Episodios

  • 経営者のコスプレをするための主要キーワード解説
    Jan 20 2026

    This episode explores the phenomenon of “cosplay executives” in online business culture, where language replaces substance. It shows how polished endings, polite phrases, and trendy buzzwords create the image of leadership without real experience. Terms like KPI, LTV, PL, BS, and PMF become costumes, not tools, while phrases such as “let me,” “I think,” and “thank you for reaching out” manufacture authority and demand. By combining vocabulary and tone, anyone can sound strategic without accountability. The episode asks why this culture spread, how it rewards appearance over practice, and why real credibility must come from experience, responsibility, and consistent thinking.

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    9 m
  • なぜ人は“サラリーマンの苦労”を神話にしたがるのか ― 自己正当化としての人生ストーリー
    Jan 19 2026

    This episode explores a deep human instinct: the need to believe our lives were not wasted. When reality feels like placement rather than choice, we create stories to protect ourselves. In Japan, corporate life is often justified through narratives of endurance, communication, and moral virtue, turning adaptation into righteousness. Skills that only function inside companies are expanded into “social ability” to preserve meaning. This is not deception but psychological defense. The problem arises when one story dominates and judges others as inferior. The episode invites listeners to see how survival narratives shape values, and why respecting different paths matters today.

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    9 m
  • 継続教という宗教──なぜ「続けているだけの人」が崇拝されるのか
    Jan 18 2026

    This episode questions the modern belief that persistence is always virtuous. Continuation began as a practical means to reach goals, yet it has quietly become a moral standard that replaces substance with duration. We explore how society rewards stability, low risk, and frictionless behavior, while undervaluing bold attempts and one-time achievements. By measuring years, frequency, and consistency, organizations can judge people without understanding their work. This creates a culture where not failing matters more than creating meaning. The talk invites listeners to reconsider whether continuing is truly strength, or simply a convenient way to avoid uncertainty, responsibility, and genuine evaluation.

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    10 m
  • 日系企業で定年まで勤め上げたいなら、狡さを徹底的に磨きなさい
    Jan 17 2026

    In this episode, I explain why “cunning” is the most important skill for surviving long term in Japanese companies. It does not mean cheating or breaking rules, but mastering subtle adaptation to an environment that values harmony and risk avoidance over truth or performance. Success is measured by how little friction you create, not how right or talented you are. I show how sincere people often take on more work and more blame, while clever employees stay invisible and safe. This strategy offers stability, but it also erodes personal meaning. Choose stability or choose meaning, but never pretend both fully.

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    10 m
  • 『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