Every chapter is a small victory. Lesson 3: you learn to tell time. Lesson 5: you make your first full sentence about going to Kyoto. The kanji look like little drawings at first—but then 山 (mountain) actually starts to look like a mountain.
“My name is…” — Watashi no namae wa… Genki I
The first time you open it, the page is a forest of squiggles. Hiragana stares back at you like a secret code. But then, slowly, you learn to decipher it: あ is “a,” い is “i.” Your pen scratches across the margin of the workbook, and for the first time, your hand writes something that isn’t English. Every chapter is a small victory
Genki I is the sound of your first real conversation, even if it’s just “What time is it?” It’s the feeling of recognizing a word on a menu. It’s the courage to say Wakarimasen (“I don’t understand”) and not feel embarrassed. The kanji look like little drawings at first—but
By the time you reach the last chapter, the rabbit and the bear don’t look like strangers anymore. They look like old friends. And you realize you’re not just studying a language.