Shocking Facts How Japanese Kids are Raised

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  • čas přidán 15. 05. 2024
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    Raising Japanese children can be quite different compared to the rest of the world. Different Japanese customs and Japanese traditions lend to a different way a Japanese baby or Japanese child is raised. As Japanese kids grow, they are typically taught empathy, how to care about Japanese group harmony and to think about others. As a Japanese baby, most of their time is spent with their Japanese mother and they grow up in the same bedroom. In fact, many Japanese don't leave the house until after they get married. Japanese children are also taught to ride public transportation like ride a Japanese train or ride a Japanese bus in the middle of Tokyo or any other large Japanese city. These are just some of the examples in the video of how shockingly Japanese are raised differently from the rest of the world. Let me know in the comments how it relates to your country.
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    __ Shocking Facts How Japanese Kids are Raised Timestamps __
    0:00 - Intro
    1:44 - 1. Japanese Moms are Always with the Baby
    2:44 - 2. Sleeping Arrangements
    4:23 - 3. Taking a Bath with the Opposite Sex Parent
    5:45 - 4. The Importance of Empathy
    8:00 - 5. Disciplined by Groups
    10:26 - 6. Kids Going to School Alone
    11:37 - 7. Healthy School Food
    14:35 - 8. Living with Parents After High School
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Komentáře • 4,7K

  • @PaolofromTOKYO
    @PaolofromTOKYO  Před 3 lety +389

    czcams.com/video/MbyC2FlsFhU/video.html Watch a Day in the Life of Wolfy
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    • @020untitled
      @020untitled Před 3 lety +1

      You really don't need to rush when delivering the sponsor's message. The message gets lost when you are talking so so fast. 😀

    • @adrianwatratan9843
      @adrianwatratan9843 Před 3 lety

      Hi paolo

    • @zoheirouar5396
      @zoheirouar5396 Před 3 lety

      English Subtitles please

    • @2Click-My-iCON
      @2Click-My-iCON Před 3 lety +3

      Everyone is misunderstanding.
      Individuality and compassion can coexist.
      Japanese people are unique, aren't they?
      Japan is also unique, isn't it?
      We can make high quality products because we think about people.

    • @bluebutterfly7233
      @bluebutterfly7233 Před 3 lety +5

      Loved the video! A lot of child rearing is the same around the world. However, as a retired Social Worker, bathing with your opposite sex parent after the age of 3 or 4 is highly inappropriate! I don't care what culture you're from. When a child starts to become very inquisitive about sexual parts, it's time to stop bathing with them. It's very difficult to teach children personal boundaries when parents are still bathing with them, never mind the discomfort for either of them. You have to remember when child rearing, things are different from when you were little compared to now. For example, I would not be letting my 5 year old roam a city by themselves with so many wackos out there that's for sure. There's so many other ways to teach children independence. 💙🕊️🕊️💙

  • @UYou1Wonsh
    @UYou1Wonsh Před 3 lety +4577

    Japanese Schools: Have nutritionists to make sure that students get healthy meals.
    American Schools: What’s a Nutritionist?

    • @Castle3179
      @Castle3179 Před 3 lety +159

      Canadian high school cafeterias(back in my day): Greasy pizza, Mexi-fries, chilli cheese fries and some parents give their kids lunch telling them not to get unhealthy food from the cafeteria.

    • @HatlessTea
      @HatlessTea Před 3 lety +207

      Also America: pizza is a vegetable and part of a healthy balanced meal

    • @sayfridge
      @sayfridge Před 3 lety +20

      Who needs nutritionist in America honestly

    • @tia9363
      @tia9363 Před 3 lety +24

      @@Castle3179 really, I'm also from Canada but since I was young they would make heathy breakfasts and lunch. In high school the students made the lunches which is a option course you get credits for you would have to pay for or go to the foods room, usually has a snack a fruit or vegetable with a sandwich. Of course in elementary either teachers or helpers would make the food for people who don't have food. Maybe because we live in different areas and every school I'm from talks about how you need a heathy diet in every grade makes the difference or age difference.

    • @hyouzanren1846
      @hyouzanren1846 Před 3 lety +11

      We pick the one who bid the lowest price for our future generations!

  • @alisekauwe1400
    @alisekauwe1400 Před 3 lety +3814

    After watching a documentary about how Japanese children are raised through attachment parenting, I decided early on to raise my children similarly (co-sleeping, wearing them in a sling for the first year of their life, co-bathing, always having them with me 100% of the time, etc.). Now they are 13 yo and 8 yo. They are the best kids in the world. They are considerate, confident, compassionate and self-disciplined. It was the best decision for my family!

  • @roxannestarratt5803
    @roxannestarratt5803 Před 2 lety +378

    I agree with showing children how their actions affects those around them, instead of telling them that they are wrong and are grounded for how they treated someone.

    • @2b-coeur
      @2b-coeur Před 2 lety +2

      Yeahh apparently the Inuit do something similar!

    • @pariscuties1786
      @pariscuties1786 Před 2 lety +9

      Its a common theme in eastern and indigenous cultures, focusing on the plural rather than the singular

    • @rey_nemaattori
      @rey_nemaattori Před rokem +6

      I actually might use this on my kid one day. The West has a serious lack of empathy in that regard and it tears our society apart at the seams.

  • @gtw4546
    @gtw4546 Před 2 lety +623

    Teaching children to consider the feelings of others and having this be a community effort explains why everything in Japan stays so clean and nice. Everyone is raised to be thoughtful.

    • @777rogerf
      @777rogerf Před rokem +11

      Sometimes Westerners in Jtend to present social harmony and and personal development as inherently opposites rather than as mutually compatible and necessary.

    • @beardedlonewolf7695
      @beardedlonewolf7695 Před rokem +14

      Yes and the crime rate is so low as well.

    • @En3rgyLee
      @En3rgyLee Před rokem +17

      Man ngl I just want to experience Japan for like several years. Their standards of living is beautiful and where my mind is at as compared to the U.S. The U.S. is basically a dumpster.

    • @ntmn8444
      @ntmn8444 Před rokem +1

      @@777rogerf because we live in a world of extremes. And that will be the end of us. I guarantee it.

    • @ntmn8444
      @ntmn8444 Před rokem +7

      @@En3rgyLee that’s a gross exaggeration. It’s a dumpster in certain cities, but others it’s quite clean. Like, you can’t compare NYC, which is quite literally a cesspool, to say, where I live. It’s quiet and clean here where I am. Also this is a big country. You can’t make sweeping statements like that here.

  • @VanJR.
    @VanJR. Před 3 lety +3006

    As a Hispanic, it’s also very common for young adults and adults to live at home. I find interesting why there’s a “rush” to kick your child out at a certain age

    • @cathhl2440
      @cathhl2440 Před 3 lety +132

      They want back their lives.

    • @michaelo8622
      @michaelo8622 Před 3 lety +570

      American Culture is awful. My parents are both immigrants, we just ignore American culture. Family loves and takes care of each other. That should be the norm.

    • @peachesmontclaire
      @peachesmontclaire Před 3 lety +163

      @@michaelo8622 I moved out at 18 because I wanted my own space and privacy. I still love and support my family, but not from under the same roof.

    • @addisonb.1356
      @addisonb.1356 Před 3 lety +104

      @@cskiller86 A lot of American families want their kids to be independent and start their lives and make a living for them self's and understand how "hard" the real world is. So usually when your 18 you graduate from high school and expected to go to college and just have your life begin. Its a little sad yah know

    • @Lupo32
      @Lupo32 Před 3 lety +13

      Your parents wanna get freaky
      Abd keep the passion / spice in their
      Relationship.
      Much like Craig's parents from the movie
      Friday .

  • @lilakgirl
    @lilakgirl Před 3 lety +6889

    My parents don’t want me walking alone in a city and I’m 19 lol
    Update : 22 now and never expected this reaction from my comment 😂💀 …Parents still don’t want me walking alone. Obviously for good reasons

    • @neonnebby7370
      @neonnebby7370 Před 3 lety +128

      Same lol

    • @sayfridge
      @sayfridge Před 3 lety +161

      Impossible i walk out alone almost every time and my Parents doesn't give a shit about it 15 btw

    • @PrincessofKeys
      @PrincessofKeys Před 3 lety +435

      Honestly just probably depends on where you are at and how dangerous it is...hell I don't even want to walk anywhere alone and Im in my 20s lol

    • @cathhl2440
      @cathhl2440 Před 3 lety +99

      Tells us a lot about the city you live in.

