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Who Wears the Pants in Japan?
Japanese Rule of 7 ^ | 24APR2014 | Ken Seeroi

Posted on 04/25/2014 2:30:57 PM PDT by Jack Hydrazine

“Ken? Ken! Wake the hell up! Meet me at the station.”

I sat up in bed, and realized it was not my bed. Words like this are why Ken Seeroi does not answer his iPhone after 11 p.m. The dreaded Yoko was on the line, and I was in her bed. Well, at least she had a bed, and not a horrible futon like I do. Either way, I really gotta remember to turn off that ringer.

“Ah baby, I’m kind of asleep,” I mumbled, “and it’s pouring down rain.”

“I forgot my umbrella,” she said. “Bring me one.

“Yeah, just stop at 7-11. They’re like five bucks.

“Never mind,” she said. “I’ll just get wet. Forget I asked you. Don’t worry about me.

I could see where this was going, so I tried to use my sweet voice.

“Ah baby, jeez. I’ll give you the 500 yen. Just pick up a little umbrella, okay? Maybe they have a cute one,” I added, helpfully. Ken Seeroi has the voice of an angel, I tell you.

“They don’t. I hate their umbrellas. Never mind,” she said, then, “I’ve had a cold all week, but don’t worry. I worked all day, and I can walk through the rain too.

“Who hates umbrellas?” I said. “Ah jeez, when does your train get in?

“I’m boarding now. Six minutes. You should run.”

“Ah jeez,” I said, holding the phone and trying to put on my pants. I say that a lot.

“And I wanna eat grilled chicken,” she said.

“I made pasta.”

“Too many carbohydrates, and it’s late. I want chicken. Bring money,” she said, and hung up.

Two Australians Walk Into a Bar

Running to the station in the rain with two umbrellas, I wondered when my life came to be ruled by Japanese women. It’s like the Australian guys I met over Japanese beers at an Irish bar a month ago. Men with Japanese wives spend inordinate amounts of time in Irish bars, I don’t know why. Probably it’s just an Aussie thing.

“Look, they’re really sweet at first,” said the one guy to me.

“But once you’ve got married, mate, that’s it,” said the other. I wondered when they’d started completing each other’s sentences.

“Yeah, wait till they take your entire paycheck and give you an allowance.

“And good luck getting sex ever again.

“Sounds great,” I said, “where do I sign up?

“Anyway, I gotta go,” said the first guy, downing half a pint of beer in one gulp. “Wife’s gonna be mad.

“Yeah, me too,” said the second guy. “Mine’s been angry since the day we got married.” And they both laughed nervously.

They stood up to leave, when suddenly the first guy turned toward me and leaned in, like he had something vitally important to say. “You’re working for her,” he said desperately, “for the rest of your life. Remember.”

“It’s worse once you have a kid,” said the other, then they ran out the door giggling like schoolgirls.

So that was a bit unsettling. I thought maybe I’d order a gin and tonic, just to calm the old nerves, but then I remembered Yoko might be at her apartment waiting for me, so I decided to just grab a can of chu-hi and hurry to the station.

So last week, I was talking to a couple of schoolgirls who were students of mine at the junior high.

“Ken Sensei,” they chuckled, “do you like Japanese girls?

“Sure,” I said. “And Russian girls, and Kenyan girls, and girls from Antarctica. Seeroi Sensei does not discriminate.” It’s true, I’ll take anything.

“But Japanese girls are spoiled,” said the first girl.

“I thought you were supposed to be sweet and loving.

“Oh, we’re neko kaburi,” said the other girl.

“What’s that?” I asked.

And they tried to think of how to say this in English.

“Cats over?

“Putting on cats?

“Maybe, cat costume?”

The thought of hot Japanese girls in cat costumes was sounding pretty excellent, until they explained it further.

“Ah, you mean a wolf in sheep’s clothing,” I said.

“That’s right,” replied the first girl. “You should be careful, Ken Sensei. We can lie to you, you know.”

“Honestly?” I asked.

“It’s true,” they laughed, and ran away, giggling like Australian men.

