Things I Dislike about Foreign guys & How to date Japanese Girls?

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 28 тра 2024
  • If you like this video, I really appreciate your support🔥
    【Patreon online Japanese course】www.patreon.com/user?u=49978610
    【Buy me coffee】ko-fi.com/mochisensei820#link...
    konnichiwa❤️
    Today I talked about things I dislike about foreign guys, but I think people in every country has each culture and nothing bad, but just from experience I felt something so I shared!
    You'll see more about dating Japanese women!
    【Do Japanese girls want to date a foreign guys?】
    • 日本人女性は外国人男性のことが好きか嫌いかの...
    Do you want more of daily lesson?
    【Mochi sensei instagram】 / mochi.sensei.japanese
    💡DM me on instagram for private Japanese lesson
    ★For abusolute beginners! Let's learn how to introduce yourself first😊
    • How to introduce yours...
    ★The ultimate guide to Japanese verb groups! Verb conjugation✨
    • The ULTIMATE GUIDE of ...
    ★Don't use わたし(watashi) and あなた(anata) too much? ...Why? Check this!
    • わたし、あなた( I and YOU) IS...
    #japanesewomen #datingjapanese #japanesegirlfriend

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,9 тис.

  • @ImSockman
    @ImSockman Рік тому +2010

    I think there is a certain level of maturity required to date other cultures because you have to recognize that every culture is different and you have to be willing to adjust.

    • @kylefenrick9168
      @kylefenrick9168 Рік тому +37

      This kind of sounds like just general relationships anywhere.
      Other cultures, tend to be based around the qualities of the culture, are appealing when a person grows up with morals.
      Non-direct can be frustrating. But in turn, it also makes for a less embarrassing time in public.

    • @akaRyuka
      @akaRyuka Рік тому +134

      i mean it works both ways, japanese people also have to adapt to date someone foreign, just expecting a foreigner to 100% act the japanese way is very unfair and disrespectful to who they are, there need to be a common ground

    • @foxzillax5745
      @foxzillax5745 Рік тому +33

      @@akaRyuka my thoughts exactly. I can be interested in another culture and want to learn about that culture as I dating someone foreign, but there are some American things I will refuse to change.

    • @NightmareZV
      @NightmareZV Рік тому +10

      @@akaRyuka That's part of the balance and I agree. If anyone's dating a foreign, there should be a specific talk where they can both agree in a middle point of what they are willing to change and tolerate as well and what other things are just fine being there or not.
      But anyway, like the other dude said this is still pretty much in any relationship. Difference might be that dating someone in your country makes it a little easier to get some cultural things quickly.

    • @pandaman1331
      @pandaman1331 Рік тому +4

      @@akaRyuka Especially since the more often than not fail to adapt when they themselves are the foreigners. Ore more like don't even try to adapt. They don't hold themselves to their own standards.

  • @semarugaijin9451
    @semarugaijin9451 9 місяців тому +187

    One of the things that is so interesting about the whole kokuhaku thing, ie; directly asking her to be your girlfriend is actually the opposite of other Japanese sensibilities where everything else is left implied, insinuated, indirectly.... except for that.

    • @Aaron-us2ux
      @Aaron-us2ux 5 місяців тому +9

      Hey hey, it's this or something involving tentacles.... it's japan, after all.🐙📺🤦‍♂️😏😉😂🤣😎✌️

    • @grayfox1189
      @grayfox1189 5 місяців тому +14

      Well said, I was thinking the same thing. Be indirect with everything EXCEPT when it comes to kokuhaku

    • @darassylmoniakam
      @darassylmoniakam 4 місяці тому

      that's why it's not a good idea to date japanese.

    • @melchior2678
      @melchior2678 4 місяці тому +2

      @@Aaron-us2ux 😅😅😅😅 so true! 😂

    • @paxhumana2015
      @paxhumana2015 4 місяці тому +3

      I prefer letting my "yes" mean an actual yes, and my "no" mean an actual no. I have ASD and I prefer to have things simple...not stupid, but simple, for it is possible for things to be complex, but needlessly so as well, and when something is needlessly complex, which is most of the time, then they are stupid things that are made by stupid people.

  • @joshhoward1289
    @joshhoward1289 3 місяці тому +22

    I have lived in Japan for 8 years now. I really enjoyed your insight and while I am married and have no experience in what you are sharing, I can see what you are talking about in social settings. Very interesting, thank you for providing me better cultural insight.

  • @amunra7173
    @amunra7173 5 місяців тому +21

    This is an exceptionally informative video. The things you listed are very reasonable, and it is quite helpful to understand how culturally you might be more formal or conservative with these interactions. Personally, as an American outlier, it's comforting to know there's a culture who I might be more socially aligned with than my own. I actually relate with ALL of this, more than most like me might. Thank you.

  • @TheKojiLinx
    @TheKojiLinx Рік тому +514

    I followed Mochi-sensei's advice and I'm still not dating a Japanese girl. Apparently I have to talk to them in order to date them. Wild! On a serious note, great insight into Japanese dating culture. Also guys, just because a girl is nice to you in ANY culture, it doesn't mean they want to date you. Relationships are hard. 頑張って 皆さん!

    • @cr8284
      @cr8284 11 місяців тому +22

      ​@@maegalroammis6020
      You're always complaining and hating Japanese.
      You can forget Japanese and make friends with people in your own country.

    • @maegalroammis6020
      @maegalroammis6020 11 місяців тому

      @@cr8284 don't tell me what to do troll! ypu dont know my experiences and how people are in mine!

    • @sedivh0
      @sedivh0 11 місяців тому +23

      @@maegalroammis6020 Bro you described 85% of the entire population of planet earth
      A LOT of people in EVERY country do not want to learn other languages besides their own, a LOT of people in EVERY country, especially men, do NOT like to share their feelings and will make sure to hold it in until they can't anymore, and a LOT of people, and this one is the most common, a LOOOOT of people in EVERY. SINGLE. COUNTRY. Talk trash behind your back. Especially older people and younger people. They judge you based on looks and superficial things.

    • @gerardopadilla2666
      @gerardopadilla2666 10 місяців тому +6

      @@maegalroammis6020 Pot calling the kettle black?
      You can't accept someone else's experience and you want everyone to take your own as the universal one? You have every right to describe your experience, but at this level it only makes you wonder if it is not your acquaintances who are "pathetic", mind you.

    • @Hajo87-tz7hz
      @Hajo87-tz7hz 10 місяців тому

      You don't say

  • @quixadhal
    @quixadhal Рік тому +706

    Just for reference, the best way to let an American guy know you aren't interested is to tell them "You're such a good friend!". Being put in the friend zone is almost universally understood, while being ignored or given the cold shoulder often just makes us think we need to try harder or do something different.

    • @senseiruthe
      @senseiruthe Рік тому +46

      Definitely seen guys that still didn’t realize it when a girl was saying that to them 😅

    • @CrunsherExtreme
      @CrunsherExtreme Рік тому +7

      @@senseiruthe just tell them as a women that you are 100% lesbian and not interested in guys... the end :D I think a lot of people are interested in other cultures or the excotic look of their natives.

    • @senseiruthe
      @senseiruthe Рік тому +36

      @@CrunsherExtreme That would usually work but have also seen a guy say, "thats okay. I like a challenge" some guys can't be saved haha

    • @JJ_loves_JP
      @JJ_loves_JP Рік тому +16

      @@senseiruthe some guys are just wild animals lol

    • @splork8016
      @splork8016 Рік тому +46

      As a guy it's not easy to understand when it's a no, or a no for now, like she addressed in the video. Sometimes they want you to leave, sometimes they want you to try harder, sometimes it's confusing.

  • @laurencemestas9988
    @laurencemestas9988 4 місяці тому +14

    I love how your voice sounds while you are talking very calmly. Nice information to keep in mind. Thank you!

  • @adtvtxvafaee9799
    @adtvtxvafaee9799 7 місяців тому +3

    I was taken aback at first but as I listened more I learned and understood more. Very informative.

  • @bluemuscle2
    @bluemuscle2 Рік тому +679

    As an American male we are used to being told things directly sometimes we do not pick up on subtle hints too well😊

    • @SooooNerdy
      @SooooNerdy Рік тому +23

      Well that's false lol you break personal space. And you ignore discomfort signs. " I was just trying to get to know you" I'm just a nice guy.

    • @alexjugureanu853
      @alexjugureanu853 Рік тому +88

      @@SooooNerdy nerd

    • @TheKhalzone
      @TheKhalzone Рік тому +16

      As an Aussie... yeah same, though that could just be me being dense

    • @notusingmyname4791
      @notusingmyname4791 Рік тому +44

      @@SooooNerdy most of us also miss the indirect hints that a girl is into us.

    • @aceshotz5051
      @aceshotz5051 Рік тому +3

      @@alexjugureanu853 I mean… it’s in his username so, yeah

  • @okguy1282
    @okguy1282 Рік тому +223

    Interesting. I am married to a Vietnamese woman. I am Puerto Rican. Living in California. So I had head start on cultural differences. Met my wife in High School a long time ago. She was only in US for 3 years. Even then at my young age I knew I had to approach with caution. She was nice to everyone but she associated more with her girl friends. I approach her as if I was not interested. Just started conversation. Stayed at a distance. As time went on I earned her confidence then she would approach me. I was so happy. After that the rest is history. She then knew I was interested and later on she said she appreciated my patience. She felt that I was a guy who was responsible and committed. For me I knew I had to make adjustments for her. Foreign Guys dating Japanese women without these skills…many have wrong idea. Relationships require work…you cannot force it. Any culture. Both have to give and take. Love is wonderful, but you must show it in your respectful actions. If cultural differences…that’s another layer. Once the relationship is established then you can make mistakes. 29 years married. I did well. 🙏🏼☺️

    • @A_Really_Realist
      @A_Really_Realist 7 місяців тому +6

      A happy and prosperous life to you both. 👍

    • @azazelreficulmefistofelicu7158
      @azazelreficulmefistofelicu7158 7 місяців тому +3

      Well done mate. Congratulations to you both for those 29 years and more to come.

    • @user-rf2qe4gi4k
      @user-rf2qe4gi4k 7 місяців тому +3

      I call bullshit.. what teenage boy in highschool has this level of social and cultural awareness regardless of where you're from.. I bet you dicked it up like every other boy does going in to hard and then you were told by her to slow down... boring men change their stories as they get older, the stories get spicier with every year they're told, trust me, my dads 60, his stories are Thai curry by now hahahaha. Good on ya and congrats on a successful marriage!

