before moving to Japan to teach English on the jet program I took an introduction to Japanese culture class in which the teacher shared an anecdote with us he said that Japanese people love less they love small things I don't know why but they just do and he said that this was best exemplified by this paradoxical experience he had in which he came across a vending machine in rural Japan that sold two drinks one large one small same drink same same price and when I heard that I just thought what there's no way that's true because
who in their right mind would pay the same for less but when I came to Japan I witnessed this firsthand I'd go to my supermarket and see people buying packs of one at iny mushroom when packs of two were just as cheap an ex-girlfriend of mine purposely chose to live in a small apartment when there were others in the area that were in the same price point but significantly larger I said why don't you move into one of these larger places wouldn't that be more comfortable and her response was just and I simply couldn't understand
this I kept going back to why pay the same for Less wouldn't it be better to have more space just in case but I never really got an answer that made sense to me so I kind of just chocked it up to Japanese weirdness and more or less stopped thinking about it but this question popped back into my mind again fairly recently with the announcement of a new camera you see a couple months ago my buddy Harris heler he swung by beo to hang out and when he did he had a Panasonic S9 with him
it's this new Panasonic camera that they had given him to reveal and when I saw it I thought hey that's a pretty cool camera let's see what all the reviewers have to say about it when the Embargo lifts well the reviews dropped and something very interesting happened the comments on the English reviews of the camera and the comments on the Japanese reviews of the camera were markedly different the West seemed to say that Panasonic had cut too many corners in the pursuit of making a smaller camera some even went as far as to say that
given the current camera Market no one in their right mind would buy such a product and the sentiment in the Japanese comments was and two weeks later while people in the west continued to attack Panasonic for making such a pointless device the S9 went on to become the second best selling camera in Japan forcing Panasonic to issue an apology for not being able to ship units quickly enough so why what's with the love of less the love of the small in Japan in my recent video on the non-ai mega thrust earthquakes I talked about how
Japan's culture of hard work and cooperation may have evolved as a sort of survival mechanism that the reason Japanese people do so much overtime and are so concerned about not upsetting the peace is because hardwork caution and cooperation were necessary in an environment in which a cataclysmic earthquake or tsunami could hit at any time the thing is I think that these natural disasters are also directly responsible for for at least part of Japan's love of the small I think that it's been the earthquakes the tsunami the taiu and the fires that have led to this
culture of kawaii you see in response to that earthquake video I recently made there was a fair number of people that said if these tsunami are so destructive and so common then why don't Japanese people just move why don't they go to a coast that doesn't have as many earthquakes or why don't they just move more Inland and this is because to begin with there aren't any safe coasts again the 2011 earthquake the most powerful earthquake in Japanese history that didn't occur along that southern coast of honu where all the non Kai Mega thrust earthquakes
happen it occurred along the country's eastern coast and the most powerful destructive earthquake that's happened since then was earlier this year that was the nto earthquake that happened along the country's northern coast and to answer the other question why don't Japanese people just move more Inland this is because that land simply doesn't exist take a look at this topographic map of Japan now I would wager that even people who aren't familiar with Japanese geography can accurately guess based on this map where all of the major cities are that's right here here and here it's no
coincidence that the majority of Japan's population has gathered in a few select places they're the only places flat enough to actually build cities with both robust Transportation infrastructure and a sea port to facilitate trade all the people are in the flat areas because that's where the prod productive Farmland is that's where you can build the big factories and the car plants etc etc you want to move the 60 70 80 million people from the few flat areas up into the mountains yeah it might be possible but it's not practical it's going to bring the country's
productivity to zero this is one of the reasons they keep building reclaimed Islands here why ult almost speculated in Akida that Neo Tokyo would be built on top of Tokyo bay because all the good land has already been used up so despite how crazy it may seem in many instances it's actually easier and far more convenient to expand Into The Ocean than it is to build up into the mountains right but what does this have to do with Japan's love of the small everything one because as we've just demonstrated the premium for space in Japan
is so much higher than it is in a place like the United States and two because even if you're lucky enough to live in one of the nicer areas historically speaking owning more and bigger and heavier things has always meant getting hit harder when disaster inevitably Struck it may seem like I'm connecting unrelated Dots here but this is actually taught through literature and historical essays in Japanese schools there's a famous author Kono CH whose book the whole joli is actually required reading in the public Japanese school curriculum and the whole joli is essentially the author's
account of packing up and abandoning a privileged life to live in a 10t by 10t empty portable home after experiencing in a bunch of earthquakes fires and typhoons CH basically came to the conclusion what's the point of spending all this money on these big expensive things that will only weigh me down and could disappear at a moment's notice in the next natural disaster he writes all human Endeavors are foolish but spending one's fortune and troubling one's mind to build a house in such a dangerous capital is particularly vain you know it's funny we often talk
about how interesting it is that certain animals will grow to match the size of their envir environments goldfish for example if you keep them in a small tank they'll stay small but if you put them in a big lake they can become enormous but I actually think that humans are the same if you look at House tours for famous people that live in the United States for example you often see that they have three or four maybe sometimes five or six extra rooms extra bedrooms or bathrooms that will likely never use but they get them
because they have the luxury of being able to flex again this is why I think that Japan loves the small the portable the Kawaii the Walkman the Game Boy the PSP I think that generations and generations of people living through unimaginable earthquakes and catastrophic tsunami and fires and typhoons in a place where there's such a high premium on Space has led to this culture that asks what can I throw away how can I get rid of some more dead weight what features can I take out to make this a little bit smaller a little bit
lighter a culture that says a bigger apartment yeah bits night and would rather have a Nintendo switch than a gaming PC and a small camera that eventually overheats over a big one that can shoot forever a culture that says just enough is better than a cumbersome Surplus because in Japan a cumbersome Surplus has always meant more to lose