“The Little Flock Goes to the Sky” A song that cannot be translated. But it can be felt.
30.08.2025
English for Job Interviews: How an Online Tutor Helps You Succeed
31.08.2025

31.08.2025

Tymur Levitin
Tymur Levitin
Teacher of the Department of Translation. Professional certified translator with experience in translating and teaching English and German. I teach people in 20 countries of the world. My principle in teaching and conducting lessons is to move away from memorizing rules from memory, and, instead, learn to understand the principles of the language and use them in the same way as talking and pronouncing sounds correctly by feeling, and not going over each one in your head all the rules, since there won’t be time for that in real speech. You always need to build on the situation and comfort.
View profile

📍 Why “Thinking in English” Is Not the Magic Key

🧠 The Myth of Thinking in English

Many language learners are told: “You need to think in English!” The idea sounds powerful — a shortcut to fluency. But is it really true? Or even helpful?

The truth is: thinking in a foreign language is not a goal — it’s a side effect. You don’t wake up one day and “start thinking in English.” It’s something that happens naturally — over time, and under the right conditions.

And sometimes, trying to “think in English” too early can even slow you down.

What Does It Really Mean to “Think in a Language”?

Let’s break this idea down.

When people say “think in English,” they usually mean:

  • speaking faster
  • not translating in your head
  • being more confident and fluent

But the real process is deeper. Thinking in a language doesn’t mean forcing yourself to not translate — it means that you’ve internalized enough patterns that your brain recognizes the logic and flow of the language. And that takes exposure, practice, and time.

What Actually Helps You Think in English

To eventually “think” in English, you need to:

  • Feel the structure of sentences
  • Understand how ideas are grouped in English
  • Recognize typical word combinations
  • Use context instead of translating every word

This is what we teach at Levitin Language School. We don’t push students to “think in English.” We help them build a foundation where thinking becomes natural — not forced.

Why the Phrase Can Be Harmful

Telling beginners to “think in English” can:

  • make them feel guilty or inadequate
  • confuse their learning process
  • block their natural use of translation as a tool
  • create unrealistic expectations

Instead, we encourage conscious learning at first, and fluid thinking comes later — when the brain is ready.

The Real Goal: Understanding and Expressing Yourself

You don’t need to “think in English” — you need to:

  • understand native speakers
  • express your own thoughts clearly
  • react in real-life situations

And you can do that using all your tools: translation, associations, comparisons, and personal logic.

We don’t chase abstract goals like “thinking in English.”
We help students use English — for real communication.

🟦 Final Thoughts

Thinking in a language is not the starting point — it’s the result. Don’t force it. Build it. Slowly, wisely, and with the right guide.

At Levitin Language School, we believe in clarity, logic, and personal learning paths. Because your fluency isn’t measured by your thoughts — it’s measured by your ability to connect.


Rubric: Myth-Busting Language Advice
Series: Language Myths Busted
Author: Tymur Levitin — Founder, Director, and Senior Instructor at Levitin Language School
Speak Free. Learn Smart.
School: Start Language School by Tymur Levitin — https://levitinlanguageschool.com
Meet the author: https://levitinlanguageschool.com/teachers/tymur-levitin/

🔗 Choose your language

Русская версия:
Миф: Чтобы свободно говорить, нужно «думать на английском»

Українська версія:
Міф: Щоб вільно говорити, потрібно «думати англійською»

English version:
Myth: You Need to Think in English to Be Fluent

Deutsche Version:
Mythos: Man muss auf Englisch denken, um fließend zu sprechen

Related posts:

© Author’s work by Tymur Levitin — founder, director, and head teacher of Levitin Language School / Start Language School by Tymur Levitin

Tags:


    Learning Foreign Languages ​​Online
    Easy and Affordable!

      FORM FOR A FREE TRAINING CONSULTATION

      50% DISCOUNT ON THE FIRST LESSON

      Additional fields for specifying classes

      50% DISCOUNT ON THE FIRST LESSON

      en_USEnglish