    • @maegalroammis6020
      @maegalroammis6020 7 місяців тому

      what isd has to do with japanese? ok asian womern are wazste of time

    • @stanspb763
      @stanspb763 7 місяців тому

      Good response. The same guys complaining about foreign girls in her own country rejecting them, are guys who were also rejected by girls of his own society that know him best. There are a lot of childish responses about how bad it is for a Japanese girl to not be interested in a guy who could not even attract girls in his own country. Americans who have no world experience assume everyone wants them because of their passport. No, that assumption is what gives Americans a bad reputation in other countries(plus the fact that the US has likely bombed their country and staged coups in 104 countries.) I have dated in most of the 92 countries I have spent time in and see the same sort of behavior by Americans visiting other countries expecting to be held in high regard. That arrogance comes from ignorance of the societies they visit. At one time after WW2, a better quality of life was possible than in countries that were attacked since the US was untouched during the war that claimed 65,000,000 killed, almost half of those were Soviet citizens who were killed in defeating the Axis Powers. The only country that exited the war richer than entering was the US. But that arrogance is built into most Americans who know nothing about the rest of the world.

  • @tintineadoraermitanya
    @tintineadoraermitanya 5 місяців тому +16

    I’m a Spanish girl and I think my personality matches much more with the Japanese culture. For example, I could never date a guy if he doesn’t ask me about it formally. That’s one of the reasons why it gets really difficult for me to adapt to my own country’s culture, because in Spain, people tend to be extremely extroverted and honest. ^^U

    • @darassylmoniakam
      @darassylmoniakam 4 місяці тому

      we have no reason to respect him.

    • @Joseph-kq9zc
      @Joseph-kq9zc 2 дні тому

      I’m Spanish, descendant of Conquistadors here in the Southwest United States. We have are different, more rough around the edges. More of, “ I like this girl she is mine now”…lol

  • @jonathanhall7815
    @jonathanhall7815 6 місяців тому +2

    Very insightful, I would probably have tripped up on some of these points. I am impressed by your sensitivity and attitude of respect.

  • @williamknopic7915
    @williamknopic7915 Рік тому +56

    Wisdom comes with maturity.
    And everything falls into place.
    Doesn't matter what the culture is.
    Because Wisdom is present.

  • @sleeper6000
    @sleeper6000 11 місяців тому +61

    If you're American, it does depend regionally on where you are from. As someone from the northeastern US, I was always taught growing up to mind personal space and not be super touchy. It was a little hard adjusting when I moved to California where everyone does hug a lot or get close. Personally, having personal space boundary is important to me so, I'd rather keep a minimum safe distance. Some guys like doing that (touching, hand on shoulder or even leg etc) as it is a non verbal way of communicating "I like you" or trying to hookup in some cases, so that's why some of them do it. I am very blunt/ direct because of where I'm from, so that's something good to keep in mind if I ever visit Japan, haha.

    • @jakegaubatz
      @jakegaubatz 7 місяців тому +1

      It has to do with the weather as well. Warmer climates I think are more open to being closer to each other due to the lack of harsh winters.

    • @sunnymammajamma6455
      @sunnymammajamma6455 7 місяців тому +7

      @sleeper6000, yeah touchy feely ? How else is girl going to understand you want to be physical or get intimate ? Just by talking all night at covid distance apart? Yeah 1st date second date but third date you still expect to be sitting Covid distance apart? By the third date she probably going to think why is this guy so afraid to dare touch me or lean in for a kiss. Is it the Norm to ask to be BF GF before even kissing ? She fails to talk about that. Now I don’t live in japan so I don’t know, but what she talking about sound like school girl shit. As a grown ass woman does the same rules apply?

    • @BooDamnHoo
      @BooDamnHoo 5 місяців тому

      Ah. I've "learned" from psychology to not get into someone's personal space (get too close) but to do periodic and subtle touching. This is as simple as intentionally and lightly touching or brushing her hand at an opportune moment, touching her shoulder gently and briefly when moving around her or leaving a table, etc. Just small, light touches now and then. There is a psychological basis to this that often will make her feel slightly more warmly towards you, or more personal. This doesn't mean constant touching or wrapping an arm around her, or putting your hand on her leg. This is light, brief, subtle. Go too much too soon and it's creepy. Maybe be even more careful about it with Japanese women. It can help silently express your interest or friendliness initially. It doesn't even need to be someone you are interested in to use it a LITTLE. I will touch fingers or hands with even a female bank teller just to make the interaction a bit less informal and mechanical. It can help to warm their interactions with you in a helpful and pleasant way. Of course, if a woman does it to you it works the other way around as well but can be a definite indicator of her interest in you. Don't be creepy.

    • @giannilyanicks1718
      @giannilyanicks1718 3 місяці тому

      ten big reasons why the Japanese doesn't make good friends:
      1 they are too lazy to learn foreign languages and they laugh at our accents when we speak badly their language
      2 they never tell us what mistakes we would make, even though it is the only solution to improve us in front of them
      3 they judge what people deserve to hear their "honne" (true thoughts and feelings) and they impose lies most of the time
      4 they insult us behind the back without seeking to know us more and they refuse to talk about themselves for some reason
      5 they are too serious , they only swear by work-work all their life and by their nonsense rules, they don't care about humanity
      6 they're very money-driven
      7 they refuse to invite you in their homes without explaining you why and considers your appart like a museum
      8 they don't want affection
      9they believe stories told by their xenophobic elders
      10 they abandon us suddenly by "ghosting"
      interacting with them is a wasting our time for us westerners. Don't annoy me with "nyeeeeh therez ppl like them in da world" please.

    • @PolferiferusII
      @PolferiferusII Місяць тому

      It also depends on personality, which has variation wherever you're from. I generally don't/didn't think about it in a direct vs indirect way. I was grew up with 2 brothers and 2 sisters insensitive. Both of my brothers are talkative, the older is a bit aggressive, my younger brother isn't aggressive but talks often and very loudly due to speech problems; of my sisters, my eldest is very polite by nature, but often makes uncomfortable unintentional social gaffs that hurt people's feelings, my other sister is loud, but pretty sensitive, but can be pushy. Myself, the fourth of five, is quiet, and sometimes wishes his siblings would were quieter. I like to think before I speak with strangers, and always try to not hurt others feelings. So, from myself and my siblings, 4 out of five are, I guess, typical Amerigajin (is that how its spelled?), but, at least in this respect, I might not be a typical American. However quiet I am, though, I am more direct than, perhaps, a typical Japanese person, but always trying to be considerate. Growing up my family hosted foreign students during Christmas for many years. About half were from East Asia (Vietnam, Japan, S. Korea, and Taiwan), and all were clearly more "direct" than the students from Japan.

  • @Lexyvil
    @Lexyvil 7 місяців тому +57

    In terms of relationships, I feel it's really important to be direct in terms of how we feel as soon as we're able to. It prevents wasting the time of the person that aimed to be in a serious relationship, like that they can quickly know in advance that they can move on to look for someone else who may be more interested and likely to accept dates.
    Sure being friendzoned hurts, but at least it's better that it's being addressed sooner rather than have it drag on to where it would hurt a lot more for being falsely led. Being straight to the point saves a lot of trouble for both parties.

    • @darassylmoniakam
      @darassylmoniakam 4 місяці тому

      japanese are the worst persons to date.

    • @daenackdranils5624
      @daenackdranils5624 4 місяці тому

      eight big reasons why the Japanese doesn't make good friends:
      1 they are too lazy to learn foreign languages and they laugh at our accents when we speak badly their language
      2 they never tell us what mistakes we would make, even though it is the only solution to improve us in front of them
      3 they judge what people deserve to hear their "honne" (true thoughts and feelings) and they lies most of the time
      4 they insult us behind the back without seeking to know us more and they refuse to talk about themselves for some reason
      5 they are too serious , they only swears by work-work all their life and by their nonsense rules, they don't care about humanity
      6 they doesn't want to date tourists , you can't contact them country to country , they're very money-driven
      7 they refuse to invite you in their homes without explaining you why and considers your appart like a museum
      8 they believe lies told by their xenophobic elders who bash foreigners
      interacting with them is a waste of time for westerners. don't annoy me with "nyeeeeh every ppl r like them" please.

    • @giannilyanicks1718
      @giannilyanicks1718 3 місяці тому

      good reason to not respect japanese.

    • @giannilyanicks1718
      @giannilyanicks1718 2 місяці тому +2

      good reason to hate them

    • @puremachinery
      @puremachinery 2 місяці тому

      @Lexyvil It sounds like you just shouldn't try to date Japanese people.

  • @SpaceDisco1
    @SpaceDisco1 7 місяців тому

    I'm always so amused that this is such a huge topic.

  • @anarchyforlive
    @anarchyforlive Рік тому +50

    This was fun to watch for me (Dutch guy) and my Japanese wife. I never tried to find a Japanese on purpose and it just happened. From these topics only being direct is something I do. Now me and my wife have found common ground on how to communicate. Both styles are not better or worse, just different. The most important is mutual understanding for each other and the willingness to our best for each other and patience.
    I would not have gotten the smiley thing either, but also wouldn't have gone mad saying bad words. That is just awful to me and not a proper response ever.

    • @jannepeltonen2036
      @jannepeltonen2036 10 місяців тому +9

      I mean, the Dutch are renowned even among Europeans to be extremely direct :D

    • @corumeach
      @corumeach 9 місяців тому +3

      Humility and patience are a cultural asset of many Asians. Western people are often more self-centered and demanding. But the habit of beating around the bush for the sake of saving face is very difficult for us. ;)

    • @ericcartman3485
      @ericcartman3485 9 місяців тому +1

      ​@@jannepeltonen2036i love dutch people

    • @daenackdranils5624
      @daenackdranils5624 9 місяців тому +2

      that one is masochistic , why marrying an indirect lady

    • @GenerationNextNextNext
      @GenerationNextNextNext 8 місяців тому +1

      @@daenackdranils5624 Well, he's happy isn't he?

