True Blood: Personality and Blood Types in Japan

A blood type towel: not as gross as it sounds.

Sometimes, it’s the small cultural differences you notice more than the big ones. For me, one of the most interesting things about Japanese culture is the fascination with blood types. It’s a pretty small aspect of Japanese culture, but it’s so different from what I’m used to in the United States that it really catches my attention. So what does Japan think about different blood types?

In Japan, blood types are linked with personality. Somebody with Type O blood is supposed to have a completely different personality than somebody with Type A blood.

You can think of blood types in Japan much like astrology. Instead of trying to pick up somebody with a cheesy “Hey baby, what’s your sign?,” you might ask your potential mate-to-be “Hey baby, what’s your blood type?”

This blood type craze all started in the 1970s when an author named Masahiko Nomi published a book called Understanding Affinity by Blood Type. The book was an instant best-seller and led to lots more books on the subject.

The Four Different Blood Types

Blood types are a pretty recent discovery. It wasn’t until 1900 that an Austrian scientist discovered the existence of different blood types, a discovery that earned him a Nobel Prize. Since that discovery, scientists have gone on to figure out that different types of blood have different types of antibodies and antigens. I’d be lying if I pretended to have any sort of understanding of what this means in medical or scientific terms, but the most important thing is that immune systems react differently to different kinds of blood types.

There are four different blood types: A, B, O, and AB. I could bore you with the “science” about how each blood type is different, but why do that when I can tell you all the completely unscientific stereotypes for each blood type?

Type A

People with Type A blood are said to be timid, mild-mannered, and pretty earnest. A Type A person might be like that bookworm sitting in the corner of the library. However, Type A people are also known to be stubborn and anxious.

Type B

Type B is particularly important to me, because my blood type is B+! People with Type B are like Miley Cyrus: they can’t be tamed. They’re supposed to be wild, creative free-thinkers. But Type B people are also supposedly erratic and selfish.

Type O

Type O blood is pretty unique. People with Type O blood are known as “universal donors,” because Type O blood can be used in any type of blood transfusion.

If people with Type A blood are Clark Kent, Type O people are Superman. People with Type O blood types are said to be outgoing, confident and passionate with very dominant personalities. It’s said that public figures are often Type O, like politicians and baseball players.

Type AB

Those with Type AB blood are supposed to be somewhere in between Type A and Type B blood. They’re supposed to be social people who are at the same time very calm and in control. But Type AB people can also be very aloof and irresponsible.

Bath salts for people of different blood types, not a bath made of blood.

An astonishing 90% of Japanese know their blood type, which is pretty surprising. It’s my impression that most people in the United States have no idea what their blood type is, unless they have some medical reason for knowing.

How do you find out your blood type? There’s no easy, do-it-yourself way, but you can find out through your medical records or by donating blood. I probably wouldn’t have known my blood type had I not donated blood a few years back and the Red Cross let me know.

Japanese people have used blood types for tons of different things. Compatibility in relationships is sometimes predicted by blood types, and sometimes blood type can be a deal breaker before a potential couple even meets. People will throw parties for people of a certain blood type. Baseball cards will have the player’s blood type listed right along with his batting average.

And of course, as you see in the pictures in this post, there are different products marketed to people with different blood types. Are Type B bath salts really that different from Type A bath salts? Probably not, but that doesn’t stop people from buying them up.

“Hey kids, I’m the father of western medicine! Don’t do drugs!”

Of course, linking blood type to personality is pseudo-science at best. While blood type can tell you certain things about a person (such as what their ancestry might be), no scientist out there will tell you that there’s a tie between personality and blood type.

People justify their fascination with blood type by saying that ancient medicinal figures such as Hippocrates (of the Hippocratic Oath) thought that something in the blood influenced people’s personality. But then again, those Greek dudes had pretty strange (and wrong) ideas about human physiology. If we still listened to the Greeks, we’d be covered in leeches every time we were sick.

There’s also a darker side to blood types in Japanese culture. Some have argued that the Japanese fascination with blood types leads to unfair stereotyping. Blood type has been used for justifying schoolyard bullying (but then again, what hasn’t?). There’s even a term in Japanese for discrimination based on blood type: bura-hara, a combination of the words “blood” and “harassment.”

So what do you guys think? Is there some truth in the stereotypes about blood types? Let me know in the comments!

P.S. Do you fit your blood type’s stereotype? Follow us on Twitter.
P.P.S. Do you break free from genetic predetermination? Like us on Facebook.

  • Anonymous

    I “should” be Type A, all reserved, mild-mannered, book-wormish and stuff…but in reality I’m type O. (And as anyone who knows me would know, “outgoing” and “confident” do NOT describe me in the least bit!)

