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A Language Learning Secret: Reset your Brain’s Filter…

Here is a secret that will increase your language learning ability.

You want to learn another language, but the details that you have to learn and the vocabulary that you encounter seem overwhelming.

Applying this secret is a paradox. Instead of having to learn something or instead of struggling to memorize something, you just have to “unlearn something.”

Your language learning success will accelerate if you manage the resources of a certain part of your mind by deactivating it.

The part of your mind that you need to de-activate is your “perception filter.”

Your “perception filter” is a hidden part of your mind that filters unneeded and irrelevant stimuli. Your mind does this so that you can focus upon important tasks, and avoid distraction from countless and endless array of sights, sounds, smells and sensations.

If you ever had the experience of buying a car, and suddenly seeing that make and model of vehicle that you bought is on every street? It now seems that the same model car is everywhere you look…on the road, in parking lots, in magazine pictures…

We have this experience because of the work of a part of our brain called the “Reticular
Activating System” (RAS
). The RAS is responsible for filtering unimportant information, data, input…stimuli that we don’t need to attend to.

If all this stimuli reached your conscious awareness, you would be too bogged down to function. So, the RAS functions to keep you productive, and sane.

In the car buying example, your brain now knows that recognizing this car is important, for example finding it amid the other cars in a crowded parking lot. So, the RAS becomes sensitized, and notices this type of car. It is not that there are mysteriously more of this one make and model of vehicle now on the road. This make and model was already there, but, you did not have a reason for noticing it.

In language learning, you need to train your brain to hear new sounds…to hear new nuances of sounds, to notice little word details.

Your goal is to train your reticular activating system to look for and hear these nuances. And, the way that you do this is to…

  • Pay attention sounds
  • Look at yourself in a mirror as you create the sounds
  • Feed back the sounds to yourself with a tape recorder, voice recorder
  • Watch sounds of native speakers and yourself in audio editing software to see the different patterns

One cool trick is to piece together some PVC pipe elbows and a PVC sleeve of the right size to form a loop that you can talk into an listen to your own voice.

In your study of Spanish, you need to be able to hear several things that are different than the way that you hear English. Then, you have to adjust your mouth and tongue to different positions to speak your new language.

With Spanish, your tongue needs to be more flexible, and your tongue needs to feel free enough to “almost escape your mouth.” Think of this as the reason that native Spanish-speaking women seems so alluring and intimate. Think of this mouth and tongue movement as revealing a warmth and openness that others find attractive.

Your mental attitude and your mental imagery play a role in how you create and express words in a target language. Focusing on mental imagery, sensation, sound, sound production all help you reset your brain so that you are become aware of important small differences that might have been filtered otherwise.

Another technique is to write out the words, sounds, accents that you want to become more aware of. Then draw pictures of these words, sounds and accents…or just doodle. Anything that you can do to create in internal curiosity will help.

The technique that you use doesn’t matter, but the act of calling attention to these nuances will convince, reset, reprogram your brain to work for you in a new way.

What you are doing is telling your brain that these words, sounds, accents are important. Then, your RAS will start to notice and pay attention to these signals. Once this happens, you will start to perceive the formerly invisible, silent clues that were always there.

And, as you practice the target language, you will notice all kinds of things that you didn’t notice before.

After that, you need to practice until you can make the same sounds. But, don’t try to strain and make the sounds in different ways than the native speakers do. The reason that native speakers make the sounds the way that they do is that these are the easiest, most natural, most effortless ways to produce the sounds. Easy, most natural, effortless translates into “most fluid” and most fluent.

You will also notice native speakers, and pick up on the nuances of their conversation. After a time, you will build enough confidence to make comments and speak a few words in the target language to them.

What will be happening is that your mind is filling in all the words, sounds and accents that it once automatically blanked out for you so that you would not be distracted by them. But, now that these words, sounds and accents have meaning for you, you become able to pay attention to them.

So, take these few, easy steps, and train your mind to work with a few new words, sounds and accents. Your RAS has been on the job all along, and will respond quickly to unfilter the new information for you.

Just project a clear picture of what you want to be able to do. Project that image in a confident and grateful manner, thank yourself for the improvement, and enjoy the ease and excitement of learning in a better way.

And, remember to treat yourself well. Reward yourself for your progress at learning and speaking Spanish, day by day, more closely speaking like a native speaker does.

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