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Precerpt from My 20th Language: L3 Spanish - San Juan Bautista

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  San Juan Bautista When I first moved to SJB, I was clearly in Spanglish territory. We initially moved into a duplex, and the couple on the other side spoke mainly Spanish, especially when it was about important, shared matters. I quickly turned to a Spanish teacher at work, where I was administrator of a number of language programs. The teacher, wanting to impress, showed up with a nice binder and traditional lessons in hand. Oops! “Oh,” I told her. “I can read most of those things, and I can talk about academic stuff without much trouble, but what I really need is to understand when I am being asked if I have electrical tape or to be able to ask for help with plunging a plugged toilet.” Those are not the topics of textbooks, but they are the topics of life in SJB. The teacher quickly adapted, and I started learning how to live abroad at home, so to speak. In return, as payment for her kindness, I would attend her classes when she needed an interactive audience or non-stu...

From Fact to Story: How Personal Details Lift Foreign Language Proficiency

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Facts are the bones of communication. They hold things up, keep them straight, and make sure meaning doesn’t collapse. But bones alone don’t make a living body. To move toward higher proficiency, a learner has to add flesh—personal details, feelings, and perspective. That’s what turns a fact into a story. At lower levels, learners focus on accuracy: I went to the store. I bought milk. I came home. Clear, correct, and complete. But at higher levels, accuracy becomes the floor, not the ceiling. What matters is how you connect those facts, how you color them, how you make someone want to keep listening. I went to the store because we were out of milk, and I ended up talking with the cashier about her new puppy. That’s not just a report—it’s a moment. Adding personal details and feelings does more than make speech interesting. It keeps the conversation alive. When you share a reaction— I was surprised , I felt relieved , It reminded me of home —you invite your listener to respond. That e...

When Teens Push Parents' Limits

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  Every parent reaches that moment when a teenager tests the edges of patience, trust, or authority. It’s not rebellion for rebellion’s sake; it’s the work of growing up. Teens push limits because they’re learning where those limits are — and whether love holds steady when they cross them. When the push comes, the parent’s instinct is often to tighten control. But control rarely teaches what we hope it will. What teaches is calm, consistency, and consequence without drama. A teen who meets a wall of anger learns to fight harder. A teen who meets a wall of steadiness learns to think. The hardest part is staying grounded when you feel disrespected. That’s when you breathe, slow down, and remember that your authority doesn’t come from volume — it comes from presence. You can be firm without being harsh, clear without being cold. You can say, “I’m not okay with that,” and still leave space for them to come back. Teens need boundaries, but they also need dignity. They need to know that ...