“Japanese Girls Are The Best”

Yellow fever (noun).

an acute, often fatal, infectious febrile disease of warm climates, caused by an RNA virus transmitted by a mosquito, especially Aedes aegypti, and characterized by liver damage and jaundice

Whoops, wrong one.

yellow fever (noun) – the maddening sensation to go crazy for all peoples that is Asian

I might be paraphrasing Webster on that one.

And while that term can apply to both sexes, it definitely has more of a polarizing pull on the fellas.

Double And, might I add, while there is a wide spectrum of Asian, none of them receive quite the same attention as the Japanese. Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, and all the rest provide a sense of “mystery and intrigue” to some Western peoples. But I’d argue it’s because of the perceptions of Japanese media— the games, the shows, and yes the adult videos— that Japanese girls get fetishized the way they do.

I’ve been guilty of this myself.

My Yellow Fever Origins

pikachu

Most of my generation got its gaming start with Mario on the NES or Sonic on the Genesis. I was no different, but I credit Pokemon for introducing me to the concept of slaving away for a game. As my first RPG, Pokemon to me had so many layers I never had to deal with before. It wasn’t just a one-track mission to save the princess or beat the bad guy, but a quest for self-improvement. You didn’t conquer levels. You leveled up yourself. Bond with your pals along the way, all in the name of becoming Pokemon Master.

The show took it one step further, “… to be the very best like no one ever was.” A quote that rivaled Bret “Hit Man” Hart.

I ate that stuff up. Maybe too much. I watched the dynamic between Ash and Misty on the show. She wasn’t a damsel in distress. She was a friend. A friend who secretly harbored feelings for the main character.

I couldn’t remember seeing something like that from my American cartoons, but I’m sure I was just oblivious. Being so involved in the world of Pokemon more likely skewed my view. From here on out, I started to wonder. Maybe this type of girl didn’t exist in America. Could it be a Japanese thing?

I branched out into watching other shows. All of which not only reinforced the idea that Japanese girls are different, but maybe they’re better. I soaked up the images in “harem” anime like Tenchi Muyo and Love Hina. And, it blows my mind to think I liked characters like Shinji Ikari who were super helpless. I guess I related to the weakling who could depend on someone else to show him the way. I appreciated the idea that there was another guy out there that had several hot babes wanting to love him no matter how fragile he was.

At this time, I was horrible at handling rejection. Never did I appreciate the mechanics of a game so much. I wished real life had a pause and resume feature– more time to calculate each move before I made it. If life was like a show, I could fast forward to a better episode.

Whenever I’d get “friend zoned”, I’d bury myself in games. I’d watch more anime. The anime obsession would eventually transition to watching Japanese TV shows, or jdramas as they call it.

These days Twilight gets a lot of flack for leading teenage girls on with the concept of “undying love”. But I let shows like Lunch no Jou and Nodame Cantabile feed me the same type of belief. Yuko Takeuchi and Juri Ueno became avatars of that ideal girl.

I became so absorbed in my fantastical perception of Japanese culture. I started reinforcing those ideas with distancing language. American girls are like this, but Japanese girls wouldn’t ever do that.

Japanese girls are the most passionate, patient, kind and caring beings on earth.

Eventually, I wound up with some idea that it was only Japanese girls who could really understand me.

Meeting My “Match”

yellow-fever“It’s like one of my Japanese animes!”

Sure enough, my first girlfriend would be Japanese.

We didn’t have chemistry. We didn’t have a spark. But thanks to my train of thought, I already committed to the belief that this kind of person is someone who I can fall in love with.

I will fall in love with this kind of person. And so I did.

I kept myself in a fantasy, and I turned myself into an anime character in the process. I relied on scripts I’d learned from my experiences in Japanese media. A lot of my conversation and gestures came off as forced instead of natural. I tried so hard to be the ideal boyfriend to match my image of the ideal girlfriend.

