Loading...
todoloja articles essays and opinions

Articles - Journals - Essays - Opinions

You live in Ecuador, you speak Spanish, right?

By Pierre Wauters

No, I don't. How long have you been living here? 1 year, 3 years, 10 years? Why don't you speak Spanish? Silence.

When I was thinking of emigrating to Ecuador, I remember asking the question to an expat, who runs a prominent web site about Ecuador and who had been living here for a long time, of whether Spanish was really essential in Ecuador. The answer was a clear "no". I was told that it was not necessary.

Today, I have been here for 6 months myself and I totally and utterly disagree with that statement. Very few people speak English in Ecuador, even at places where one would expect it the most such as banks or the offices of an airline company such as LAN. Only big hotels and international airports have staff who could claim that they speak English.

To make the most of truly living here, there is only one way: speak Spanish, start learning now !

Learning another language seems to be a daunting enterprise to most north American expats. This is because the art of speaking multiple languages requires some kind of switch to be activated in the brain and in the US this switch has never been touched for most people who only speak one language. In Europe, where I was born, you can hardly move 100 miles without changing language. In Brussels/Belgium, my city/country of origin, it is even worse: people speak 2 languages in the same city and both are mandatory at school. So, I guess, our language "switch" has been turned on at a very early age and it definitely helps. We also had to learn, or should I say "study", Latin and Greek. German was optional, I did not take it, pfff give me a break!

Having said that "the langiuage switch is inactive", it is an easy excuse to say:" I just cannot remember the words..." or similar things to not even try learning Spanish when coming to live in Ecuador. It is also a matter of respect for the people. What would you think if you were in their shoes or if they were coming to live in your country? After all, Ecuador is their country and the language here is Spanish, end of story.

How do you go with learning Spanish efficiently so that you can s-p-e-a-k it, in other words have a conversation with someone? That is the one million dollar question. I know what does NOT work:

  • accumulating Spanish learning methods (books or CDs) to be perused, maybe tomorrow
  • taking Spanish classes and trying all the teachers around until "the best one" is found
  • telling everybody day after day that you cannot speak Spanish so that they can feel sorry for you
  • studying the dictionary in bed

I am not saying that any of these methods is not helpful, far from it (yes I do "study the dictionary" some times and the dictionary can be an invaluable tool when one understands its limitations). And yes, teachers are great, particularly those who make it fun (like Virginia). 

What I am saying is that there is something else far more important that needs to happen if one truly wants to learn.

The first thing to realize is that there is nothing special about learning a language compared to learning anything else such as the stock market, karate or indian cooking.

I repeat: there is nothing special about learning a language. Just like anything else, the best way to succeed at learning a language is to watch people who are successful at doing it and copy them. This is the core principle of many "become successful" programs.

Let's look at an excerpt of a "self confidence building program" that I found on the net which says:

Think of one person who you consider to be self-confident in a situation where you would like to be. Write down their name. Do this for every situation in which you would like more self-confidence.

Once you have a 'confidence model' for every situation, write down what it is that lets you know that that person is confident - make it specific. For example, rather than, "the way he looks", write "his face is relaxed and smiling a little".

Cover all aspects of the person:

- facial expression
- posture
- voice tonality (loud, soft, deep...)
- gestures
- the way they dress
- how they interact with others
- how others react to them
- anything else you notice about them

Just replace the words "self-confident" with the words "good at learning Spanish", the word "confidence" with "Spanish learning" and so on and let's read the text that we obtain:

Think of one person who you consider to be good at learning Spanish in a situation where you would like to be. Write down their name. Do this for every situation in which you would like more language learning skills.

Once you have a 'Spanish learning model' for every situation, write down what it is that lets you know that that person is good at learning Spanish - make it specific. For example, rather than, "the way he looks", write "his face is relaxed and smiling a little".

Cover all aspects of the person:

- facial expression
- posture
- voice tonality (loud, soft, deep...)
- gestures
- the way they dress
- how they interact with others
- how others react to them
- anything else you notice about them

Am I trying to say that self-confidence has anything to do with learning languages? Sure but not in the sense that some people have it and some don't.

Who is this one person who you could consider self-confident in a language learning situation? Think about it. Who does everybody agree is good at learning languages?

Well, we are absolutely surrounded by these role models every single day, there are so many of them that we just don't see them. They are our models, I name ... the kids.

Everybody will tell you: kids are wonderful at learning languages, it is so easy for them, kids can learn anything etc. etc. etc. ad nauseum.

But why can they and why can't we? Do they really have something that we don't? I don't think so !
We too can learn anything, we just have to undo some of the damage that school and life has caused us and then we can grow again.

Let's take a look at a typical kid "learning" a new language in a typical situation where he/she is interacting with other kids speaking another language. Let's look at that kid as if he/she was our role model for self-confidence. What is the kid actually doing?

First, he does not know that he is learning, unless we keep telling him every five minutes. A corollary of the above is that he does not know or care that he does not know. He does not keep repeating to all the other kids that he does not speak the language. They would not care anyway, so why tell them?

As far as he is concerned, he is playing with other kids who just happen to speak some gobble-dee-gook but since speaking gobble-dee-gook is fun and they are playing anyway, it is just like saying peak-a-boo or some other word. That is what I see when my daughter runs around the fountain in Vilcabamba with local kids. They are having fun. They are relaxed. This is principle number one: it should not be a drag, it should be fun and we should stop thinking that we don't know all the time. If we keep thinking that we don't know, this is what happens, we just won't know, ever.

Second, once the kid knows a few words, he will use these words that he knows, no matter how incorrect, mispronounced or incomplete, without shame. This is principle number two: the new words must be used no matter what and even though a complete sentence cannot be formed. Complete, grammatically correct sentences will come later. The first prioriy is to make the other person understand what you mean.

Third, kids listen, adults talk, and, more often than not, "cross-talk"! It is through listening that kids absorb a language. They have no choice at school but to listen. Or, at the table, when the adults talk, the kids don't necessarily participate but that does not mean that they are not absorbing every word that is being said.

Learning a new language is the only situation where I would wholeheartedly recommend watching TV, a lot of TV, particularly ads or even lunch time soaps. Luckily, it is not difficult to watch ads, just turn the thing on and you get as much as needed to teach you all the essentials of everyday living. You will hear about nappies and baby bottoms, and deodorants and great "healthy-fat-free-frozen" meals, family life in general as well as banking and insurance. You will learn basic words such as "cheap", "easy", "safe", "fast", "money", "rich" etc... Don't smile. It does not matter that a particular subject is silly or of no interest to you. What you want is absorb the language like a sponge. Do that an hour a day.

In summary, having fun, listening, speaking with no shame are the three key aspects that I see in a child exposed to a language learning situation. Since they never fail at learning a new language, this must be what truly works. Bingo! We found our role model for success.

It is important to note here that when we try to copy a role model and still fail, it probably means that we haven't observed the role model well enough and that we are still missing something important. So, if you feel like saying at this point: "but I have done everything that you just said and I still cannot speak", well, that can only mean that, either you haven't done it right or that there is something else that the kids do that I haven't covered. The fact that kids can learn languages fast and efficiently is indisputable. If we do what they do, we MUST succeed. If we don't, it means that we are NOT doing what they do (*).

Building on what has just been said, I will propose in a next article a new Spanish learning technique, kind of an anti-method of learning which I have been practicing for a few months and which I believe can produce better results than any other method.

See you back soon...


(*) the only alternative would be that kids have some kind of physical ability that we don't have. This is a tempting explanation but I don't believe in it. Maybe the photo below will answer that one better than I can.