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5 minutes is enough… but not for the reason you think

Oriane

“Just do 5 minutes a day.”
 
That is something I have heard a lot.
 
It sounds simple. Almost too simple to really work.
And usually, it comes with this idea that small habits create big results.
But I don’t think that’s the most interesting part.
 
What makes those 5 minutes powerful is something else.
 
It removes the resistance.
Because most of the time, the problem is not that we don’t have time.
 
It’s just that it starting feels heavier.
 
We wait for the right moment.
More time, more energy, more motivation, or anything else (and we always find a good reason).
 
And in the end… we don’t start.
 
5 minutes changes that.
 
You don’t need to prepare.
You don’t need to be fully focused.
You don’t need it to be perfect.
 
You just begin.
 
And once you start, something shifts.
 
Not always in a big way.
Sometimes you stop after 5 minutes.
Sometimes you continue a bit longer.
 
But the important part is not how much you do.
 
It’s that you made it easier to come back to it.
And that’s often what people struggle with. Not learning… but starting again.
 
I’ve seen this a lot with language learning. 
People don’t lack motivation.
 
They just feel like they need to do it “well” every time.
And that makes everything heavier than it needs to be.
 
So maybe those 5 minutes are not about progress.
 
Maybe they’re just about lowering the barrier enough so you actually begin.
And sometimes, that’s already more than enough.
 
I’m actually doing the same right now.
 
I’m learning Japanese (and a few other things), and I try to keep at least a few minutes every day. Not always perfectly, not always focused, but just enough to stay connected to it.
 
And I’ve noticed something.
The more I do it, even just a little, the less I want to stop.
It becomes part of my routine, but also something a bit satisfying in a very quiet way.
Like crossing it off your list at the end of the day.
 
And I think that’s what makes it work.
 
Not just starting… but keeping that link with what you’re learning.
 
Because when you keep coming back to it, even in small ways, you’re much more likely to continue.
 
And honestly, that’s already a good place to start.
 
See you soon.
Oriane

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This column was published by the author in their personal capacity.
The opinions expressed in this column are the author's own and do not reflect the view of Cafetalk.

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