The Most Surprising Thing About Japan

People often ask me, What’s the most surprising thing about Japan? It’s a good question too, since there’s a lot of strangeness in a country where a businessman drinking a can of miso soup while weaving a pink mini clown bicycle through a crowd of pedestrians isn’t remarkable. But after a few years, everything—-eating raw horse meat, that dude rubbing his ding dong in the men’s room, a girl puking into a plastic bag on the express train—-came to seem quite ordinary. But above all that, one thing came to stand out as truly surprising:

Japanese women are a lot stronger than they appear. I mean, a lot.

Everything I’d read prior to coming to Japan, and continue to read in the foreign press, is that Japanese women are docile, subservient, second to men. So this was confusing. Though to be fair, I find a lot of things confusing, so maybe it’s just me.

Life in a Japanese Family

Here’s a story I hear from half a dozen girlfriends. I mean, not that I have half a dozen girlfriends. Maybe they’re just friends of friends. There, that sounds a bit better. Anyway, Mom gets up early, makes breakfast and lunch for the family, then hustles everyone out the door with their lunchboxes. After that, she washes the sheets, scrubs the bathtub, and hangs out the towels. We’re talking real 1950’s, Leave-it-to-Beaver stuff here. Later maybe she’ll go off to a part-time job, take an English class, have an affair with her English teacher, or just meet some housewife friends for coffee and cakes. In the evening, her daughter will help her make dinner while her son lays around in his underwear with a Sony Playstation doing not a damn thing. He won’t cook, wash dishes, or do his laundry. All he has to do is pass grueling entrance exams, get into some college, and go off to work in an office for the rest of his life. The mother just tells him what to do, and he does it.

After dinner, they take their baths, and go to bed. The son maybe can’t even be bothered to take a bath, except about once a week. Around midnight, Father comes home after work, having done the usual six hours of overtime and an hour commute to find everyone asleep and dinner covered in Saran Wrap. He eats alone in front of the TV, falls asleep on the sofa, then takes his bath and goes to bed for five hours before it starts all over again the next day, often six or seven days a week.

On the surface, it might look like he’s The Man in Charge, since he’s the one wearing a suit, and gets meals and laundry done. But it comes at the exchange of his paycheck, so you gotta wonder—-who’s working for whom? Personally, between staying home doing housework or driving a desk in a sweaty Japanese office, I’d opt for the apron. Plus I’m a whiz with a feather duster, really. Here, it looks like if you’re young and reasonably attractive, you just wear painfully high heels and fake eyelashes for for a few years, then never have to work again. Retired at 22. Apparently, I missed my chance. Well, a guy can dream, at least.

Now, I don’t mean to say that women have it great in Japanese society. They don’t. Because nobody has it great. People work eighty hours a week at a diminutive table with ten other people and live in apartments that wouldn’t make a decent dorm room. Clearly, women aren’t in positions of power in companies or the government, but there’s one place they call the shots, and that’s in the home. They control the money, decide what to buy, and tell their husbands and sons what to wear, think, and how to behave.

Again, you know, I’m not trying to say this is right, only that the notion of “equality” hasn’t exactly caught on in Japan just yet. Everybody’s got a different part to play. Men bring home the money, women take care of the house, and white people teach English. Yeah, don’t get me started. So equality—-who’s got time for that? Women don’t have opportunities to pursue fulfilling careers, because Guess what? nobody does. If women are prevented from advancing in the workplace, many simply choose to opt out of that miserable situation, because, unlike men, they can.

Life on a Japanese Farm

This was all very perplexing to me until I went to the farm. I spent all day thinking about it while planting onions and digging up potatoes. Nothing like a little fresh air and dirt to get your mind right. Remind me never to do that again. All that dirt, yuck. Completely ruins your nails. Whatever. So that night I was in the farmhouse drinking beer with The Tanuki and Somebody Sensei. I call The Tanuki The Tanuki because he has giant balls. Like nuts that hang down for days, but that’s a long story, so some other time. And I call Somebody Sensei Somebody Sensei because he used to be a teacher and I can never remember his damn name, so I just gesture in his general direction whenever I need to refer to him.

Anyway, as men do, we were talking about women in between slugs of beer and supermarket sashimi. You know, Japan has amazing sashimi in every grocery store, and for cheap too. The beer’s not too shabby either. What a great country, really. Anyway, I was telling them about the half-dozen girlfriend issue.