  • @ChrysusTV
    @ChrysusTV Рік тому +118

    When I lived in the US, it seemed like confession culture was mostly until the end of high school. I think at some point even Americans have a hard time figuring out if they're a couple or not lol. Eventually you'll talk with your partner to discuss what your relationship is/isn't, but things like "will you be my girlfriend?" or "will you go out with me?" become _way_ less common after high school. Even words like "dating" will be interpreted differently by different people. Some people consider "dating" to be "an official couple" while others consider "dating" to be "going on dates but not an official couple." And then once you _are_ a couple, you can usually use the word "dating" to communicate to _others_ that you are a couple. Basically, after high school, figuring out if you're a couple and/or want to be a couple is a longer conversation you have rather than "will you be my girlfriend?" As far as I know, the entire reason for that is that phrases like, "will you be my girlfriend?" seem childish, so instead as we get older we make the whole process much more complicated for ourselves even though such a question is probably the most straightforward approach.

    • @sethaldrich6902
      @sethaldrich6902 Рік тому

      Women killed it bc they wanna date around in USA

    • @giannilyanicks1718
      @giannilyanicks1718 Рік тому +4

      five big reasons why the Japanese doesn't make good friends:
      1 they are too lazy to learn foreign languages and they laugh at our accents when we speak their language
      2 they never tell us what mistakes we would make, even though it is the only solution to improve us in front of them
      3 they judge what people deserve to hear their "honne" (true thoughts and feelings) and they lies most of the time
      4 they insult us behind the back without seeking to know us more and they refuse to talk about themselves
      5 and they are too serious , they only swears by work-work in their life and by their rules
      interacting with them is a waste of time for westerners. don't understand the weeaboo people pretending they can befriending them.

    • @StArShIpEnTeRpRiSe
      @StArShIpEnTeRpRiSe Рік тому +7

      Not because it's childish, more like, because as you older, you fear more that the girl will say NO, and you try to complicate it to get an answer without risking a "humiliation" of yourself.

    • @StArShIpEnTeRpRiSe
      @StArShIpEnTeRpRiSe Рік тому

      @@giannilyanicks1718 It's just you.
      Your 1st and 4th point prove, that the problem is mainly with you.
      They are not too lazy, they just has no reason at all to learn any foreign language, and if they do, they have easier job with Korean or Chinese than English.
      If you are a native english speaker, you should know, the problem is not them, it's your language.
      Japanese not lazy, they literally fear to speak english because they fear they speak something wrong. (Nothing wrong, but us ->BUTT ASS like this).
      Also, native english speakers basicly butcher every single language they learn. (Sayonara ->Sayo onara means Sayo's fart).
      It's not your fault, English is a language which butcher itself every single sound. Just say it out loud: "G" now say it in: "Game". See? You just said G 2 times, but pronounced it right only 1 time that's your language which is you say they are too "lazy" to learn..
      Ofc they are serious, they are socialized in a region, where earthquakes volcanic activity and typhoons destroy their country. In that many natural disaster a serious community survive, a selfish *ss however can kill everyone around him.
      If you can't understand their history/culture you can't understand them and you never make a friendship someone you can't understand at all. Learning a language not make you understand the culture behind it. And if they laugh because you say something funny and you take it as an insult, you clearly can't understand them.
      Yep, this one was direct, proving I'm not japanese. :D But you're not too, so it's fine.

    • @ChrysusTV
      @ChrysusTV Рік тому +3

      @@StArShIpEnTeRpRiSe Someone older should be gradually losing that fear. You can just, you know, move on with your life. It's not the end of the world like it is when you're in high school.

  • @shrivak
    @shrivak 6 місяців тому +3

    The idea that one shouldn't give up if his kokuhaku is refused is a really incredible insight. That right there at the end was the most valuable bit of information to me!
    N-not that the rest wasn't valuable or new.
    Thank you for the enlightenment~!!

  • @lakshmankarunaratne3541
    @lakshmankarunaratne3541 3 місяці тому +1

    Thank you very much for your explanation. It's very useful.

  • @aaronmicalowe
    @aaronmicalowe 11 місяців тому +232

    As for Kokuhaku (sounds like a penis injury), a lot of Western guys have learned not to ask formally about whether you will be a girlfriend, because if they do that in the West the response can be so extreme and negative that it can put a man off forever. So to avoid that toxicity, men simply don't ask anymore and wait for the woman to ask first. Not out of fear, but to avoid conflict.

    • @tolgacengiz3121
      @tolgacengiz3121 9 місяців тому +6

      Appreciate this great explanation

    • @GenerationNextNextNext
      @GenerationNextNextNext 8 місяців тому +16

      I hate how westerners are so hostile towards everybody. I am a woman, but I try to be respectful when I turn someone down. I tell them I'm not interested in dating anyone right now. Equally, though, I've had men who have been hostile towards me when I've nicely turned them down. And I didn't turn them down because I hated the guy. I turned them down because I have bipolar disorder and can't handle a relationship, family, or children right now. I also am asexual. He wouldn't even let me explain and called me all kinds of names, and I didn't even know the dude. He asked me out while I was having lunch by myself. Now, I don't like the guy. That wasn't the problem at first, but now it is. I don't know why people in the West are so entitled.

    • @aaronmicalowe
      @aaronmicalowe 8 місяців тому +13

      @@GenerationNextNextNext I don't understand men who are like this. I never approach women and always wait until they approach me. And yet I have managed to have two marriages (cause the first one is where you learn from your mistakes). So, there is no need for men to approach women ever. I'm happy for women to do all the work in starting a relationship, and if they don't, then I guess they don't want it. 🤷‍♂

    • @jase276
      @jase276 8 місяців тому +11

      As for America I suppose it depends on the state. Many Southern states things like Kokuhaku still exist. However in states like California and Florida, hookup culture is big, many people aren't looking for long term relationships but quick flings. And even worse, this hookup culture is idolized.

    • @martyb4815
      @martyb4815 8 місяців тому

      ​@@jase276Sorry, not for me!!! NEVER! God will not except you, if your fornicating; Roman's 8:1-9. 1Corin6:9-10.

  • @jesavius
    @jesavius Рік тому +107

    Mochi is the ultimate friend. Thank you for letting us know about Kokuhaku. We have a boyfriend/girlfriend in the U.S., but it's not as explicit as kokuhaku. We just discuss if we're dating, and that's usually an implicit agreement that we're boyfriend and girlfriend.

    • @mochirealjapanese3430
      @mochirealjapanese3430  Рік тому +15

      "dating" means like going out with who you like in Japan,
      but in the US, "dating" only use in couple?(bf and gf relationship?)

    • @jesavius
      @jesavius Рік тому +16

      @@mochirealjapanese3430 Yes, and it's confusing. In the US, if you are just dating each other exclusively, it implicitly means you guys are boyfriend and girlfriend. There's usually never a discussion about being boyfriend or girlfriend. We just say, "We're dating," implying that we're in an intimate relationship.

    • @Halera-
      @Halera- Рік тому +15

      @@mochirealjapanese3430 When a man invites a women for a date, and they go on several dates later on, people say "they go on dates". But when the man and woman become a couple, people say "they are dating" = "they are boyfriend and girlfriend".
      I think we did have "kokuhaku" culture in European-American culture long ago. When women didn't have political rights and were dependent on their man, it was a man's interest to secure a woman as his fiancee and wife later on. But now, from a man's point of view, it only makes sense to pick up women. There is no business in securing a formal relationship. It is a woman's business to establish a formal couple status. So it is more often the woman asking the man to confirm their formal status.
      There are 2 aberrations with this. Sometimes it happens the man asks the woman for becoming his girlfriend. But this usually happens when the man is significantly less attractive and he is not sure if the woman wants him, or the man was brought up in very traditional values. The second aberration is that women have business in securing a formal relationship, but they rarely do it. They often rely on emotions and how they perceive atmosphere with the man (just as you said Japanese people rely on less direct messages) and assume they are a couple. When you said you didn't consider the BBQ man as your boyfriend, European and American women more often have the opposite problem: they think they are in a relationship but the man thinks differently.

    • @dharmaandra4720
      @dharmaandra4720 Рік тому +1

      @@mochirealjapanese3430 so why you not dating gaijin?😏 or you not like japsdick?😏🤣

    • @YourBestNeighbor7
      @YourBestNeighbor7 Рік тому +5

      @@dharmaandra4720 are you angry???

  • @twlowe19
    @twlowe19 7 місяців тому +12

    Absolutely loved my time in Japan and loved so many different things there. Dating there always seemed far too convoluted and a number of guys I knew ran into serious drama, so I generally steered clear. This would've gone out the window had I met someone who simply knocked me out, but alas, there's no predicting when that could happen and it simply didn't. Such is life.

  • @davidmaib677
    @davidmaib677 6 місяців тому +1

    Yes, we do! You are wonderful. Thank you.

  • @AynenMakino
    @AynenMakino 10 місяців тому +25

    I'm really glad you're willing to talk openly about this. It's difficult to understand a culture well when not being direct about many things is such a large part of that culture. Saying everything so openly really helps to understand what it's like for Japanese people to be socially involved with forreigners.

    • @FocusedFighter777
      @FocusedFighter777 7 місяців тому

      I doubt most fo these dudes care about the culture or folklore etc... They just want to bathe in their fetish of 'cute submissive japanese girl'..

    • @darassylmoniakam
      @darassylmoniakam 4 місяці тому +3

      that'z why it's not a good idea to go in japan.

  • @spammus1
    @spammus1 11 місяців тому +22

    As an Italian, I get the "get too much into my personal space" thing a lot, even just with male friends from other countries. It's definitely something I always try to keep in mind when I'm travelling abroad, but sometimes I just do it unconsciously

    • @Surfnturf808
      @Surfnturf808 Місяць тому

      Yeah, I’m American and Italians get too close for even my comfort😂

  • @AtlasDestroyerFan
    @AtlasDestroyerFan Місяць тому

    very helpful! thank you so much. 😊

  • @findinggreatness
    @findinggreatness 3 місяці тому +1

    I think that everything that you said was very understandable and I agree 💯

  • @MatadorM9
    @MatadorM9 Рік тому +85

    I think I’m fine with most of these points, specially number 1. I like to protect my personal space lol. The one I find awkward is not being direct. I like people to tell me clearly what they want or think. But when it comes to relationships it’s ok not being so direct. Some of my rejections came in the form of “I’m flattered but …” , “I’m not ready to date rn” etc.
    What is the nationality of the guy you rejected and got angry. I think more than cultural might be personality. I know guys from Mexico and heard Americans can be like that. But again, I think it’s more of their personalities.
    My wife is Chinese and before we started dating she had a similar experience. They fit after being rejected, started insulting her and insulting China. Those are sore losers.

