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The Three Pillars

The foundation of effective language learning: Consistency, Volume, and Efficacy.

Every language learning method can be measured against three pillars: Consistency, Volume, and Efficacy.

These exist on a spectrum. The more you have of each, the faster you learn.

Consistency means regular practice.

Memory consolidation happens between sessions, not during them. Spaced repetition outperforms cramming because your brain needs time to reinforce new connections.

Ten minutes daily will take you further than two hours on the weekend.

Volume means exposure at scale.

Before children speak their first language fluently, they've absorbed thousands of hours of input. There's no shortcut here.

The more phrases, variations, and contexts you encounter, the faster your brain recognizes patterns.

Efficacy means the method itself must work.

You can be consistent and get massive volume, but if you're doing something ineffective (memorizing grammar tables, translating word by word), you won't get results.

The Method is designed to maximize all three. Each feature exists to drive one or more of these pillars.

The result is language learning that actually works—without feeling like studying. No flashcards to drill. No grammar rules to memorize. No vocab lists to review. Just listen, understand, and speak.

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