Episodios

  • 『今からでも間に合う』という語り口が、なぜ危険なのか
    Jan 16 2026

    In this episode, I explain why the phrase “it’s not too late” is often dangerous. Although it sounds hopeful and encouraging, it is usually a psychological trigger designed to rush decisions and stop critical thinking. It ignores market structure, timing, and real risks, and later shifts all responsibility onto individuals when things fail. I show how this language is commonly used in business, self-help, side hustles, and AI trends to stimulate anxiety and urgency. Truly valuable opportunities are rarely loud, simple, or urgent. They are slow, uncertain, and often invisible at first. What we need is not hope, but a calm understanding of time and structure.

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    8 m
  • なぜ日本では理念のために死が語られにくいのか
    Jan 15 2026

    In this episode, I explore why modern Japan rarely creates stories of people who die for abstract ideals such as nations, religions, or grand principles. Rather than criticizing or praising this tendency, I describe it as a structural feature of Japanese society. Everyday life, family, work, and immediate responsibilities are valued more highly than distant ideologies. This makes radical nationalism and heroic sacrifice less likely, but it also makes strong national narratives harder to build. Japan becomes quieter, slower, and sometimes vague, yet relatively safe. This episode reflects on how choosing concrete life over abstraction has shaped a peaceful society.

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    7 m
  • 欲望を持ってはいけない、ではなく、欲望を“見せてはいけない”社会
    Jan 14 2026

    In this episode, I explore how desire is treated in Japanese society. Desire itself is not forbidden, but showing it openly is. People are expected to hide their personal wants behind harmless stories such as “self-growth,” “learning,” or “contributing to society.” As a result, only “odorless” and safe desires are allowed to appear in public. I discuss how this creates a culture where people who seem to have no desire are valued, even though real desire never disappears. It is simply pushed underground and disguised. This episode asks whether a society that avoids speaking honestly about desire can truly preserve a sense of life and authenticity.

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    9 m
  • 仕事ができるとは何か──評価されない時間に耐えられなくなった社会
    Jan 13 2026

    In this episode, I examine what “being good at work” really means in a world where most labor cannot be measured by numbers. Office work is judged through vague impressions rather than clear results, yet these evaluations still shape careers. I argue that today’s problem is not inaccurate evaluation, but the fact that people can no longer wait for it. In an unstable economy, self-promotion and performance become survival strategies. As a result, acting competent often matters more than being competent. This is not a moral failure of individuals, but a structural change in how modern white-collar society rewards visibility, speed, and self-branding over patience and substance.

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    11 m
  • セレブが憎まれない時代の構造
    Jan 12 2026

    In this episode, I examine why modern “celebrity business owners” and flow-based entrepreneurs no longer provoke class anger, but are instead consumed as entertainment. By comparing flow businesses that survive on constant energy and hype with stock businesses built on trust and accumulation, I explore how inequality is transformed into a story rather than a conflict. Luxury, power, and hierarchy become fantasy, not something to question. When class difference is turned into drama, anger fades and hope replaces it. This episode argues that entertainment quietly neutralizes social tension, not through force or ideology, but by converting structural inequality into something we admire, enjoy, and even dream of joining someday.

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    9 m
  • 人生に意味があることが前提になっている自己啓発屋の語りは、信用すべきではない
    Jan 11 2026

    In this episode, I question the way self-help culture assumes that life must always have meaning. Many motivational messages begin with the promise that your struggles are meaningful and your life is destined for purpose. While this sounds kind, it can quietly become dangerous. It excludes those who cannot find meaning in their experiences and turns uncertainty into failure. I argue that meaning is not guaranteed, and that honest thinking must start from that uncertainty. When “meaning” is treated as a product that can be sold, people begin to outsource their own lives. This episode explores why such comforting stories deserve careful skepticism.

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    7 m
  • 自己責任で生き残れる人が増えるほど、自己責任では生き残れない人が声を持てなくなる社会
    Jan 10 2026

    In this episode, I examine a paradox of modern society: as more people succeed through personal responsibility, those who cannot survive by that logic gradually lose their voice. Self-reliance, effort, and competition are not wrong, and they have created many capable and independent individuals. However, when a society is designed only around self-responsibility, structural problems are translated into personal failure. People facing health issues, family burdens, mental strain, or simple bad timing become invisible. What appears efficient on the surface slowly accumulates distortion beneath it. This episode argues that a sustainable society needs both freedom to compete and systems that protect dignity when competition fails.

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    9 m
  • カピバラはなぜ現代の人気者になったのか
    Jan 9 2026

    In this episode, I explore why capybaras have become unexpected icons of comfort in modern society. Their popularity is not simply about cuteness, but about what they represent. Unlike traditional “healing” figures or mascots that carry roles, messages, or expectations, capybaras do nothing and ask for nothing. They offer no lessons, no encouragement, and no meaning. In a world that constantly demands opinions, productivity, and purpose, this complete lack of obligation feels deeply reassuring. This episode examines capybaras as a symbol of a society exhausted by meaning—and explains why “doing nothing” has quietly become a form of value today.

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    8 m
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