Is Japan providing a glimpse of all our futures?
The Guardian
Ai Aoyama is a sex and relationship counsellor who
works out of her narrow three-storey home on a Tokyo back street... she did
"all the usual things" like tying people up and dripping hot wax on
their nipples. Her work today, she says, is far more challenging. Aoyama,
52, is trying to cure what Japan's media calls sekkusu shinai shokogun, or
"celibacy syndrome".
...
Japan's under-40s appear to be losing interest in
conventional relationships. Millions aren't even dating, and increasing numbers
can't be bothered with sex. For their government, "celibacy syndrome"
is part of a looming national catastrophe. Japan already has one of the world's
lowest birth rates. Its population of 126 million, which has
been shrinking for the past decade, is projected to plunge a further one-third
by 2060. Aoyama
believes the country is experiencing "a flight from human intimacy" –
and it's partly the government's fault.
...
The number of single people has reached a record high.
A survey in 2011 found that 61% of unmarried men and 49% of women aged 18-34
were not in any kind of romantic relationship, a rise of almost 10% from five
years earlier. Another study found that a third of people under 30 had never
dated at all. (There
are no figures for same-sex relationships.) Although there has long been a
pragmatic separation of love and sex in Japan – a country mostly free of
religious morals – sex fares no better. A survey earlier this year by the Japan
Family Planning Association (JFPA) found that 45% of women aged 16-24 "were not interested
in or despised sexual contact". More than a quarter of men felt the same
way.
Official alarmism doesn't help. Fewer babies were born
here in 2012 than any year on record. (This was also the year, as the number of
elderly people shoots up, that adult incontinence pants outsold baby nappies in
Japan for the first time.) Kunio Kitamura, head of the JFPA, claims
the demographic crisis is so serious that Japan "might eventually perish
into extinction".
...
"Both men and women say to me they don't see the
point of love. They don't believe it can lead anywhere," says Aoyama. "Relationships have become
too hard."
Marriage has become a minefield of unattractive
choices. Japanese
men have become less career-driven, and less solvent, as lifetime job security
has waned. Japanese women have become more independent and ambitious.
Aoyama says the sexes, especially in Japan's giant
cities, are "spiralling away from each other". Lacking long-term shared goals, many
are turning to what she terms "Pot Noodle love" – easy or instant
gratification, in the form of casual sex, short-term trysts and the usual
technological suspects: online porn, virtual-reality
"girlfriends", anime cartoons. Or else they're opting out altogether
and replacing love and sex with other urban pastimes.
...
Aoyama cites one man in his early 30s, a virgin, who
can't get sexually aroused unless he watches female robots on a game similar to
Power Rangers.
...
Mendokusai translates loosely as "Too
troublesome" or "I can't be bothered". It's the word I hear both
sexes use most often when they talk about their relationship phobia. Romantic
commitment seems to represent burden and drudgery, from the exorbitant costs of
buying property in Japan to the uncertain expectations of a spouse and in-laws. And the centuries-old belief that the
purpose of marriage is to produce children endures. Japan's Institute of
Population and Social Security reports an astonishing 90% of young women
believe that staying single is "preferable to what they imagine marriage
to be like".
...
The sense of crushing obligation affects men just as
much. Satoru
Kishino, 31, belongs to a large tribe of men under 40 who are engaging in a
kind of passive rebellion against traditional Japanese masculinity. Amid
the recession and unsteady wages, men like Kishino feel that the pressure on
them to be breadwinning economic warriors for a wife and family is unrealistic.
They are rejecting the pursuit of both career and romantic success.
"It's too troublesome," says Kishino, when I
ask why he's not interested in having a girlfriend. "I don't earn a huge salary to go on dates and I don't
want the responsibility of a woman hoping it might lead to marriage." Japan's media, which has a name for
every social kink, refers to men like Kishino as "herbivores" or
soshoku danshi (literally, "grass-eating men"). Kishino says he
doesn't mind the label because it's become so commonplace. He defines it as
"a heterosexual man for whom relationships and sex are unimportant".
...
Is Japan providing a glimpse of all our futures? Many of the shifts there are occurring in other
advanced nations, too. Across urban Asia, Europe and America, people are
marrying later or not at all, birth rates are falling, single-occupant
households are on the rise and, in countries where economic recession is worst,
young people are living at home.
...
"Gradually but relentlessly, Japan is evolving
into a type of society whose contours and workings have only been contemplated
in science fiction,"
...
Japan's 20-somethings are the age group to watch. Most are still too young to have concrete future
plans, but projections for them are already laid out. According to the
government's population institute, women in their early 20s today have a
one-in-four chance of never marrying. Their chances of remaining childless are
even higher: almost 40%.
...
"Japan has developed incredibly sophisticated
virtual worlds and online communication systems. Its smart phone apps are the
world's most imaginative." Kelts says the need to escape into private, virtual
worlds in Japan stems from the fact that it's an overcrowded nation with
limited physical space. But he also believes the rest of the world is not far
behind.
Getting back to basics, former dominatrix
Ai Aoyama – Queen Love – is determined to educate her clients on the value of
"skin-to-skin, heart-to-heart" intimacy. She accepts that technology will shape
the future, but says society must ensure it doesn't take over. "It's not
healthy that people are becoming so physically disconnected from each
other," she says. "Sex with another person is a human
need that produces feel-good hormones and helps people to function better in
their daily lives."
Aoyama says she sees daily that people crave human
warmth, even if they don't want the hassle of marriage or a long-term
relationship. She berates the government for "making
it hard for single people to live however they want" and for
"whipping up fear about the falling birth rate". Whipping up fear in people, she says,
doesn't help anyone. And that's from a woman who knows a bit about whipping.
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