March Spring Cleaning: Beginner Series Updates and Blog Refresh

Håfa Adai everyone, yan Biba Mes Chamoru! I just wanted to share a few quick updates: this March, I’m doing a little “spring cleaning” on the blog! You might notice some changes: I’m tightening up post titles, standardizing beginner lesson formats, adding clearer front-and-back navigation at the bottom of lessons to make the learning path easier to follow, and updating older lessons so they match the style and clarity of our current content. I also realized that some of our first lessons are missing audio—sorry about that! We’re recording those drills and will have them up soon. On top of that, we’re designing a new landing page to make it easier to find your way around the site. All of this is part of our focus this month on completing the full beginner series, so if things look a little different as you browse, now you know why.

Thanks for following along, and happy studying! See you in the next lesson!

2025: Un Dångkulu na Si Yu’us Ma’åse!

We know it has been quiet here on the blog and in our practice groups as we take time for a family loss, and we so appreciate everyone’s patience and understanding. But as 2025 comes to a close, we wanted to say Un Dångkulu Na Si Yu’us Ma’åse to all of you – our Saturday practice groups, our readers on the blog and all our supporters. It is so inspiring for us to see all the time, care and effort you put into learning the Chamorro language. We’d like to take a moment to share a mini recap of the year, along with a few shoutouts:

Blog Views: This year the blog reached over 97,000 98,000 total views, which has left us absolutely staggered! We know that learning Chamorro in adulthood can be a huge challenge, so it’s exciting to know that our passion project here on the blog might be helping you on your journey.

Virtual Tip Jar: We’d also like to extend a heartfelt Si Yu’us Ma’åse to everyone who has supported us through our Buy Me A Coffee page. Every contribution goes directly back into sustaining this blog and into the tools that help us do this work more efficiently. Please know that your support truly goes a long way, and we appreciate each and every one of you. And dångkulu na kulu to our monthly subscribers nanayanneni, Lenika Cruz, Jake, Jaynina, Ungacta, and Frankt! We are so humbled by your monthly support 💛

Saturday Practice Groups: A large chunk of what we do here is inspired by our Saturday practice groups. The content on the blog and our own learning would not be the same without these spaces or the people who show up for them. Many of us have been gathering in these spaces for years, and a few of us have been together since the beginning. In agradesi hamyu

Lessons and Notes: In 2025, I experimented more with learning directly from the language itself—by observing patterns—rather than relying so heavily on grammar texts, as I had in the past. This shift has made learning Chamorro feel more natural and it has significantly broadened how and what I learn. As a result, the lessons on this blog are subtly evolving to reflect this new approach and I’m really excited about all the new content ahead😊

2026: As a look ahead, Jay and I plan to focus more intentionally on our lesson content, with the goal of finally completing our beginner series. We also recognize that learning works best when it’s interactive, so we’ll be exploring ways to build in more engagement—using thoughtful learning design while keeping our approach sustainable and scalable. And in the background I’ll be ramping up my transcription and data collection efforts. Other than that, it will be work as usual on the blog and in our practice groups 🙂


Un dångkulu na Si Yu’us Ma’åse everyone! And here’s to another year ahead of learning and using the Chamorro language😊. Remember to be kind to yourself, patient on your journey, and to keep going. We got this!

My Deep Gratitude To All Of You

I want to take a moment and give a Si Yu’us Ma’åse – thank you – to everyone here, in our online Chamorro language learning community. We see all the activity here on this blog and in our practice groups, and it never fails to leave us in awe to see so many people persisting in learning and using the Chamorro language. In this post I want to give some specific shout-outs and highlights from the past few months:

Blog Activity

We are only 3 months into the year, and this site has logged over 21,000 views and over 31,000 audio downloads from across the world, mostly from the States, Guam, and the CNMI. I am staggered and honored that this blog can be part of your learning journeys. Thank you for being part of our online learning community, and for everything you do to learn our language and make Chamorro part of your lives.

Tip Jar and Gifts

THANK YOU to everyone who has contributed to this blog with gifts, either directly on the site or on our digital tip jar! Everything you give us supports our efforts to create more digital materials and tools on this blog. I want to offer some specific shout-outs:

  • To the incredibly generous person who gifted my WordPress subscription, un dångkulu na si Yu’us ma’åse! Thank you for your gift, this ensures that the site will continue to host all of our content, ad-free, through August 2026.
  • To those who have contributed through our online tip jar, I am both honored and humbled by your generosity. A big thank you to Patliz, amanda.merriweather, Frankt, TJ, Lawrence Cruz, Janinacam_, Agradesimento, profchat4us, SYM!!!, Mary Clement, and all the anonymous donors. Un dångkulu na si Yu’us ma’åse!
  • To my first monthly supporter profchat4us, un dångkulu na si Yu’us ma’åse! Thank you for believing in our work here enough to want to offer your monthly support.