    • @nayeemhaider8367
      @nayeemhaider8367 Před 3 lety +49

      same here my my folks dont let me out unless they can have a servant go along with me....... feels infuriating but thats how life in the Third World is I suppose

  • @Larjus
    @Larjus Před 2 lety +415

    I'm from Finland, and some parts of this video sounded very familiar to me, like kids going to school on their own, schools serving healthy lunches, and families bathing together (but here it's just sauna instead of baths). While there are lots of differences between Finland and Japan, I've always felt some sort of connection to their culture. There are things we share.

    • @orange3547
      @orange3547 Před 2 lety +9

      I’d like to visit Finland some day!

    • @akinasukizakura
      @akinasukizakura Před 2 lety +11

      フィンランド好き♡

    • @glanwen10969
      @glanwen10969 Před 2 lety +10

      I was to say the same. And in Finland you don't have to pay for the lunch, it's offered by the city. The lunch is free also in lukio (~high school/ koukou), it is only until universities and colleges you have to pay for it, but it is very cheap, like three euros a meal.
      The sauna culture is perhaps changing, but traditionally families have bathed in sauna all together, so seeing your family members naked is no big deal. Some people here are more concerned their privacy than others, sometimes for personal reasons more than for adapted culture, but I think that younger people are more bashful than older generations.

    • @pink_alligator
      @pink_alligator Před 2 lety +16

      I'd say the only difference or the core for the only differences between us Nordics (I'm Swedish Norwegian) and Japan comes from Japan being a collective society to a fault and a more conservative culture. While we're not pure individualist as like the US (which takes that to a fault) we certainly share the thinking about the collective but we're still much more individualist compared to Japan and definitely a lot less conservative

    • @razor1uk610
      @razor1uk610 Před 2 lety +2

      @@pink_alligator ..just do not fall close to, or in to the bad books of the Norway Child Services, even slightly,
      ..they at times have severely over-reacted and removed children for egotistacal reasons of office with power over all citizens, with no oversight over some of their higher level staff's 'opinionated' decisions that were later found to be morally incorrect to the many situations, for decades.

  • @enjoyslearningandtravel7957

    I really find it good that young children are taught to clean up the classrooms themselves instead of having a janitor or cleaning person do it. When children do the cleaning themselves they respect for the cleaning people instead of having everything done for them.

  • @dianesieh5834
    @dianesieh5834 Před 3 lety +2084

    Wolfie's hairstyle looking like he growing beansprouts 🌱

    • @rainypath96
      @rainypath96 Před 3 lety +24

      Pikmin lol

    • @Snebleh66
      @Snebleh66 Před 3 lety +10

      Hahahahahahah this comment 🤣

    • @abirhasankhan9327
      @abirhasankhan9327 Před 3 lety +35

      I just realized, that hairstyle is the hairstyle of the baby from "the incredibles", you know the one who had the power to materialize in to fire ball, metal etc.

    • @stormveil
      @stormveil Před 3 lety +2

      @@abirhasankhan9327 Jack Jack in the English version.

    • @abirhasankhan9327
      @abirhasankhan9327 Před 3 lety

      @@stormveil Ah yes. I forgot his name lol

  • @abdulla3763
    @abdulla3763 Před 3 lety +707

    This video is what family CZcams channels should be like.

    • @nolandderlugner1351
      @nolandderlugner1351 Před 3 lety +62

      Today we're going to starbucks
      Give our children a ipad and then buy a jetski!

    • @tenko4636
      @tenko4636 Před 3 lety +6

      True

    • @chaimaefaida9464
      @chaimaefaida9464 Před 3 lety +2

      Agree

    • @Kailz
      @Kailz Před 3 lety

      Yeah also I like your pfp

    • @andi_1485
      @andi_1485 Před 3 lety +4

      "WE USED DAD's CREDIT CARD TO BUY $150000 worth of game skins/ power-ups!!!"

  • @randimatsuzaki8461
    @randimatsuzaki8461 Před 3 lety +162

    My mom took pride in having us all kicked out by the time we were 18. I grew up in the states.
    I struggled and starved through university trying to get bills paid while being a full-time student. Since I had no safety net anyway, I moved to the other side of the planet. I live in Japan now.
    In preparation for having my own children, I insisted we build on to the house in such a way that our children would be comfortable staying with us as adults if they so choose.

    • @Find-Your-Bliss-
      @Find-Your-Bliss- Před rokem +2

      Beautiful story.
      I want to read your book all about it.
      🧚🏻‍♀️

    • @sorayaroshan9005
      @sorayaroshan9005 Před rokem +4

      You are a brave woman, you should be proud of yourself. hope u have a beautiful life.'

    • @zahirahussain5061
      @zahirahussain5061 Před rokem

      Love u mom...way to ❤️❤️

    • @veronicagonzalez2346
      @veronicagonzalez2346 Před rokem +6

      In latinamerica you'll have to kick your kids out or they'll stay until 45 years old literally 😅

    • @tsunamis82
      @tsunamis82 Před 9 měsíci +5

      Your kids are always your kids. Turfing them out at 18 is not good parenting.

  • @amyj.4992
    @amyj.4992 Před rokem +21

    My mother taught me that too. "would you like it, if someone invaded you space or get loud in your ear?" Empathy is so so important

  • @lizahalifax1949
    @lizahalifax1949 Před 3 lety +1041

    At 16 my mum decided she had done her job raising me and said I was old enough to live on my own ! I'm 41 now and have 3 wonderful children, my eldest is 21 and I would never dream of asking them to move out. I love having them at home.

    • @TheWorkshop298
      @TheWorkshop298 Před 3 lety +61

      How did you find a place to stay? Where did you find food? How did you afford your education? I am asking cause i might be in that situation in a few months.

    • @lizahalifax1949
      @lizahalifax1949 Před 3 lety +105

      @@TheWorkshop298 I was lucky enough to find a full time job so could afford to rent a house. I had nothing to put in it, not even a bed so for quite a while I slept on the floor. I got the basics that I needed as cheaply as I could or bought second hand items. Once I found my feet I replaced those items with ones that would last .

    • @lizahalifax1949
      @lizahalifax1949 Před 3 lety +53

      @@jessesmith8388 me neither. I don't understand how a mother could do that !

    • @rm3015
      @rm3015 Před 3 lety +111

      That is why the elderly in the west lead a lonely life in their old age. If you kick your child out at 16 then how can you expect them to bond with in your old age. I feel so bad for old people in the west.

    • @lizahalifax1949
      @lizahalifax1949 Před 3 lety +60

      @@rm3015 it really is very sad how some parents are in a rush to say they have done raising their children. The thought of my children maybe wanting to move out one day really upsets me. I love having them around me at home. I've told them their never leaving 😂

  • @cranscape
    @cranscape Před 3 lety +1415

    Several years ago a group of Japanese students visited my American high school for a couple weeks and their reaction to our lunches made me realize we were being fed garbage. Like I knew it, and we all wished it were better, but seeing their reaction just cemented that in my mind. Our food was trash. And the funny thing is that when people try to improve standards and make it healthier the parents go on a rampage about it to preserve the trash food because their kids won't eat healthier food. The trash starts at home I guess.

    • @imshaunnurse
      @imshaunnurse Před 3 lety +28

      They try to fund it but the city keeps picking to put it in teachers salary instead

    • @jigsaw2281
      @jigsaw2281 Před 2 lety +67

      Tell your govt. not to spend 730 billion dollars on defence ..Divert this money to education and food and health

    • @---tn1iu
      @---tn1iu Před 2 lety +39

      People wanna pop kids out and not parent. You have to feed your kid nutritious food. Snacks and junk food are okay sometimes but the bulk of their food must be healthy so they can start off on the right footing.

    • @serene5345
      @serene5345 Před 2 lety +19

      An exchange student came from Sweden and thought the same thing about cafeteria food in the local high school. In Sweden the students meals are almost like home cooked dinners.

    • @nixy1244
      @nixy1244 Před 2 lety +26

      Not only that, but they tried to go healthy, but the budget didn’t change, so we got things that tasted like cardboard. It was cheap stuff and some students blamed the cafeteria ladies for it when they were just working with what they were given.

