Speaking from personal experience, on a whole, Japan is still behind compared to the West regarding such treatment. What it all boils down to is what hospital you go to and how open the patient/patient's family is. Joking aside, I didn't mean to imply therapy treatment doesn't exist in Japan. I mean, his methods were pretty dang crazy and unethical.but all's well that ends well? Ohh Kiku-rin Though, I don't know if he's the best example to use to represent Japanese psychologists. (not just talking to the family members who don't even have the depression issue) it will only help, or be a crutch (like glasses doesn't permanently fix your vision) but talking to the person and helping them overcome, will. People should know taking medicine for a psychological issue is not going to fix your perception of things. like what's the procedures to get therapy and how much it cost and so-forth. (her dad never attended her sessions either so she wasn't excluded in HER issues) it's not like therapy doesn't exist in Japan, but I'm not sure how the whole set-up is over there. in Love Shuffle, Kiku-rin was a psychologist with Kairi as his patient and she was suicidal. They are still behind in certain aspects of medical treatment. I think this is more of a Japanese social issue, not just an issue within the Freeter dramaverse. There is something fundamentally wrong here. What about therapy? I mean even if she has to be hospitalized they cannot really think she'll just recover like this, even if they move. And these scenes at the hospital where the doctor talks to the relatives and the mother is practically thrown out of the room, as if she isn't involved at all. Of course, Seiji is totally overstrained - they can not possibly believe he has the ability to make it better, he's not a therapist - he's a family member. Does anybody actually live in Japan and knows something about it? Because if they way of treatment is giving some medicine and hoping that everything will become better magically - it's just the most stupid thing I ever heard and I hope I'll never get depressive in Japan. MaiKitty wrote:What really get's me angry about this otherwise great drama is the way they treat depression. Meanwhile, his supportive, long-suffering, stay-at-home mother is found huddled on the kitchen floor repeatedly mumbling "sorry" and "excuse me." She is diagnosed with depression. He tries various part-time jobs, but after a year, he is defeated and holed up in his room playing computer games. Resilient at first, Seiji interviews at other companies, where, as his father predicted, quitting is held against him. I couldn't help sympathizing when Seiji quit after just three months, but his father (Naoto Takenaka), a stubborn, old-school corporate warrior, views his decision as weak and selfish. Nor does logic prevail in the office, where a tyrannical department head rules. Seiji (Arashi's Kazunari Ninomiya) is an average guy turned into a freeter (short-term worker) by his pride and prevailing corporate and societal values.Įmployed by a medium-sized company, he's appalled by the silliness of the new-hire training session at a "dojo," where it's considered appropriate to whack with a long stick those who don't perform as ordered. I wanted to yell: Relax, everybody, and stop making each other's lives more difficult. It's so realistic, I was feeling very grumpy by the end of it. #Freeter ie o kau torrent tv#TELEVIEWS / Fuji TV offers hope in TV landįreeter, Ie o Kau (Tuesdays, 9 p.m.) also has a great cast and the story is believable and realistically done. Softsubs are available now! Thanks to earthcolors! But while their personalities clash at first, they gradually come to understand each other.Ĭast: Ninomiya Kazunari, Karina, Igawa Haruka, Maruyama Ryuhei, Shima Daisuke, Otomo Kohei, Washio Machiko, Sakaguchi Ryoko, Takenaka Naoto, Asano AtsukoĮnglish subs : (Hard) STORMY team sub + (Hard) freeter_ohno a_ra_shi lj Manami, proud to be working as an on-site supervisor, is the complete opposite of Seiji. Because of that, he soon decides to work towards rebuilding his life: "Even though I'm just a freeter, I'm going to buy a house for the sake of my family." One of the people he meets at the construction site is Manami Chiba (Karina), who graduated from a top-class university and joined a well-known general contracting firm. However, after his mother falls ill with depression, he ends up having to take on a part-time job at a construction site. With no dreams, no savings, and a poor relationship with his family, he becomes a hikikomori (shut-in) in his own room. The story revolves around a young man named Seiji Take (Ninomiya), who quits his job after three months. Plot: The story is based on a book of the same name by Hiro Arikawa, published last year.
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