    • @UchihaKuriso
      @UchihaKuriso Рік тому +3

      Same. Social intricacies escape me, so I prefer if someone is direct. I will probably not get what you want if you keep skirting around. xD

    • @dethkok3869
      @dethkok3869 Рік тому +1

      @@UchihaKuriso I concur.

    • @maikutsukino4743
      @maikutsukino4743 Рік тому +16

      Guy from America here! You are correct. Any guy that is rejected and becomes angry and verbally abusive is NOT the kind of guy you want to be with. I think it shows they really did not care in the first place and were looking for a woman to be a possession, not a girlfriend.

    • @ajosralastname7823
      @ajosralastname7823 Рік тому +1

      You seem Mexican

    • @maikutsukino4743
      @maikutsukino4743 Рік тому +4

      @@ajosralastname7823 LOL! Naw, really an American. Born in Western New York. Bloodlines: 30% Scottish, 30%German, 25% Dutch and 15% Native American Mohawk. I really like highlighting the Mohawk side from time to time! I would be the 6th generation born in America. Welcome to the Great Melting Pot! Was going to marry into the Japanese culture and move there.

  • @erikbrantner4295
    @erikbrantner4295 Рік тому +5

    Hi,
    I just wanted to mention that it's probably a good idea to be honest as well as open minded to other cultures and that there's many different ways of expressing.
    Try not to be too vague.
    Sometimes being direct will keep you from guessing what the other person is all about and how they feel.
    It would be nice if we could all be mind readers or more simply,be gifted to know what you are saying with body language or even conversation from a person not face to face/ or long distance relationship!
    Everyone is different .
    Thanks for this information on this 😊

  • @NicEphesians611
    @NicEphesians611 Місяць тому

    Thanks for your advice, wish me luck! 😆

  • @g_man2177
    @g_man2177 7 місяців тому +1

    I do like the fact that you focus on the positive aspects with communication. I can respect a person's boundaries (space) when you don't know each other well, and eliminating the grey area when establishing a relationship.

  • @MayumiC-chan9377
    @MayumiC-chan9377 Рік тому +17

    My husband is South African Zulu and Japanese (African American father and Japanese mother)
    my husband knows our culture well and i’m glad when we travel back to Japan with our Daughter and Son. We have been married for 10 years and it’s a wonderful relationship!
    My husband is an ex-soldier and i’m a pediatrician and we love your videos!
    One thing i loved was when we started our relationship we went on a trip to Okinawa and he isolated me so we could talk. He told me he wasn’t perfect and he has a lot of things he will improve. He told me and still says it today “You bring out the best in me” and i love how he treats me and our children. My husband works hard and unlike his time in the military he is always there for us.

    • @mookiestewart3776
      @mookiestewart3776 Рік тому +4

      I’m a half black American too (white European and African American) I’m heading to Japan next year to teach , wish me luck lol

    • @serpentmanthys6439
      @serpentmanthys6439 Рік тому

      Poor of ur husband's mother's thing :'(

    • @MayumiC-chan9377
      @MayumiC-chan9377 Рік тому +2

      @@serpentmanthys6439 i don’t understand what you mean

    • @serpentmanthys6439
      @serpentmanthys6439 Рік тому

      @@MayumiC-chan9377 Don't worry sis. It was just a joke. :)

    • @MayumiC-chan9377
      @MayumiC-chan9377 Рік тому +3

      @@serpentmanthys6439 i don’t like the joke

  • @wave8359
    @wave8359 11 місяців тому +7

    You are absolutely right, lady !---and it is true also of many other cultures in the world, especially in South and East Asia. Ironically enough, it is this self-respecting modesty of Japanese women that makes them so appealing and attractive to many of us in the West, as well as in the East.
    Please do not change . Your self respect is admirable.

  • @jeep3r
    @jeep3r 3 місяці тому +1

    Yes, i can understand your point, and you are right.

  • @ianavery6774
    @ianavery6774 5 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for the insights

  • @SrSaraviaMusic
    @SrSaraviaMusic Рік тому +72

    I think that the respect and tolerance to other people's culture must be mutual. It's cool to learn about each other, discovering new things and find things in common

    • @mcmarkmarkson7115
      @mcmarkmarkson7115 11 місяців тому +3

      Culture doesn't matter much, what you need to attract women: Look good or have money/influence/a good job. This is true in every culture.
      Also never trust what a women says she likes in front of the camera.

    • @MemoryMori
      @MemoryMori 10 місяців тому

      @@mcmarkmarkson7115 I must agree and disagree on half what you said :D :D
      just dont know whitch half :D :D

    • @mcmarkmarkson7115
      @mcmarkmarkson7115 10 місяців тому

      @@MemoryMori let me know if you find out :D

    • @joeljude9180
      @joeljude9180 10 місяців тому

      @@mcmarkmarkson7115 They are all important. If you look like a model, are super rich, and rage like a barbarian every time y'all have a miscommunication, she won't want to be around you :/

    • @mcmarkmarkson7115
      @mcmarkmarkson7115 10 місяців тому

      @@joeljude9180 Do you know of anyone that looks like a model, is super rich and rages like a barbarian but is without somebody?
      Women especially have a big tolerance for bad boys. Men are far less likely to stay in abusive relationships, but there is an increasing number of such losers.

  • @JaredKuharski
    @JaredKuharski 10 місяців тому +3

    Hello, Your video brought a smile to my face. Finding out the differences between cultures is a lot of fun. We don't have a 'kokuhaku' culture in the United States, but it would make things a lot simpler. I think it would be cute to have 1, 3, 6 month anniversaries with someone. I understand now why the kokuhaku is important to a person in Japan. My suggestion is when anyone meets a foreigner that they are interested in romantically, they should let them know how they feel, and at the very least do some research or talk with your special person about what expectations they have from the relationship. Ask this person what specific events or holidays they would like to celebrate together, and find out what traditions are important to each other.

  • @pensamentmenut
    @pensamentmenut 5 місяців тому +1

    We do kokuhaku in Spain too! Even though it's not like asking a yes or no question, but more like having a talk in order to define the relationship. Setting a date and celebrating monthly anniversaries is more common amongst younger people, teenagers and such

  • @heinzklinckwort2958
    @heinzklinckwort2958 6 місяців тому +1

    Thank you very much for this priceless advice dear Mochi-sensei !! Allow me to express that your eyes are very beautiful, they are so pretty !!

  • @emteiks
    @emteiks 11 місяців тому +4

    Great that you share these thoughts on relationships. I did not know about kokuhaku and I think it is not so common in Europe to ask explicitly but it is often assumed as obvious after the couple spends more time together and is close to each other. The anniversary day is often "the first day we've met", not the "date of kokuhaku declaration" ❤

    • @nindza79
      @nindza79 3 місяці тому

      Isn't the first kiss the official date? I mean, people know each other since they are kids and then they get together later in life, it would be weird to automatically give like 15 years to anniversary lol.

  • @XsxLife
    @XsxLife Місяць тому +1

    Awesome video!!!

  • @cruz25617
    @cruz25617 5 місяців тому +2

    This is actual respectable advice. I can see how kindness can easily be misinterpreted, or even mistaken as approachable. Some people may view it as weakness and feel entitled that it's there chance to take advantage. Which i do not like.
    This is especially true when they overstep your boundaries, and they think they can just start touching you. You'd be surprised at just how ignorant a lot of people can be. Or, the purpose of you making this video is exactly because of these said experiences. Having your guard up is normal for everyone.
    Anxiety is a thing. So some individuals configure things differently from other's. My challenge is that i am a very open minded person. So it would be hard for me to beat around the bush, or thread lightly.
    I usually don't shy away from personal questions, and would also like the same in return. But being it's a different culture altogether, i can and will respect the differences. As well as take this advice we'll into consideration.
    Thank You.

  • @solinokun
    @solinokun Рік тому +26

    Wow the kokohaku culture is also true in other places. I'm from the middle-east and it's so weird for me in the US that if someone asks you to go eat outside or meet somewhere, you're kinda automatically assumed to be in a romantic relationship. In my country, while asking someone to meet up somewhere shows that you probably like them, you do have to actually ask them to become your boyfriend or girlfriend for the romantic relationship to start. So glad Japan is the same😂😅

    • @fireteamomega2343
      @fireteamomega2343 10 місяців тому +2

      No not really most people in the US don't really care about what you are doing unless they need to mind their own business or you're in a small town with nothing to do but gossip.

    • @kilerog
      @kilerog 10 місяців тому +2

      Just eating with a girl doesn't mean you're dating. But if you're repeatedly doing dating activities then it should not be surprising if one of the both of the pair decides that "yeah, this means we're dating." Generally, the first couple of dates should be about establishing what the relationship is and whether it's going to continue on or break up. Though there is a very annoying trend among people nowadays to "not put a label" on their relationship, and then you get craziness like "we've been going out for six months but we're not boyfriend/girlfriend." It can also lead to problems with miscommunication about how serious the relationship is, or whether they're supposed to be exclusive or not, etc.

    • @GenerationNextNextNext
      @GenerationNextNextNext 8 місяців тому +1

      @@kilerog I'm a Western woman. I'm bipolar with gray-asexuality due to phobia of pregnancy and child of abuse. If a guy approaches me, asking to date me, there will be high conditions he has to meet, practically, because I'm baggage, even if some guys think I look good. Some western guys think girls shouldn't have any high standards at all, but they don't seem to be realistic about relationships, marriage, and family, which is what dating leads to. I usually just turn guys down because I know dating me is difficult. But some insist or even get angry when I do. And I don't always want to explain my personal business.
      If someone asks me out, this means they are trying to impress me and get to know me, not the other way around. Therefore, for me, I do not consider myself officially dating someone until a year has passed. That's my condition. If I ask a guy out, I have to meet his condition. But if it's me being asked out, you have to convince ME. That might seem a long time to a lot of guys; this is why I don't date. Six months is too short for me. But I need that time to make sure that someone can be trusted, is safe, is kind, has a good temperament, shares my values on life, etc. If someone says they don't "want to put a label on it", there's nothing wrong with that if they are unsure. I'd rather you say that then jump in too quickly. That makes you seem unrealistic to me. Someone who doesn't want a label is someone who realizes they aren't sure of you yet or they have other things going on. If someone doesn't like that phrase, they don't have to date them. But I personally appreciate a "no labels" approach because it allows us to get to know one another without expectation, as human beings before lovers, if that's your intention. Before you become my boyfriend, husband, and father of my children, I need you to become my friend.
      Personally, the only guys I've been on the fence of not rejecting have been childhood friends who seemed to have never changed much. The guys who've asked how I was doing without asking me on dates. Who worried about my mental and physical health condition. Who drove me to the hospital when I had bad menstrual cramps due to fibroids. Who knew about my abuse and asked me how relatives were doing. Those guys ALMOST made me want to date them, but again, I consider what I can physically and mentally handle in a date, and that varies from person to person. The timestamp of six months seems to be so common to Westerners, particularly Americans, that it's like they can't wrap their heads around the idea of patience.
      I agree about communicating though. I usually make it very clear from the beginning that it will take me a year to really warm up to anyone, and in that time I will be seeing whether you can be trusted as a boyfriend or husband.