But, everything seemed awesome. I was riding that high of having my first serious relationship, so everything was perfect. This went on for three years. She did no wrong, could do no wrong, and would ne’er do a wrongily wrong.

Until she broke up with me. Bonus bummer: I found out she cheated on me.

You’d think that would’ve burst the bubble. There’s no way I would keep thinking that Japanese girls are the best. But alas, I held on.

The Blindness Begins to Break

From 2009-2012, I taught English in Japan. During this time, I started to notice how much other guys were going crazy over Japanese girls too. I wasn’t alone in my way of thinking, but by watching the people around me, I saw really ugly sides of people in the pursuit of a J-girl.

I taught at a senior high school, and so many guys would tell me they were jealous. They wished they worked at my school because so many girls were hot. Those words irked me. It was kind of gross.

This whole time I didn’t even think of ogling them. They weren’t just Japanese girls. They were my students. They had depth.

I witnessed friendships crumble. Guys would be “best friends” until one would call “dibs” on a girl at a bar. They’d point fingers, but Japanese girls didn’t break those bonds. Those guys let themselves throw it away for eye candy.

I think they knew this sort of behavior didn’t work back home, but something about being in a foreign land changed that.

Of course, you had the flip side of the yellow fever concept too. Some people called it white worshiping, others termed it gaijin-hunting. (Foreigners in Japan were known as Gaikokujin, or Gaijin for short. And a Japanese girl who wanted one would be the hunter.)

Here it was again: the fantasy versus the reality. The mystique and intrigue of what wasn’t familiar, except this time it wasn’t wonderful. It was incredibly frustrating. The roles roles were reversed. I was an Asian guy being passed up for dudes who looked more “foreign”.

I’m not going to lie. It made me pretty bitter. When I was overseas, I worked hard to transform myself. And it was for real this time. I got in shape. Instead of sitting by and hoping I’d encounter someone by chance, someone that’d fall in love with me, I worked hard to build my esteem. I tried to be social. And I thought I was doing pretty good.

But no dice. The Japanese girls I bumped into just saw the surface. They already had their minds made up on what I could offer. Even though I was still a foreigner, they wanted to pick something that looked a bit more exotic.

Basically I was hit with some karma for being so shallow, but I still wasn’t able to see the connection between what they were doing and what I did.

The worst example of this idolization came from a friend. He fell in love with a girl at the clothing store. That’s no code for some seedy underground brothel either. She was just a regular girl working in retail.

But my friend just knew she was special. She was beautiful. She was good-looking. She was hot. She was cute. She was really hot.

She talked to him. And even though he couldn’t really understand what she said, nor could he properly express himself to her (they used an iPhone app to communicate, zoinks!) he was about ready to propose.

Maybe my obsession didn’t manifest itself in the same way, but my friend and I had been similar enough in our thoughts. His relationship didn’t work out, and he took it hard. I saw his dream crumble, leaving him a broken mess.

I’ve been there before, but this time as an outsider, I could see more clearly from the beginning. Things never really looked like they would work out. Connecting the dots, seeing the devastating effect it had on my friend snapped me out of my haze.

It wasn’t about race. It wasn’t about nationality. “Japanese girls” weren’t the best. I was typecasting an idea, but people are just that… people. Good and bad. Superficial and deep. Smart and dumb.

I’d been blind. I’d been pretty dumb. And for all my gaijin-hunter frustration? I had a friend unload on me, putting the final nail in the coffin:

All those girls who can fall for something like that… It’s your own damn fault for liking them.

  • David Rodriguez

    I have seen the light at the end of the Yellow Fever Tunnel… m(._.)m

    Nice article – As a fellow who has been told to be currently suffering from yellow fever, I can now see that I was blind in my sole pursuit for a japanese girl.

    Thanks for the insight and eyeopener.

