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July 07, 2015

It is one of the biggest social and health problems facing Japan - about 1 million people, mostly men, have locked themselves in their bedrooms and will not come out.

It is one of the biggest social and health problems facing Japan - about 1 million people, mostly men, have locked themselves in their bedrooms and will not come out.
Japanese health professionals are now scrambling to stop the next generation from suffering the same fate.
Not only is the condition shattering families, it is also threatening the country's economy.
For nearly three years, Yuto Onishi's world was his small bedroom in Tokyo. 
He slept during the day and lived at night, trawling the internet and reading manga - Japanese comics.
Mr Onishi, now 18, refused all contact with friends and family, sneaking out only in the dead of night to eat. 
The Japanese call the condition hikikomori.
"Once you experience it, you lose reality," Mr Onishi told 7.30.
"I knew it was abnormal but I didn't want to change.
"It felt safe here."

School pressure led to social withdrawal

In junior high school, Mr Onishi failed as a class leader and to cope with the shame and judgment of others, he withdrew. 
For Mr Onishi and the estimated million Japanese like him, the pressure from families and society is too much to bear.
Dr Takahiro Kato is one of the few hikikomori experts in Japan.
"In Western societies, if one stays indoors, they're told to go outside," Dr Kato said.
"In Japan they're not.
"Our play has changed, it's all on screens and not real-life situations anymore.
"There are cultural reasons also, a strong sense of embarrassment and an emotional dependence on the mother."

The longer a person stays in a room, the harder it is to come out

The causes and treatment are little understood, but Dr Kato is determined to stop the next generation of Japanese boys locking themselves in.
He is leading a team at Kyushu University to decipher the condition. 
"Most case studies have only focused on the psychological aspect, but hikikomori is not just about mental illness," he said.
"We're working on the social and biological aspects as well and want to be the first to provide a multi-dimensional diagnosis."
The road to recovery from hikikomori can be a long one and the longer a person stays in their room, the less likely they are to make it out.
One of Dr Kato's patients, a 23-year-old, has been in therapy for a year.
He said a domineering mother and pressure to perform at school caused him to drop out and barricade himself in his room.
"I just wanted to suppress everything, put a lid on everything," he said.
"I didn't want to think... I didn't want to feel."

Rebuilding communication and trust key to opening the door

Dr Kato said recovery can only be successful if the dynamics of family interactions change, and that means the whole family has to be involved in counselling. 
The first steps are to rebuild communication and trust.
Yuto has been out of his room for six months now.
The dream of travelling and working overseas forced him out. Early intervention worked.

5 comments:

  1. They're on strike.
    They're sick of their crap society and want as little to do with it as possible.

    ReplyDelete
  2. psychology of parents and school pressure is starting to take it's tole on the Japanese Male. The Psychology of "Pillar of the Family!"


    The Passing of tests and acceptance of society to succeed and make there family Proud.


    They need a few beers with some buds, a strip club, then sit down plan out there future.
    Not that easy.



    Japanese President ABE is a Zionist Agent he is allowing Fukashima to kill the Pacific Ocean with General Electric.
    But it won't just kill the Pacific Ocean or people in Japan, oh no it's slow burn across the world if not fixed!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anti-social behavior, in a society of conformist, is a sign of intelligence.~ N. Tesla

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  4. Huge cities, especially Japanese cities, are the human equivalent of a CAFO (Confined Animal Feeding Operation). Only the humans aren't being reared for meat, milk, or eggs, but for their value in being debt slaves to the oligarchs. Of course, the oligarchs themselves live on large country estates when they aren't in their giant urban penthouses.

    Agenda 21 aims to squeeze all remaining humans into packed cities under the guise of sustainability, but the real reason is so the Ruling Elites can have all of nature to themselves without having to deal with middle or lower class neighbors. If Agenda 21 succeeds in its goals hikikomori will spread like wildfire through the entire human population.

    ReplyDelete