Hello, this is AJ. Welcome
to the mini‑story for “Thought Mastery.” Are you feeling
good? Are you moving your body? Breathing deeply. Smiling big! Good posture? I
hope so. Let’s get started.
* * * * *
There was an incredible woman
named Sri. Sri was a linguist and she wanted to study Swahili.
What was Sri?
Well, she was a linguist.
What is a linguist?
A linguist is a person who
studies languages. Aha.
So what did Sri study?
Languages, Sri studied
languages. She was a linguist.
Was Sri a truck driver?
No, she wasn’t a truck
driver. Sri was a linguist.
Who was a linguist?
Sri, Sri was a linguist.
How many languages did Sri
speak? Three?
No, not three.
Six?
No, not six.
She spoke 247 languages.
How many languages did she
speak?
247, Sri was an amazing
linguist. She spoke 247 languages.
In fact, she had total
mastery in 247 languages.
Wow. Did she have total
mastery or was she pretty good?
Total mastery, she had
total mastery in 247 languages.
What kind of linguist was
Sri?
An incredible linguist, a
super linguist, an amazing linguist.
But, she needed another
language. She wanted to study Swahili.
Where do people speak
Swahili?
Africa, in Africa.
People speak Swahili in
Africa, of course.
Did Sri want to speak
Swahili or did she want to speak Japanese?
Well, she already spoke
Japanese perfectly, so she wanted a new language. She was bored, time for a new
language. She wanted to speak Swahili.
She wanted to speak 248
languages perfectly.
What was Sri?
A linguist, she was a linguist.
Not just a normal linguist, she was a super duper incredible linguist.
So she wanted to learn
Swahili. First she tried a visual method.
Did she try to learn with
her eyes or her ears?
With her eyes, a visual
method. related to seeing, visual. Visual.
Visual means with the eyes, connected to the eyes, She tried a
visual method first.
What kind of method did
she try to learn Swahili with?
A visual method, she tried
a visual method for learning Swahili.
She read textbooks and
grammar rules.
Did she listen to them or
did she read them?
Well, she read them,
right? It was a visual method, she used her eyes. She read textbooks. She read
grammar rules.
What language was she
studying?
Swahili, she was studying
Swahili with a visual method.
She studied Swahili with a
visual method for two years. Every day she read textbooks. Every day she read
grammar books. After two years what happened? Nothing. After two years Sri was
frustrated. She still could not speak Swahili.
Was the visual method
successful for Sri?
No, no, no, no, no, it was
not successful for Sri. Sri failed with the visual method.
For how long did she study
with the visual method?
For two years, right? She
studied with a visual method for two years.
Which language did she
study for two years?
Swahili, right? She
studied Swahili with a visual method for two years.
Who studied Swahili with a
visual method for two years?
Sri, Sri studied Swahili
with a visual method for two years.
Was she successful after
two years?
No, she failed. She was
not successful after two years. She still could not speak Swahili.
So, she modified her
approach.
Did she change her
approach or did she keep the same approach?
Well, she changed it. She
modified her approach.
What did she modify?
Her approach, her method,
her technique. She changed her technique. She changed her way of learning. She
modified her approach.
She modified her approach
to what?
To learning Swahili, she
modified her approach to learning Swahili. She changed her technique for
learning Swahili.
What kind of approach did
she try next? Was it a visual approach again?
No, it wasn’t. She
modified her approach. She changed that.
It was a kinesthetic
approach, a kinesthetic method.
Ooh, a new word,
kinesthetic. Kinesthetic means related movement and the body. So related to
movement, feeling, physical feeling, and the body.
She learned Swahili with
her body, with movement and feelings in her body.
Sounds interesting. What
kind of method did she try next?
Kinesthetic, she tried a
kinesthetic method.
Who tried a kinesthetic
method?
Sri, Sri tried a
kinesthetic method.
For what?
For learning Swahili, she
tried a kinesthetic method for learning Swahili.
Did she try to learn with
her body or with her ears?
With her body, she tried
to learn Swahili with her body. She tried a kinesthetic method.
What was the kinesthetic
method?