  • @rosaliebarry5995
    @rosaliebarry5995 Před 2 lety +27

    I loved your video! I went to Japan a few years back and found it very interesting. My daughter and I were very impressed at how people were so quiet and unintrusive . Even in a big city like Tokyo you didn’t feel overwhelmed by all the people because they were all so respectful of one another. No one was loud or staring at you.

  • @erinbuxton6787
    @erinbuxton6787 Před rokem +18

    Well, I must be from Japan because I parent like this too! Breastfed, cosleep, only left my babies/kids 1 hour a week every Sunday morning, taught empathy above all else, and sent them to a small Charter school with amazingly healthy lunches served and this school's entire premise was teaching kids values. :) I live in Arizona BTW. Lots of my parent friends also parent this way as well! I love it.

    • @heathergladden3146
      @heathergladden3146 Před rokem +1

      I can't wait to move to Arizona. I'm 36 and never knew my parents (dad left after he found out my mom was pregnant w/ me, mom died shortly after I was born due to complications)
      My grandparents raised me as best they could but had multiple health problems and accidents so I ended up taking care of them while still in elementary school. And I am still caring for my disabled grandmother to this day.
      Sorry for the infodump, but I am in FL now and really hope AZ will be way better than here..

    • @hadast3806
      @hadast3806 Před 8 měsíci

      I have dark circles like a raccoon right now parenting this way. 😂
      But it’s best for the child if the mother is self sacrificing and give everything for the baby.

  • @ED-ie3et
    @ED-ie3et Před 3 lety +1824

    I really like that empathy is taught to kids. We need that in the US

    • @hat4hat
      @hat4hat Před 3 lety +55

      It is taught but some kids just either don’t know any better or just don’t care

    • @myujokt733
      @myujokt733 Před 3 lety +115

      @@hat4hat Because it isn't enforced and in the end people just go, Eh whatever. Along with individualism, it creates the idea that you yourself matter more than the other guy, despite giving people the illusion of absolute freedom in things.

    • @user-du9ip3tb6s
      @user-du9ip3tb6s Před 3 lety +132

      Empathy is not "taught". Kids learn it from observing in parents and adults. If adults have no empathy, the kids won't have it either.

    • @Food4thought1234
      @Food4thought1234 Před 3 lety +18

      @@user-du9ip3tb6s So yeah, the parents "teach" them.. so it it indeed "taught" LMFAO

    • @lskipski5023
      @lskipski5023 Před 3 lety +5

      Not just US but everywhere ❤️🥰

  • @trebor1616
    @trebor1616 Před 3 lety +1516

    When you do something wrong.
    Japan parents: shows empathy.
    Filipino parents: pulls out slippers, hangers.

    • @roxannedeleon5016
      @roxannedeleon5016 Před 3 lety +15

      😂😂😂 so true....

    • @weltschmertzz
      @weltschmertzz Před 3 lety +109

      My parents: pulls out belt
      Super angry parents: buckle side of belt

    • @johokeen1
      @johokeen1 Před 3 lety +16

      @@weltschmertzz OUCH! DOUBLE OUCH!!

    • @xXxSkyViperxXx
      @xXxSkyViperxXx Před 3 lety +21

      in public tho:
      Filipino parents: whispers* nakakahiya! (it's shameful/embarassing!)

    • @sayfridge
      @sayfridge Před 3 lety +19

      My Parents: Sees a wallpaper with Anime girl on my phone
      *After 2 hours of flank and spank*
      STOP WATCHING CARTOONS ITS FOR KIDS

  • @sarahlongstaff5101
    @sarahlongstaff5101 Před 9 měsíci +23

    I'm American, and I only lived in Japan for 18 months, but so much of this style of parenting resonated with me. The "mom suffering for her kids" I first saw in the movie Tampopo, and I remember thinking "that is the kind of mom I will be!" I did sleep with my children, and bathe with them through elementary school, because it was more water efficient and we had a big enough shower. I think the Japanese tradition of ofuro, having the whole family bathe in the hot tub together, explains a lot--if your house doesn't have central heating, then you have to warm up before bed. My mother raised us to think of others, the Japanese way, but my mother grew up in South Africa--I think that I didn't have 100% American-style childhood myself. Another thing from Japan that I tried to teach my children is "interdependence." For example, my children take turns doing everyone's laundry, not just their own, the way Americans do. I DO encourage their critical thinking and individuality, though. I think my children are much better "world citizens" because of this mix of Japanese and American parenting.

    • @smithface8791
      @smithface8791 Před 8 měsíci +1

      All of this is like a culture shock as I read everyone’s comments. I live in Australia and I have never heard of children kicked out of their parents’ homes. It sounds shocking and extremely cruel. I always thought that children only left home on the day they married.

    • @sarahlongstaff5101
      @sarahlongstaff5101 Před 8 měsíci

      Oh yeah. One of the researchers who studies Hikikomori in Japan (that's the young people who refuse to leave their rooms) said that at least Japanese parents let them stay. He pointed to how many homeless young people we have in the US living on the streets! It's a crisis.@@smithface8791

  • @ShirleyLarson-LaMarche
    @ShirleyLarson-LaMarche Před rokem +67

    As an American Anthropologist I feel this video is an amazing contribution to other people bridging the gap of cultural understanding.

  • @saiphaneeshk.h.5482
    @saiphaneeshk.h.5482 Před 3 lety +1460

    Living with parents
    India: 90% of them live with parents until either of them die

    • @TheShahkulu
      @TheShahkulu Před 3 lety +104

      @@jaychun102 China is super dirty too, so dirty in fact that they caused a global pandemic again.

    • @hedgehogthesonic3181
      @hedgehogthesonic3181 Před 3 lety +102

      @@TheShahkulu I think India is worst, more dirty than China, no doubt.

    • @rangod1532
      @rangod1532 Před 3 lety +37

      @@jaychun102 India is a subcontinent, countries within a country... Many states are dirty but few aren't...also, not all Indians look black/brown...

    • @warrior9326
      @warrior9326 Před 3 lety +58

      @@rangod1532 racists

    • @rangod1532
      @rangod1532 Před 3 lety +31

      @@warrior9326 how am I racist? Do u even know the meaning of a racist? 😂

  • @just_a_turtle_chad
    @just_a_turtle_chad Před 3 lety +1427

    Turtle approved.

    • @Umbruh_Prime
      @Umbruh_Prime Před 3 lety +8

      First bitwit and now Paulo too? Diverse

    • @jodycochrane888
      @jodycochrane888 Před 3 lety +1

      You were just on a Radio TTS video, the fuck is going on?? 😭💔

    • @robertcurrie1160
      @robertcurrie1160 Před 3 lety +13

      Turtle, I see you everywhere,that's 4 videos I've watched today approved by you & 5 yesterday,we must have the same taste! Lol 😁

    • @nicolechang1161
      @nicolechang1161 Před 3 lety +2

      This is the only approval that counts

    • @a-meal8646
      @a-meal8646 Před 3 lety +4

      What will win.
      A sea turtle or a Costco bulk size of plastic straws

  • @lolanelson9634
    @lolanelson9634 Před 2 lety +27

    First of all, your baby is adorable 🥰! I raised my children with a more attached parenting style than I was raised. I then encouraged my kids to raise their children with a stronger attachment style of parenting, like the family bed, and training from a point of empathy. This channel just popped up on my feed, and I’m so glad it did!

  • @elaineencke4936
    @elaineencke4936 Před 2 lety +33

    It is so touching how sweet this country's culture is - especially how they cultivate empathy! What beautiful souls!