“Know the only problem with having two wives?” asked The Tanuki.

“What?” I said.

“Two wives.

“Very funny. Well, try multiplying that by three. And they all expect me to do everything,

“Women,” said Somebody Sensei. “Can’t live with ‘em.

“Pass the beer nuts, would you?” I said, gesturing in his general direction. “And if I don’t do what they say, they either yell or pout. Is it possible to have a conversation that doesn’t devolve into passive-aggressiveness? It’s like having an argument with Gandhi.

“What’re American girls like?

“Ah, all kinds, really. But they might actually resolve issues through, you know, discussion.

“Well, Japan’s a matriarchal society.

“Say what? I thought it was the opposite. Don’t you mean ‘patriarchal’?”

The Tanuki shook his head. “Women are in charge,” he said.

“You gotta get your mind right,” said Somebody Sensei.

Rather than right, this straight blew my mind, since it was counter to everything I’d read about Japan. Thanks internet. But here were two well-respected, successful men, who also happened to be Japanese, rather than some 17 year-old Wikipedia contributor from Canada. And what they said made a lot of sense, so I asked Akiko about it.

Japan as a Matriarchal Society

Akiko’s my go-to girlfriend whenever I need to know something, since she’s smart because she’s a doctor. Plus she’s sophisticated because she drinks wine and can pronounce things like Sauvignon Blanc.

So when she came to my place for a little wine, I asked her, “Is Japan a matriarchal society?”

“I’ve never thought about it,” she said. “But baby, can you run to the store for some Sauvignon Blanc?”

“Let’s drink Chardonnay instead,” I suggested, “since I’ve got that in the fridge.”

“I don’t want Chardonnay,” she said. “Too oaky. Never mind. I’ll just drink tap water.

“It’s gotta be Sauvignon Blanc?” I can never pronounce that, actually.

“And if it has a cork, make sure you’ve got a corkscrew.

“That I have,” I said.

“Hurry back,” she said.

I hurried back. Picked up a bottle of Sauvignon Blanc with a screw top anyway, so there. Plus a bag of the delicious Calbee black pepper potato chips that I love. No one says Ken Seeroi isn’t a savvy shopper. Seriously, no one says that.

“Anyway,” I continued as I unscrewed the wine, “let’s say your parents were going to buy a new house. Who’d make the ultimate decision, your mom or dad?

“My mom. And you better not eat those Calbee chips. They’ll make you fat.

“But they’re delicious. They’re black pepper. I love them. And I thought your dad brings home the paycheck?

“True, but it’s not his; it’s the family’s.

“Does your mom give him an allowance?

“She does,” she said with a smile, and this seemed to make her happy.

“Okay,” I continued. “So if they were going to buy a car, who would decide?

“Mom.

“Furniture? Sofas and tables and stuff?

“Mom, of course.

“Washing machine? TV? Fridge? Sony Playstation?

“Probably my mom,” she said, then added, as if surprised, “Huh, Japan is matriarchal!”

“I’m having a moment of clarity,” I said.

“You should’ve bought a bottle with a cork,” she said.

Japanese Arranged Marriage

I recently ran into a couple at a sakura flower-viewing party. They’d met through a matchmaker, and told me they were planning to get married.

“I just got tired of being alone,” said the guy.

“I made up my mind to get married,” said the girl.

“So you decided to get married,” I asked, “and then you met each other?

They both nodded.

“I think we do it the other way around in the U.S.,” I said.

In talking to them, it was clear they weren’t even on a first-name basis, literally, but they understood the arrangement well enough. He’d go off and make money, and in exchange she’d provide a sort of laundry and food service. It was financial security for her, and he wouldn’t have to come home at midnight to an apartment reeking of dirty clothes and eat bowls of instant noodles until he died. It wasn’t “equality,” it wasn’t even love, but maybe it would develop into that. Anyway, it was better than nothing, and that seemed like the best deal they could make.

“Well, congratulations on your upcoming marriage,” I said.

“Yes, we’re excited,” the woman beamed. The man looked away.

“No doubt you are,” I said. “No doubt.” I repeat myself like that sometimes.

