A member of which society

authentic chochin japanese paper lams hanging on old shrine

In Japan, they have a word 社会人 Shakaijin which directly translated would mean someone in society (Shakai means society, Jin means person), however the meaning is actually someone who supports themselves financially. This means that the average undergrad student is not included, and nor is someone who is passed ‘working age’ that needs assistance in order to live.

So when you ask Japanese students to write an essay entitled ‘University students must not work part time’, their argument against it is often that working part time helps you build skills that you can use when you enter society, but they’re already in society, so I tell them to use ‘when you graduate’ instead.

Also instead of people saying that they didn’t finish high school, people say they became a member of society after junior high (about 15 years old in general).

I have since found out that, as suspected, this is a phenomena that is limited to Japan. As such, it gives people quite a shock when I explain that it doesn’t really make sense when you say it in English (and it probably shouldn’t make sense when you say it in Japanese, but it does).

It’s funny how something can be so universal in one language, and entirely non-existent in another.

ENJOYED THIS? HAVE MORE.

MOUNTAINS OF WISDOM

Subscribe to my yamabushi newsletter

RECENT BLOG POSTS

Tim Bunting AKA Kiwi Yamabushi on Zao-san
Fuel for the fire
Tim Bunting AKA Kiwi Yamabushi on Zao-san
Never or now
Tim Bunting AKA Kiwi Yamabushi on Zao-san
Where is the answer?

YAMABUSHI BLOG POSTS

closeup photography of yellow red green and blue chess piece
Uketamo on behalf of others
person holding a green plant
A Special Ritual for 3.11
blank paper with pen and coffee cup on wood table
It’s not the coffee.

RANDOM POSTS

No hesitation
Things to help you get through quarantine
photo of head bust print artwork
Action before emotion
Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Get In Touch

Sakata City, Yamagata, Japan 

tim@timbunting.com

Share this:

Like this:

Like Loading...
Scroll to Top