Episodios

  • 孤独のグルメが好まれる理由
    Feb 5 2026

    In this episode, I examine why the Japanese drama *Kodoku no Gourmet* (Solitary Gourmet) has gained fans not only in Japan but also overseas. While many explain its popularity through Japanese food culture, I argue that the deeper reason lies in its lack of imposed meaning. The show offers no life lessons, no dramatic character growth, and no ideological message—it simply presents a man eating when he is hungry. In a world where people constantly feel pressure to justify choices and define purpose, this “meaning-free” design is refreshing. By placing desire without judgment, the series provides comfort to modern audiences who are exhausted by narratives demanding interpretation, success, and personal transformation.

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    8 m
  • 本は全部読まなくて良い
    Feb 4 2026

    In this episode, I reflect on the meaning of reading in the modern age. Today, we have countless ways to learn through videos, audio, and digital content, yet reading remains a uniquely demanding but valuable experience. I share my personal struggle with slow reading and my failed attempt to learn speed reading, which taught me that reading is not about absorbing every word. True reading expands imagination and allows us to experience lives and perspectives beyond our own. I also discuss why literature is essential for developing emotional flexibility and humor. Ultimately, reading is not about efficiency or memorization, but about enjoyment, discovery, and the accumulation of small moments of insight.

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    10 m
  • ニヒルと挑戦 ― 虚無主義をめぐって
    Feb 3 2026

    In this episode, I explore the relationship between nihilism and challenge from a philosophical and personal perspective. Nihilism often appears as a defensive attitude—rejecting meaning, effort, and ambition to avoid the pain of failure. Reflecting on my university days, I discuss how cynicism can become a shared escape from vulnerability and growth. Drawing on Nietzsche’s idea of creating values beyond nihilism, I argue that real strength comes from facing meaninglessness and still choosing to act. While nihilism may feel safe, it ultimately produces emptiness. True vitality emerges when we accept risk, confront uncertainty, and create our own sense of meaning through action and lived experience.

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    7 m
  • 教養本ブームという病
    Feb 2 2026

    Today’s episode explores the idea that the modern “cultured book boom” may reflect insecurity rather than genuine intellectual growth. I discuss how many people treat knowledge as an accessory for status instead of a lifelong transformation shaped by solitude, experience, and reflection. Short summaries, fast-learning promises, and efficiency-driven reading habits risk producing surface-level intelligence without depth. True culture, I argue, is not something you can acquire quickly, but something that slowly ferments through living, questioning, and confronting personal limits. This episode questions cost-performance thinking applied to learning and invites listeners to reconsider what it really means to become intellectually whole.

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    8 m
  • 安心できる人間だけが生き残る社会 ― 日本型評価システムの正体
    Feb 1 2026

    This episode explores why certain content creators quickly gain widespread support in Japan despite not making strong claims or controversial statements. The key factor is psychological safety. Audiences prefer creators who do not threaten their self-esteem, display strong desires, or create conflict. This reflects a broader Japanese social structure where stability and emotional comfort are often valued more than bold talent or strong individuality. The episode connects this pattern to corporate culture and social evaluation systems. Ultimately, success in modern Japanese media and workplaces often depends less on brilliance and more on being reliable, predictable, and socially safe for the widest possible audience.

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    9 m
  • サンクコスト社会の終焉 ― 昔は正解、今は罠
    Jan 31 2026

    This episode explores how Japanese society was once designed around sunk costs—and why that logic no longer works. In the past, lifetime employment, seniority-based pay, and steady economic growth made long-term sacrifice a rational investment. Today, those same sacrifices often become unrecoverable losses. The rules of the game have changed, but the mindset has not. By reframing sunk costs as a structural issue rather than a personal failure, this talk explains why so many people feel trapped despite “doing everything right.” The pain many experience today is not individual weakness, but a society still running on outdated assumptions.

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    7 m
  • サンクコストの呪いから自由になろう ― 職人の生き方に潜む罠
    Jan 30 2026

    This episode examines the “sunk cost trap” hidden within the admired image of the Japanese craftsman. While dedication, endurance, and unwavering commitment are often praised as virtues, they can also become mechanisms that trap individuals in paths they can no longer leave. By reframing craftsmanship not as a moral story but as a structural model, the talk explains how past investments of time, effort, and identity quietly restrict future choices. True freedom, it argues, is not denying the past but being able to discard it when necessary. The episode invites listeners to rethink pride, perseverance, and what it really means to choose freely.

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    12 m
  • ブームになるもの、ならないもの
    Jan 29 2026

    This episode explores why some things suddenly become massive trends while others never spread, regardless of their quality. Using examples like matcha drinks and capybaras, the podcast explains that popularity is not driven by deep understanding or true value, but by “design for easy participation.” Trends succeed when they feel safe, simple, visually clear, and socially low-risk to share on social media. In contrast, things that require explanation, provoke strong preferences, or feel uncertain are unlikely to go viral. The episode concludes that becoming a boom is not about superiority, but about whether something is engineered to spread effortlessly.

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    7 m