Well, it was called TPR
and she had to jump and move while learning. The teacher said “Jump” in
Swahili, of course, and Sri would jump. The teacher said “Sit” in Swahili. And
Sri would sit. She did this every day. Every day she jumped and sat and moved
and walked and wrote and read, as the teacher told her to in Swahili. It was a
kinesthetic method, right? She had to move her body. She was learning with
movement. Kinesthetic.
Did this boost her learning?
Oh yes, it did.
It boosted her learning.
It raised her learning. It increased her learning. She began to learn Swahili.
She began to understand Swahili. She began to speak Swahili.
Did the kinesthetic method
lessen or boost her learning?
It boosted her learning.
It increased her learning.
What boosted Sri’s
learning of Swahili?
The kinesthetic method,
the kinesthetic method boosted her learning of Swahili.
Did it boost her learning
a little or a lot?
Of course, a lot, it
boosted her learning a lot.
She began to learn much,
much faster.
Which was faster, the
visual method or the kinesthetic method?
Well, the kinesthetic
method obviously. The kinesthetic method was much faster. It boosted her
learning a lot more.
What did it boost?
It boosted her learning.
It boosted her learning speed.
Of what?
Of Swahili, it boosted her
learning speed of Swahili.
What boosted her learning
speed of Swahili?
The kinesthetic method.
So she used the
kinesthetic method for one year. It boosted her learning. She learned faster
and faster and better and better. But, but she did not achieve mastery. She did
not become a master of Swahili. She was good, but not a master.
Did Sri become a master of
Swahili by using the kinesthetic method?
No, she did not. She did
not become a master. She became good but she did not become a master by using
the kinesthetic method.
And so she modified her
approach again.
Did she change her
approach again, a little bit?
Yes, she did. She changed
it again. She modified it again.
What did she modify?
She modified her approach.
She modified her way of doing something. She modified her way of learning
Swahili.
What did she do next?
Well, she added something
this time. She continued to learn with the kinesthetic method but she added
something more.
What did she add? What
kind of method did she add next?
Well, she added an
auditory method.
Auditory, another new
word, auditory. Auditory means related to hearing or listening, related to the
ears. It shares the same root as audio, right? Audio meaning sound. Auditory
means related to sound, related to listening, related to hearing, auditory. So
a listening method is what she changed to or added. She added a listening
method.
What kind of method did
she add?
Auditory, she added an
auditory method.
Who added an auditory
method?
Sri, of course. Sri added
an auditory method.
Why?
Because she wanted total
mastery of Swahili.
Which language did she
want to totally master?
She wanted to totally
master Swahili, of course.
So what did she add to her
learning method?
She added an auditory
method, an auditory approach.
What did she add an
auditory approach to? What did she add it to?
She added it to the
kinesthetic method. She was already using the kinesthetic method, then she
added the auditory method to it. She added them together, doing both.
Did she subtract an
auditory method?
No, she didn’t subtract
it, she added it. She added an auditory method, right?
And she added a visual
method?
No, no, no, no, no, she
did not add the visual method. She subtracted the visual method. She eliminated
the visual method.
So what did she add?
An auditory method, she
added an auditory method.
She began to listen to
Swahili every day, listening more and more and more. Every day listening to
Swahili, tons of listening, 3 hours, then 4 hours, then 10 hours, then 23.5
hours of listening every day.
How many hours did she
listen to Swahili every day?
23.5.
So how many hours did she
sleep every day?
.5, only 30 minutes. She
decided to only sleep 30 minutes each day and she listened to Swahili 23.5
hours every day.
Was she successful?
Yes she was.
Sri became a total master
of Swahili in only one year. After one year of listening to Swahili 23.5 hours
a day she became a total master of Swahili. Now she speaks 248 languages
perfectly. Sri is the best linguist in the world.
* * * * *
Okay, that is the end of
the mini‑story for “Thought Mastery.” As always,
listen to it again and again and again. In fact, listen to this mini‑story 23.5 hours every day. If you listen to my lessons 23.5 hours
every day you will too become a master of English. But if you want to, 1 or 2
hours is probably enough.
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