  • Simi

    Wow, this is proably one of the first Tofugu articles that got me goosebumps when I finished reading it.
    It’s cool that you’re being so honest – not only with yourself but with people in general…

  • super_notnormal

    I have seen the light at the end of the Yellow Fever Tunnel… m(._.)m

    Nice article – As a dude who has been told to be currently suffering from yellow fever, I can now see that I might have been blind in my sole pursuit for a japanese girl.

    Thanks for the insight and eyeopener.

  • Mwani

    This is a really good article. I like how you took it through the journey of being honest about your perceptions and how they evolved throughout your experiences. I’m glad you were able to see people as people. I had a bad break up with a Japanese girl who was also my first serious relationship and it kind of messed me up…like for a little while I couldn’t see people as people anymore. I’ve been trying to get over those negative/unrealistically positive feelings for a while now. I think as men we tend to want to idealize women as well just to live in a perfect fantasy where we can never be hurt, until we are. It’s important to be able to learn from that.

    The Gaijin-hunter thing is weird too, as a black guy I would wonder if I go to Japan will I encounter women like this. Because I don’t want to be with someone who is just attracted to novelty but for someone who really likes me for who I am. It seems like since Japan is so homogeneous there will be no escaping the fact of our difference in race/appearance. But hopefully that wouldn’t be all there is to it. In fact I’m sure it wouldn’t because I wouldn’t be with someone who wasn’t really a good match for me personality wise. But anyway, maybe I’ll be hitched before I go there anyway haha.

    Anyway, thanks for a lot for sharing your story. :D

  • http://lazuli-in-paradise.com/ lazuli

    I’ve seen black Gaijin hunter in a club back then when I was in Japan.

    But I can say nothing since I used to hunt Japanese guys lol

  • guest

    I prefer Japanese women, but it has little to do with “yellow” or external appearance. Simply put, Japanese women act feminine; American women act like men with breasts. Viva la difference! Cue the Haters in 3… 2… 1…

  • Al Alryo

    Guest san .. I approve your message.

  • Nick Ronin

    One part that was not discussed was the age of the women, (or men) who caught the fever. Many times there is a shallowness in our fantasies, and what we determine is our perfect match. Superfluous traits are at the top of the list, and we delude ourselves to believing those traits are the only thing we need, blinding us to the truth. What about the inner qualities? We forget they exist, right up to the point where we are crushed, heartbroken. The dream shatters, reality sets in, and, if you learned something, you discover to look past the outer shell and attempt to learn what the other person has inside them of substance.

    Some people figure this out later in life with experience, some people never get it.

  • ricardo248

    not just Japanese woman but also from all east Asian counties are really beautiful, if you put a beautiful Europe girl next to a average east Asian girl, i would choose the Asian one even if there inner beauty is the same, don’t know why(born in Europe). but because I’ve been to japan and watch a lot of video site’s like nico nico douga and the korean version afreeca to more understand them how they life how they react. maybe it’s because i grew up with anime and Japanese influences that i look different at European lady’s and east Asian lady’s.

  • Richard Robertson

    Jon, first let me say a really big thank you for writing this article, I have really enjoyed reading this article! I really respect you for being so honest and serious about the topic, the way you have written this is new to me because I am used to people and articles writing about this topic in a rude, racist or erroneous way and it annoyed me how no one could seem to get to the bottom of this respectfully. I have been a victim of the Yellow Fever as well in recent years, thankfully no longer, but I do know what it feels like to think that Japanese girls are the only girls on the planet I could fall in love with — it wasn’t deceitful or fraudulent, my emotions were true, I honestly felt like I would only be compatible with a Japanese woman. Surrounding yourself solely in Japanese pop-culture can be misguiding or blinding to the world of loving relationships that can be had anywhere in any country.

    I’m getting off track here I think… Anyway, I agree with virtually everything you have said and I hope you continue writing articles with this degree of honesty and down to earth feeling. Keep up the good work, Jon!

  • lanthas

    Nice article, couldn’t agree more. Goes to show how important it is to keep anime and real life separate – to always keep in mind that characters and situations that appear in anime are idealizations that in no way represent reality in Japan, or anywhere else for that matter… Especially with such harem series that are specifically made for lonely male viewers to identify with :-)

  • Mariana

    way to go in generalizing around 300 million women!

