Episodios

  • 言葉ではなく、波長で人はつながる
    Dec 31 2025

    In this year-end episode, I reflect on a simple but often overlooked truth: real connection is not created by language alone. You can study a foreign language for years and still feel no bond with certain people, while sometimes sharing deep understanding with someone despite limited words. Communication goes beyond vocabulary and grammar—it rests on values, worldview, and shared emotional rhythm. I also explore how “being natural” or “speaking honestly” is often an act, especially in politics and public life. True understanding comes from sensing what lies beneath words. Thank you for listening this year, and I wish you a thoughtful and peaceful new year.

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    7 m
  • 自信とは何なのか?
    Dec 30 2025

    This episode explores what “confidence” really means in an age obsessed with self-esteem and certainty. Rather than treating confidence as strength, loudness, or unwavering belief, this talk reframes it as the willingness to act while fully accepting the possibility of being wrong. Drawing on everyday examples from work, politics, and self-help culture, the episode critiques performative confidence and exposes how apparent certainty often masks deep anxiety. True confidence, it argues, is quiet, flexible, and capable of revision. In an uncertain world, the ability to hold responsibility without clinging to absolute correctness becomes the most realistic and humane form of confidence.

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    8 m
  • 日系企業では、軽薄さが最適解になる
    Dec 29 2025

    In this episode, Shigeki analyzes why “lightness” becomes the optimal survival strategy inside Japanese corporations. This is not a personal attack or a moral critique, but a structural explanation. In organizations where decisions change frequently, responsibility is blurred, and evaluation criteria are unclear, taking everything seriously can lead to exhaustion. Those who survive tend to detach emotions from words, tolerate contradictions, and switch positions quickly. What appears as superficiality is actually a functional adaptation. This episode explains why sincere, logically consistent people often burn out—and why incompatibility with such systems is not a personal failure, but a mismatch of environments.

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    9 m
  • YouTubeは“考えない人”の楽園ではなくなった
    Dec 28 2025

    In this episode, I analyze the rise and decline of “meaning-free” YouTubers and explain why that era is coming to an end. Early YouTube thrived on vlogs that avoided opinions, responsibility, and ideology, offering viewers a sense of freedom from overproduced media. However, once this style became a template, it lost its power. As living costs, global instability, and social anxiety increased, viewers began to see “natural” and “carefree” creators as irresponsible rather than comforting. Today, audiences seek clarity, position, and accountability. The creators who survive will be those willing to take responsibility for meaning—and accept being disliked.

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    9 m
  • 頭を使っていないけど、勝っている側の考え方
    Dec 27 2025

    In this episode, I explore a mindset often praised in modern society: the belief that “not thinking deeply, yet still winning” is a virtue. We examine how ideas like being “natural,” “easygoing,” or “not overthinking” are used to justify success without reflection. This mindset works well when supported by youth, energy, luck, or favorable circumstances—but it becomes fragile over time. As those advantages fade, the absence of accumulated thought reveals its cost. This episode is not an attack on individuals, but a structural critique of how anti-intellectual values are quietly rewarded, and why, in the long run, only sustained thinking remains a reliable asset.

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    9 m
  • 信用は文化を生まない ── 信頼貯金がすべてをダメにする理由
    Dec 26 2025

    In this episode, Shigeki explores the hidden dangers of overvaluing “trust” and “credibility” in business and society. While trust is often praised as the foundation of success, he argues that it does not create culture, discovery, or innovation. Trust functions mainly as a system that prevents mistakes and discourages deviation from the norm. Through historical examples such as Christopher Columbus, the episode shows that breakthroughs come first—and trust is assigned afterward. When societies prioritize safety, past performance, and risk avoidance, creativity fades. This talk challenges the belief that accumulating trust leads to progress, and asks what is lost when we play it too safe.

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    8 m
  • 新自由主義的自己責任論が人生相談を壊すとき
    Dec 25 2025

    In this episode, I examine the hidden dangers that emerge when life-advice content becomes intertwined with neoliberal self-responsibility thinking. While life coaching and self-help often appear kind and supportive, they can quietly shift blame onto individuals who are already vulnerable. When failure is explained only as a lack of effort or mindset, thinking stops and responsibility is simplified. This structure is especially profitable as content, yet deeply harmful as guidance. I contrast today’s advice industry with earlier forms of life counseling that were constrained by distance, credibility, and non-commercial motives. Not all advice heals—some advice binds.

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    8 m
  • サラリーマンという言葉が壊した個人
    Dec 24 2025

    In this episode, I examine how the word “salaryman” has quietly reshaped individual identity in Japanese society. Unlike professions defined by skills or expertise, “salaryman” describes people only by how they are paid, not by what they do. This linguistic habit ties identity to companies rather than personal abilities, making it difficult to describe oneself outside organizational affiliation. I explore how this structure developed, why it feels normal in Japan, and how it can hollow out individual identity over time. This is not a critique of workers, but an analysis of language, structure, and the quiet costs they create.

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    8 m