You know my story with German is quite long. I had that language as a subject when I was in middle school and high school but I never really paid much attention to it. You know it was like, learn, pass the exam, forget. I had good grades from German but due to the fact I was learning it only for the purpose of passing exams I didn't learn much. However, I came back to it last year and I started from the beginning. I have a lot to learn but you know I mainly do it for work purposes. In my job you get paid more if you know the second language. And who knows maybe I will move to Germany one day.
I also used to learn French when I was at the university but it was just basics. Anyway, I left the university after a year as it wasn't something for me. I studied Business English but to my surprise, we only had one subject about business. The rest was just matters associated with the history of English, its structure etc. Just basic philology. I'm not saying it was something bad as I learned a lot of things about languages in general and things I wouldn't be able to learn on courses or something. So I don't regret that one year I spent at the university but it wasn't something for me. German is nice because it's very logical. It's like mathematics.
Generally, I want to speak three foreign languages. Now, I'm focused on German and after German I would like to learn either Russian or Swedish. I heard that if you know English and German, Swedish is very easy to learn. And Russian will be easy for me to learn as it's similar to Polish.
Generally slavic languages are very close to each other and I love that about them.