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Ryujiki

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Everything posted by Ryujiki

  1. Enrique Bunbury-Ciudad de Bajas Pasiones
  2. Limp Bizkit - Re-arranged
  3. Not much to be honest the next poster can draw well
  4. A little the next likes action movies
  5. My friends influence me in good and bad ways.And I said that they influence me in bad way, not because they are bad, but sometimes they usually advise you even without knowing very well what they are saying to you. It depends on me, if I change my character
  6. Soda Stereo - Mundo de quimeras
  7. All the people said that the world is crazy,so if the people say to you that you are not normal,for me that a compliment.
  8. Ryujiki replied to jenny_swe's topic in New Members
    Welcome aboard! There is a swedish girls invasion? :rolleyes: (I am not complaining)
  9. Ryujiki replied to Reilly's topic in The Lounge
    Sorry of hear about your mom! :( You say that love can be measure,I am not thinking the same,but I respect your opinion.But I guess that you cant love all the people.There is people that you love and theres people that you do not love.
  10. Ryujiki replied to Reilly's topic in The Lounge
    For me,the love cannot be measured. I love you like a friend? For me that's a little bit wrong.For me that's like a limit I understand that there's A LOT of things that you can not do with a friend. LOVE IS NOT JUST SEX! I am agree with the people that say that if you say "I love" all the time becomes meaningless. To be honest I just say it when I really mean it.You have to listen to yor feelings,but also you have to hear to your brain too. To love up to your enemies? Difficult,is not it?
  11. Muse - Time is Running Out
  12. Franz Ferdinand - You're The Reason I'm Leaving.
  13. 12 Biggest Regrets 1. living at home during college 2.becoming a cp addicted very late (2005) 3. Not appreciating Coldplay earlier... 4. getting a dog while living at home during college 5.Wasting time of my life doing nothing
  14. I found this article in the New York Times Magazzine! Check in New York Times website!
  15. Well this is a phenomenon that is happening in Japan.I guess that the japanese culture do not help at all. This is a another part of the article: South Korea and Taiwan have reported a scattering of hikikomori, and isolated cases may have always existed in Japan. But only in the last decade and only in Japan has hikikomori become a social phenomenon. Like anorexia, which has been largely limited to Western cultures, hikikomori is a culturebound syndrome that thrives in one particular country during a particular moment in its history. As the problem has become more widespread in Japan, an industry has sprung up around it. There are support groups for parents, psychologists who specialize in it (including one who counsels shut-ins via the Internet) and several halfway programs like New Start, offering dorms and job training. For all the attention, though, hikikomori remains confounding. The Japanese public has blamed everything from smothering mothers to absent, overworked fathers, from school bullying to the lackluster economy, from academic pressure to video games. "I sometimes wonder whether or not I understand this issue," confessed Shinako Tsuchiya, a member of Parliament, one afternoon in her Tokyo office. She has led a study group on hikikomori, but most of her colleagues aren't interested, and the government has yet to allocate funds. "They don't understand how serious it is." That may be in part because the scope of the problem is frustratingly elusive. A leading psychiatrist claims that one million Japanese are hikikomori, which, if true, translates into roughly 1 percent of the population. Even other experts' more conservative estimates, ranging between 100,000 and 320,000 sufferers, are alarming, given how dire the consequences may be. As a hikikomori ages, the odds that he'll re-enter the world decline. Indeed, some experts predict that most hikikomori who are withdrawn for a year or more may never fully recover. That means that even if they emerge from their rooms, they either won't get a full-time job or won't be involved in a long-term relationship. And some will never leave home. In many cases, their parents are now approaching retirement, and once they die, the fate of the shut-ins - whose social and work skills, if they ever existed, will have atrophied - is an open question That isn't a problem just for the hikikomori and their families but also for a country that has been struggling with a sagging economy, a plummeting birth rate and what has been called a youth crisis. The rate of "school refusal" (kids who skip school for one month or more a year, which is sometimes a precursor to hikikomori) has doubled since 1990. And along with hikikomori sufferers, hundreds of thousands of other young men and women are neither working nor in school. After 15 years of sluggish growth, the full-time salaryman jobs of the previous generation have withered, and in their places are often part-time jobs or no jobs and a sense of hopelessness among many Japanese about the future. In addition to the economy, Japanese culture and sex roles play a strong part in the hikikomori phenomenon. "Men start to feel the pressure in junior high school, and their success is largely defined in a couple of years," said James Roberson, a cultural anthropologist at Tokyo Jogakkan College and an editor of the book "Men and Masculinities in Contemporary Japan." "Hikikomori is a resistance to that pressure. Some of them are saying: 'To hell with it. I don't like it and I don't do well."' Also, this is a society where kids can drop out. In Japan, children commonly live with their parents into their 20's, and despite the economic downturn, plenty of parents can afford to support their children indefinitely - and do. As one hikikomori expert put it, "Japanese parents tell their children to fly while holding firmly to their ankles
  16. I am agreed! End a relationship with a letter or with a phone call is stupid,(well that is my opinion) But I have another question: You ever received a break up letter? Or worst :you ever help to a friend to write a break up letter?
  17. I am pretty sure that this thread was created before,but since the search button is not working,I bring back this thread back. So before they start complaining, I ask for excuses for that person who created this topic earlier :D To be honest I have never written a letter of this type, have finished all my previous relations with a conversation. I could be great if you post your opinions and experience. What do you think of those letters? Are they really nessesary? How can you write a "perfect break up letter"
  18. Kaiser Chiefs - Oh My God
  19. Outcast - Hey Ya.
  20. Good night Julia! :kiss:
  21. Like Gloria Gaynor sings: "I will survive" :lol:
  22. Robbie Williams-Rock DJ

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