    • @davidanthony4960
      @davidanthony4960 Před rokem

      ARE YOU F..KING serious?? ok let me start by saying Japan is a very veery fake culture.. what they show the world its NOT how they act... ok 1.) Japan has NO children's rights.. so children are basically seen as a piece of furniture and moved around without any respect or understanding of what they child needs and is entitled too as a human being under the children's rights laws which most other countries do have....
      2.) japan does not understand family or custody laws that most countries do.. japan has no laws in place that understand that a child should be allowed to have contact with both parents after a divorce.. they think the kid should only see one parent.. which goes alongside my first point in that they have no childrens rights laws... so they done care if they child sees both parents.. which the rest of the word "modern world" understands is necessary for the Childs mental well being and growth........
      3. Japan is known as the family child abduction capitol of the world..... you just need to google it... 100000s of kids are being taken away from one parent if the other patent isn't happy anymore... and abducted so that one parent cant see them.... I could write about this forever but let me tell you.. you have a false idea of Japanese culture... it has been and long been the country that pretends to be a beautiful sweet place.... until you get caught in itssystem..
      4. Japan have incredibly poor human rights laws.. I mean the laws go back 100s of years and they haven't been changed... Japan may look visually like a lovely place to you.. but let me promise you it is a dark place especially if you are a foreigner and are married to a Japanese.. the country and cultural beliefs will literately eat you alive and you will never recover... and that also goes for Japanese people also.,.
      the issue with japan is the LACK of empathy for others not how much they teach it,.. lol.. trust me on this.. all the bowing and yes yes yes thank you thank you bow bow bow... its all bullshit... if you were caught in a family issue or had a kid there you would be eaten alive and thrown out like you were a piece of nothing... trust me.. ive seen it millions of times... it is a country that has a huge LACK of empathy for whats cosindered morally right in most developed countries.... good luck

    • @sarahlongstaff5101
      @sarahlongstaff5101 Před 8 měsíci +2

      This is only for little kids. When they get to middle school and the brutality begins. Bullying, competitiveness, overstudying. I taught English there. The change in one year in the demeanor of kids going from elementary to middle is tragic.

  • @2Click-My-iCON
    @2Click-My-iCON Před 3 lety +666

    Without a mistake, Paolo's child.
    The face looks just like that!

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak Před 3 lety +3701

    Your son is so super cute!

  • @dianaunger6782
    @dianaunger6782 Před 8 měsíci +6

    I am American, my mom was from Japan and yes, I was constantly corrected in terms of empathy - how did I make others feel. It was a bit of a culture clash. I now value being brought up to empathize. I sometimes feel like others here are so self absorbed and can't tell when they offend others. I am older and I can remember walking by myself at 5, a lot of kids did then. That changed in the 70's. And now parents helicopter, there is a lot of fear now.

  • @joannealton6041
    @joannealton6041 Před 2 lety +2

    You guys are so sweet and look like great parents. I loved this video!

  • @watchdealer11
    @watchdealer11 Před 3 lety +583

    Respect to moms and dads for all the sacrifices parents make raising us!

    • @mhaz1862
      @mhaz1862 Před 3 lety +22

      @@twootakua_ typical millennial crying baby..so weak..booo

    • @iWh15tl3
      @iWh15tl3 Před 3 lety +9

      @@twootakua_ God created the family so the Dad and Mom give wisdom and love to their children...do you still live with your parents?

    • @michaelk4896
      @michaelk4896 Před 3 lety +19

      Anyone can make children but not every one is a parent. Well intended umbrella statement but unfortunately not the case with many people.

    • @stormveil
      @stormveil Před 3 lety +1

      @@mhaz1862 who raised those weak babies then? 😅

    • @trevorfranks69
      @trevorfranks69 Před 3 lety +2

      Nah

  • @gordongekko4752
    @gordongekko4752 Před 3 lety +1403

    My Japanese mother family rules:
    1. Respect and honor your parents and elders.
    2. Kyoukan or empathy (迷惑を かけない)
    3. Shoujiki or honesty, integrity.
    4. Ganbatte! Try your best! But really, perfection or kanpeki (完璧) in all you do to reach enlightenment.
    5. Save one-half your paycheck.
    6. The group or team is more important than you, the individual.
    7. And the list goes on an on.
    8. And don't forget to send your child to the grocery store or neighbor's house to pickup things alone starting at age 4.
    9. When I walked to school, there were signs reminding us of correct behavior.
    10. Once at school, we formed up in the courtyard at the position of 'attention' and the principal would stand out in front of us and yell, "Dainippon teikoku, tenno heika . . ." And we shout and raise our hands up in the air, "Banzai, banzai, banzai.!"
    11. It was an unspoken taboo in my family to send your aging parents to a nursing home. See rule 1. As an adult, I lived with my aging parents and took care of them. If someone asked me where I lived. I would say with my parents. If the person asking the question was American. They would give me a strange look. But if the person was Japanese they gave me an approving look or they would say, 'good son.' Fortunately, I have three brothers and two sisters. We all took turns living with our aging parents. Both died in their beds in their home sleeping next to one of their siblings.

    • @CyclingMartialartswithMusic
      @CyclingMartialartswithMusic Před 3 lety +75

      #6 is the complete opposite in a western country. Like the US. #11 is what most asian countries do which Americans find weird. 🤔

    • @cyrus117
      @cyrus117 Před 3 lety +13

      So underrated man😔❤️

    • @hyouzanren1846
      @hyouzanren1846 Před 3 lety +8

      Confuse about no10...what its mean? School motto?

    • @vlowolvtake1797
      @vlowolvtake1797 Před 3 lety +24

      What school did you go to??? Is that a public school. I'm asking because of No. 10. It sounds like something that would've been done during WWII. Went to Jp public schools decades ago here.

    • @gordongekko4752
      @gordongekko4752 Před 3 lety +20

      @@vlowolvtake1797 Yes. Japanese public school during WWII.

  • @user-pt6fb8ks9p
    @user-pt6fb8ks9p Před 9 měsíci +2

    Japanese parents teach their children respect , honesty and good manners. That is the most important thing. They also spend more time with their children and exemplifies cleanliness as they grow up.

  • @dianasaghegyi1554
    @dianasaghegyi1554 Před rokem

    I want to thank you for your video as it gave me incredible reassurance. I realised that I instinctually did many things in a very similar way as you described, even though some people tried to discourage me to do otherwise. Now I feel that I have been right to listen to my gut and I laid the foundation to a healthy, safe parent-child relationship. My daughter is happy and balanced, and that is what matters to me the most. You have my outmost gratitude for helping me realise all of this. You are great.

  • @denisrmluiz
    @denisrmluiz Před 3 lety +937

    It's always so cool so see how people's voices sound different when speaking different languages. 🤩

  • @InuMiroLover
    @InuMiroLover Před 3 lety +2098

    Japanese parents: "Young children are more than capable of going across town alone to go to school."
    American parents: "I dont care that you're almost 18, you're not going across the street to the convenience store alone! You'll get kidnapped!"

    • @tinabastarache2674
      @tinabastarache2674 Před 3 lety +150

      just look at all human trafficking that goes on all over the world.

    • @0_DefaulT_0
      @0_DefaulT_0 Před 3 lety +232

      And American parents are not that wrong... Here in Ukraine, you're in danger the exact second you walked out the door. Especially when it gets warmer and darker outside.

    • @yallaintit
      @yallaintit Před 3 lety +95

      Lmao what, I got to go out at like age 12 idk what country you’re in. And America is more dangerous than Japan so yeahh, kinda understandable haha.

    • @sebastiansebastian5270
      @sebastiansebastian5270 Před 3 lety +109

      @@yallaintit exactly. Japan isn't as dangerous because the crime rate is low.

    • @xanderzed6587
      @xanderzed6587 Před 3 lety +17

      @Aries BBA3 Thats nothing to show off , flaunt , or laugh about 😐

  • @amandacarrington915
    @amandacarrington915 Před 2 lety +12

    Hey, thanks for sharing your thoughts/feeling/experiences with wolfy. It's ensightful and much apprciated.
    I live in the UK, so there is a bit of cross-over with American culture there (when it came to lunch). However, When I was about 10 I moved to a boarding school and there was a huge shift in how foods was treated, which you might find interesting.
    It was a small school, so the whole school ate at the same time and each class/group had their assigned table. Meals were different everyday and I would consider them fairly healthy and balanced. These meals would be served out by the "Head" of the table (usually a teacher), the "Server" of the table rotated everyday (anyone else on the table who wasn't the teacher) and they were expected to serve the whole table. The tray of food would then be served out by the Head, Heads of table would make up game to decide who would eat the leftovers (often phrased as "seconds"). The server would then take away any dirty dishes to the kitchen.
    I have a memory of being a Server one time and carrying a tray of food that was bit heavy (I think it was a pie) ... and I ended up pouring hot gravy down my uniform and scalding my legs. I remeber putting the pie on the floor and running to the toilets to try and run cold water over myself, thankfully a teacher had spotted me struggling and had ran after me to provide aid. I then remember being in floods of tears, naked in a bath with the Matron putting cold water on me (it was a boarding school, of course they had a Matron).
    A bit of an unusual food/lunch setup compared to my UK- Based peers, but one I think really taught me good manners and gave me an appreciated for different foods and one I hope my own children will be able to learn valuable lessons from.

