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I want to live in japan!!
its been my dream since forever!!! i have a feeling that it will happen!! i wont stop till i get to live in japan and know their customs!!
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Right there with you! I want to go to Japan so bad, rather for a trip or to live there. I'm really down on my luck right now as I realized not too long ago how bad I want to go to Japan, but something nags me that I may be going to Japan sometime in the future.
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Well you can be like me, I'm going to live in Japan for a year. Be a exchange student, hehe work hard for the scholarship :) Good luck. ^^
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hope you will have your chance in the future..
my chance finally arrive, I will be staying in japan for 2 years.. study abroad.. huhuhu.. |
I'd like to live there for a while too, just to see what it's like. Now, would I like to live there for the rest of my life? Dunno. Have to see how things go. A year or two maybe enough for me.
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I think I will also study to study within a few years, maybe 2/3. I'm so excited about it :D
I just hope that when that happens I have an availabre Computer to come here and say something once in a while. |
you dont want to live in Japan.
its hot in the summer and bloody cold in the winter. weather sucks. theres earthquakes like all the time. unless youre RICH, you will have a crappy, hot, small place to live in where you have to use the toilets that are on the FLOOR. lol dont mean to be negative but ive had so many friends TRYING to live in Japan and they end up coming back! Cost of living in Japan is much higher than in the West and you really should learn the language enough to speak semi fluently to live there. you can get GYPED if you only speak english and little Japanese. You don't think so but you CAN. Japan is a beautiful interesting and CRAZY place in our world but its definatly a place worth the visit, otherwise unless you are japanese, can speak it fluently, or are born there, i would not live there. |
Only one reason
The only reason I would want to go to mainland Japan is because my aunts live in Osaka. I hear they have a pretty nice house with some cute Japanese guys nearby, lol.
They visited here once on Okinawa and told me to come to where they live because it's nicer over there [[but I find Oki safer]]. I'm on the edge. :'P |
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But about the toilets... They do have some normal seat tiolets. |
^ oh yeah they do lol but most of the middle class lower class citizens
dont have that luxury. my friend lives with a room mate in an apt in Tsukuba and OMG... its not even big enough for a dog lol |
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western style toilets, a luxury in japan? hmm, that one must have passed me by. or on the other hand perhaps i can refer to u when i tell my acquaintances that i live in a top notch flat since it has a western style toilet. in reality it is a very ordinary flat, perhaps even lower middle class standards. |
Whats wrong with floor toilets anyway?
I personally prefer them because you don't have to worry about the seat being dirty or cold or whatever. They are also far easier to clean. And there are a few other advantages that I don't think i should mention...:cool: |
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If you want to live in Japan, get some kind of practical skills you can rely on wherever you are in the world.
Many people come to Japan as English teachers and it works out fine for short period of time. But that won't get you further in life and you would eventually run into a wall. Meanwhile, people like chefs, graphic designers, CPA, and investment bankers are good to go in Japan because these jobs require either special skills or knowledge which can be applied anywhere in the world. My advise to you guys is to first go to Japan for a short period of time earlier as possible and get a taste of how it's like to live in Japan. Some people get enough after a year and some get obsessed with it. If you want to live longer in Japan after your first stay, then take a moment and work on yourself so you can survive in Japan and take care of yourself and your family if you choose to get married in Japan. Good luck!! |
I know that Japanese toilets aren't bad, yah they have some ground toilets (not bad), but most toilets in Japan are even advanced tech., I personally would die to go and live there, I LOVE Japan, although I am still 17, I plan to go and finish my Master Digree there ( in the Future ), and then work there for a few years so that I can get the Citizenship.
