Why Confidence in English Begins with Permission
Learning to speak English with confidence isn’t just about grammar or vocabulary.
Sometimes, it’s about giving yourself permission.
- Permission to have a German accent—and love it.
It’s the echo of your hometown baker calling your name across the street. - Permission to think in German and translate. That pause before you speak? It’s your brain doing a quick work of art.
- Permission to mix languages with other German speakers. Half a sentence in English, half in German… like a sandwich you didn’t plan but still tastes right.
- Permission to feel frustrated. Some days the words slip away. That’s still part of learning to catch them.
- Permission to celebrate small wins. The joke that lands. The coffee you order without stalling. The phone call where your hands stay still.
- Permission to invent words. Shakespeare would be proud.
- Permission to answer in one language and finish in another. Efficiency is bilingual’s best-kept secret.
- Permission to exaggerate pronunciation for fun. Sometimes water deserves to sound like a Hollywood trailer voiceover.
- Permission to use hand gestures as part of your vocabulary. They’re free, and they never need conjugation.
- Permission to forget a word and replace it with “thingy.” Native speakers do it all the time.
💬 Your English journey isn’t a test.
It’s a path. And every step, no matter how tiny, leaves a footprint.


0 Comments