Lifestyle

Curse of “How are you?”

In English conversation, the question Japanese fear the most is “How are you?” For Japanese who are unfamiliar with overseas, it is. The learning site explains that this is more of a conversation starter than a question. But, we feel obliged to answer this properly and get nervous. When I was in junior high, I was taught in English class that if someone asked me “How are you?” all I had to say was “I’m fine, thank you, And you?”

At my first English lesson after this New Year’s holidays, as expected, I was asked “How was your holiday?” This is another cliché that is very confusing to the Japanese. This is because we are “doing nothing special” in most cases. If I cleaned, read, played online games, and basically stayed home and didn’t interact with anyone, “What did you do on your vacation?” I would answer, “Nothing.” When I returned the same question to the tutor, she replied that she had fun at the bar all night with friends and got together with her families to give gifts to her nephews.

I have this exchange with over 100 English tutors a year from all countries, and I have never heard anything other than “dinner party with friends or family” or “hiking or traveling.” Has anyone else gone through the same daily life as yesterday? Are there no foreigners who stayed home alone gloomily?

Some Japanese feel having no friends. This is because when they enter the workforce, their living place changes, and their friends from school days become estranged. They may say hello to the clerk at the supermarket they always go to, or have dinner with co-workers, but the people are not “friends”. I think this is common in the world, but where are those people?

First business day of 2023!Prev

The food that kills the most people in JapanNext

Related post

  1. Lifestyle

    The 18-year-old students will take the exam for two days.

    Today and tomorrow will be important days for 18-year-olds. They will take the national standardized test for college admissions.Students take the e…

  2. Lifestyle

    Hay Fever Season Has Arrived

    Once again this year, Japanese people have to fight hay fever. Hay fever is an allergic reaction of the human body to pollen. The immune system overre…

  3. Illustration of a person on an electrically bicycle with a zero battery in the middle of a hill.

    Lifestyle

    The battery level of the rental bicycle is zero.

    Today I used a shared bicycle service for the first time: an electrically assisted bicycle is available for 165 yen ( about $1.2 ) per 30 minutes. U…

  4. Lifestyle

    Digital Detox with Zazen at the Temple in Shibuya

    At Kourinin, a temple in Shibuya, zazen sessions are held at 7:00 a.m. on weekdays. Zazen is a Buddhist practice where you sit up straight and focus o…

  5. Lifestyle

    More Simple E-Scooter Riding Starts in July!

    The National Police Agency decided to apply the same traffic rules to e-scooters as to bicycles if they meet standards for maximum speed, size, etc., …

  6. Lifestyle

    Today is the last day of work for the year!

    Today is the last day of work for many of us! Government offices are close from December 29 to January 3 by law. Private companies often follow this t…

PAGE TOP