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Is English Really That Difficult?

Is English Really That Difficult? Or Are We Just Overthinking It?

Let me ask you something honestly — when was the last time you said, "I'm not good at English"?

If you just nodded your head, you're not alone. Millions of students across India say this every single day. And honestly? Most of them are wrong about themselves.

English has this strange reputation of being "the hard language." But is it actually hard — or have we just been taught to fear it?

Let's talk about it.


Why English Feels So Hard (At First)

There are some real reasons why English trips people up, especially for Indian learners.

The spelling makes no sense. "Though," "through," "tough," and "cough" — all look similar, all sound completely different. Even native English speakers make spelling mistakes regularly. So if you've ever felt embarrassed about a typo, don't be. It's genuinely confusing for everyone.
The tenses are endless. "I eat." "I am eating." "I have eaten." "I had been eating." Each one carries a slightly different meaning. In Hindi or other Indian languages, we don't always make these fine distinctions — so the brain has to build new habits from scratch.
Articles — a, an, the — feel random. Hindi doesn't have articles at all. So when you're trying to figure out whether to say "I went to hospital" or "I went to the hospital," it genuinely feels like guessing.

These things are real challenges. But here's what nobody tells you —


English Is Also One of the Easier Languages to Start Speaking

Surprised? Let's look at what English doesn't make you do.

No gender for objects. In Hindi, a table (mez) is feminine and a fan (pankha) is masculine — and there's no logic behind it. In English, a table is just a table. Simple.
Verbs barely change. "I go. You go. We go. They go." Almost the same across the board. Compare that to how much verb forms shift in Hindi depending on who's speaking, and English suddenly looks very friendly.
The basic sentence structure is clean. Subject + Verb + Object. That's the backbone of almost every English sentence. Once you internalize that one pattern, you can start building real sentences — even with a small vocabulary.

Many linguists actually rank English as one of the more learnable languages in the world, especially at the beginner level. The advanced stuff gets tricky, sure. But getting started? That's not the problem most people think it is.


The Real Problem Isn't the Language

Here's something worth thinking about — the students who struggle most with English are often not struggling because of the language itself. They're struggling because of how it was taught to them.

In most Indian schools, English is treated like a subject to pass, not a skill to use. So students spend years memorizing grammar rules without ever having a real conversation. They're judged when they make mistakes. They feel embarrassed to speak in class.

Slowly, a belief forms: "English is not for me."

That belief does more damage than any grammar rule ever could. Because once you decide something is beyond you, you stop trying. And when you stop trying, the language never improves — which then "proves" that you were right all along.

It becomes a cycle.


What Actually Helps

People who become fluent in English usually have one thing in common — they stopped treating it like homework.

They watched English movies and shows without always reaching for subtitles. They listened to English songs and actually looked up the lyrics. They started reading things they genuinely liked — articles, blogs, stories — in English. They made mistakes in conversations and kept going anyway.

Fluency didn't come from a textbook. It came from exposure and practice, over time.

If you're looking to improve your English right now, here's what actually works:

  • Read a little every day. Even 10 minutes of an English article or blog builds your vocabulary and sense of sentence flow over time.
  • Speak without waiting to be perfect. Nobody starts fluent. The people who improve fastest are the ones who speak early and often — mistakes included.
  • Listen more than you study. Podcasts, YouTube videos, audiobooks — let your ears get comfortable with the rhythm of the language.
  • Don't chase grammar rules first. Let the feel of the language come naturally. Rules make more sense once you've already heard and used the language for a while.

So — Is English Really Difficult?

Honestly? A little bit, yes.

The spelling system is inconsistent. The tenses take time to get right. And some rules seem to exist just to confuse you.

But difficult and impossible are two very different things.

Hundreds of millions of people have learned English as a second language and speak it with confidence every day. They weren't all born with some special talent. They just kept going when it felt uncomfortable.

The language itself is not your biggest obstacle. The story you've told yourself about the language — that's the real thing standing in your way.

Change the story. The language will follow.


Frequently Asked Questions

Q1. Is English hard to learn for Indian students?

English can feel challenging at first, especially because of its spelling rules and tenses. But compared to many other languages, English has a simpler sentence structure and no gender system for objects — which actually makes it easier to get started. The real difficulty is not the language itself, but the fear and hesitation that builds up over years of being judged in school.

Q2. How long does it take to become fluent in English?

It depends on how consistently you practice. Most people see a noticeable improvement within 3 to 6 months if they read, listen, and speak in English daily — even for just 15 to 20 minutes. Fluency is not about being perfect, it is about being comfortable enough to express yourself clearly.

Q3. Can I improve my English without joining a coaching class?

Absolutely. Many fluent English speakers never attended a single coaching class. Watching English content, reading blogs and articles, and simply speaking without fear of mistakes can take you very far. Consistency matters far more than any paid course.


About the Author

Adarsh Sharma

My name is Adarsh Sharma. I am 31, and writing is probably the one thing I have been consistently good at my whole life.

I studied at Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya, Bareilly — a school that does not just teach you subjects, it builds your character. Those years shaped a lot of how I think today. After that, I moved to Delhi for college at Delhi University, where the city itself became my biggest teacher.

I write because I believe most things in life are simpler than they are made to sound. This blog is my attempt to prove that — one honest article at a time.

If something here made sense to you, that is exactly why I wrote it.

— Adarsh Sharma

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