  • @adamdzwoniarek3841
    @adamdzwoniarek3841 Před rokem +10

    it's all about bonding with the baby. The first months and years are crucial

    • @annwood6812
      @annwood6812 Před rokem

      I think babies can bond with dad too. It doesn't have to be all on the mom. Dads should let women have some time to themselves.

  • @_lost._.zeny_
    @_lost._.zeny_ Před 3 lety +247

    "He's such a smiley boy!" says the smiley man.
    😊😁

    • @priscillasodeke6099
      @priscillasodeke6099 Před 3 lety +1

      I was looking for this comment, because I had the same thought lol 😁

  • @ToriHalfon
    @ToriHalfon Před 3 lety +160

    When I've visited Japan, I noticed how amazing Japanese mothers are with their children. So present in the moment with the kid, crouching down to their level to speak with them softly, so gentle. I think Japanese parents might be the most nurturing in the world.

    • @R1DDL3RS
      @R1DDL3RS Před 3 lety +29

      Japan has a serious child abuse problem. I wouldn't say Japanese parents are any more or less nurturing than any other group.

    • @ToriHalfon
      @ToriHalfon Před 3 lety +4

      @@R1DDL3RS I'm just going off of what I saw personally US parents vs. Japanese parents.

    • @R1DDL3RS
      @R1DDL3RS Před 3 lety +19

      @@ToriHalfon It wasn't a personal attack, I just think its important to be honest about Japan.

    • @ToriHalfon
      @ToriHalfon Před 3 lety +5

      @@R1DDL3RS no offense taken. Was just clarifying that I wasn't basing my statement on any statistics, just what I observed.

    • @R1DDL3RS
      @R1DDL3RS Před 3 lety +5

      @@ToriHalfon Ah fair enough. Glad that this was a productive exchange.

  • @clearquartz1677
    @clearquartz1677 Před 2 lety +41

    The more I learn about Japanese culture, the more I feel like I’d be very comfortable there. Love your videos!

  • @piasanda1803
    @piasanda1803 Před rokem +11

    Thank you so much for this video! I am a grandparent of seven and it was shocking for me to learn that I was brought up just like kids in Japan. I am Japanese and my husband is a Caucasian American and my kids are obviously half and half but have carried over much of the same parenting style you show. It explains some shocking behaviors of my parents that I did not understand before, such as sending me to school by myself on public transportation, and not providing lunch. What is unusual in the United States was common and usual in Japan. I understand now that they did this for me out of love and expectation that the community would do their share.

  • @jachos149
    @jachos149 Před 3 lety +87

    I love how Maiko's perspective on the empathy with the community vs. losing one's individuality. I think this is one of the advantages of having parents from different cultures - kids get to have a balance of both.

    • @yiwoon_cr8s
      @yiwoon_cr8s Před 3 lety +2

      #Agree

    • @user-ej6bn3fl6y
      @user-ej6bn3fl6y Před 9 měsíci

      Yep I definitely lost myself here in Japan for thinking of others waaayyy tooo much

  • @benjaminiwan4722
    @benjaminiwan4722 Před 3 lety +361

    Me being age 11 to even go to school alone
    Japanese kids: HA JOKES ON YOU I WAS A TODDLER WHEN THAT HAPPENED

    • @thefearlessshaheen2366
      @thefearlessshaheen2366 Před 3 lety +44

      Not, quiet, In Japan they have a community system where adults in the neighbourhood lookout for children if they feel uncomfortable because of an adult following them. They can run to the nearest house. It is seriously done when children go and come back from school.

    • @laurieanne3779
      @laurieanne3779 Před 3 lety +10

      @@thefearlessshaheen2366 ohhh yes I’m one of those people watching the kids 2 or 3 times a month for me coz we do by turn 😊✨
      Also school starts from 6 not 5 years olds😅after the kids 6 birthdays and that in befor April. And if your 6th birthday is after the star of school( even 1 day after) than you’ll have to wait for the next year😅

    • @lurvthyself5302
      @lurvthyself5302 Před 3 lety +1

      @@thefearlessshaheen2366 so parents in the neighborhood take turns secretly following the kids to make sure they get to school safe?

    • @MillyKKitty
      @MillyKKitty Před 3 lety +3

      Me who wandered alone in a forest age 3: AMATEURS

    • @chrisgould101
      @chrisgould101 Před 3 lety

      Young Kenobi is already a black belt at 2 years old. By 3, he was breaking concrete with his bare forehead and spinning heel kicks. When he became 4 Young Kenobi self attended a temple where he defeated the sensei and took over the temple. He now lives in a remote village and is still frequently seen breaking concrete with his head.

  • @Goofy8907
    @Goofy8907 Před 3 lety

    Good video, and thank you Naiko for joining and giving us the take from a native

  • @chiyamax
    @chiyamax Před 11 měsíci +2

    Hi guys, I’m Japanese college student. I want to add some points to this video.
    In Japanese elementary and junior high schools, they teach children where to stay away. That's very nice for them who don't yet understand the lurking dangers and the distinction between good and evil.
    In addition, community members are always watching around the school to make sure that children are not involved in traffic accidents or crimes, and some families have notified the authorities that they will protect children in the community in case of an emergency. If children are chased by a suspicious person, they can run into those homes and ask for help.
    Every family has different rules, but most families allow children to go out alone as long as they observe the curfew. I know a lot of parents who confirm in advance who they're going with, what they're doing, and where they're going.

  • @thestudio66
    @thestudio66 Před 3 lety +308

    My father's first girlfriend was Japanese, many moons ago. Even when they broke up, and he fathered me with my mother, he retained many Japanese traditions as a way to raise me, whilst combining them with our own, Portuguese ones. Empathy, Responsibility and Love above all, were values I learnt through him, and being given not just toys and friends to play with, but responsibilities as well - which made me feel validated, and strong - independent.

    • @moondog7694
      @moondog7694 Před 3 lety +6

      Not sure about the empathy one. If Japanese are so empathetic, why are there so few vegans? Why is there not much of an animal welfare movement there? Why do they not admit refugees? If it's the government, how come I don't see large number of Japanese people begging their government to start accepting refugees? How come Japanese aren't coming to Africa and handing out free food to the starving people in Africa? Are large numbers of Japanese people donating money to build wildlife refuges in other countries to help save their endangered species? Are Japanese people donating bone marrow to strangers?

    • @thestudio66
      @thestudio66 Před 3 lety +6

      @@moondog7694 Considering their society and culture, it's fair to say the Japanese are still opening up to things, and to us in general, as for many years it was a closed society. You're right in asking those questions, although I do think it's a matter of time - not lack of empathy.

    • @moondog7694
      @moondog7694 Před 3 lety +3

      @@thestudio66 I think it's that more of their empathy is directed inwardly (towards their own family members), thus less is available for outside their own family. Empathy is a zero-sum game. The more you have for strangers, the less you'll have for your own family, and vice-versa. Dr. Ed Dutton says right-wingers are more instinctual. Dr. Bloom says all humans were right-wingers hundreds of years ago. Dr. Satoshi Kanazawa says that leftism can be defined as concern for non-genetically related beings. People of a different nationality, or different race, or different species, or just people outside your own family or not known to you (like not your classmate or coworker), are treated as non-kin, if what SerpentZA says is true. This is what bloggers like JayMan, HBD Chick, etc. say.

    • @anaypatil2932
      @anaypatil2932 Před 3 lety +2

      well spoken

    • @thestudio66
      @thestudio66 Před 3 lety +2

      @@anaypatil2932

  • @soriyahhintergardt3941
    @soriyahhintergardt3941 Před 3 lety +511

    Every American has that mystery meat burger that no one would ever eat from school.

    • @TheDragonfriday
      @TheDragonfriday Před 3 lety +5

      Lie, people will eat it :)

    • @aznsugarg
      @aznsugarg Před 3 lety +27

      Not necessarily, growing up in Louisiana, we had red beans and rice, jambalaya, gumbo, cornbread, shrimp, catfish, etc. I was shocked at what kids got when I moved out of state.

    • @JoolsUK
      @JoolsUK Před 3 lety +3

      @@aznsugarg Jambalaya is awesome!