  • Mariana

    are you portuguese?
    anyway, you can’t really assume every single woman from the whole Asian continent is ‘beautiful’.
    you also shouldn’t claim they are better than european girls simply because they are asian.
    that’s a fetishistic attitude to have.
    the point of this article was for people to understand that not every girl from x nationality, ethnicy, race is better because of some stereotype.

  • Rina

    There are plenty of feminine American girls. Get your head out of your anime shows and look around you.

  • Brad Garrett

    Man, this was a really deep and interesting article. I really appreciate the honesty and vulnerability you wrote.

  • ricardo248

    i don’t see them as better and l did not say that all the woman from Asian country’s are beautiful.don’t get me wrong i do like European woman even as Asian woman and all kind of woman from x nationality… looking back at my comment i’m trying to figure out why i typed that because those are all personal preference and from my point of view. (i’m from the Netherlands btw) but it’s a bit how i think when i see a girl. maybe i compare to much. i don’t even know me anymore@.@

  • http://www.michaelfrank.com.br/ Seiji

    Really cool to see an article so deep on Tofugu, hope to see more articles like this one.

    Thanks for sharing your experience, Jon. It sucks that you have been through all this, but you’re not alone, many of us have been there. Japan really sells that idea of the perfect girl, it’s everywhere: animes, mangas, doramas and of course, Japanese Idols. It’s not uncommon people getting delusional and fantasizing about how Japan is, believing that everyone is respectful, that most girls are honest and shy, etc. In the end, as you said, people are just people.

  • Mami no Gakusei

    Conclusion….JAPANESE GIRLS ARE THE BEST! WE LOVE YOU, MAMI!!!!!!!!

    P.S. We love you too, Aya.

  • zachary T

    Extremely good article Mr. Dao. thought provoking and informative. could not have been easy to write ( or edit) so thank you for your personal experiences. on a lighter note, the picture Aya drew looks like my face when I see an SDN48 music video, lol. ( never liked anime/manga, but love the all female j-pop groups)

  • erererer

    i can’t believe this do u know how dumb and sexist some of you commenters sound………

  • Levene

    Sadly, you are correct. While there are some feminine women in America, most are not. But feminism hasn’t spread so bad in Japan like it has here in a America…
    ….I’m waiting for the haters too now lol

  • Levene

    This is a good post. Some people have a racial preference and there is nothing wrong with that, but I think the problem lies in with people making those generalizations with those racial preferences. I’ve never had yellow fever, thank goodness.

  • 古戸ヱリカ

    Article: “Stereotyping people is bad!”

    *immediately rushes to the comments section to post stereotypes*

    They only disagree with me because they’re haters!

  • shiro

    Honestly? I think it’s a little less despicable to be attracted to a certain type of person for their looks (because come on, everyone has a “type”! nbd) than for some bizarro “inherent cultural difference” than you just made up.

    I think you’re in for some nasty surprises, but regardless, good luck with your search and your future life. I hope everyone finds what they are looking for.

  • 疎か物

    Perhaps it is wise to begin by elucidating my own shortcomings: I am going to generalize – a logical cognitive function which alleviates, if only a minutia of, time and its consumption (for we are all creatures of impermanency). It is also pertinent to address the concept of subjectivity; “Cogito ergo sum” should be a fine axiom for this, yet allow me to expand – my thoughts and opinions are both my cusps of bondage and my means to liberation, and what I express may very well differ from the views of others; this seems rather simplistically transparent, but we oft forget that there are other, often incongruent, viewpoints; it is in this respect that I approach this “article” albeit this approach is quite paradoxical (for although I respect the ability of others to speak, I am often protruded by what they say, and how they say it); with my idiosyncrasies out of the way we can begin.

