Stephen
29 posts


Man, what a trip the Japs are:
Leaving shoes behind when committing suicide in Japan is a deeply ingrained cultural practice symbolizing a transition to another realm, respect for the location, and preparation for the afterlife. It acts as a final act of order and personal resolution, often signaling that the individual is leaving the physical world behind.
Key reasons for this practice include:
Cultural Etiquette: In Japan, removing shoes before entering homes or sacred spaces is mandatory to keep them clean. Leaving them at a suicide site, such as a bridge or forest, is a continuation of this ritualized, respectful behavior.
Symbolic Transition: It signifies stepping out of the material world and leaving one's physical, societal, and functional "identity" behind.
Orderly Departure: Leaving shoes, often neatly paired, allows the individual to depart "cleanly" without creating a mess or causing unnecessary disruption to others.
Signal of Intent: The shoes act as a clear sign of the person's final resolve, separating the act from a momentary or accidental incident.
English

You’re standing in front of your garage with your baby daughter and your sister, chatting calmly, everything feeling safe and normal. Then out of nowhere, your sister casually says, “You’ve got a bug on your clothes.” Instantly, calm turns to panic, you scream, jump, and react with pure fear, shocking everyone around you. One tiny bug flips the entire moment upside down. How would you react if someone said that to you? Would you stay cool for your child’s sake, or would fear take over before you even think? And is it funny afterward… or just embarrassing?
English

@lyly_tranthi021 Vietnam man is concerning your pregnancy capability instead of vierginity.. is it?
English

@lyly_tranthi021 Đó là chuyện của mày, người ta giữ là chuyện của nta. Nứng lz thì kiếm trai mà chơi. Đừng có áp đặt
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