Japan, seriously. What a country. Anyway, I had a lot more to say on this subject, like about how not all women are alike and the dangers of overgeneralizing, but I’m on the train to Yoko’s house now, so I gotta polish off this chu-hi, buy some breath mints, and get running. Maybe I’ll edit it later, once I finish cooking dinner and she’s in the tub. Jeez, I should’ve picked up some flowers too. She’s gonna be mad. Well, that’s probably not gonna change anytime soon, unless I marry her like she keeps asking me to. Then I guess that’d solve all my problems. Ah jeez.


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Humor; Society; Weird Stuff
KEYWORDS: japan; pants; women
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1 posted on 04/25/2014 2:30:57 PM PDT by Jack Hydrazine
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To: Jack Hydrazine

"Ken!"

2 posted on 04/25/2014 2:34:19 PM PDT by freedumb2003 (Fight Tapinophobia in all its forms! Do not submit to arduus privilege.)
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To: Jack Hydrazine
Short answer: the women do and they know it. They are also smart enough to let the men think they do. Feminazis have always been frustrated with Japanese women refusing to seize the Alpha role.

I was at a gathering once there where a foreign feminist asked a Japanese housewife why they didn't compete with men more. She replied sweetly "We don't want to step down and give up the freedom we enjoy."

3 posted on 04/25/2014 2:36:39 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (Obama: Fake black man. Fake Messiah. Fake American. How many fakes can you fit in one Zer0?)
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To: Jack Hydrazine
Who Wears the Pants in Japan?

Gonna take a wild guess here....

The tentacles?

*runs for cover*
4 posted on 04/25/2014 2:37:38 PM PDT by RandallFlagg (Uninstall Fascist Firefox. Get Pale Moon.)
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To: Jack Hydrazine
The robots?

5 posted on 04/25/2014 2:43:07 PM PDT by Clint N. Suhks ("I can see Putin's bootprint on 0bama's ass from my house"! Sarah Palin)
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To: Jack Hydrazine

Oh, man, the stories I could tell. When I went to Japan there was a pool to see how long it would take me to get married. When I returned still single eight years later the pool was whether I was gay or not. Neither one. You just have to understand it isn’t how it appears.


6 posted on 04/25/2014 2:44:48 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: RandallFlagg

Holy crap, that’s exactly what I was going to put.


7 posted on 04/25/2014 2:48:30 PM PDT by EEGator
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To: Jack Hydrazine

The Artillery Man in War of the Worlds described a Victorian England not all that different:

All these—the sort of people that lived in these houses, and all those damn little clerks that used to live down that way—they’d be no good. They haven’t any spirit in them—no proud dreams and no proud lusts; and a man who hasn’t one or the other—Lord! What is he but funk and precautions? They just used to skedaddle off to work—I’ve seen hundreds of ‘em, bit of breakfast in hand, running wild and shining to catch their little season-ticket train, for fear they’d get dismissed if they didn’t; working at businesses they were afraid to take the trouble to understand; skedaddling back for fear they wouldn’t be in time for dinner; keeping indoors after dinner for fear of the back streets, and sleeping with the wives they married, not because they wanted them, but because they had a bit of money that would make for safety in their one little miserable skedaddle through the world.


8 posted on 04/25/2014 2:53:12 PM PDT by null and void ( They don't think think they are above the law. They think they are the law.)
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Comment #9 Removed by Moderator

To: Vigilanteman
[ I was at a gathering once there where a foreign feminist asked a Japanese housewife why they didn't compete with men more. She replied sweetly "We don't want to step down and give up the freedom we enjoy." ]

Almost sounds like Marrying a Japanese woman is like Marrying a Klingon woman....

...

"They are a clever people..."

Martok: We are not accorded the luxury of choosing the women we fall in love with. Do you think Sirella is anything like the woman I thought that I'd marry? She is a prideful, arrogant, mercurial woman, who shares my bed far too infrequently for my taste. And yet... I love her, deeply. We Klingons often tout our prowess in battle, our desire for glory and honor above all else. But how hollow is the sound of victory without someone to share it with. Honor gives little comfort to a man alone in his home... and in his heart.

..

General Martok: My Lady.

Sirella: You've put on weight, and your hair is going gray.

General Martok: My... deterioration is proceeding apace.

Sirella: I thought you would be in your grave by now.