    I am no wordsmith akin to Shakespeare, Dostoyevsky, Chekhov, Huxly, Twain or Dazai; but I do have the common decency to bloody well form sentences that are more substantial than three words; under what pretext does one vindicate continual, illogical pauses. There can be nothing so dramatic in one’s life as to pause.Every.Few.Words; this article is not a dramaturgic narration and therefore it lacks any logos in this use of dramatized pauses. Perhaps English is your second language, as is mine, and there are some inconsistencies in the grammatical format (the oft referenced ‘lost in translation’) ; if this is the case – I would espouse a bit of constraint in publishing any works that are to be read by the general populous, “If there is to be wisdom, ’tis to be accrued in self-reflection”.

    Whist on this topic: have you not been educated in the basics of philology? If you are to interpret the colloquialism of “Yellow Fever” note is as such; then add to the fact that it was a disparaging term used by Jingoists or self-deemed racial exceptionalists who held antipathy for proverbial “race intermixing” (an impossibility since humanity is a single race); it was then adapted as the term of endearment you use in this article.

    Furthermore, this construct’s tone is far too adolescently woeful, I am truly bereaved that you were unable to “score” any Japanese women due to your lack of caucasoidal traits. Remember that Japan’s homogeneity is ridiculously high, and that most humans distinguish characteristics originally on appearance ( a generalization, undoubtably), since you don’t look foreign enough the vacuous will not acknowledge you. Woe be to you, you wretched soul! Oedipus himself knew not such a pain!

    Finally we come to some pseudo-epiphany over how one is not to objectify through the idealism of a characteristic perfection, I rejoice for you, but I feel this journey was made for the cobbler’s profits alone (only in terms of narration, for I will not cheapen your human experience).The moral here is a classic cliche: one that is so sparsely addressed here that it diminishes the efforts of the past sages who had written it using a sea of ink over the course of the millennia of human knowledge.

    Allow me to express my distain for such articles while showing my seniority, Tofugu has become a mishmash of nonsensical banter; I came here five years ago to learn about relevant Japanese news, cultural heritage, and historical figures that would enrich my Japanese language skill vis-a-vis an insightful medium that helped me understand some anthropological features of the emerald archipelago; I would have never dreamed it to fester into an angsty forum of incompetency.

  • http://www.dandelion-cha.com/ アマンダ

    This was a really interesting read and quite honest. I’m glad you opened up about this manner. I have encountered all types of men with this so-called “yellow fever.” I have actually had a couple of guys say to my face that they don’t like black girls and that Asian girls are supreme. As a black woman myself I can be fetishized and seen as lesser at the same time…so I understand what it’s like from both angles. What I find interesting is how Asian men are not seen as masculine and are not desired while Asian women are seen as this feminine ideal. Very interesting dichotomy.

    But, in the same light, aren’t the same girls you described struck with a fever as well? A fever for foreigners, specifically white men? So it goes both ways…

  • Jon Dao

    Simi, much thanks for the feedback! I think when you really learn from something… and when you’re truly at peace with it, you can be totally honest. I’m lucky to have reached this point.

  • Jon Dao

    You know what, I don’t think a fetish/type/pursuit is necessarily a bad thing, just as long as you can do it without the idolization. Bottom line: there’s just good and bad everywhere. Race don’t matter.

  • Jon Dao

    I don’t disagree with you one bit. I think a lot of people have trouble not fessing up to “shallowness” when they don’t care about substance. Types are okay– I encourage types still! Just without the putting anybody on a pedestal.

  • Jon Dao

    Haha sometimes I look back, and I’m like “How did I ever relate to this?!”

  • Jon Dao

    So true. I’ve very thankful I did!

  • Jon Dao

    Your experiences can make or break you. Don’t let them break ya!

    It really depends where you go in Japan. You’ll get all sorts of reactions. Some who are immediately drawn to you because you’re “unique”. Others who’ll be scared of you because you’re “unique”. Some people will be indifferent. Then you’ll have the people who really want to get to know you for you.