    • @jame254
      @jame254 Před 3 lety +3

      @@aznsugarg same in Indiana there was not a day I did not have steak or meat loaf. California as well

    • @MandaRisteen
      @MandaRisteen Před 3 lety +8

      @@aznsugarg I grew up there too. Our HS typically had three lines for food: One with "hot lunch" that rotated each day (where you'd find the Cajun/Creole dishes), then there was the hamburger line, and then the pizza line. I miss authentic Gumbo! I try to cook it, but it doesn't taste the same :)

  • @MelissaRae1975
    @MelissaRae1975 Před rokem

    Totally appreciate this video and information. Its so neat to hear how people around the world live. Thank you.

  • @eltubo7
    @eltubo7 Před rokem +1

    So nice to see Wolfe growing on this channel. Looks like his father more and more.

  • @vanshkhanvilkar6173
    @vanshkhanvilkar6173 Před 3 lety +173

    In India when a child became 15 or 16 then he is allowed to roam alone. We stay with our parents almost the whole life in the same house. It's because we have family oriented society. It always good but somethings everyone wants privacy it's little bit difficult.

    • @rashmitikhe4720
      @rashmitikhe4720 Před 3 lety +5

      आपल्या भारतात सगळंच अति आहे... बऱ्याचदा आई वडिलांबाबोबर राहणे नकोसे वाटते... ते किती अपेक्षा ठेवतात.... लग्न झालं कि पालकांचे प्रेम कमी आणि अपेक्षाच वाढत राहतात...

    • @pragnes007
      @pragnes007 Před 2 lety

      i am 8 i am fro india i go alone to store

    • @pragnes007
      @pragnes007 Před 2 lety

      i have roamed alone in my apartment I have not went alone in the town i only go to the store or temple or park

  • @kiddracoify
    @kiddracoify Před 3 lety +71

    Hey a german here: you also go alone to school here- in fact it is a privilege and if you are accompanied by a parent, it means that you are not one of the big kids yet. Also many people stay here longer at there parents place, so that they have not to worry so much during university or a job training about money and rent.

    • @abediegun4545
      @abediegun4545 Před 3 lety

      in Switzerland too, including kindergarten, if you need to cross street, traffic stops,
      but in the US we have traffic wardens too, but most parents walk together or drive them unless school us comes over to pick up

    • @k.e8638
      @k.e8638 Před 3 lety +1

      @@abediegun4545 Ich weiß ja nicht wo sie leben, aber in meinem Ort haben wir enorme Probleme mit Eltern die ihre Kinder unbedingt vor die Schultür fahren müssen. Ich bin selber Japaner und empfinde eher das dass Verhalten unserer Kinder eher dem Gegenteil Japans Kinder entspricht. Aber mir ist bewusst das sich das von Region zu Region unterscheidet, vorallem in den Großstädten.

    • @Mamez369
      @Mamez369 Před 3 lety +2

      I lived in Germany in the 1980s as a child, and I walked or took buses to school on my own. When I came back to the States, I was annoyed when my mother started walking me to school or waiting for the bus.

    • @HoLoCraftMoDz
      @HoLoCraftMoDz Před rokem

      @@xiagm-kemasmfadlic150 LMAO Die Macht wird wieder vereint meine Kameraden!

  • @larrygraham3377
    @larrygraham3377 Před 2 lety +1

    Great video guys. Thank you so much.
    All of you are a wonderful family !!!
    I'm sure your baby will grow up to be someone special because he has such wonderful parents !!!

  • @loverrlee
    @loverrlee Před rokem +1

    This was sweet. Your little family is so cute. I wish you all nothing but the best. 💗

  • @brandonlesco4821
    @brandonlesco4821 Před 3 lety +275

    Regarding the empathy part, my culture goes like this: Kid does something bad. Parent says, "other people are going to say I'm a bad parent."

    • @TheFuronghua
      @TheFuronghua Před 3 lety +11

      Exactly

    • @xXxSkyViperxXx
      @xXxSkyViperxXx Před 3 lety +7

      is that how it is in china too? cuz i grew up in an overseas chinese family in my country and i remember my dad talking like that

    • @MillyKKitty
      @MillyKKitty Před 3 lety +7

      Kinda sounds like gaslighting 😅
      (Mother Gothel vibes)

    • @makingofkira8710
      @makingofkira8710 Před 3 lety +5

      @@MillyKKitty in India too

    • @cathhl2440
      @cathhl2440 Před 3 lety +2

      @SanioraDuc That's horrible! Don't they teach Psalm 127 in church?

  • @angelabalano8941
    @angelabalano8941 Před 3 lety +314

    Here in Philippines, you can live with your parents as long as you want too

  • @daretodreambedo4449
    @daretodreambedo4449 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for this video. My kids and I have been watching something on Netflix about first errands, and we're so impressed (me particularly) on how the kids remember to do things, have self-control, think of solutions, are so self-aware... I wanted to know why the kids are so responsible, etc and came across your video. I was born in CA. My family is from the south, and I have a bit of mixed heritage and grew up with a lot of different cultures in CA (so there are a lot of factors going on here). I co-sleep with my son (5) and daughter (11). My 15-yr-old will sometimes join us. I feel like my 11-yr-old still needs that so that's why I let her sleep in the room with us. Interestingly, I got rid of my boxspring and top mattress, so we just use a mattress on the floor, and I put it up during the day because I don't like clutter. I like the tatami mattress you mentioned. The co-showering. I did that with my son until he was about 4 1/2. I questioned if that was too old by American standards, but he has a developmental delay and didn't seem to be aware that I was different lol. He still does not consider me to be a "girl." He used to say I was a boy. Then, it changed to me just being "mom"--not girl or boy. I teach my kids to be empathetic, but I also want them to be individual and I support individuality. Also, I don't expect my kids to move out at 18. I don't want to oblige them to stay either, but I think it's better that they are established before they move.Thank you so much for the Bokksu suggestion. I'm going to check that out.

  • @mikemorgulis9657
    @mikemorgulis9657 Před 2 lety

    I LOL’d at the gps tracker! Thanks for the inside scoop. Wolfy is super cute and has a great smile!

  • @jhonathanazeredo7660
    @jhonathanazeredo7660 Před 3 lety +195

    In Brazil it's also very common for you to live with your parents when you're an adult. We usually move out for work or after marriage. Or if you decide to leave. I think that's part of the Latin culture.

    • @ileua_
      @ileua_ Před 3 lety +10

      Its the same in the Philippines

    • @Nezumi--
      @Nezumi-- Před 3 lety +16

      honestly i think it's normal the world over, only the anglo-saxon/western countries seem to think that toxic independence is a good idea >.>

    • @a.9492
      @a.9492 Před 3 lety +3

      Same in India

    • @montywoodside
      @montywoodside Před 2 lety +4

      @@Nezumi-- Californian here. Most young adults here, myself included, still live with our parents, even in the early 20s. (At least it's a very common phenomenon I see within my technically Western community.) I'm sure it's mostly due to the fact that it basically costs $4000 per month to live in a shoebox here in California. In fact, I suggest that the whole taboo of living with your parents here in America is slowly fading due to the mere cost of living, at least in the "big" states such as CA.

    • @janavukcevic
      @janavukcevic Před 2 lety

      Same in Montenegro and Serbia.

  • @doubleknot3679
    @doubleknot3679 Před 3 lety +286

    Perfect, I was just about to eat dinner.

  • @SophieBroder
    @SophieBroder Před 2 lety +1

    You are a lovely couple. Always sharing valueable information.

  • @juniordunkley2751
    @juniordunkley2751 Před 2 lety +1

    Love watching Paolo Japanese features give you best insight into Japanese life on you tube

  • @lorainegershom2438
    @lorainegershom2438 Před 3 lety +60

    Wolfy is so happy. When he smiles it makes me smile. You both are amazing parents!
    Thank you for sharing your beautiful son's life.

