Every failed study plan I've seen — including my own early ones — died the same way. Week one: three hours a day, new notebook, unstoppable. Week two: a busy day breaks the streak. Week three: the guilt of the broken streak makes starting again feel heavy. Week four: "I'll restart next month."
The fix isn't more discipline. It's a plan sized for your worst realistic day, not your best one. Here's the routine that survived contact with my actual life.
The Core: 45–60 Minutes, Review First
The order matters more than the duration. Most people spend their fresh energy on exciting new material and "run out of time" for review — which is exactly backwards, because review is where language actually becomes yours.
- Review — 10–15 minutes, always first. Yesterday's vocabulary, this week's kanji, last week's grammar. Flashcards, a quick self-quiz, re-reading notes — whatever form, it comes first while your head is fresh.
- New grammar or vocabulary — 20 minutes. One grammar point from your current level's notes, or one set from the vocabulary lists. One. The urge to do three is how week-two burnout starts.
- Kanji writing — 10 minutes. Three to five characters, written by hand with correct stroke order. Small daily doses beat weekend marathons by a huge margin.
- Listening — 10–15 minutes. Attached to something you already do: commuting, cooking, walking. (More on making this painless in training listening from day one.)
The Bad-Day Rule
When the day falls apart, drop the new material — never the review. A ten-minute review-only day keeps every word you've learned alive and keeps the habit unbroken. A zero day starts the forgetting clock on everything. The difference between learners who make it and learners who restart every month is not talent — it's what they do on their bad days.
This rule matters because forgetting is not a personal failing; it's a schedule. Skip review for four days and the previous two weeks quietly evaporate. Protect the review slot like an appointment and everything else becomes recoverable.
The Weekly Shape
- Five normal days of the routine above.
- One consolidation day: no new material at all. Re-read the week's grammar, re-test the week's vocabulary, rewrite the kanji you hesitated on. This is the day that turns a pile of studied things into things you know.
- One free day. Guilt-free. Sustainable systems have slack built in; systems without slack break at the first wedding, festival or deadline.
Three Small Things That Keep It Alive
- Anchor the session to an existing habit. "After morning tea" beats "at 7 a.m." — habits attached to habits survive schedule changes.
- End each session by choosing tomorrow's new item. Starting is the expensive part; a session that begins with a decision already made starts itself.
- Track presence, not performance. A simple calendar tick for "studied today" builds the only metric that matters at this stage: showing up. The knowledge is a lagging indicator; the streak is the leading one.
Forty-five focused minutes a day is roughly 270 hours a year — more than enough to move a beginner through N5 and deep into N4 territory. Not with the routine you fantasise about on motivated days. With the one you can still do on the bad ones.