π Companion Materials
For Your KML Journey
To walk with KML is to notice patterns, emotions, and rhythm.
Every kanji you meet has a heartbeat β shaped by stroke, sound, and story.
These companion tools help you explore the art and memory behind each lesson.
π 1. Remembering the Kanji β James Heisig
This classic text inspired the idea that kanji can be remembered through meaning and imagery.
KML builds upon that insight β adding emoji emotion cues, stroke animations,
and AI-guided storytelling to deepen long-term recall.
A long-standing community of Heisig learners. You can browse shared mnemonics and compare memory stories
β a good place to see how others visualize meaning before crafting your own.
βοΈ 3. Calligraphy & Stroke Practice Tools
- Use a physical brush pen such as Tombow Fudenosuke for expressive motion and line control.
- Or try Zen Brush 3 for a meditative digital brush experience β ideal for visualizing stroke flow before animation practice.
π§ 4. Japanese Audio & Immersion
- JapanesePod101 β Audio lessons from beginner to advanced
- NHK Easy News β Read and listen to real news in simplified Japanese
- Tandem / HelloTalk β Chat with native speakers; use kanji youβve learned in context
π§ 5. Your Personal βAh-ha!β Notebook
Keep a small notebook or digital memo where you record:
- new emoji-kanji connections,
- stroke-order surprises,
- story ideas that suddenly make a kanji βclick.β
These flashes of recognition are what transform study into memory.