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How Often Do Japanese Teenagers Live Alone?

Discussion in 'General Discussion' started by Mahesvara, Jan 18, 2017.

  1. Mahesvara Lostbelt King

    mahes
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    Found this article to be pretty interesting:
    https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/answerman/2017-01-16/.111067

    David asks:

    How common is it for Japanese teens to live on their own? You see it a fair bit, in anime and manga: teens living in a single person apartment, one that's either paid for by their family or paid for by part-time jobs. Do teens in Japan do this in real life, or is this simply a way of keeping the story simple and streamlined?

    No, this is actually a thing! While it's not EXTREMELY common, it's definitely not unusual for Japanese high school students to live alone, away from their family.

    Going to high school in Japan has a lot in common with going to College elsewhere: getting into a good school is extremely competitive, and the school you select will usually have more to do with reputation and your interests rather than where you live. As a result, many high school students face long commutes to and from school every day. If you're in a club or an after-school activity, this can mean going home very late, and cutting into time for studying. Some students even apply to a school in a city they don't live in! Another scenario is in the case of if a parent is transferred to another city/prefecture/country, but wishes for the kid to finish out the school year where they are.

    Some very nice schools have dormitories, but most don't. Since school is so important, the family will often try to make some sort of alternate living arrangement. If a relative lives nearby, the student might temporarily move in, to save on the commute time. If that's not an option, the family might rent out a tiny apartment in the neighborhood. Japanese high school kids are very independent and spend a lot of time away from home already, and parents work so much that kids are often alone in the house anyway, so on the face of it, the kid officially living alone isn't a huge adjustment.

    But that said, it's not an arrangement that many parents are ENTIRELY comfortable with. Parents might insist that they come home on weekends, or otherwise check in with their kids. Boys are more often allowed to have these arrangements than girls (who parents tend to be more protective of). The rooms are usually too small to bother having people over.

    I had one Japanese friend in high school who had lived alone in Tokyo for a few months before moving with his family over to the US. I marveled at the experience. "Wasn't it lonely?" I asked him, to which he shrugged. He was at school, at his club most of the time. He really only went home to sleep, he explained. I sat back and muttered that I couldn't possibly do the same.

    And in America, I definitely couldn't. Japanese kids learn at a very early age that most strangers can be relied on for help. Tokyo in particular has such a dense population that, in public, it's very hard to not at least be within earshot of SOMEBODY. This great trust in common decency and general safety is the main reason why such young kids are given such tremendous latitude with their lives, for better or worse.

    This can backfire. While it's pretty rare for a kid to get involved with the criminal underworld, like in Durarara!!, kids with troubled or lonely home lives can often wind up hanging around the wrong people. Or worse. Back in 2014 a 16-year-old girl who was living alone was arrested for the murder and mutilation of a classmate.

    But cases like that are exceedingly rare. I couldn't find any statistics about high school kids living alone, but anecdotal evidence seems to indicate that it's not that uncommon among high achieving students from well-to-do families. And if that were actually causing a problem, we can probably count on Japan's ridiculous news media to sensationalize the hell out of it.
     
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  2. Gobb

    Gobb finds a way

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    >Or worse. Back in 2014 a 16-year-old girl who was living alone was arrested for the murder and mutilation of a classmate.
    christ

    Thanks for the share, though. I did also find it to be an interesting read.
     
  3. Mahesvara Lostbelt King

    mahes
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    It's like the polar opposite here in the states.
     
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  4. Gobb

    Gobb finds a way

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    Same here really.
     
  5. Mahesvara Lostbelt King

    mahes
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    Well considering that America has high crime-rates and kids are generally taught to not trust strangers, living on your own as a high schooler would not work out well.
     
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  6. Gobb

    Gobb finds a way

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    Most definitely. Shows the difference in cultures.
     
  7. Mahesvara Lostbelt King

    mahes
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    I'm almost kind of jealous of them tbh lol
     
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  8. Gobb

    Gobb finds a way

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    Yeah, would've been pretty surreal at that age.
     
  9. Mahesvara Lostbelt King

    mahes
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    Teaching independence at that age is what helps prepare kids for the real world and its honestly something my generation and below in the US really needs, because most kids after graduating HS are definitely not prepared and remain dependent on their parents for years to come.
     
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  10. Kaito

    Kaito thicc thighs save lives

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    Living alone aside, how the **** do these teenagers even get money to pay rent?

    I bet even a shitton of working adults struggle with that in that kind of economy.
     
  11. Gobb

    Gobb finds a way

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    Agreed.

    It said their parents pay or with their part-time jobs. I don't think a tiny apartment to rent was excessively expensive.
     
  12. Kaito

    Kaito thicc thighs save lives

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    Maybe wealthy families can allow it, but definitely not the middle class.

    That's like paying for a second home (that isn't yours).

    inb4JapaneseCentrelink
     
  13. Gobb

    Gobb finds a way

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    Yeah.

    https://www.japanimal.org/living-expenses-apartments.php

    If you look here, it's not overly excessive sometimes.
    >$300 for a month

    Then again, seeing as education is so important, it makes you wonder if they could get bank loans for that sort of thing, or something.
     
  14. iNoto

    iNoto Hajimari to owari wa kiseki no moto ni

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    >this is actually a thing! While it's not EXTREMELY common

    Based animes showing me the facts, haHAA.
     
  15. Kaito

    Kaito thicc thighs save lives

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    So if let's say average Japanese student were to live alone, he'd need approx $500 living expenses in total/month.

    >$300 for rent
    >$200 for living expenses

    Yeah, you'd need to be rather wealthy. Also buying the apartment is another concern.
     

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