Time in the Japanese language has taught me a lot about my own native English--usage of adjectives and their synonyms, mostly. The ongoing process that began a little over five years ago, has been an exhausting trial in patience and frustration, as well as a grim lesson in frivolity, complete with all the haphazard convenience most often tucked behind a blaring red "As Seen on TV" sticker.
I've recently begun to liken the experience of learning a foreign language to a human being learning to walk (a period in my life I remember with miraculous clarity, smartass). It begins with painstaking first steps, as learning patterns are established, and a basic foundation is laid. With the passing of time, your ability and confidence slowly grow. Then, knowing neither physical limitation nor fear of failure, you learn to run at a reckless, broken pace. Head filled with pride, naivety, and the reassurance that you've finally got everything figured out, you pack your life in a suitcase and move to a land of fellow walkers to put your newfound ability to the test.
Upon arrival, you find that it's a place where everyone already knows not only how to walk, but how to run, how to climb up and down, how to balance the low-wire, the high-wire, and the checkbook. They can cartwheel, shimmy, samba, and perform a nearly unlimited range of other movements available exclusively to those with long legs and a pair of feet (ostriches, kangaroos, and Jesus lizards notwithstanding). But somehow the expectations were different. You hadn't expected them to take these gifts for granted. Your raging hard-on for bipedal locomotion quickly deflates with the enthusiasm on which it rode, as the realization that all the time in the books was spent towards giving you a skill that everyone else has innately possessed since spilling from the womb.
So the hastily-concluded moral to my anticlimactic shitpile of a story, still fresh in its telling?
Two feet, do not a record-setting Olympian make.
5 contributions to this piece:
Bad day at work?
Remember all the time they have to spend in the books to be able to come here, too. We all possess innate skills; it's just a matter of recognizing and attaching value to them.
Bad day at work... Not really. Just waking up and smelling the pie.
Oh, and no books for these guys--they were born with it.
You have a way with metaphors, always masterfully crafted for excellent emphasis.
When I came to "Your raging hard-on for bipedal locomotion quickly deflates with the enthusiasm on which it rode" I remembered why your blog kicks ass and is worth checkin in on.
Best of luck with your walk
Actually wasn't a metaphor. I totally had a hard-on.
Thanks tho.
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