  • @ClassyJohn
    @ClassyJohn Před 3 lety +109

    I 100% agree with the view of having your kid learn how to be empathetic towards other people's feelings (which, in asian countries, tends to be more about group harmony mentality) while also embracing their own individuality.
    I have a pretty unique experience as I grew up in the U.S. as an Asian American so most of the emphasis in school was on not breaking laws or getting into trouble (you're considered a bad kid if you do so). At home, my mom taught me to be considerate of others and put others needs above your own as I grew up around siblings and I saw that my parents basically always put us (the kids) first before themselves. The way that has affected me (as an adult in his late 20s) is that I have tendencies to be indecisive often because I try my best to be agreeable and pick a decision that would benefit most or everyone else over myself. I'm trying to be myself more (less agreeable especially when there are differences of opinion) and be more decisive, being more considerate of myself.
    If theres any advice I would impart to new parents or parents with very young kids, I would say that i personally think its a good idea to expose your kids to these situations from both the empathetic ("think of others") mindset and the individual ("think of yourself") mindset and let your kid make the decision themselves. They will make mistakes and thats okay (mistakes are how we grow). Its good to teach your children but at the same time, give them space to think and make their own decisions. They'll grow into their own individual person better when they're forced to make their own decisions based on their own reasoning (rather than the logic/bias that you or others impose on them).

    • @Jordan-inJapan
      @Jordan-inJapan Před 3 lety +4

      Sounds like awesome advice to me!

    • @fia-chanchannel
      @fia-chanchannel Před 3 lety

      @@Jordan-inJapan I agree!🤩💯✨

    • @zy032
      @zy032 Před 3 lety

      I've just be blessed with the words of a true sage

    • @MoonBrookReacts
      @MoonBrookReacts Před 3 lety +1

      I was raised the same way to be empathetic it’s just sometimes it becomes draining, like you said trying to make sure everyone else is ok when you yourself may not agree. I’m learning that it’s ok to put myself first sometimes. As for my children I raise them to be respectful and empathetic as well as let them know it’s ok to think differently. It’s ok to disagree but just make sure it’s respectful.
      My family is from a mixed background even though we were born in America I often wonder if this way of parenting was ingrained throughout generations (some Native American and the rest came from Europe, Africa and Asia)

  • @Idkwhattoputhelp429
    @Idkwhattoputhelp429 Před 2 lety +17

    This way of raising is just so humble - I may use some of these into consideration if I ever have kids when I’m older 😊

  • @cheskydivision
    @cheskydivision Před 2 lety +52

    Would be great to see more empathy taught in the U.S.

    • @seeleygirl6178
      @seeleygirl6178 Před rokem +1

      And more respect of elders and authority. Like we used to learn back in the day and some still do, but too many don’t.

  • @silvervase
    @silvervase Před 3 lety +84

    My mother used to pop me on the bus and wave goodbye from the time I was five. I am from the country and school buses were heavily used. I also would play outdoors in the woods for hours unsupervised. Maybe I am just old

    • @bishop51807
      @bishop51807 Před 3 lety +1

      Maybe it was the nation or area you grew up in. Some places in the city I grew up in I would not be hanging around at night, even today as a 30yr old man.

    • @jankapf5807
      @jankapf5807 Před 3 lety

      The same

    • @chrisgould101
      @chrisgould101 Před 3 lety

      Young Kenobi is already a black belt at 2 years old. By 3, he was breaking concrete with his bare forehead and spinning heel kicks. When he became 4 Young Kenobi self attended a temple where he defeated the sensei and took over the temple. He now lives in a remote village and is still frequently seen breaking concrete with his head.

    • @IDontKnow-pf6en
      @IDontKnow-pf6en Před 2 lety +1

      they mean city buses, not school buses

  • @princessmoonbeam0719
    @princessmoonbeam0719 Před 3 lety +116

    I live with my mom and I'm 34. I don't live off, rather I take care of her, though.

    • @tywinlannister8015
      @tywinlannister8015 Před 3 lety +19

      I mean that makes sense. I don't know why people have a problem with that. Your family is your team. When you're little, you need to be cared for. It feels normal to return the favor when someone needs it. On top of that you love your family so ... that's not a "chore" or "debt that must be repaid".
      I lived with my Mother for the longest time, and I only moved when I got married. Took care of my Mother before then, I still visit regularly to make sure she lacks for nothing.
      And I lovingly care for my wife. You look after your own. No need to look further.

    • @salmonella6744
      @salmonella6744 Před 2 lety

      I'm sure it's your house tho right?...😐

  • @volkergluth3428
    @volkergluth3428 Před rokem +1

    Greetings from Germany! Interesting what I saw. What is very special to me is how young people live at their parents home for so long... I was happy to be on my own at 21. This was good for me.

  • @thyanimeweeb4106
    @thyanimeweeb4106 Před rokem +5

    im from malta and walking to school alone is really common and
    cooking for them selves is common too!
    the sad thing is that in malta kids dont see thier parents so often
    as they are at work 24/7

  • @flowerpower1054
    @flowerpower1054 Před 3 lety +82

    Wolfy looks like he’s starting to enjoy his bath time. He’s such a sweet little boy. ♥️

  • @azuresea00
    @azuresea00 Před 3 lety +153

    I went to school alone when i was 6, but i was the only kid to do that. My classmates were picked up every day by their parents, i was sometimes quite jealous 😂

    • @richardokolonji7763
      @richardokolonji7763 Před 3 lety +5

      Dam😂😂😂😔

    • @iris657
      @iris657 Před 3 lety +1

      oh no a kid attending school alone, like 95% of the population. so hard.

    • @vanessa-vv6zi
      @vanessa-vv6zi Před 3 lety

      Pls that was me too, but I found it fun to be alone lol

  • @mjmikaelson
    @mjmikaelson Před rokem

    I learn a lot from your channel. Thank you for sharing!

  • @madfox5085
    @madfox5085 Před 2 lety

    I love seeing your videos. Wolfy should have been there in whole video

  • @roamingmompreneur792
    @roamingmompreneur792 Před 3 lety +95

    I love the concept of teaching the children how other people feel with their actions. That’s an excellent lesson that we should all be giving to our children. I’m loving Japanese culture through these videos.

  • @grrrrlmeat
    @grrrrlmeat Před 3 lety +101

    Great timing. I was just wondering what I should watch.

    • @christopherpham9181
      @christopherpham9181 Před 3 lety

      Chef and columnist Jonah Reider’s best tool to organize a home kitchen is something restaurants give away for free. - czcams.com/video/y-dGZXAi1vc/video.html

  • @angie4511
    @angie4511 Před 9 měsíci +14

    I lived in Japan for three years with my family of three children. Best experience of my life. I loved every minute of living there.

  • @Dogsnark
    @Dogsnark Před 2 lety +1

    More of this please! (What a charming couple you are!)

  • @juliegarbs4142
    @juliegarbs4142 Před 3 lety +59

    I am from Texas. I love the Japanese way and culture so much.

  • @jackienaiditch7965
    @jackienaiditch7965 Před 3 lety +141

    Here in U.S, we have the term "helicopter parents." This seems to be a common way of parenting now here, where parents watch their kid's every move. In some instances, the police have even been called when kids are seen walking alone.

    • @kay4732
      @kay4732 Před 3 lety +24

      That's because it's so dangerous. My mom experienced an attempted abduction walking to school in the 1950's! Crime is out of control in the US. Children are often the targets. So sad.

    • @LittlePixieBot
      @LittlePixieBot Před 3 lety +21

      @@kay4732 Actually, the kids in the US are statistically no more in danger than they were in the 80s. It's just the cultural shift and being exposed to when children do go missing due to the Internet and media reporting.

    • @lauraz2896
      @lauraz2896 Před 3 lety +2

      Children are very rarely abducted in Japan. Most of them are a result of child custody disputes and involve foreigners. Much less reason to worry like in the US

    • @jackienaiditch7965
      @jackienaiditch7965 Před 3 lety

      @@kay4732 Children are rarely abducted in the U. S. According to Reuters: On average, fewer than 350 people under the age of 21 have been abducted by strangers in the United States per year since 2010, the FBI says. From 2010 through 2017, the most recent data available, the number has ranged from a low of 303 in 2016 to a high of 384 in 2011 with no clear directional trend."

    • @awesomecat
      @awesomecat Před 3 lety +2

      also known as: authoritarianism.

  • @discoverdiscoverymusic8548

    I've learned a lot from your videos. I am planning to live in Japan, and there is some downside that is popping out in every research I browse, but I believe that when you love the place and go for the dream you want, you will live there happily. Thanks for Sharing Paolo & Maila, including Wofly- Super Kawaii.

    • @davidanthony4960
      @davidanthony4960 Před rokem

      oh please keep researching.. Japan are and is the king of facade.. its one of the best countries of showing what they want people to see of Japan.,. they are experts.. japan will eat you alive if you have any soul or feelings... you better be a robot if you live there otherwise you will get eaten alive eventually. one of the biggest pretend warm cultures ive ever know..