  • Jon Dao

    In a way, I think this is part of the reason why the whole Otaku sub-culture is so huge. You have plenty of people who’d rather spend as much time as they can with games, anime, etc… because it’s easier. You DO get a sense of perfection in this type of fantasy.

    The scariest video I ever saw, was this Japanese dude who collected over 1,000 (!) sex dolls. He’d pose them all over his place: seated on the couch, standing in the kitchen. I’ll never forget his line, “Unlike a real girl, they’ll never hurt you! They’ll never betray you!”

  • Jon Dao

    Ooh! A language/writing comment– I like it. Thanks for taking the time to respond.

    As a writing tutor, English teacher, and conversation coach, I want to commend you for writing with purpose, taking time to carefully detail your thoughts.

    It’s very clear you have high value on language and communication. It’s clear you’re trying to better yourself. These traits are further laudable.

    What I will say though is, your love for being wordy hinders your message.Using overly formal and unnecessary word choices for a 6 paragraph response will ensure your meaning is lost. ESL students often think that the bigger the vocabulary, the stronger the command of a language. However, this is not true.

    Simple is best.

  • Jon Dao

    haha I’m all for music fangirling!

  • Jon Dao

    Thanks for your time, Brad!

  • Jon Dao

    Richard, it means a lot that my writing is resonating so well with people.

    You bring up an excellent point. Stereotypes or perceived images… they’re not always lies that we tell ourselves. Sometimes they’re just a belief system we’ve built up. Your surroundings and environment play such an important role.

  • Hannah Whittingham

    Well, to be frank. Woman ARE in fact men with breasts. In the same way that men ARE woman with sticks protruding out of there crotches. We’re all humans after all (Made with just slightly different parts. :3).

    Now if I may ask, what is “feminine” to you? And what makes it so desirable?
    Do you have something against masculinity? D: Why can’t someone be both feminine and strong?
    Have you actually met more then 5 woman in your life?

    I understand that you are human, humans LOVE/NEED to put things into categories. (I doubt we could function properly if we didn’t.) But you simply cannot group millions of woman like this. Because frankly, it’s just not true. Saying that Japanese are feminine and American woman aren’t, just isn’t true. It’s like saying all Americans are fat, or all Brits are bad cooks.

    It’s not true, and you can’t judge an entire demographic of human being on something as simple as this. Keep in mind that your own experiences don’t account for an entire population.

  • Hannah Whittingham

    Lol. Yes, please share with us your super accurate, sciencey statistics with us.
    I didn’t realize you had made contact with every woman in America and then
    evaluate them as “feminine” or not. (Did you include Japanese Americans in this generalization? Or did you just conclude that since they were Japanese, they were feminine by default)

    Now if I may ask, what is feminine to you, and why do you value it so much?
    When you say “Most American’s are NOT Feminine” what does that mean?
    Do you mean clothing wise? Personality traits? Is being outgoing somehow less feminine then being reserved?
    I would honestly like to here your response, so I can better understand your mindset.

    Because you obviously understand that what your saying will upset people, so I want to better understand.

  • http://zoomingjapan.com/ zoomingjapan

    I’ve been in Japan for 6 years now.
    I see those guys all the time. To be honest, I’ve never ever met a foreign guy here in Japan who was interested in a foreign girl, who didn’t have a Japanese girlfriend or wife yet.

    For us foreign girls in Japan that can be quite frustrating.

    And many with the “yellow fever” wake up when it’s too late. Some so late that kids are invovled.
    I’ve seen many of those guys come and go here in Japan.

    Thanks for this article and thanks for being so honest!

  • 古戸ヱリカ

    Thank goodness you’ve come, Captain Thesaurus!

  • 古戸ヱリカ

    That second paragraph sounds like the setup of a horror movie.

  • ZXNova

    At first I got spooked when I first read this article. I was like “Not this type of guy…” but then I read the rest of the article.