  • http://twitter.com/xharmony harmony

    I think it’s kind of fun. I wonder which blood types we’re supposed to be compatible with? I’m also B+, and I guess it does sound a bit like me, but then so does my astrological sign… I don’t think I’ll be bathing in any “bloodtype bath” anytime soon, though, haha.

  • 神名綾人

    My blood type is blue, should I be concerned?

  • Maarkun

    im O, and it matches allright!

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    Seems pretty normal to me.

  • http://www.facebook.com/shou.ryuushinji Shou Trammell

    The whole blood thing is interesting, it kinda makes me feel bad that i don’t know my own blood  type. I thing i may get harassed if someone were to ask me what it was. i think its good for that of the merchants a good way for them to capitalize on the blood types for that matter!

  • http://www.blueterritory.com Arisa

    Haha I’m type O and completely do not fit the profile XD I’m very type AB-ish? Or maybe A-ish? Then again, the choices are far too limited… at least with astrology there’s a broader choice XD not that I believe in that, but…

  • Jimmymisc

    This is what should have been posted instead, Japanese thinks like this:

    A type: diligent, OCD, does not get along well with B, always meet deadlines.B type: “my pace”, weak under pressure, messy, does not get along well with AO type: gets along with every type, admired by A, loved by B because of good people skills, disorganized, speaks more than committing actions, strong under pressure.AB: unpredictable, genius in a good way / bad way

  • 神名綾人

    I dunno, I liked the one with the line breaks better.

  • Hailey

    I’m type O, and that definition actually fits me pretty well (except I suck at baseball).

  • Jenny Ayres

    I’m type O and it doesn’t fit me at all, although my Japanese friends always say やっぱり!! when they find out.

    Also, not all type O people are universal donors, just people with O negative blood… I’m assuming almost everyone knows that, but you might want to change it anyway?

  • Anonymous

    I’m A and it describes me perfectly xD

  • TigerMilkTea

    I am type AB+
    Totally fits me, I can be very introvert but sociable at the same time.. though I am not considered irresponsible. Japanese blood type readings are so interesting love this post <3

  • Kuroshirohaiiro

    You are actually wrong about type O. Type O, medically speaking, is a universal receiver of blood in transfusions. Type AB is a universal donor for the most part, more specifically AB+. I know this because I donate blood regularly and there is an insane demand for my blood, being an AB+. I do pure white cell and plasma donations, where they filter your blood, take what they want and pump the rest back in through the other arm…cool.

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    Thank you!

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    I thought it was the other way around, that Type O is the universal donor and Type AB is the universal recipient. That’s what all my research showed :?

    http://www.redcrossblood.org/learn-about-blood/blood-types

  • http://twitter.com/tweetyburdz Future Dr. Arguelles

    I am type B!!!! XD

  • Maestro

    I’m type C and feel left out.

  • Erithis

    The universal red cell donor has Type O negative blood type.The universal plasma donor has Type AB positive blood type

  • 神名綾人

    I believe type C is the one that’s always right in multiple choice tests.

  • Anonymous

    To be honest, I’m surprised more people in America don’t know their own blood types.  It could be dangerous if they’re in an accident and don’t know (then again, they’ll likely find out from the paramedics or whoever had to figure it out).  I guess I’m just surprised because I’ve known mine since I was a child (because I’m a former military brat?).

    But yeah, interesting bit of cultural insight. Actually, it’s kind of funny: a series I like just recently let its audience know the blood type of one main character, only because it was important to the plot. And when that happened, it wasn’t even a real blood type (at least, I don’t think it’s real… but I can’t be 100% sure).

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000334843269 Jacob Saldana

    O negative. Yay, for rare blood, and I would agree that this matches my personality. Weird that this article was posted today. I just happen to donate some blood today.

  • sumi

    Hashi, you are absolutely right. I am AB+, and I have received type A blood without problem (well, I’m still alive, I think).
    Type AB is supposed to come from the Mongols, so I may be part Asian besides being part Russian and Romanian. I really don’t believe it has anything to do with personality though.

  • http://twitter.com/21tigermike Michael A. Robson

    “P.S. Do you fit your blood type’s stereotype? Follow us on Twitter.
    P.P.S. Do you break free from genetic predetermination? Like us on Facebook.”

    LOL!

  • http://twitter.com/21tigermike Michael A. Robson

    PS. Isn’t the whole Blood Type thing just an upshot of getting ‘blood types’ from our parents (I’m not a doctor), which coincides with getting personality traits from our parents (since they teach us to be tough, gentle, aggressive, ambitous, giving, optimistic/pessimistic… nature v nurture, etc).?

  • chelsi

    Is there a blood type for Hashi Fever? because i’ve been reading the posts all day long.

  • Justinpskeen

    I don’t tell any Japanese people my blood type. or anyone else for that matter. They can get way to into it sometimes and the blood type steriotypeing can get a bid annoying. Just saying.