General Martok: [laughing] I shall endeavor to die. This year, if possible.

10 posted on 04/25/2014 3:06:46 PM PDT by GraceG
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To: Jack Hydrazine

“Ah baby, I’m kind of asleep,” I mumbled, “and it’s pouring down rain.”

“I forgot my umbrella,” she said. “Bring me one.

“Yeah, just stop at 7-11. They’re like five bucks.

“Never mind,” she said. “I’ll just get wet. Forget I asked you. Don’t worry about me.

And people doubt that the Jews made it to Japan and influenced them in ancient times...

That sorta exchange would make a Jewish mother weep with pride if her daughter was a Japanese Housewife!


11 posted on 04/25/2014 3:09:08 PM PDT by GraceG
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To: F15Eagle

IIRC, most Kamikaze were college students. Employment prospects were even worse in 1945 than now, I guess.


12 posted on 04/25/2014 3:09:19 PM PDT by elcid1970
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Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

To: Jack Hydrazine
As strange as this may sound, the setup has the practical effect of making all Japanese children be the product of single-mother households, with all the symptoms and results that one sees in such households in the US--but with two major differences. First, the woman gets her money, not from the government, but from her husband's work, so even though she may be passive-aggressive, she knows she can't just walk away and try to go it on her own--and she doesn't expect the other Japanese taxpayers to subsidize her lifestyle. Second, she knows she has to get the sons to finish their education and go into successful careers, otherwise they'll turn into otaku, young men who lock themselves up in their bedrooms 24/7 and never leave home, so there isn't the laissez-faire let-'em-run-the-streets attitude one unfortunately finds here too often.
14 posted on 04/25/2014 3:21:18 PM PDT by chajin ("There is no other name under heaven given among people by which we must be saved." Acts 4:12)
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To: chajin

[ As strange as this may sound, the setup has the practical effect of making all Japanese children be the product of single-mother households, with all the symptoms and results that one sees in such households in the US—but with two major differences.

First, the woman gets her money, not from the government, but from her husband’s work, so even though she may be passive-aggressive, she knows she can’t just walk away and try to go it on her own—and she doesn’t expect the other Japanese taxpayers to subsidize her lifestyle.

Second, she knows she has to get the sons to finish their education and go into successful careers, otherwise they’ll never leave home,
]

In some ways sounds like how it used to be in this country decades ago if your father had a job that always kept them working and the mother was a bit of a shrew.

Some decent chucks of Japanese culture today came from the 1950’s and Douglas MacArthur’s influence in re-building Japan after the war.

Some parts of this could very well have come from 1940s-50s american culture.


15 posted on 04/25/2014 3:30:35 PM PDT by GraceG
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To: Jack Hydrazine

Here is something you may find interesting:

http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/uk/article4072320.ece

“The benefits of drinking green tea and eating raw fish are extolled in a new study showing that Japanese women live longer than any others. “

Note: They don’t mention Japanese Men....

I wonder why :)


16 posted on 04/25/2014 3:34:05 PM PDT by GraceG
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To: GraceG

There’s a bit of indirect evidence that Jews did make it to Japan when they traveled east after the second diaspora.


17 posted on 04/25/2014 4:10:42 PM PDT by Jack Hydrazine (Pubbies = national collectivists; Dems = international collectivists; We need a second party!)
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To: Billthedrill

If you aren’t homo or hetero, what are you?


18 posted on 04/25/2014 4:12:03 PM PDT by Jack Hydrazine (Pubbies = national collectivists; Dems = international collectivists; We need a second party!)
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To: RandallFlagg

Yer thinkin’ of the female ninja magic!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wfYmTJYdeTw
(this is a really weird Japanese video so you might not want to click the link!)


19 posted on 04/25/2014 4:16:00 PM PDT by Jack Hydrazine (Pubbies = national collectivists; Dems = international collectivists; We need a second party!)
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To: F15Eagle

Apparently on the night before their one & final mission many Kamikaze pilots took brush to paper and penned elegant haiku verses in perfect Kanji script describing their imminent ascension to the realm of the gods while thanking the Emperor for making such a glorious ending possible.

Takes education to do that, IMO.


20 posted on 04/25/2014 6:08:20 PM PDT by elcid1970
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