  • Meerkat

    If it doesn’t influence their work-relationship negatively and is withing legal boundaries, I don’t see why a student shouldn’t date his/her teacher. But then: Why would you want that? Look at the relation-shits 18 year olds have! Who wants that?

  • ZXNova

    From what I observed from locohama and some other articles I’ve read, I’m absolutely certain black gaijin hunters exist. As a black guy myself, that’s one of the many worries I have when I think about going to Japan.

  • Wow

    Man I love Tofugu!

    Anybody else finish this article by blurting out “DAMN!”

  • MoiKnee

    Thank you for your response. I will try my best to see things in that way. Hopefully there will be those people right? I mean statistically it’s likely that some people will be one way, others will be another way, and still others will think differently. I guess too because Japan is such a homogeneous culture, with ways of dealing with things that are decidedly “foreign” to me, in my hurt mindstate I started to wonder if this will be a universal experience with “them”? Like maybe this is just how “they” do relationships, or something. I mean it is such a conformist society..etc. Idk it’s weird because I used to think the exact opposite. It’s weird to feel like I’m sounding racist or something. Or you have the opposite feeling of “they” are so awesome. (granted there are probably many beautiful and awesome girls there just like anywhere else.) But it’s a challenge to see things in a “clear” way sometimes when it comes to human relationships. Thank you for your insight. :D

  • MoiKnee

    Translation:

    Paragraph 1: I’m going to say what I want to say, though you may not like it. Also I insinuated that this wasn’t a real article by saying “article”

    P2: English is my second language. I feel like it may be yours too. I bring this up because I think my writing is better than yours, and I feel like you paused too much and am criticizing you for it.

    P3. Are you stupid? Yellow fever is a bad term. Don’t say it like it’s cool.

    P4. You sound like a sad teenager. Too bad you couldn’t get any Japanese girls (sarcastically)…just because you didn’t look “foreign” enough for them. Japan has mostly Japanese people. Lots of people judge things just based on appearance. So people without much in their heads would just see you in that way. Let me belittle you a little bit more.

    P5. I feel like your “revelation” was bullcrap in a narrative sense, just used as sort of a cheap trick. I think it was not explored with enough depth to make Shakespeare feel good in his grave about how words are being used.

    P6. I’ve been coming to this site a long time and I think it’s significant and worth mentioning, while I tell you how I dislike these sorts of articles. Tofugu is a bunch of bullcrap. I came here to learn stuff about Japan and I think it’s just some angsty crap I get here now.

    - Hope I was able to accurately portray OP’s intent.

  • Shoko

    Thanks for such an honest post. Really love it when people just speak their minds out. As a Japanese girl myself it does bother me when figures in anime/manga/the pretty actresses in dramas and stuff mislead the audiences to having such fantasized images about Japanese girls. But people drawing/writing these are Japanese creators, so I guess we need to think about how Japanese people themselves are “fueling the fire”, so to speak, to this complicated issue.

  • 疎か物

    OP here,
    Blessing to all the keen witticism you internet stalwarts,
    but I feel a tad misconstrued – I wasn’t looking to express my superiority in paragraph 2 (yet I’m quite sure you will go to the grave believing otherwise), I was simply trying to indicate my dislike in the most adroit way possible: hoping to express my pathos via logic( what I got instead was a rally of discontent) , I will agree that it was far too obsequious and vehement, in my actions.

    I’m quite satisfied with how Mr.Dao handled the whole thing non-combatively: it takes a good bit of self-command to do so (now you may laugh at the irony of this comment); furthermore, the Captain Thesaurus comment gave me a good laugh, as did your interpretation of paragraph five

    My question would be why not infatuate on Shakespeare? Are we not to refine our every facet to become keener?

    In closing I would like to make note that this kind of interpretation is the death of experience, you have cheapened my thoughts profoundly, and I suppose that should be proper penance for being a righteous bastard, but no matter, as I mentioned before we are but subjective creatures.

    Now allow me to politely exit stage left…