Episodios

  • サラリーマンは能力で出世しない——“権力の匂い”を嗅ぎ分ける野生の本能
    Nov 15 2025

    This episode explores the real engine behind corporate promotion in Japan: not skill, not logic, but a primal instinct to sense power. Shigeki argues that those who “smell” hierarchy—who instantly detect who must be pleased, avoided, or feared—advance faster than the educated or rational. In contrast, highly literate people lose because they rely on correctness rather than instinct. Through dark humor and social critique, the episode examines why power-sensing cannot be learned in adulthood and why Japan’s corporate world rewards wild intuition over competence. A sharp look into the inverted logic shaping Japan’s salaryman society.

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    10 m
  • 芸能知性の時代――思考なき言葉が社会を支配する|The Age of Celebrity Intelligence — How Thoughtless Words Rule Society
    Nov 14 2025

    This episode explores the rise of “celebrity intelligence” in Japan—an age where entertainers speak as if they were thinkers, and fast, pleasant words replace real thought. Shigeki examines how media blurred the line between entertainment and philosophy, turning instant reactions into a substitute for genuine intellect. As silence disappears and speed becomes the new standard of “smart,” society trades depth for comfort. People no longer think; they consume the feeling of understanding. This episode asks: What happens to a culture when performance overtakes thought? And how can we reclaim the space to think slowly, responsibly, and deeply once more?

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    8 m
  • 本物のニートと、演じるニート——リアルの嘘をめぐって|The Real NEET and the Performed NEET: On the Lies of Modern “Reality”
    Nov 13 2025

    In today’s internet culture, “real” NEETs rarely appear on screen. Instead, we see performers—people acting broken, exhausted, or unhinged for clicks. This episode explores the gap between genuine isolation and the staged versions consumed as entertainment. Shigeki argues that modern audiences don’t want truth; they want believable lies—safe, sanitized realism. In a world where everyone is half actor and half critic, even despair becomes a performance. What does “authentic” mean when every gesture is recorded, edited, and judged? And how can we live honestly when reality itself has become an audition?

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    10 m
  • 陽キャ適応型日本人論 ― 世代を超える日本的軽さ|The Brightly Adapted: How Generational Japan Learned to Smile and Survive
    Nov 12 2025

    In Japan, being cheerful is not just a personality—it’s a survival skill.

    This episode explores the “brightly adapted” Japanese: those who thrive by smiling, reading the room, and avoiding depth. Shigeki argues that such lightness, celebrated as social virtue, hides a quiet exhaustion beneath. In a society where air must not be disturbed, conformity becomes the path to success. Yet, he asks: what happens to the thinkers who cannot laugh along? True dignity, he concludes, lies in silence—in the courage to pause, reflect, and reclaim one’s own words in a country that fears seriousness.

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    10 m
  • 発酵する思考──沈黙が知を育てる時間|Fermenting Thought: The Quiet Time Between Input and Output
    Nov 11 2025

    In an age that worships speed and instant response, we risk losing the art of slow thinking. This episode explores the silent space between input and output—the time when ideas ferment, deepen, and quietly mature into true understanding. Shigeki argues that wisdom is not born in reaction but in reflection, in the courage to wait and say nothing. Thought, like fermentation, needs darkness, stillness, and time to gain its fragrance. As social media rewards immediacy, we must reclaim the dignity of slowness. Only through silence can our words regain weight, and our minds rediscover depth.

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    7 m
  • 努力を可視化する病——SNS時代の「無為のすすめ」
    Nov 10 2025

    In today’s hyper-visible world, even our efforts must be displayed. This episode explores the modern obsession with showing “proof” of hard work—posting study sessions, seminars, or self-improvement updates—and questions what we lose in the process. Shigeki argues that true growth doesn’t need witnesses; quiet, unseen effort can be more meaningful. Embracing “idleness” is not laziness but a subtle form of resistance against productivity worship. Through reflective commentary, this talk invites listeners to rediscover the dignity of doing nothing and the beauty of living without the need for validation in an always-performing society.

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    8 m
  • 忖度と空気読みの違い
    Nov 9 2025

    In Japan, “reading the air” once meant a graceful sensitivity—sensing others’ emotions without words. Yet today, it’s often replaced by sontaku, the fearful act of guessing superiors’ wishes and staying silent. True reading the air is born from empathy, not fear; it connects, not suppresses. It means feeling another’s mood, sometimes choosing silence out of kindness, not submission. This episode explores how Japan’s quiet art of empathy became distorted into obedience—and why recovering its gentler, more human form may be key to a freer, more compassionate society.

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    8 m
  • 営業マンと総務的イケメン
    Nov 8 2025

    In every company, the fiery salesman and the calm administrative “gentleman” embody two essential forces: passion and balance. The salesman lives in battle—sweating, persuading, chasing numbers. The silent gentleman, by contrast, maintains harmony, quietly stabilizing the air around him like invisible air conditioning. One fuels growth, the other preserves order. In an age obsessed with visibility and efficiency, we often forget that quiet competence sustains the system. True maturity, both for people and organizations, lies in balancing fire and water—ambition with serenity, speed with grace.

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    10 m