This post became EXTRAORDINARILY long.. so I've decided to post a short version first for the people who only care about the main points and don't want any explanation. 
Edit: Oh yeah, this is in response to the "So what exactly did you do?" question from the incredibly derailed Benny Lewis thread.
My philosophy-- 習うより慣れろ Don't study, get used to it. It's like AJATT without the system. Also- don't forget the hard work. Languages cannot be mastered in any length of time without the proper application of hard work. I didn't *DO* AJATT but I stole some ideas. The biggest two being 1. "Just Do It" and 2. "Do what you love anyway. Just do it in Japanese."
It took me 2 years and 10 months to pass the N1 with a 94%.
Sept '08 - June '09: College classes only. Some listening to music for pronunciation practice. Genki 1.
→Could only do what is in Genki 1.
Study Time: ~1 hour/day.
June '09 - Sept '09: Found AJATT. Did RTK1 and Tae Kim. Read "All About Particles." Language exchange penpals. Watching dramas, anime and podcasts for listening.
→Could understand basic conversational Japanese, read several hundred kanji.
Study Time: 3 ~ 4 hours/day. +600 cards in Anki.
Sept '09 - June '10
Back to school. No time so classes as main. Genki 2. An Integrated Approach to Intermediate Japanese. Final Fantasy 13 in Japanese. Began 1 novel.. very slowly.
→Could produce surprisingly natural Japanese and converse.. in text. Read ~half of RTK1's Kanji. Listening and Speaking terrible.
Study Time: 1 ~ 3 hours/day. +2 Textbooks into Anki.
June '10 - Sept '10
Pre-Study Abroad free time. Read 4 novels. Replayed FF13. Watched more drama/anime. Conversed online with Japanese university friends.
→Could almost read dictionary-free. Could write equivalent of college-level essay with correction. Listening and Speaking still terrible.
Study Time: 5 ~ 7 hours/day. +3011 cards in Anki.
Oct '10 - Aug '11
Study Abroad in Kobe. Read 2 novels. Read a lot of newspapers. Had a good teacher for reading/writing. Discovered 飲むニケーション. Watched all of One Piece. Took N1 in early July in Osaka.
→Could read non-technical material dictionary-free. Could converse about topics not too advanced but still a little awkward. Could write college level essays. Listening OK. 100% Japanese entertainment both possible and highly enjoyable.
Study Time: "Study"- 3 ~ 4 hours but lived mainly in Japanese thanks to summer cram. +3100 cards in Anki.
Last paragraph from the long post:
"My Japanese took its final huge jump AFTER I returned to the US but this post is long enough already. I may explain in depth later when I'm feeling masochistic but here's the short version:
Found FC2 Live. Read 7.5 more novels. Read newspaper every day. Played 5 games in Japanese. Went through job hunting, a break-up, and a fairly nasty period of self reflection- all in Japanese."
That's about it.
Passing N1 in December was probably possible but, as I explain in the long post, no one had clued me in to the fact that passing the N1 with a high score was a fairly rare feat and I was determined to make over 160 points or force myself to take it again. Of course I'll never know.. and I don't really care!
Now it's been 5 years and 1 month and I'm ok calling myself bilingual.

Edit: Oh yeah, this is in response to the "So what exactly did you do?" question from the incredibly derailed Benny Lewis thread.
My philosophy-- 習うより慣れろ Don't study, get used to it. It's like AJATT without the system. Also- don't forget the hard work. Languages cannot be mastered in any length of time without the proper application of hard work. I didn't *DO* AJATT but I stole some ideas. The biggest two being 1. "Just Do It" and 2. "Do what you love anyway. Just do it in Japanese."
It took me 2 years and 10 months to pass the N1 with a 94%.
Sept '08 - June '09: College classes only. Some listening to music for pronunciation practice. Genki 1.
→Could only do what is in Genki 1.
Study Time: ~1 hour/day.
June '09 - Sept '09: Found AJATT. Did RTK1 and Tae Kim. Read "All About Particles." Language exchange penpals. Watching dramas, anime and podcasts for listening.
→Could understand basic conversational Japanese, read several hundred kanji.
Study Time: 3 ~ 4 hours/day. +600 cards in Anki.
Sept '09 - June '10
Back to school. No time so classes as main. Genki 2. An Integrated Approach to Intermediate Japanese. Final Fantasy 13 in Japanese. Began 1 novel.. very slowly.
→Could produce surprisingly natural Japanese and converse.. in text. Read ~half of RTK1's Kanji. Listening and Speaking terrible.
Study Time: 1 ~ 3 hours/day. +2 Textbooks into Anki.
June '10 - Sept '10
Pre-Study Abroad free time. Read 4 novels. Replayed FF13. Watched more drama/anime. Conversed online with Japanese university friends.
→Could almost read dictionary-free. Could write equivalent of college-level essay with correction. Listening and Speaking still terrible.
Study Time: 5 ~ 7 hours/day. +3011 cards in Anki.
Oct '10 - Aug '11
Study Abroad in Kobe. Read 2 novels. Read a lot of newspapers. Had a good teacher for reading/writing. Discovered 飲むニケーション. Watched all of One Piece. Took N1 in early July in Osaka.
→Could read non-technical material dictionary-free. Could converse about topics not too advanced but still a little awkward. Could write college level essays. Listening OK. 100% Japanese entertainment both possible and highly enjoyable.
Study Time: "Study"- 3 ~ 4 hours but lived mainly in Japanese thanks to summer cram. +3100 cards in Anki.
Last paragraph from the long post:
"My Japanese took its final huge jump AFTER I returned to the US but this post is long enough already. I may explain in depth later when I'm feeling masochistic but here's the short version:
Found FC2 Live. Read 7.5 more novels. Read newspaper every day. Played 5 games in Japanese. Went through job hunting, a break-up, and a fairly nasty period of self reflection- all in Japanese."
That's about it.
Passing N1 in December was probably possible but, as I explain in the long post, no one had clued me in to the fact that passing the N1 with a high score was a fairly rare feat and I was determined to make over 160 points or force myself to take it again. Of course I'll never know.. and I don't really care!
Now it's been 5 years and 1 month and I'm ok calling myself bilingual.
Edited: 2013-10-17, 5:50 am