    • @Aaron-us2ux
      @Aaron-us2ux 5 місяців тому

      ​@@GenerationNextNextNext So many requirements.... I'm sure you must be very pretty.😂😂🤣Good luck🍀 with that.👍🏼😎✌️

  • @aaronmicalowe
    @aaronmicalowe 11 місяців тому +100

    I remember one think my Japanese girlfriend really hated was kissing in public - it made her seize up, and giving her a hug while she was doing the washing up. Ironically, I avoided doing these things with my current wife but she really loves them, so you have to get to know every individual in life, erm... individually. That's a big part of the reason we even have relationships.

    • @ThePhantom712
      @ThePhantom712 10 місяців тому +3

      Its to bad u didnt bring her to German sauna and made out with her in the jacuzzi lol.

    • @moontecker
      @moontecker 10 місяців тому +7

      @aaronmicalowe I do think kissing in public should be kept at personal space or time. Especially here in NYC that is where I am......I seen way too many. I always felt like why not make out at home. No need to show everyone that your making out with your GF/BF. This is personal matters.

    • @aaronmicalowe
      @aaronmicalowe 10 місяців тому +6

      @@moontecker My current wife is Ugandan. They're even stricter. If you kiss in public, it's jail. It's considered a sex crime there.

    • @yvonnehorde1097
      @yvonnehorde1097 9 місяців тому +2

      @@ThePhantom712 Many saunas are naked in Germany but it is frowned upon if you make out there.

    • @ericcartman3485
      @ericcartman3485 9 місяців тому +1

      ​@@yvonnehorde1097is it? I have seen multiple couples kissing in these? Just kissing, not "making out" though

  • @crypteiansentry1922
    @crypteiansentry1922 2 місяці тому

    I think your attitude was correct on 3. I am an Australian male and your first three are similar views to my own way of thinking. Item 4 is an old fashioned culture that is dependent on your upbringing. My failing would be in the touching, if I feel a connection or protective in some situations, but patience and working to know each other used to be the way for us all. Now it is a lost skill or consideration and many relationships are taken for granted.
    The very reason foreign men look to Asian women for relationships. Traditional values...and then 90% of them mess it up, just as you explain. I was lucky, I am a slow and not so confident guy as to rush into anything recklessly. This year in August will mark our eleventh anniversary ❤

  • @MLBBFATBROS
    @MLBBFATBROS 5 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for sharing your opinion!

  • @rezthemediaruler3768
    @rezthemediaruler3768 Рік тому +8

    This is very interesting and I thank you for sharing those informations with your Viewers.
    In Germany the 4 Points are like this (Note: This differs from person to person and I will speak of how a well behaved mature person would act):
    1. We don‘t like to be very close to one another unless we are already in the Relationship and prefer to take it more slowly. We want to be sure that our Partner wants to get close with us and not force them.
    2.We want to know what our Partner does like and does not like to make them happy and avoid to make them upset. We make ourselves very clear in that to not accidentally hurt each other by mistake or force Situations where one could feel himself to be uncomfortable.
    3. We need clear Communication, especially over agreements. We often say that „Communication is Key“ and we need to clarify how a Relationship will go on. We don‘t want People around us that we can not stand for personal reasons and we don‘t want to have a big Drama over a minor thing.
    Also, we don‘t want to hurt the other Person more badly in not telling them we are not interested (that’s what bad people would do).
    If we are not interested, we will tell you right away.
    4. We do ask the one we love to get together and become a Couple if the Person agrees.
    A single „No“ however will lead to the Person asking the Question, to not ask again!
    So if you are not sure and don‘t want them to leave tell them something like:
    „Maybe?“
    „Let‘s spend some more time together.“
    „I am not sure, but I do like you. Please give me some time.“
    Something like that.
    Again. This is what a normal and mature person would do.
    Be sure to learn about other Cultures or you may kill your Friendships, Relationships and potential Partnerships.
    Have a nice day everyone.

  • @graystreak8312
    @graystreak8312 Рік тому +31

    in the USA, Confessing your love and Kokuhaku are common during school but not so much as you get older. Dating can be really confusing here since it really depends on where you grew up. I am from Philly, pa and folks there are very direct. However, that isn't the case in most other parts of the country. For Example, Los Angeles has a very complex dating scene since so many diverse folks live here from all different kinda of backgrounds, cultures and countries. In fact, you often have to ask where someone is from to figure out the best way to approach asking them out, what level of personal questions will make them comfortable, and what "dates" consist of.

    • @Xilladan093
      @Xilladan093 Рік тому

      Lol demon rat cesspools with homeless, junkies, and modern people

    • @liltanksJJ
      @liltanksJJ Рік тому +2

      I agree this dating trash in the US is a headache

    • @christheghost2655
      @christheghost2655 Рік тому +1

      Agreed, it's like. Sometimes kids will kokuhaku , but then when we get older
      We stop and now it seems like if we ask them out to coffee or a movie it's equivalent to asking.
      I've dated a lot. And finally found the right one to marry. But geeeeeeeeeeeez it is a nightmare to get here.

    • @sethaldrich6902
      @sethaldrich6902 Рік тому +1

      It doesn't happen anymore unless after having alot of sex

    • @OxysLokiMoros
      @OxysLokiMoros Рік тому +1

      From a german perspective people from America are not really honest or direct, they are usually super friendly, but honest or direct... no way.

  • @Karatejin
    @Karatejin 4 місяці тому +1

    About item 4:
    - I stepped forward and asked my lady if she would like to be my girlfriend, my companion! Thinking about previous relationships (or sort of), I sensed that if I hadn't made any move, all would slip among my fingers. I'm glad I did that! 😄
    One more sub!
    Happy New Year!

  • @killroyagain
    @killroyagain 6 місяців тому +2

    Nope, we don't have the kokahaku culture in Belgium. But young teenagers (10-12 yo) sometimes do. They often ask to a boy/girl if he/she wants to start a relationship with him/her. When we get older that way of "kokahaku" changes into "a first kiss on the lips'. That date can also be used too for celebration (like I do with my wife).

  • @rajgutierajgutie6139
    @rajgutierajgutie6139 10 місяців тому +5

    I completely agree with your perspective. It's important to recognize that not all foreigners behave in the ways that are often stereotyped. It's understandable that personal space is important to you, as it is for many people, regardless of their cultural background. Additionally, being too forward and asking personal questions can be seen as rude in many cultures, so it's important to be aware of these cultural differences and show respect for them. I commend you for valuing cultural understanding and taking the time to learn about different cultures before entering into relationships. and as far as that guy who you had issues with is his problem, not yours, you did the right thing. He had a very low esteem, and it was obvious. Being angry and rude to people is not acceptable.

  • @damian99669
    @damian99669 Рік тому +8

    Long ago when i was stationed in japan I was in a long term relationship with a Japanese girl that I had know for a long time (prior to moving to Japan). This is very spot on, to this day I am still sad that I couldn't stay in japan or convince my girlfriend to move to the US with me. Compared to my relationships here in the US things are very different, PDA and communication methods being a big part of this. Maybe I have not found the right person yet here but I feel like my relationship in japan was more mature (probably a poor word choice) even though my later relationships were when both me and my partners were older.
    Great video!

  • @emjizone
    @emjizone Місяць тому

    9:30 It depends a lot on culture, religion, personal beliefs and so on. Some people attach importance to anniversaries of common events such as the first time you met, or the first time you kissed, or the anniversary of that famous barbecue you're talking about. How you commemorate it is also extremely variable. But the most traditional and common anniversary is the wedding anniversary.

  • @erichter66
    @erichter66 2 місяці тому

    This was a cool video and I learned something new. Not really sure how I ended up watching it, but it is like that sometimes when you are avoiding homework. 😂

  • @xxwallzxx4509
    @xxwallzxx4509 Рік тому +10

    Everyone is different. Valuing personal space is normal.
    Edit: A different place doesn't really specify the person on their personality. Yes, there are some different cultures. In which some will act based on their culture. But for the majority and overall. Everyone is the same as in you can find personality traits from a person in Japan to match a person that is in Africa. Nerdy shy, anime lover, jock style personality, pretty boy personality, rude, nice guy, etc. Personality traits is based on individuals and doesn't come with country or culture.

  • @rda51
    @rda51 10 місяців тому +9

    I've been to Japan four times because I absolutely love the culture and the people.
    Your video is a perfect example of the beautiful hearts of the Japanese.
    I think Japanese men would rarely get angry like your Western friend did.
    Love the Kokuhaku culture. I wasn't aware of that. Thank you for teaching us more about your beautiful way of life.
    Can't wait to get back to 🎌❤

  • @mnkykungfu
    @mnkykungfu 5 місяців тому

    Hi Mochi, I lived in Japan for many years and have to say that your points were very clear and I think very common...great job! I will say that a lot of foreign guys probably do somewhat realize these things, but in many countries we also come to learn that "the early bird catches the worm"... that is, it's better to be a bit aggressive or push those limits because some other guy will swoop in and get the pretty girl first if you don't! Probably the guys you encountered were quite interested in dating you, whether you realized it or not. And as far as the "declaring the official relationship" culture: that can be generational, too. I think these days with a lot of people connecting more through technology and screens than through personal time, many people don't have the same interpersonal skills that used to be more common. They can't deal with disagreements or conflict as well, and so just try to avoid it... like potentially getting a "no" answer to asking someone to be official BF/GF. Younger people ghost into and out of relationships more often, whereas my generation tend to think both are quite rude. So: date an older foreign guy and compare. ww

  • @Kai_Animation39
    @Kai_Animation39 7 місяців тому +2

    In the philippines we have a thing called M.U. which stands for mutual understanding. We do have kokohaku and to us it's plain common sense similar to japanese to make the relationship official.we also have monthly anniversaries called "monthsary" to celebrate each month of being bf gf. Sadly I don't have a gf because I'm shy 😢

  • @jacepro2827
    @jacepro2827 10 місяців тому +7

    we do have some similar dating methods to kokuhaku here in the philippines. we call it Ligaw (Lee - ghaw). its actually a dating period where couples get to know each other but it has to be mentioned by the person who wants to start the relationship and once his/her partner is satisfied, he/she would say yes.