  • Eileen

    I feel most of the time I’m a type A, but honestly i’m not sure. I remember hearing about blood types/personality because of this song here http://youtu.be/KDmDP4PMB3s Talking about baseball players having their blood types listed, I couldn’t help but be reminded that all Johnny’s do too http://www.johnnys-net.jp/j/artists/news/prof/prof.html I guess it’s for fans to have a human connection because of the stereotype/blood type – like “Oh he has this blood type, so he must be this kind of guy”

  • http://profiles.google.com/jonadab.theunsightlyone Jonadab the Unsightly One

    I don’t know my own blood type, but I can deduce certain things about it, based on the fact that my mom is O (and very timid and reserved and a bit anxious at times) and my dad is AB (and classic ADHD with middle-child attention-seeking syndrome out the royal wazootie).  So that presumably means I am either A or B, because I would’ve got one or the other from dad and neither from mom.

    I’m a very patient, calm, creative, free-thinking, confident…  borderline recluse who loves to be alone, spends 165+ hours/week indoors, and struggles to remember to occasionally pay attention to other people and has to force himself to occasionally participate in social activities.

  • http://profiles.google.com/jonadab.theunsightlyone Jonadab the Unsightly One

    Kuroshirohaiiro is incorrect.

    A person with O negative blood is a universal donor, because the blood has none of the three antigens (A, B, or RH), so you can put said blood in more or less anybody without provoking an immune response.  AB+ is the universal recipient, because they already have all three antigens, so none of those antigens will cause an immune reaction in them, because they’re not perceived as alien.

    Such simple type matching only works for blood because most blood cells are very feature-limited.  For organ transplant or most tissue grafts, you have to do rather more complex compatibility matching.

  • gradytripp

    All that blood type personality stuff is totally creepy. Aside from the fact that it’s pseudo-science, it’s origins are in the eugenics movement. When Japan was a colonizer, they used blood types as an ‘evidence’ to confirm racist ideas about Taiwanese and other groups and the superiority of Japanese.

  • John

    I think they might just say やっぱり no matter what you are because that’s what they did for all of us when we were there. Maybe they just like to think that they’re capable of predicting blood types or something, lol

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    Yeah, I read a bit about that in my research for this post. The eugenics aspect of the whole story is definitely a bit disturbing, but it seems to me that the modern fascination with blood types is pretty far removed from that.

  • Kiriain

    I may not know what my blood type is; but I know it goes great on pancakes.

  • Alessia_ama

    That’s really interesting, I happened to make some research about it just two days ago XD According to description I should be Superman, but I feel much more like Clark Kent :P Actually I even found different description for men and women for each bloodtype… Great post, thank you :) 

  • Kurt

    no wonder mixi offers the option of letting others know your blood type.

  • Kurt

    no wonder mixi offers the option of letting others know your blood type.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_RC3XMUCEZRUAQ36PVX6UJSZT6Q Fernando Ursine

    I’m type O, but a japanese girl I met told me I act like a type A, should I become concerned ’bout this?

  • 神名綾人

    You should see a pseudosurgeon immediately to have your blood drained and replaced with the correct type.

  • John

    Facebook does the same thing if you change your language to Japanese. The more you know~

  • http://www.facebook.com/Zerokeemu Kim McInally

    Blood Bullying >.>

    Wouldn’t you render your self immune to such things if you kept quiet. Or would you be harrased because you wont tell or dont know…As for mine…Ive had blood tests but they didnt tell me, I speculate it is O.

  • http://twitter.com/mydlands JulieM

    A+!

    A lot of the A stuff does describe me, but not all of it.  I don’t think I’m nervous, for example.  And I know my type because I’m a frequent blood donor.

  • Arashi

    I suppose I’m going to be type 0-
    (the “sacrifice” bloodtype since everyone could receive this one but the “wearer” can only receive 0-)

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  • guest

    I’ve been looking for something like this! I could NOT understand their fixation with blood types…
    It all makes sense now… well not really since blood type doesn’t really have anything to do with personality, but thanks!

  • Coco

    I remember when visiting Tokyo passing a machine where you would put in a coin and get a fortune based on your blood type, and my Japanese friends freaked out when I told them I didn’t know my blood type. I told them we don’t have the same theory about it in America and they were shocked!!

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_RC3XMUCEZRUAQ36PVX6UJSZT6Q Fernando Ursine

    NOES D:

  • susanne

    Well, is this blood type thing also combinded with the blood type diet? Certain food is good for type A but really bad for B, etc.? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_type_diet

    Actually, doing housework is definitely unhealthy for my blood type ;->

  • http://twitter.com/JACKTHEDANIELS ジャック (Jack)

    Its a strange coincidence how lots of asian people know their blood type, thats always one of the first things my friends in Korea and Japan ask me nd im never sure how to respond >.>

  • http://profiles.google.com/sayuyagami63 Zoey Harris

    Type: A
    Personality: B
    Disprooven!