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Wen
@shiwen
Raising our daughter bilingually has always been the default to me. Not because it’s more beneficial, but because it’s simply what’s natural to me and my family. There’s a difference between “learning” a language and “acquiring” a language. (掌握/身につける) No one feels like they “learned” their first language, because we all acquired it as we grew up. Things learned can be forgotten when not used. Skills acquired tend to stick for longer or come back easier. My hope for my child is not just about learning a certain number of Chinese characters or being able to hold conversations with grandparents. I hope it will be part of her life, and impact her life in a positive way, for as long as she lives. At the end of the day, my hopes are my hopes and her life is her life.
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BFG 🎩↑Ⓜ️
@bfg
My big worry after divorce - kiddo will lose the second language 🙄
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Wen
@shiwen
My observation is that kids are extremely adaptive. You gotta believe in them and then they surprise you. As long as the seeds are planted, even though they may appear to “lose” a language, it may come back at some point of their life. Even if they don’t end up speaking the language, it will likely to impact their life in some ways.
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