About Older Japanese
Most Western nations are facing the problem of aging populations, but Japan is really leading the pack, with its combination of a very low birth rate, healthier diet and a good medical system.
Japanese older people are just like elderly from any other part of the world, sometimes friendly and interesting to talk to, and other times unwilling to take crap from anyone as they dive for the last pair of shoes at a department store bargain sale. As an American living in Japan, it’s can be interesting to strike up conversations with older Japanese, who will often talk about what the war years were like for them, or the time they saw General MacArthur, and there’s an unspoken acknowledgment of all that’s changed in the past 60 years.
Since it’s generally expected that the oldest son or daughter will take over the family house and care for the parents in their silver years, elderly folks generally have the benefit of lots of family around them, at least in the semi-rural prefecture where I live. Partially because of this system, and also (I’ve been told) because Japanese rarely leave the area where their family grave is located, you don’t see people migrating to a different part of the country when they retire as is the case with Florida.
The main social activity of Japanese retired people seems to be going to the doctor’s office every day to sit and chat with friends while they wait to be seen by the doctor for some (usually imagined) pain, and if you ever get sick in Japan you’d better have a strategy for getting to the doctor’s office early.
While most of the older people living in my neighborhood are very genki (healthy, full of energy), there’s one poor woman whose back is stuck at a 90 degree angle, making her unable to stand up at all. I’d always assumed this problem came a lifetime of planting rice by hand, but supposedly it’s caused by a chronic vitamin B1 deficiency that was a problem in the first few decades of the 20th century.
Florida is old hat. Last I heard, retiring Americans prefer Arizona now.
September 29th, 2008 at 3:11 amhm I think it is only the diet and a healthy, active lifestyle. Not a got medical system…haven’t had any positive experiences here yet.
However I noticed also these “90 degree” people… I never saw so many anywhere else, how exactly did that happen? Just too much work in the wrong position?
And besides, it is usually not the oldest son/daugther who takes care. Afaik it is the wife of the oldest son who has to take care of his parents as they will often automatically move into his house once he es married and they get old …
September 29th, 2008 at 8:29 am… I meant “not a good medical system”…
September 29th, 2008 at 8:32 amDamn right about about all those old people at the clinics. I bet our Hokkensho would be a lot cheaper if they just sucked it up and only went to the clinicwhen they were actually sick. It’s even worse when they call the ambulance for non-emergency situations like in some communities.
September 29th, 2008 at 7:22 pm