Online Practice Groups

After a break at the end of 2024 for the December holidays, our online Chamorro practice groups started up again in early January and have been going strong since then. Jay and I have been guiding our groups through some difficult content, and everyone continues to do an awesome job.

Some highlights from the past 3 months include:

  • Praktikan Ogga’an: We started the year reading a book about Chamorro food to expand our cooking vocabulary. Then we switched gears for Guam’s Mes Chamoru to read I Derechon I Taotao by Rosa Salas Palomo, followed by the historical fiction piece Håyi Mansakke? by Brigida D.L. Guerrero. These are some of the longest and most complicated texts we’ve ever read together, offering great opportunities for expanding our vocabulary and grammar.
  • Praktikan Pupuengi: Jay continues to lead our Saturday evening practice group with listening comprehension activities on a selection of songs exclusively from Daniel De Leon Guerrero. Since this shift in song selection, we’ve transcribed and translated 21 of his songs and have 15 left to go before we refresh our song list. For our longtime members, we are really seeing improvement in listening comprehension. Biba hamyu!

If you are interested in joining our groups, please fill out the contact form to express interest.

Other Work

PISACON 2025: Jay and I led a workshop at this year’s PISACON (Pacific Islander Student Alliance Conference), held at the University of Washington in Seattle in late March. In our workshop titled Our Words, Like Waves: Reclaiming Our Pacific Languages in the Diaspora, we guided students representing islands from across the Pacific through our four pillars for learning and reclaiming our languages. We covered topics like the impacts of colonization, the importance of resilience, intuitive learning approaches, and the role of community. The opportunity to present our work to a wider Pasifika / Pacific Islander audience was an incredible and deeply emotional experience for both of us, and we feel so honored to have been part of this conference.

Chamorro Parsing Workshop: We also attended a virtual workshop hosted by Dr. Sandra Chung and Dr. David Ruskin about using technology for parsing Chamorro words (aka: finding the root words of transformed words). I presented my Chamorro dictionary work for this blog and also learned more about the other online Chamorro dictionary efforts and the current parsing tool. This was an introductory gathering, and I was thrilled at the number of speakers who spoke in Chamorro, weighing in with their thoughts and concerns around our various efforts. Lexicon expansion, text mining, and the potential of algorithms and / or machine learning for creating or enhancing language learning tools has long been an interest for me. But the gathering prompted me to consider prioritizing these projects that have been at the back of my mind since grad school.

Final Thoughts

It has been a packed first few months to start this year, and I’m looking forward to working on language projects and continuing to make headway in our practice groups. In the coming months it will just be heads-down as we continue with our practice groups and putting more content on the blog (including the rest of the transcripts for the Fanékungok Yan Si Dabit podcast), now that things should be slowing down.

Again, un dångkulu na si Yu’us ma’åse todus hamyu! Keep going in your learning journeys, don’t give up 🙂

Virtual One-on-One Chamorro Language Lessons Now Available

Our Saturday practice group finished reading and translating I Derechon i Taotao this morning, which means there is no new story for this week. I have also noticed a huge spike in views and audio downloads on the blog – Un dångkulo na si Yu’os ma’åse todus hamyo! A big thank you to all of you! It is truly a beautiful thing to see so much activity on this blog, which shows how much people are wanting to learn and use our language.

There are also some people who have reached out to me directly, wanting to know how they can learn Chamorro. If you are interested in group practice and study, you are more than welcome to join our Saturday (PST) practice groups on Zoom. Just fill out the Contact Form to express interest.

But if you are looking for something more personalized, there is a new and unique learning resource now available: Individual Chamorro language instruction for adult language learners, offered by our friend Jesus Lujan. He is based on Guam but offers instruction virtually, which is an incredible opportunity for anyone off-island to receive personalized Chamorro language help from a trustworthy teacher. Whether you are needing more conversation practice or are starting from level zero, his sessions can be a great support in reaching your Chamorro language goals. And if you would like to learn with a group, he also offers group discounts. Contact him today to secure your spot!

Shop Announcement! Chamorro Greeting Cards

Håfa Adai everybody! I am so excited to announce that I have launched my online greeting card shop at www.bulaguinaiya.com. This idea has been years in the making, and it’s truly fulfilling to breathe life into it at last. All the greeting cards feature sentiments written in Chamorro, with the English translation given on the back of every card. And each card is designed, printed, cut, folded and packaged by me! Whether you’re celebrating a special milestone or just looking to brighten someone’s day, I’ve made cards for every occasion. We launched this business last week at the Marianas Festival in Oregon and are looking forward to making more cards and stationery products for our community. As a thank-you to my readers here, please use the code LENGGUAHITA at check-out for a discount on your order, valid through December 31, 2024 🙂