My guide to learning Japanese beyond the beginner stage

An average Japanese learner

Ahh, so that's how it is. I understand everything now. (She doesn't get it at all).

Japanese is a hard language to learn. Who knew?
Sociology
Number of Kanji known 3
Anime seen 293,487,234
Study Characteristics
Attempts to watch Terrace House 2
Money spent on textbooks a lot
Plans to go to Japan? obviously
Skills
Katakana reading speed 0.5 katakana per second
Confidence level honestly too low
"Hey Google, show me Japanese resources. Resources EXCEPT Genki. Seriously? Nothing?"

I guess it makes sense why most guides online are for beginners. It's easy to do the first step into learning Japanese - learn hiragana! Learn katakana! Count to 10! Yay! But as soon as the building blocks are in place, everything becomes impossibly difficult. You want me to know HOW MANY kanji?? What the hell is a 'conditional'? Do you hate me? :(

Unfortunately for me, I'm trying to learn Japanese. I'm not an expert by any means, so take what I say with a healthy dose of skepticism. This is just what worked for me to get into an intermediate level. I will probably remain an intermediate student for a long, loooong time. I've also found that there's very little in the way of resources online for people who have finished Genki 2, and are ready for more complex learning. All the throwaway listicles just dispense helpful wisdom like "practice lots!" as if we hadn't already thought of that. So here's my take on things.

The main experience I've had is that money talks, and bullshit walks. It sucks, but money does wonders. Without a physical textbook and/or a wanikani subscription, learning Japanese is horrendously difficult. Yes, technically there are resources out there if you REALLY try - but the inconvenience puts a barrier between you and learning. Ideally, your learning should be as frictionless as possible to start. An actual, real-ass textbook you can write in does wonders. Wanikani is also brilliant, and the only way I'm able to remember kanji. At the very least, please consider buying a textbook to work from. I had a very good experience with Quartet 1 as the next step up from Genki 2. The workbook you can get alongside it is truly essential, because it drills grammar points into you and forces you to write kanji.

Using the skills you've learned up to this point

Reading my first book made me feel like an absolute idiot. Actually, reading anything in Japanese always makes me feel like an idiot. But practice really is the only way. You can buy manga in Japanese for VERY CHEAP (~500yen per volume, and I've found volumes are pretty huge) on BookWalker. This is also great because when manga is digital, you can really zoom in on troublesome kanji or furigana. I also read books from my local library, which means technically the first Japanese novel I read in full was a kid's Minecraft novel. High literature, indeed. Listening is another barrel of fish, but I've had semi-okay experiences with tokusatsu and slow songs. J-Dramas and reality tv like Terrace House are really hard, because everyone yaps at mach 5. Podcasts are also a good source of exposure, but I find it's no good listening to them in the background - I have to do nothing else and really focus on them.

Some helpful links

  1. Tadoku - Free graded readers.
  2. Natively - Find manga that's challenging, but, you know. Not TOO challenging.