by the way 'Tommasi', do you know if Programmers ( those who study Computer Science and Computer Information Systems ) have a good future in Japan? |
Hey,
I had wanted to go and live in Japan for a long time before I graduated high school to. So I applied to college here and did it. It wasn't easy. I live off my monthly scholarship and it's just enough. I had a bit of culture shock after the newness wore off, but I absolutely love it here. Yeah, the summers are hot and muggy, the winters are bitter, but I love it here and I'm glad I'm here. If you want to do it go for it, don't let it just stay an idea. But understand that you're gonna have a hard time sometimes, even with the culture. Good luck. -Lee |
hi, i also think of learning the japanese language and maybe study or even live in japan.
but i'm worried, because i heard many stories of people, FOREIGN people (gaijins),who went to japan that were treated bad because of their race. so there are sometimes clubs or cafes where only japanese people are allowed to go to and sometimes you are mocked on the streets and so on so i wanted to ask you: ist it true? is japan really such a racist country? thx for your replies :) |
Yes it is true in the countryside but in big cities like - Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Fukuoka - you will be fine.
I'm sure there are places in your country as well where foreigners or certain race of people are not so welcomed. As far as you disallowed to come in to certain places, yes it is true but you are talking about places in the red light districts. Words are already spread and those sex workers know that foreigners bring in STD s. It is also because they don't want to piss off Japanese customers by foreigners taking all of their women. Also, some of the local bars, don't expect people to let you in unless you can speak Japanese. Those people who run those places do not speak English and if you cannot communicate with them in Japanese, they would ask you to leave for sure. I mean, isn't it normal? All the foreigners in Japan are referred to as gaijin and people have problem with that because most of them have never been treated as a minority back home. For Japanese, gaijin is not a discriminatory word but because of this reason, foreigners take it offensively. Some Japanese people have never seen foreigners so just let it go. Again, if you can speak the language, it won't be a problem. For long timers, this gaijin thing is very annoying because no matter how well you speak Japanese or how long you live in Japan, you would always be a gaijin. I know it's fucked up but that's how it is. So when you go to Japan, please choose the location wisely and be prepared. Good luck!! |
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let me guess, you have never been there and have read a load of crap that you are now regurgitating? Yes, Japan is hot in the summer but it is far from cold in the winter - I didn't use a coat once and had no trouble (in fact, it was pretty mild!). There are a decent of earthquakes, but 99.9% are not felt by humans because they are so small... Quote:
The FACT is that I have lived here for a year now and can honestly say that, apart from the heat and public toilets, none of what you have said is true |
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I have a question! for the list of those cities...how is Takanawa? In like the Gaijin thing XD. It's not like....dangerous bad like we're gonna jump you and burn your house down right? *thats happaned in my old town once to this family of Russians)
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I shall be taking a trip to Japan hopefully in the next year or two. Hopefully will be dragging a few friends along with me. But thats a long term goal.
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I want to live in Japan someday too..I think it might be a interesting place to live....but thats; just my opinion
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Gaijin a racist word? Hmm, I guess that really depends on quite a few things.
I've lived in Kurume for almost 2 years, not exactly all the time, but within 3 years of time, so... anyways, people here quite freguently use word GAIJIN to refer to foreigners, I've personally NEVER seen GAIKOKUJIN written anywhere outside the ward office. Even my girlfrriend, her family, I, my friends, my gaijin friends, my girlfriends english teacher, my japanese teacher etc. refer to foreigners as GAIJIN, so... I don't know. But then again, there aren't that many foreigners down here. Atleast not western, we've got plenty of Koreans, Philippino and Chinese here... |
I want to live in Akihabara, Japan someday.^^
Maybe it's because i'm an Otaku [extreme anime & manga fan];) |
I have always wanted to live in japan.
I'm now 16, and I'm in the 11th grade, after the 12th I shall go to a University to learn chinese and japanese, chinese as a major and japanese as a minor language. i will attend to that course for 3 years, and in a 4th, I might go to China or Japan for one year to do my master degree. Do you happen to know to where foreign students go in Japan in their master degrees? Are three years enough to learn japanese? I already know a few basics... |
New york summers are muggy and winters bitter so im used to it.
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