    • @cakiepop2038
      @cakiepop2038 5 місяців тому

      In America, we call that "going steady" !

    • @SalvadorButtersworth
      @SalvadorButtersworth 4 місяці тому

      In the Philippines, isn't it normal to bring your mother and cousins on the first date with you?

  • @selohcin
    @selohcin Рік тому +474

    "I didn't tell him directly because I didn't want to hurt him, but I think I hurt him more by not telling him directly." YES. Women all over the world need to wake up and realize this. Whatever "manners" you think you are having by not telling a man that you're not interested in him are completely cancelled out by the sheer rudeness of giving a man a false impression of your relationship.

    • @RazielBR
      @RazielBR Рік тому +54

      Hmmmmmm no? I mean, we tend to be more direct, yes. But assuming that every girl that talks to you is interested in you is more of a guy's fault than the girl's.

    • @ggasco1254
      @ggasco1254 Рік тому

      why do only the women have to wake up? Are the men stupid? or unable to adapt?

    • @paulrickard-steelphantom4476
      @paulrickard-steelphantom4476 Рік тому +30

      I agree simply because I recently dealt with this. So many mixed signals. After 2 dates acting like she is interested but never makes time for me...always friends or likely another guy...so I realize she just wants attention and say see ya! It hurt more because I was so confused and thought I needed to try this or that... yeah be direct! It hurts but you know where you stand and can move on faster!

    • @tylerrobinson8963
      @tylerrobinson8963 Рік тому

      I know most people in America don't talk to each other with their faces that close. It's usually the piss drunks that do that with their stinking alcohol breath. The talk of being direct is about both parties being adult enough to ask and answer questions honestly while also handling unfavorable responses without reducing the mind back to adolescent impulse. I would agree at that East Asian society, especially females make far less noise than my fellow Americans. Philosophical principles are engrained in the history of the far East. Since World War 2 America has leaned on the idea of Exceptionalism. Bigger, stronger, faster, more powerful, attack life as if it's a roadblock keeping you from glory. There is no doubt our culture is dominated by arrogance for better or worse.

    • @giannilyanicks1718
      @giannilyanicks1718 Рік тому +18

      five big reasons why the Japanese doesn't make good friends:
      1 they are too lazy to learn foreign languages and they laugh at our accents when we speak their language
      2 they never tell us what mistakes we would make, even though it is the only solution to improve us in front of them
      3 they judge what people deserve to hear their "honne" (true thoughts and feelings) and they lies most of the time
      4 they insult us behind the back without seeking to know us more and they refuse to talk about themselves
      5 and they are too serious , they only swears by work-work in their life and by their rules
      interacting with them is a waste of time for westerners. don't understand the weeaboo people pretending they can befriending them.

  • @sanaatanviswa
    @sanaatanviswa 26 днів тому

    Nice inputs ❤❤

  • @kretzschi5000
    @kretzschi5000 7 місяців тому

    about relationships, in germany for example we kind of had a kokuhaku culture there were these famous little peaces of paper during school and people would write in class on the paper "would you go out with me? Yes, No, maybe" and would give it to their chosen one but that is no more. nowadays it starts with a kiss. you get closer and as soon as you kiss you know, now it starts. Its even more complicated with friends. you dont ask to become friends at some point you are friends it just happens with time and no one really knows when it starts

  • @tangoto1209
    @tangoto1209 Рік тому +3

    9:25 from what I've seen both in real life and media people become significant others when they start going on dates just the 2 of them and they know they both like each other romantically. So someone asking another out on a date is basically the same as asking someone to be your boy/girlfriend it can however sometimes be misinterpreted as asking to hang out as friends if they ask to "hang out" or something like that and the 2 are already friends.

  • @kauemetzgerotavio7564
    @kauemetzgerotavio7564 Рік тому +7

    I'm Brazilian, and we tend to be very direct here (at least I prefer to solve things this way, I find it more practical). As per touching before knowing, it depends a lot. I know girls who don't mind or even prefer that way, as well as girls that prefer to be more physically distant until both have something going on. Curiously, we have a "kokuhaku" culture for most of the time. We can date a person for an extended period of time without asking them to be girlfriend/boyfriend, but sometimes it generates misunderstandings (like one side feeling that they're already an official couple and the other thinking they are just having fun or are still getting to know each other), but to make it official, it is much more common to ask a girl/guy to be your girlfriend/boyfriend.

  • @kaliden1
    @kaliden1 3 місяці тому +1

    Very nice video. I have always loved your culture, thank you for sharing your insights. not sure if this goes against your being to direct thing, I personally will give a compliment when i see something worth complimenting, like tell a girl she has a very nice smile. I am not direct with negative things typically, unless that person is being very rude i might tell them. I was raised if i dont have something nice to say I shouldn't say anything. Anyway this is the first of your videos I have seen, very well done i look forward to watching more of them.

  • @ejazmuhamad9631
    @ejazmuhamad9631 Місяць тому

    Kokohaku😄😄😄😄what a aamazing word😄I learned new word from you….thanks

  • @danielacardoso4402
    @danielacardoso4402 Рік тому +35

    In Brazil there's definitely kokuhaku. Btw, my husband and I started to spend a lot of time together at college. He confessed to me after 1 year, but I told him that I didn't have any feeling for him at the moment and we could see how it would evolve. He continued to spend some time with me, a little less than before, but still we did a lot of things together. Another year passes by, and one day when we were walking together he kissed me. We started dating that day. We've been together for 14 years now.

    • @Dravis1995
      @Dravis1995 Рік тому +2

      I wonder how that worked out considering you had already denied him once. So either he read the atmosphere with the kiss and knew it was the right moment or he had a shot in the dark and hoped for the best.

    • @JJ_loves_JP
      @JJ_loves_JP Рік тому +1

      @@Dravis1995 I feel like the second option is what he went for. But who knows? Me personally I would’ve gone big or go home

    • @sethaldrich6902
      @sethaldrich6902 Рік тому +15

      Damn poor guy was your last option after you ran through all the other guys. You got so lucky he didn't move on.

    • @NA7SU2000
      @NA7SU2000 Рік тому

      @@sethaldrich6902 I understand this sentiment, but my guy….in a year? Thats kinda quick

    • @maxn.4616
      @maxn.4616 Рік тому

      simp

  • @TheMoonKingdom
    @TheMoonKingdom Рік тому +100

    Regardless of cultural differences; no one is entitled to your affection. It's reasonable to be disappointed when someone doesn't reciprocate romantic interest, but it's unreasonable to be angry. Just relax & find someone who is interested in you, & be friends with the person isn't:)

    • @gaborcsernak2627
      @gaborcsernak2627 9 місяців тому

      This ☝

    • @Firearcher4
      @Firearcher4 9 місяців тому

      I agree

    • @mrsticky005
      @mrsticky005 8 місяців тому +6

      It's not the lack of reciprocation that makes people angry but lack of respect. Of course that's still not an excuse to allow your anger to take control however I completely disagree
      about being "friends" with someone that you are interested in but who isn't interested in you because there won't be mutual respect within the so called "friendship".
      I say it's better to cut off all communication with that person entirely. You can and should still be friendly and respectful. However trying to be "friends"
      is really just a waste of time.

    • @GenerationNextNextNext
      @GenerationNextNextNext 8 місяців тому +1

      @@mrsticky005 Respect is subjective and cultural, but it seems the West thinks if everyone doesn't think like them, they are "wrong". I don't know where you're from, but it sounds like Americentrism to me.
      Just because someone disrespects you unintentionally doesn't mean you always have to lash out in a tirade of anger. There are other ways to solve your problems. Clear communication that someone offended you or hurt you could suffice and would probably be more effective in a calm and rational manner than a temper tantrum. And when the person explains why they weren't direct, accept this answer and move on.
      If you can't handle being "friends" than don't be. But don't ever go into a country just to date Japanese women either. They don't have the same dating culture there. Most of them meet people from school and work or through mutual friends, people they know well, feel safe around, and those their families approve of. They are usually childhood friends, so even if rejected, they stay friends without any harm, unlike Westerners, especially Americans. If you're not making any effort to be a Japanese citizen or learn the culture, why would anyone try to date anyone in Japan?
      Dating isn't for fun, it's for marriage and building families. If you don't plan on being a citizen, making friends, learning the job culture, and other important social cues, dating in Japan overall is a waste of time. Gain a mature mindset around dating, and rejection would seem more realistic to you. It's not just the women who rejected you, but the man dodged a bullet too. Could he really see himself married to her and having children with her? If he doesn't like how she handled things, then that's a red flag that he should be happy he saw, instead of getting angry about it. Instead he ended up looking like the dummy.

    • @giannilyanicks1718
      @giannilyanicks1718 8 місяців тому +1

      five big reasons why the Japanese doesn't make good friends:
      1 they are too lazy to learn foreign languages and they laugh at our accents when we speak their language
      2 they never tell us what mistakes we would make, even though it is the only solution to improve us in front of them
      3 they judge what people deserve to hear their "honne" (true thoughts and feelings) and they lies most of the time
      4 they insult us behind the back without seeking to know us more and they refuse to talk about themselves
      5 and they are too serious , they only swears by work-work in their life and by their rules
      interacting with them is a waste of time for westerners. don't understand the weeaboo people pretending they can befriending them.

  • @JordiSeliane
    @JordiSeliane 6 місяців тому

    I think that without a doubt you always have to respect the other person, not all foreigners without extroverts. I think talking can resolve many cultural clashes with friends or your partner. I've lived in Japan for 9 years and I think reading the environment doesn't work “well”. We can all use it, but many times reaching out to a person and caring about them is better than thinking they need to be alone. I respect your opinion and I certainly believe that this social wall is what distances the Japanese a lot, internally and externally, the communication is all in this world, always (in my opinion, of course) Greetings and thanks for the video ❤

  • @smallvillepodbr3
    @smallvillepodbr3 4 місяці тому

    Thanks for this video.

