I’ve found that I belong in a minority of people in the US, as a person who can speak two languages. An average American is overly impressed when they discover I speak French as if speaking another language is a superpower. Americans are a minority in the world. Most people in other countries speak several languages. Every country where English is not a native language teaches their children in school how to speak English. Because of our privilege of being born in a country where English, the international political language, is the mother tongue, there is a trend of Americans dismissing learning another language. “It’s too hard,” we say. “Everywhere else speaks English,” we reason. “I don’t have the time,” we argue. Here’s the truth: yes, it can be difficult, but it’s an immensely rewarding process. When I read French, I read it as naturally as if I’m reading English. That’s one of the most amazing feelings. Yes, it takes time to learn a language, which is why I started learning at the age of six or seven. In fact, the best time to start learning a second language is as a child. The younger a child starts learning a second language, the more easily they will pick it up. The brain is very malleable in young children, meaning that they can easily grasp a new language and learn it right alongside their first language.