I'm not sure that very many people will be able to relate to this, but I kind of need a good vent about it, so here goes:
The whole Gaelic thing is really getting to me.
Let me start by saying that I've always been good with languages. They're sort of a hobby. I speak Spanish well, have studied Latin, and can read/be polite in several other languages. And even before I met my husband, I'd been interested in learning Gaelic, though I'd always concentrated on Irish, as there were a lot more learning resources available in my area.
I'm also a firm believer in preserving and supporting minority languages, and part of my reason for moving here, rather than having my husband move to the U.S., was that I didn't feel comfortable asking him to give up that language/cultural community.
So, I came here with the best of intentions toward learning Gaelic. And I do still want to. Most of the time. But I've become really ambivalent over the whole thing.
Mostly, I can deal with the fact that I only understand about half of the conversations that go on in our household. But, particularly when I know I'm the subject, I do sometimes get annoyed at my husband, MIL and other family members/guests. I'm sure they're not deliberately trying to exclude me, but that's sometimes how it feels.
I also find myself getting really annoyed with people who constantly ask me how my Gaelic is coming along, or tell me 'Oh, you'll have to learn Gaelic!' I just want to tell them: a) It's not coming along at all, and b) No, actually, I don't. I guess my natural stubbornness kicks in a bit.
And that's part of the problem. I really don't need to learn it. It's not as though everyone here doesn't speak English. It's not as though day-to-day business can't be and isn't generally done in English. It's not even as though there aren't plenty of people who are from here, or who've lived here for decades, and who still don't speak Gaelic themselves.
Plus, I just feel unaccountably self-conscious about it. I can't really explain it. I've never felt that way about learning any other language. But I'm just really embarrassed whenever my husband tries to get me to try Gaelic words and phrases (which, bless him, he never does in front of other people.) Part of it is simply that it's really hard! There are an awful lot of sounds that just aren't in any other language I've ever learned, and I just think 'I can't make that noise.' And also, I suppose some of it is that I've noticed people are, frankly, kind of snobby about it. They'll comment on how bad some radio presenter's Gaelic is, or how the Gaelic they teach at SMO (the Gaelic college) isn't real Gaelic, and basically make out that anyone who isn't an original, native, life-long speaker is somehow doing it wrong, or just being pretentious and trying to jump on the proverbial band-wagon.
And that's the other thing. Even though I have picked up the odd bits of conversational Gaelic, I just feel weird using them. It feels pretentious. So even when I understand if someone asks me how I am, or if I want something, or comments on the weather... it just seems so unnatural to reply in Gaelic. I feel like I'd be faking it. I'd feel pretentious. I can't really explain it any better than that.
But then, on the other side of all that, I still really do want to learn. I'd like to understand my husband and in-laws (and, someday, our children), and I know it would help my chances of getting a proper job locally. Also, on the (admittedly rather rare) occasions when people apologize to me for speaking Gaelic in front of me, I feel really guilty. Why should they apologize? I'm the odd one out.
So, anyway, I just needed to get that out. I don't know if anyone else has experienced anything like this or not. It's not like living in a non-English speaking country, where obviously one would expect to learn another language. And I don't know if any other UKY'ers living in Wales or NI are living in heavily Welsh or Irish-speaking families/communities. But if anyone has been through this before and has any words of wisdom or consolation, I'm all ears.