  • @FastmineNOR
    @FastmineNOR Рік тому +3

    Regarding "kokuhaku"-culture in Norway-
    We kinda do have it and not at the same time. Personally I've asked or been asked to become my bf/gf in previous relationships, but I know that it is not the case for everyone here. Many of my friends don't do it that same way, and they slowly just become a bf/gf through dating. So it really seems to be dependent on the people in question.

  • @IsaacG8
    @IsaacG8 Рік тому +34

    About kokuhaku... the guy you were dating, I think he was presumptuous. Every relationship I have ever been with, including with my wife, I asked if they would like to be my girlfriend or at least see each other exclusively. We don't usually get into relationships without confirming we're in a relationship.

    • @laclochard
      @laclochard Рік тому

      He was an incel. He thought this girl owed him something and got abusive when rejected...

  • @mattreaper9926
    @mattreaper9926 5 місяців тому +1

    I appreciate your words, as a foreign man that is interested in Japanese women I find this most informative. Thank you for the effort you put into this video.

  • @daromaka3750
    @daromaka3750 Місяць тому

    Clearly presented Mochi especially the kokuhaku culture scenario ( in my culture we call it "kupfimba" - African language: Zimbabwe) All interesting similarities the way you do in Japan. Love it 😊

  • @MrJusticeM
    @MrJusticeM Рік тому +4

    You are spot on. When I was in the Navy we traveled all over and even though I didn't travel to Japan I agree most guys have that mindset that it's the same everywhere. We went to clubs all around the world but the difference with me is that I observed the culture and took my time. When I talked with other women I was very respectful so in turn a lot of women stayed in contact through letters and phone calls. They Love BM trust me.

  • @SurfyKirky
    @SurfyKirky Рік тому +10

    I’m sure this has been said many times already, but it’s not okay for anyone to get mad if you’re not interested. If he has not expressed his interest he can’t assume you are. You can ask and see if it’s reciprocated and then go from there, but if it’s not then you can be upset but be mature enough to be understanding and leave on a good note. Just because you might not date it doesn’t mean you have to lose a friend. And as you said, it might grow into that at some point but with no expectations that it will

    • @bcluett1697
      @bcluett1697 10 місяців тому +1

      That was a really immature response to accuse her of lying when she didn't return the guy's feelings. It's the kind of reaction that happens when people make up a fantasy in their mind about what was going to happen. Perhaps she was his first gf and he put all his hopes on this date. It seems like a mistake an inexperienced person would make.

    • @SurfyKirky
      @SurfyKirky 10 місяців тому +1

      ⁠@@bcluett1697sorry I’m a little confused I never accused her of lying.

    • @statementleaver8095
      @statementleaver8095 5 місяців тому

      Getting MAD is a sign of a Control freak.
      Giving a Second chance (reciprocation) to someone You aren't comfortable around is a extremely dangerous move.
      To separate on BAD terms may sound horrible but Both parties understand the outcome.

  • @Madowl576
    @Madowl576 Місяць тому

    hi, thanks for the info

  • @melanieholmes3316
    @melanieholmes3316 6 місяців тому +1

    Great insights! Thank you for discussing these very important and helpful topics. Wow you are really beautiful. Your english is really good too. We need you! ha ha

  • @PabbyPabbles
    @PabbyPabbles Рік тому +56

    The "modern" North-American style has a late kokuhaku of sorts.
    Two people who like each other will start dating/hanging out more and more, and will become more physical, and THEN maybe a few weeks/months later, one of the two will ask "so are we a couple?"

    • @travislowrider6623
      @travislowrider6623 Рік тому +6

      This.

    • @Korxion
      @Korxion Рік тому +1

      Has someone from Wisconsin this is true

    • @phillipsmejkal1
      @phillipsmejkal1 Рік тому +1

      seems totally normal for me in europe too.

    • @AzzRushman
      @AzzRushman Рік тому +2

      That doesn't sound too romantic

    • @PabbyPabbles
      @PabbyPabbles Рік тому +1

      @@AzzRushman Get closer to each other first and make it official / confess immediately to someone you barely know to get to know them, pick one, but none of them will be like Disney or Hollywood romcoms

  • @jsoulcool
    @jsoulcool Рік тому +4

    Hi Mochi-sensei and thank you for your video. First of all, I must say, you are too cute and calm! When you were telling the story about your boyfriend and talking about anniversaries, it reminded me of high school, it was really adorable!
    But secondly, I wanted to speak on some of the things you brought up. I'm sorry that you got into the negative situation with the friend that liked you. I will just say that not all non-Japanese men would respond the same way in that situation. I think most of us would be at worst, confused because we thought that you liked us, not angry because our assumption was wrong. Just so you know the other side, whereas here in Japan, oftentimes friends turn into lovers, in the US, that is NOT the case. What that means is that men are forced to do everything they can to make a woman not see him as a "friend" so that he can avoid, at all costs, being placed into the hell that is known as, "The Friend Zone." If you ask any US male friend of yours, they will tell you how horrible of a situation that is. So we are always in a rush to make a girl that we like see us in an attracted way, not a friendly way. So that is why you notice the closeness, touching, etc., so early on in the relationship.
    When it comes to kokuhaku culture, we do have that in the US too, but it’s not as Black and White as it tends to be here in Japan. The reason for that is that unlike Japan, the US highly values individuality and it doesn’t have a single culture that everyone follows. There are a plethora of cultures in the States in addition to everyone feeling the need to do their own thing, as a rule. So sometimes, as in your case, people ignore the “kokuhaku”, but I think most of the time, people follow this. In the US, people often date, hold hands, kiss, and are intimate with each other before they are actually boyfriend and girlfriend. However, I think that for most, they are not “Official” until a conversation has been had about them being in a “committed” relationship. So after high school, it’s not always a guy asking a girl to be his girlfriend, using that specific phrase, but I don’t think most people go around calling someone their girlfriend when at least a clear conversation about their status, hasn’t been had. But once again, there are always exceptions.
    The misunderstanding part and the directness kind of go hand in hand and I think it’s important for a Japanese woman who is going to decide to date a non-Japanese man, to understand this. The “reading of the room” talent, I think only really works with other Japanese people. I think that is because Japanese value peace over individuality so it is easy for a Japanese person to guess what another Japanese person is thinking/feeling. But when it comes to people from the US especially, in my opinion, that superpower fails Japanese. I had a girlfriend (oh, I live in Japan, by the way) who used to try to do it all of the time to me and she was wrong about what I was thinking/feeling most of the time. I asked her to just listen to me because I told her how I felt/what I thought. Back to being direct, the whole reason for this is to remove the possibility of being misunderstood. But all in all, of course when it comes to cross-cultural relationships, both parties must be willing to be flexible and understanding of each other and the differences in each other’s cultures, in order to make the relationship work.
    Thank you so much for your video! I especially appreciate the advice to not give up and the explanation you gave because this really confused me. I had a friend who I’d held hands with, even kissed, but she still said to me that she still saw me as a friend and this really confused me. I had no idea what she meant or how she felt, and maybe she was thinking/feeling what you said in your video. I guess one last cultural difference: In the US, this is not really the case. Once a girl has “Friend Zoned” you, getting out of that space is almost impossible and asking a girl out (kokuhaku) multiple times after she has already said no is borderline harassment so yeah, if you really like an American guy and he does ask you out, please don’t “test his love” by saying no when you think yes, because he probably won’t ask again, trying to be respectful of your wishes.
    I’m sorry for this long reply but I hope that I helped answer some of your own questions. 良い一日を!

    • @cristinelgheorghiu5294
      @cristinelgheorghiu5294 Рік тому

      Very detailed and honest answer you gave her Jay. I wanted to say something similar but you already done it. I also lived in Korea the past 12 years, and recently came back to my homeland. However, in Korea they have something similar with this kokuhaku thing( in Korean way). Its very childish or immature to ask a women in this way, from where Im coming from. She'll probably walk away right away from you. When I was a teen 13-14 yo I did that, thats the age, but in high schooll we re more mature and no one will do it anymore! .. but she's so cute, isn't it?

  • @countryvideo
    @countryvideo 4 місяці тому

    Thank you for your kindness in sharing your culture. It was very interesting. Your culture is rich in tradition, and mutual respect. All you explained in your video was very appropriate. American culture could learn a great deal from your people. You think very much the way I do. Thank you again. It was an honor watching your video. My respects, and God bless you. Bruce

  • @RustyTorch
    @RustyTorch 21 день тому

    in regards to number 2, i like the way the japanese do it more, i feel like its a nicer way to approach a disagreement, i feel like itd still get the point across without the negative words if that makes sense
    overall based on that i think i was more meant for japan than where i live xD kokuhaku culture as you describe it is actually great, while here its not typically normal from my experience to have a bunch of anniversary's the first year, but it does happen sometimes, overall this is all really interesting, though im also weird by my countries standards, many dont seem interested in starting a family and getting married here meanwhile its my goal to get married and have a family and make enough to support them

  • @ytano5782
    @ytano5782 Рік тому +16

    The difference between high and low context culture, was the biggest problem for me - not only with women, but sometimes in business. As a German, I am brutally direct and honest. When I adapted to that, my life was so much easier.
    Oh, and the one important question you shouldn't forget! I almost lost my girlfriend because she thought I wasn't serious about her. It was clear to me after the first kiss that we are in a committed relationship 😅
    But I still knew the date from the first kiss and we agreed that the date is for confession 😊
    Btw: I am talking about my experiences in South Korea but they are comparable.

    • @aufsteigerup7222
      @aufsteigerup7222 Місяць тому

      You Don t have to be "brutally direct", auch als deutscher nicht. I try to be politely direct, never offending. For me it works.

    • @ytano5782
      @ytano5782 Місяць тому +1

      @@aufsteigerup7222 "Brutaly direct" not according to German standards. You can still get by in business with normal German politeness. But that's also because in the business world you're more likely to meet people who take intercultural differences into account. But in private life, you need to adapt more to avoid offending others.

  • @tinjadog
    @tinjadog 7 місяців тому +64

    I have found the kindest way to let a man down without embarrassing him is to say, “I really enjoy your friendship, but I don’t sense that we have the chemistry to be a couple and I don’t want to lead you on.” Most of the time the men have stayed friends with me. A few times their sense of entitlement got the better of them and they became rude or worse. In these cases I really had to shut them down hard. My father taught me to not accept any disrespect from a man no matter where they are from.

