Youtube comments of Robopecha (@robopecha).
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the whole underpopulation thing in japan, i dont know why its so hard to understand for the japanese government and why they dont do anything about it.
in the past: men were working all day (and night) and women stayed at home and raised the kids.
not ideal, not everyone was happy, but it worked out.
today: women are working the same as men, no one has any free time, no families are happening.
not everyone will be happy with this in the long run, but women find the work thing more important, because its change and change needs to happen. but its a halfhearted change.
you cant look to other countries and see that everyone is working there, you also have to look at HOW it is working there. and people in western countries work under different circumstances, different hours, its a different mind set.
japan will have to find its own way, but as long as nothing changes, there will be less children. its pretty simple.
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hi! i am from germany, i have one younger sister and in my family no one ever tells anyone that they love them. it would be very weird. it is more like, "of course we love each other, why would we say that???" if you know what i mean :D we hug each other when we see each other. i see them maybe a few times a year. my sister calls my parents i think once every week or maybe two weeks, i call far less, maybe every two month, but i expect them to tell me if something special happens. my mom is texting me though, if she finds something interesting or wants to show me something. which is nice and you dont have to talk a lot about random things :)
i think i always wanted a more loving family, but there are so many things factoring into this. like my mom was there too much! she was always trying to get involved with everything i told her, which was horrible as a teenager. so i started to tell her less about myself.
i really hope that in the future japanese families will be closer and spend more time with each other. not knowing your father although you live with him seems totally absurd. if men dont want kids, they shouldnt have kids. and if you want kids, then you also want to spend time with them. right?
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i like what you mention in the end, because that is what i am always thinking. i am in/from europe and i feel like we are so much more individualistic here than every american i ever talk to. in the US you have to be nice to everyone, you have to have a community, you have to adapt, you have to be likable, because you never know if something happens, like losing your job, your home or getting sick, and you need someone's help.
here in europe my health and education is being paid for and if i have no job i can still keep living like a normal person, just without luxuries or traveling. i do not have to be nice to anyone or adapt to anything (except the law), i do not NEED another person in my life that i don't want there. i never thought about europe as being collectivist. that is something that happens in parts of asia.
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it is such an important topic.
i (german) ALWAYS need my own blanket (duvet! down filling!), would never share it with anybody, because i have my own way of tucking myself in and i also would prefer having a separate mattress, because of movements.. honestly, i prefer to sleep alone.
my best sleeping experience was when i was in japan and stayed in a tatami room. it was just perfect.
since i moved to berlin 12 years ago, i am sleeping just on a mattress on the floor, because i like being close to the ground. boxspring beds look scary to me, just the thought of having to sleep on one freaks me out.
the american bed sizing seems like a joke. why would you call the smallest one twin and not the actual two person one.. twins are two people and will likely not share the smallest mattress.
if i am in a hotel with just sheets on the bed i ask for a duvet.
oh, and i sleep with windows closed. yeah its a german thing to open windows everywhere, as soon as you enter a room or train. i hate that, its like people are conditioned to actually suffocate just by the sight of closed windows. i dont like air moving around me or hearing noises from outside and i feel safer in a closed room. doors have to be closed as well.
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ok, i (german) remember we had sex ed in school in 3rd grade, in 5th and then later again (7th, 8th or 9th?). and that was in the 80s/early 90s. my parents were always open about those things, but i also remember learning a lot of sexual words from other kids in elementary school that i had never heard before. and that was a time before internet, so i guess those were the kids with older siblings (which i don't have). when i was hitting puberty my mom gave me a book as well, it was a really cool one with a cartoon style (classic 80s...) and lots of information, after reading that i knew everything. and bravo was a really big thing of course, i think from when i was in 5th/6th grade everybody was reading it. back then they did not have any nude pictures, it was just people's questions, but it taught us a lot about relationships and what others would expect from you and all those things you are wondering about during that time.
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