Hello and welcome to a weekend episode of Daily English — where we try to grow, in English and in life.

Today I want to show you something a little uncomfortable — but very human.  The illusion of understanding.

Most of us feel that we understand many things. How something works. Why something happens. What something means.

But this feeling can be misleading. Because understanding is not the same as
 familiarity.

We often recognize an idea, a word, or a process —and that recognition creates a sense of confidence.

But if we try to explain it clearly, step by step, something interesting happens. The understanding becomes less certain.

Gaps begin to appear. Details become unclear. And what felt obvious suddenly feels incomplete.

Psychologists have studied this effect. People are often confident in their knowledge — until they are asked to explain it in detail. This doesn’t mean we know nothing.But it shows something important: We often understand things less deeply than we think.

The mind is efficient. It stores simplified versions of ideas.

Enough to recognize them. Enough to talk about them.But not always enough to fully explain them.

And most of the time, this works. We move through the world without needing complete understanding.

But there is a subtle risk. When we feel certain, we stop questioning. And when we stop questioning, we stop learning.

So this weekend, you might try something simple. Choose something you feel you understand.

And ask yourself: “Could I explain this clearly to someone else?”

Not perfectly. But honestly. Because sometimes, clarity doesn’t come from knowing more —but from seeing where our understanding ends. Thank you for being here today. See you tomorrow.