  • @LordHollow
    @LordHollow Před 2 lety +1

    He.Is.ADORABLE! You have an awesome family! Very informative video. Thank you.

  • @junsjulywonpilsyonpilchany5241

    Wolfy is indeed a smiley baby; his smiles warms my soul. Another thing, I appreciate how you and Maiko openly talk about how you wanna raise your child or what parenting style you should do. You are awesome parents.

  • @maryloufarnsworth8461
    @maryloufarnsworth8461 Před 3 lety +27

    I admire the concept you have of empathy. I am an American and I think we could use more of that here. We are very independent and that is okay to a point. We don't think enough of the group, whether it is our family, our community, our state or our nation.

  • @tomithot261
    @tomithot261 Před 3 lety +17

    Fascinating and informative. We can't just take what works in Japan and bring it to the US as we are culturally so different. Thanks for this piece since I can't travel. Get to learn about the people without leaving home.

    • @user-lv1ie5xm2m
      @user-lv1ie5xm2m Před 8 měsíci +1

      Empathy and teaching good manners is a world-wide phenomenon.

    • @shakenbacon-vm4eu
      @shakenbacon-vm4eu Před 3 měsíci

      @@user-lv1ie5xm2mlol exactly. But as an Asian American immigrant, empathy just doesn’t work here. It’s all about me me me, whoever is the loudest, the most aggressive, the most persuasive.

  • @d.8709
    @d.8709 Před 2 lety +38

    This was fascinating. I'm 2nd generation American so even growing up here my family had a very different idea of how to raise/treat children then many of my classmates. Honestly, I think that multi-cultural influences make the best humans.

  • @HtxDanny.713
    @HtxDanny.713 Před 3 lety +55

    Finally I was getting bored and Paolo dropped a good video

  • @azaukat
    @azaukat Před 3 lety +90

    As an elementary school teacher here in Japan, to everyone who now believes Japanese children are raised perfectly-- we still have plenty of children who misbehave in classes, and (despite emphasis of "thinking of others") bullying is still a decently widespread problem. And it is definitely a MAJOR problem that Japanese children become so used to being told what to do that they often cannot think for themselves. Even simple problems they often can't solve on their own... which is really concerning for when they get older.
    While the Japanese way of raising children definitely has its benefits, there are still many downsides to the child-raising environment here, as well.

    • @kn2549
      @kn2549 Před rokem +5

      Do you have any legitimate sources with factual statistics on this? Im a native Japanese and never heard of this being a “MAJOR problem”.

  • @Louise-zs9rl
    @Louise-zs9rl Před 2 lety

    You gained a new subscriber, fascinating video and thanks for sharing.

  • @xanderlee4733
    @xanderlee4733 Před rokem

    Congrats Paolo!

  • @dontcare7086
    @dontcare7086 Před 3 lety +240

    Omg if I had to take a bath with my mom at 10 years old I would've died.

    • @vekholu786
      @vekholu786 Před 3 lety +3

      Why?

    • @animationspace8550
      @animationspace8550 Před 3 lety +32

      @@vekholu786 It would feel so weird XD

    • @LuisAguilar-mo5fb
      @LuisAguilar-mo5fb Před 2 lety +7

      @@animationspace8550 I would think the law that was written on us since after Jesus Leviticus 18:7 gives us the impression that it’s wrong and I wouldn’t doubt it either. Regardless follow the light and accept Jesus Christ as lord and savior before it’s too late. Today is the day of salvation

    • @RaginPancakes
      @RaginPancakes Před 2 lety +38

      @@LuisAguilar-mo5fb bruh what

    • @57shashanksharansrivastava11
      @57shashanksharansrivastava11 Před 2 lety +6

      @@RaginPancakes it's a bot

  • @khalilelhoussine5186
    @khalilelhoussine5186 Před 3 lety +362

    When you do something wrong.
    Japan parents: shows empathy.
    my parents; stop or you will feel my hand in your face
    me ; what
    my parents ; SLAAAP

    • @InuMiroLover
      @InuMiroLover Před 3 lety +36

      Parents:"DONT TALK BACK TO ME!"
      Me: "but I didnt say anythin..."
      *SLAP!*

    • @justcousins8066
      @justcousins8066 Před 3 lety +22

      Me with Indian parents:
      me: But I didn't do anything wron-
      my parents: S L A P!

    • @cyb3r-cat
      @cyb3r-cat Před 3 lety +8

      American children just learn to not feel the pain-

    • @Kalani_Saiko
      @Kalani_Saiko Před 3 lety +2

      @@cyb3r-cat Somehow, your profile pic made that sound so much worse lol

    • @Izaraqio
      @Izaraqio Před 3 lety +2

      “No lunch for a week”

  • @ellendelijster8076
    @ellendelijster8076 Před rokem

    What a cute baby!
    I think sleeping with your children and being with them nonstop is the best thing ever! I’m from the Netherlands and we still sleep with our 3 children in one bed (3, 6 and 8 yo). They never went to daycare (or school for that matter). It’s not mainstream in the Netherlands, but attachment parenting is rising. It’s the best thing ❤️

  • @joannahenry7112
    @joannahenry7112 Před 7 měsíci +1

    In the UK adults and children don't often share baths, although some parents with babies might to hold them up. Children - siblings, cousins share baths though and it's common for people to bath separately but not drain the bath between and share the water to save water

  • @goobypls2232
    @goobypls2232 Před 3 lety +69

    oh my god that single bunch of hair sticking straight up on his head is adorable

  • @vilvero
    @vilvero Před 3 lety +40

    I can’t stop thinking about how the Japanese teach their kids about right and wrong. It’s so much better to ask them how others may feel than to just say, if you do this or that you go to jail.

  • @lisalo.lisalo
    @lisalo.lisalo Před rokem +7

    All mentioned in the video are pretty much how kids are raised in Asia. Love it, it brought back the memories. Glad I came across this video.

    • @trolojolo6178
      @trolojolo6178 Před rokem

      Except in China. There is everything wrong with the modern Chinese society. Just sick to my stomach what I saw.

  • @robertslusser6753
    @robertslusser6753 Před 2 lety +1

    I just came across this video today and watched it to the very end. I really enjoyed the content and hit the subscribe button to keep in touch as I like you two together and your interactions online. As a grandfather of six I have to say that Japanese kids, as a whole, are probably raised more responsibly than most American kids. Having spent a year (1969) living in Okinawa while I was in the Marines as a computer programmer. Since then, I've always had an affinity for the Japanese people and food. I probably ate fried rice and veggies at the local Okinawan restaurant (Hamby's) right outside of the back gate at our Marine base for about a third of my meals. Our base was about a mile or so from Kadena Air Force Base.

    • @davidanthony4960
      @davidanthony4960 Před rokem

      yes raised responsibly but to become nothing but a machine.. raised to suppress any kind of out the box thinking.. its a suppressed culture that teaches you to stay in line and dont dare to dream outside that line....

  • @khrishaberniceabarquez7311
    @khrishaberniceabarquez7311 Před 3 lety +523

    some japanese moms: "think about their feelings, you don't wanna hurt them don't you?"
    my mom: *proceeds to get the belt, or slipper* "you never learn huh!?!?"
    INSTANT CRYING

    • @yiwoon_cr8s
      @yiwoon_cr8s Před 3 lety +40

      Southeast asian mom: "DO THAT AGAIN AND I'M CANING YOU!"

    • @Fl0wers_crudd
      @Fl0wers_crudd Před 3 lety +1

      yeessssss

    • @animationspace8550
      @animationspace8550 Před 3 lety +6

      I relate to this so much, though with honesty it kinda depends on what I did, how my mum was initially feeling, and if she was being logical enough to see if I would learn anything. (Edit: My father is not the empathy guy though. Even when he doesn't hit me it is more like "Don't do this because I say so". He isn't japanese though.)

    • @kazou6261
      @kazou6261 Před 2 lety

      belt?u mean the mob?

    • @simantajyotichetia3658
      @simantajyotichetia3658 Před 2 lety +4

      My mom be like : so u have choosen death

  • @7khon731
    @7khon731 Před 3 lety +1335

    Day in the Life of a Japanese Voice Actor?

  • @shiteetah
    @shiteetah Před rokem +2

    I grew up in South Africa where we also caught the bus on our own at six. Learning critical skills early is essential for confidence.