Slice of Life

DATS MY FACE 🙈

Hello and 你好! I'm Linda.

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I’m a novelty seeking, story loving, Chinese food obsessed CN-American gal. I was born in China (Chengdu to be purrcise), raised in Georgia, and currently live in NYC.

I’ve also been trying to “get better” at Chinese for the better part of a decade.

Even though my parents spoke Chinese to me at home, I could only read a handful of characters (一,二,三,个 ...etc) by the time college rolled around. By then, I’d finally gotten over my aversion to Chinese school, and immediately signed up for my first official Chinese course.

After several semesters of intensive classes (and more than a few sleepless nights), the prospect of being able to read Chinese — which before seemed like an unattainable dream — seemed within reach!

In the years since since graduating, however, I hit a plateau.

PRO TIP: When stuck…eat ramen. It won’t help you get unstuck, but it’ll make you feel better!

PRO TIP: When stuck…eat ramen. It won’t help you get unstuck, but it’ll make you feel better!

Without the time and structure offered by college courses (and exam deadlines), I was constantly frustrated (ashamed, really) by my lack of progress (or worse, regression). Maybe I just didn’t have “it”: the self discipline, the gift for language, the time...

I started drawing Panda Cub Stories because I wanted learning Chinese to be a joy — instead of a chore.

I always remembered things better if I doodled them down. A year later, these Chinese character doodles (and this little fuzzy panda cub) have brought joy, giggles, and learning to not just me — but thousands of readers on the Panda Cub Stories Instagram!

I’m so incredibly grateful to be able to share my language learning journey with all of you.

欢迎 aboard ❤️

Linda and Panda

How Many Characters (Do I need to read Chinese)?

OVER 9000!!!!! 

…is not the answer to dis question🙅🏻‍♀️

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F O O T N O T E S:

1 Actual estimates are closer to 50,000 characters. In reality, though, the vast majority of these characters have fallen out of use. A college educated Chinese person will know an average of 8000 characters, but a grasp of 2-3000 characters will let you read serious newspapers (like…Economist level serious). Source BBC (link).

2 Note that these percentages assume conversational proficiency in spoken Chinese (Mandarin, Cantonese, etc).

3 A solid grasp of about 100 characters will allow you text (with the aid of emojis) in your family WeChat/whatsapp! Source: author’s own Xperience🙃

5. These percentages were adapted from @yoyochinese