Without a doubt, learning is a wonderful experience. It might be intense, challenging, and even overwhelming sometimes but it’s nearly always satisfying if you approach it properly, has a great payoff, and is surely fun. Perhaps, one of the best skills to apply is the new language. Learning a new language has lots of benefits, many of which have even been proven scientifically. Not only language learning can strongly stimulate our brain, but it can also improve our physical health. Moreover, learning languages, in particular, stimulates or is stimulated by traveling, one way or another. And that is, perhaps, the best thing in life there can be.
Intensifying Your Brain Activity
The primary benefit of learning any language is, of course, brain activation. There are many scientific studies that demonstrate how language learning improves our thinking patterns, makes us complete a few tasks simultaneously, and just become smarter. However, there are many more benefits to that, some of which are caused by increased brain activity and some of which are independent and affect different parts of our body and our life. Here are some perks that we can achieve by intensely learning any language, at any time, for any purpose.
- Putting things in perspective. As you let a new language run through you, you learn to look at things from a different point of view. People around the world have significantly different thinking patterns, worldviews, and cultural perceptions, all of which are embedded in language. Hence, becoming another language speaker, even after a short time, does a lot of good stuff to your brain. In turn, looking at things from a different perspective influences many other areas of your life.
- Communication. By putting things into perspective, you become a better listener and speaker. You start understanding subtle meanings behind the words and phrases, simply because you might stumble upon a certain phrase in another language that perfectly makes sense there but might not make sense in your native language, despite being used. At the same time, by learning another language, you pay more attention to your language, which stimulates you to speak and write more correctly.
- Creativity. It goes without saying, learning a new language stimulates your creative thinking. As you learn to see things from a different perspective, you essentially alter your worldview. As you learn a new language, you learn how to think differently. If that does not stimulate creative and original thinking well, then, probably, nothing else does.
- Ability to see patterns. Something like an add-on to creative thinking, being able to see patterns is another “side effect” of learning a new language. The thing is that another language might use different phrasing, place words in a sentence in a different order, or simply not even contain all the tenses present in your native language. By dissecting the language and seeing these patterns, you become able to see how things work not only in other languages but also in other aspects of life.
- Physical wellbeing. If you thought that learning a new language is all about mental processes and stimulating your brain only, that’s where you’re wrong. There is a huge number of positive effects of language learning on your physical health, including the actually bigger and more powerful brain, delayed onset of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, and the increased level of serotonin (one of the most important “happiness hormones”), all of which are the effects of memorizing the new things and patterns. So, to stay really healthy, you might seriously consider taking up a new language.
There are many more benefits to learning a new language at any pace, in fact. You can largely expand your horizons and travel more or even work with some trusted translation services online to earn more. Like learning any other skill, learning a new language is a wonderful adventure that brings a lot of great opportunities and lots of fun.
Improving Your Life
Regardless of whether you learn a new language as a hobby or for professional purposes, it’s always good for you. As you start gaining this invaluable knowledge, observe the results, and get that sweet satisfaction over the completed work, you’ll see how your life gets better a little bit at a time. There’s absolutely no point in postponing this process, so start learning a new language today and become an improved version of yourself tomorrow.
BIO:
By regularly traveling, constantly learning and researching, and sharing his experiences with others, Mark Blackwood manages to never stop learning. He cannot seem to stay in one place for too long simply because not moving forward in our fast-paced and ever-changing world means moving backward. Follow Mark on his adventures through this wonderful world of modernity and never stop moving forwards.