    • @jakeg3733
      @jakeg3733 5 місяців тому +4

      How dare you! God wants you to say yes to every guy. Jk, that's a compassionate way to do it. Good for you

    • @tinjadog
      @tinjadog 5 місяців тому

      Thank you! Chemistry is such a weird thing. I wish I understood better how it works. 🤔

    • @darassylmoniakam
      @darassylmoniakam 3 місяці тому

      ten big reasons why the Japanese doesn't make good friends:
      1 they are too lazy to learn foreign languages and they laugh at our accents when we speak badly their language
      2 they never tell us what mistakes we would make, even though it is the only solution to improve us in front of them
      3 they judge what people deserve to hear their "honne" (true thoughts and feelings) and they lies most of the time
      4 they insult us behind the back without seeking to know us more and they refuse to talk about themselves for some reason
      5 they are too serious , they only swears by work-work all their life and by their nonsense rules, they don't care about humanity
      6 they're very money-driven
      7 they refuse to invite you in their homes without explaining you why and considers your appart like a museum
      8 they don't wants affection
      9they believe lies told by their xenophobic elders who bash foreigners
      10 they abandon us suddenly by "ghosting"
      interacting with them is a waste of time for westerners. don't annoy me with "nyeeeeh therez ppl r like them in da world" please.

    • @junfour
      @junfour 3 місяці тому +2

      My experience as a man has been that every girl (who does not like me) goes out of their way to waste as much of my time as possible and punish me for the crime of even trying. They act like they're interested right up until the moment of betrayal. It seems to be a game to them. I haven't been able to come up with any other explanation than it's just a form of entertainment. They do it because they can. After all, I'm a man, so I'm like an inanimate object outside the scope of morality.
      My thanks to the few girls out there who tell it like it is. Dating would be a much easier place to navigate if people stuck with the truth.

    • @darassylmoniakam
      @darassylmoniakam 3 місяці тому

      japanese are too arrogant to tell us that.

  • @truckwhisperer116
    @truckwhisperer116 7 місяців тому +1

    Sweet!!! The romcom animes are accurate!!!! 😂😂

  • @chayanbasu5790
    @chayanbasu5790 Рік тому +28

    As an Asian, I feel like every point was exact ✌🏼. Relationships (to me atleast) are not fragile or casual stuffs. It takes time to develop and requires trust ultimately getting converted to marriage.
    My biggest nightmare would be to get cheated on. Don't ever want that to happen 🥲. I would rather die.

    • @dethkok3869
      @dethkok3869 Рік тому +6

      I agree. Cheating is a devastating blow to the heart.

    • @chayanbasu5790
      @chayanbasu5790 Рік тому +2

      @@dethkok3869 so true✨

    • @nurhayat81
      @nurhayat81 Рік тому +1

      @@dethkok3869 and Devastating to the soul

    • @AzzRushman
      @AzzRushman Рік тому +2

      I could tolerate getting cheated on, but it would definitely hurt my trust and engagement in others in a really long term.
      It's like getting robbed late at night when all alone, you won't ever be having that same walk without any fear.

    • @chayanbasu5790
      @chayanbasu5790 Рік тому +2

      @@AzzRushman I totally feel the same way bro .

  • @filipepinho3319
    @filipepinho3319 3 місяці тому

    I like cultural differences in a relation, I think it brings so much more live, emotions and stories to tell to future generations, it's a very enriching experience... but it does not come without challenges, both need to be open minded to those differences...
    I'm a guy of the world, I did travel already to lots of places, meet loots of cultures, mixed with their cultures and live and try to know those as much as possible (Japan included, and I did love the country), I don't consider to be from any specific country... but home, home is and will always be where the hearth is, doesn't matter if my own country, Japan, Africa or even South Pole living with Penguins as my neighbors

  • @cdanny304
    @cdanny304 Рік тому +7

    We have a similar culture in the Netherlands regarding the personal space and kokuhaku.
    Most of the time we are direct and indirect at the same time, it really depends on the situation and question that we are being asked. That being said however, we will almost always be honest when someone asks for our own opinion and point it out and correct when someone is not either not quite right or not being honest about something.
    Unless that Dutch person is a politician, he will always be honest no matter what the situation is.

    • @helgermania1297
      @helgermania1297 Рік тому +1

      your last sentence made me roll on the floor nicely done neighbour.

    • @cdanny304
      @cdanny304 Рік тому

      @@helgermania1297, Belgian?

    • @helgermania1297
      @helgermania1297 Рік тому

      @@cdanny304 I am from Germany :)

    • @cdanny304
      @cdanny304 Рік тому

      @@helgermania1297 Ah, I see.
      The country where I usually get my groceries.
      I live near the German border. :D

    • @helgermania1297
      @helgermania1297 Рік тому +1

      @@cdanny304 I live near more near the french border but I went to the netherlands as kid sometimes and it was really fun and I loved the pannenkoeken huis.

  • @Mattlovesstuff
    @Mattlovesstuff Рік тому +11

    repeating confessions isn't really a thing in western culture. It kinda becomes more on the girl to show interest if she does change her mind or not. But a guy repeating his confessions is kinda gross and can be seen as desperate. Also yeah the no kokuhaku stuff to start a relationship is pretty tough to navigate for guys. Normally like a gift or something is a common way to say that you like someone.
    And yeah when it comes to not showing interest and stuff its kinda better to minimize engagement emojis are kinda seen as a cute behaviour so may end up attracting someone more, especially if they lack social skills

    • @serenityssolace
      @serenityssolace Рік тому +2

      True. Also I would be interested in the number of repeated confessions in Japan. What is too much? Is 3 the limit? When does it become creepy and desperate there too?

    • @mochirealjapanese3430
      @mochirealjapanese3430  Рік тому +7

      interesting!
      we japanese like, if someone said " I kokuhaku to this girl but failed..." then we friend will say "is your love is that much?! you give up because she said no just for once?!?!"😂

    • @abc123tiktok
      @abc123tiktok Рік тому

      @@mochirealjapanese3430 Definitely sounds like a cultural difference. It can be romantic to be persistent if it pays off. But from western stand point if you are just annoying them, then it becomes creepy and gross if they keep rejecting them. It some times can ruin relationship entirely. Other times people will go as far as involving the law and even destroying some ones reputation.

    • @byletheisner5006
      @byletheisner5006 Рік тому

      ​@@abc123tiktok Once it was like that in the west as well, reason for which there are many western stories, movies, tv series, etc... in which a man is persistent in his pursuing of a woman or girl until he finally manages to convince her, it is only recently that the west became more strict in that sense

  • @Wowflunky
    @Wowflunky 5 місяців тому

    I have to agree, grew up in a bit of a conservative family that lived in rural areas in America. Personal space, unless you are in a relationship or family, is something that you need to not get into as it can cause all kinds of issues. Balancing that with getting a bit closer because of interest in someone is difficult and cultural differences only make it more difficult. The direct thing is understandable too, and the misunderstanding portion actually shed some light on a recent relationship I had. Didn't go anywhere and we left on amicable terms but I will say that there were times when we talked that I didn't quite catch her meaning, doesn't help I'm dense. As for the Kokuhaku...it's a yes no thing to that. I think it's all up to how the person grew up. Thanks for the info.

  • @HoliGallistur1023
    @HoliGallistur1023 Місяць тому

    I like how fluent is your English

  • @mysticfox1663
    @mysticfox1663 Рік тому +5

    In my experience in the US a few weeks or maybe months in there's always been a conversation about making a relationship official. I.E. "are we boyfriend/girlfriend?" Or "I want to be your boyfriend" etc Idk maybe it's a Midwest thing.

    • @jlujan4584
      @jlujan4584 Рік тому

      Has to be a gen z thing lol

  • @tomhunt7354
    @tomhunt7354 7 місяців тому +1

    Enjoyed this Video Very level Headed !!

  • @dyrL90
    @dyrL90 4 місяці тому +1

    As a german guy, I totally agree on the first point. Personal space is very important and I wouldn't want that much physical contact with a stranger on the first date either as well as having their face right in front of me. That's just some common sense not to do and has something to do with respect and good manners.
    For both two and three, I think it might be hard for other people getting used to it. Especially for me as a German, because we tend to be very direct to each other but without the intention to actually "hurt" the other persons feelings or disrespecting them.
    Fourth point depends on the persons involved, i guess. Sometimes yes, sometimes no. It also depends on the time spent together. But it's very good to know anyways. People can adapt to that.
    Thank you very much for your great video :)

  • @roberthunter4884
    @roberthunter4884 Рік тому +29

    Kokuhaku used to be standard practice in the United States a long time ago, but wasn't practiced regularly from the late 70's to now. As time went on, morals and manners took a sharp decline. The culture became lazy and most things were taken for granted, or expected. Many traditions died or were lost along the way. It's all quite tragic and sad, but I have hope that someday it will come back into style and be practiced regularly, as it should be. I really enjoyed your video, it was very informative and enlightening. I hope to visit Japan someday, my sister spent 5 years there, her husband was in the military. She loved it very much. Anyway, loved the video, love you, take care and stay safe ❤️.

    • @nickysixstrings
      @nickysixstrings Рік тому +2

      All of this, Rob. Thanks.

    • @jemiebridges3197
      @jemiebridges3197 Рік тому +3

      I think here it was called "courtship" and even that word was kinda ill defined except people would kinda cut short making a pass as soon as they found that out.

    • @crysiscontained4421
      @crysiscontained4421 11 місяців тому

      Wait, that's not still a thing? People are really just assuming now? Not even a "You wanna go out with me?" question? Just "I guess we are dating now"? So what happens when they introduce the other as their SO and that's not the case? Why would you want to go through the embarrassment of being corrected to an audience? That's just fucking dumb.

  • @kompiri2
    @kompiri2 Рік тому +3

    In Mexico we do have that kind of “kokuhaku” culture. We do even sometimes sing romantic mariachi songs to the girl we want to be our girlfriend.

  • @FairyKid64
    @FairyKid64 2 місяці тому

    It's funny - I thought that the four things you mentioned would surprise me, but that's actually what I was taught growing up! I was taught to respect women.

  • @monkeybar88
    @monkeybar88 7 місяців тому

    Thank you for this

  • @mookiestewart3776
    @mookiestewart3776 Рік тому +8

    kind opf funny how the "reading the room" is almost reversed when it comes to the confession thing lmao, in the US generally two people MAY have a conversation on the status of the relationship but we kind of "just know" its official before that convo ever happens. Its more of a confirmation then a request from the guy.