Postby Drabant » July 22nd, 2010 11:58 pm
My experience is that stress is very, very bad for learning. I've experienced this with RTK as well. I would recommend that you go at a slower pace if you are starting to feel stressed. I realize that you are working towards a deadline, with may be part of the problem. But if you fail due to stress, you will end up learning slower, than if you started out slow.
The first time I did RTK I had the idea that I wanted to be done in 2 months, while working full time. Waaaay too fast. So I didn't have time to make up good enough stories, didn't have time to review stores when I failed reviews, and reviewing just felt like a painful chore. So eventually, after I had gone through the whole book, and I had to do some 200+ reviews each day because I kept failing, hating it, not managing to get the number of daily reviews down, I gave up on it.
Now I have started it again, and I'm almost done, and feel much better this time around. But if I had just added say five new kanji each day the first time around, I would have been done by now, with much less stress.
Just ignore what others say. You are doing this only for yourself, and only because you want to. Actually, the reason why people are trying to break your spirit (because this is exactly that they are trying to do) is because they are afraid of your success, because they feel it would make you superior to them.
My tips for avoiding RTK burnout, after my personal experience with it:
・As I said above, don't go to fast. I don't add more than 15 new kanji at a time now, I find that if I add more I get worse results.
・Like Heisig says, work on your stories. I usually work on the stories of failed kanji while I am out taking a walk, instead of immediately when I fail it. That way I use my time more effectively, and feel less stressed.
・If you just can't work out a particular kanji, suspend it in your deck, until you need it or until you feel ready to take it on again. Failing over and over again causes frustration and stress, which in turn hurts the brain and causes you to fail more. Don't let the kanji become your enemies.