Episodios

  • マイペースという反抗 ― テンポに支配される職場で|The Quiet Rebellion of Keeping Your Own Pace
    Nov 21 2025

    In many Japanese workplaces, tempo is everything—quick reactions, instant rapport, and constant alignment with the group rhythm. Yet some people quietly refuse this pressure. This episode explores “my pace” not as laziness, but as a subtle form of resistance: the ability to stay unhurried, unprovoked, and unabsorbed by the workplace’s accelerating tempo. While naturally gentle, uncalculating people can embody this effortless pace, thinkers and observers must choose it consciously—and are often misunderstood for it. Still, protecting your own rhythm is a rare freedom in a society that fears silence. Here, “my pace” becomes a quiet rebellion—and a way to stay human.

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    8 m
  • 対面型の金融ビジネスがなぜAI時代でも生き残るのか|Why Face-to-Face Finance Survives in the Age of AI
    Nov 20 2025

    In an age dominated by AI trading and online brokerage platforms, face-to-face financial services continue to survive—and even thrive. This episode explores why. The key is not technology, but human psychology: anxiety, uncertainty, and the desire to speak with someone who “knows your life.” Elderly, affluent clients with low digital literacy form a loyal customer base, while younger generations rely on self-directed online tools. This structural gap creates a temporary equilibrium where personal advisors remain essential. Yet as generations shift, the long-term future will inevitably change. The persistence of face-to-face finance reveals more about human emotion than about markets.

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    8 m
  • 喋れない陽キャ ― ノリ社会の理想形|Silent Extroverts — The Ideal Persona in a Vibe-Driven Society
    Nov 19 2025

    In today’s Japan, social appeal is shifting from “good talkers” to “silent extroverts”—people who may not speak well, yet radiate warmth, harmlessness, and emotional ease. Their charm lies not in depth or insight but in their ability to never disturb the atmosphere. In a society that values vibes over ideas, harmony over clarity, and comfort over truth, this non-threatening persona has become an ideal. Yet when everyone avoids friction, thinking slows, silence deepens, and real change becomes impossible. This episode explores why silent extroverts thrive, how vibe-driven culture shapes behavior, and what true kindness requires: the courage to gently disrupt the air.

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    7 m
  • 軽薄という美徳 ― 痛みに耐えられない時代|The Virtue of Lightness: An Age Unable to Bear Pain
    Nov 18 2025

    Modern Japan increasingly celebrates “lightness” — easy conversation, gentle humor, and the avoidance of conflict. What was once a criticism, keihaku (superficial lightness), has quietly become a social virtue. People are exhausted by heavy words: justice, responsibility, hope, commitment. Instead, they seek pleasant moods, smooth interactions, and emotional comfort. Yet this cultural preference has a cost. In spaces dominated by lightness, silence cannot grow, depth disappears, and real pain is avoided rather than shared. In this episode, we explore why lightness became a survival strategy, how it shapes communication, and why true kindness sometimes requires the courage to endure discomfort.

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    9 m
  • 脳筋という鏡──日本社会に残る「直線的エネルギー」の正体|A Study of Japan’s Linear Energy and Identity
    Nov 17 2025

    Here, I explore the cultural meaning behind the Japanese term nōkin—literally “muscle brain.”

    Often used as a light insult, the word reveals far more about Japan’s social psychology than it seems. From sports-team hierarchies to workplace obedience, “muscle-brained” behavior reflects discipline, loyalty, and a straightforward energy that still shapes Japanese society. Yet the label also exposes fragile pride, identity, and our fear of being categorized by others. Beyond stereotypes, nōkin represents a raw human force: the instinct to move before overthinking. This episode examines how that energy can both limit us and propel us forward.

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    9 m
  • バブル世代の小利口ぶり──日本衰退の本質|How a “Clever” Generation Slowed Japan’s Future
    Nov 16 2025

    Japan’s bubble generation grew up in an age of abundance, stability, and guaranteed rewards—lifetime employment, seniority-based promotion, and generous pensions. This environment produced a uniquely “clever” survival style: avoid conflict, read the atmosphere, joke through tension, and never take on real responsibility. While harmless on the surface, this small-minded pragmatism slowly froze Japan’s institutions and contributed to decades of economic stagnation. Younger generations now face high burdens, shrinking opportunities, and a collapsing social contract. In this episode, we explore why the bubble generation behaved as it did, how the system shaped them, and what today’s youth must learn—and abandon—to build a future of their own.

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    8 m
  • サラリーマンは能力で出世しない——“権力の匂い”を嗅ぎ分ける野生の本能
    Nov 15 2025

    This episode explores the real engine behind corporate promotion in Japan: not skill, not logic, but a primal instinct to sense power. Shigeki argues that those who “smell” hierarchy—who instantly detect who must be pleased, avoided, or feared—advance faster than the educated or rational. In contrast, highly literate people lose because they rely on correctness rather than instinct. Through dark humor and social critique, the episode examines why power-sensing cannot be learned in adulthood and why Japan’s corporate world rewards wild intuition over competence. A sharp look into the inverted logic shaping Japan’s salaryman society.

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    10 m
  • 芸能知性の時代――思考なき言葉が社会を支配する|The Age of Celebrity Intelligence — How Thoughtless Words Rule Society
    Nov 14 2025

    This episode explores the rise of “celebrity intelligence” in Japan—an age where entertainers speak as if they were thinkers, and fast, pleasant words replace real thought. Shigeki examines how media blurred the line between entertainment and philosophy, turning instant reactions into a substitute for genuine intellect. As silence disappears and speed becomes the new standard of “smart,” society trades depth for comfort. People no longer think; they consume the feeling of understanding. This episode asks: What happens to a culture when performance overtakes thought? And how can we reclaim the space to think slowly, responsibly, and deeply once more?

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    8 m