Japanese Giving Up On Relationships And Sex

I think this is the first ever spam comment I have written in Japanese that was not caught by Akismet. Here’s the comment:

watch

The reason I knew it was spam, of course, is because of the website at ‘watchbrief’. Take a look below and you can see what Google Translate made of it.

The interesting thing to me is what it reveals about how I think about spamming.

For some reason, the idea of spam originating from Japan seems distinctly un-Japanese.

I mean how crazy is that? How crazy is it that I should form an opinion on where spam is and is not likely to originate in the world based on the flimsiest of social understandings?

私はそれがどのように狂っている?意味それは私がスパムであり、社会的な理解のflimsiestに基づく世界に由来する可能性がないところで意見を形成するべきであることをどのように狂っている?

Giving Up On Relationships and Giving Up On Sex

I read in the newspaper recently that young Japanese people are giving up on relationships. They would rather cocoon themselves in their rooms with their computers.

Here’s an article from the Guardian about the Japanese giving up on sex. Under the headline Why have young people in Japan stopped having sex? it cites these figures:

A survey earlier this year by the Japan Family Planning Association (JFPA) found that 45% of women aged 16-24 “were not interested in or despised sexual contact”. More than a quarter of men felt the same way.

Some years ago I spent three months in Japan. I went the length of the main island and visited and stayed with 23 different families as well as staying with two religious communities.

I had no affiliation with the religious communities and was invited (as with the other families) simply on the basis of increasing cross-cultural awareness.

I really should write about it sometime, before it fades from memory.

watch-tranlated


Discover more from Photograph Works

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Comments

5 responses to “Japanese Giving Up On Relationships And Sex”

  1. David, I find a few of these in my SPAM folder, daily.
    Thanks for solving the mystery for me.
    Wow!

    1. It occurred to me that maybe WordPress is clever enough to print Japanese characters, so I put a couple of sentences from this post into Google Translate and pasted them in here. 🙂

  2. Interesting! I must try and do the Google Translate some time. I often get spam comments in scripts I can’t read.

    Hope you’ll take time out to write about your stay in Japan. That surely must have been a different experience.

    1. Yes, it was different. There are lots of images and conversations that remain in my mind… which is a sign that it made an impression on me.

  3. Thanks for the update on the Japanese spam as I’m getting it too and suspect we all are. Please do write about your visit as I’d like to read what your experiences were.

Leave a Reply to Maria FalveyCancel reply

Discover more from Photograph Works

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading