Haruno-san no Koto nante Zenzen Suki - Ch. 7 - Haruno-san?

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UUUUUUUUUURRRRRGH, those fucking clients are the fucking worst (I also had or some variants when working on CS). Good work on rerouting them, Hayamiya.

I got... irrationally angry at the old dude being mad at OLD crap...

Dude should retire.
 
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In Japan, the work culture is that once you're in with a company, you're in for life - you leave university and are hired that spring / hiring period, or else you're looked at like an albatross around the neck of others for the rest of your life, and will find it very difficult at best to find a proper job.

On the other hand, like I said, if you do manage to get hired, you're expected to work for that company for life, and the expectation is that the company will take care of you as well (though they frequently do not, and do not take care of issues of power harassment from middle / upper management, either). Generally speaking, mental health issues also still have massive stigma in Japan, so the effort is frequently to hide the issue rather than do anything positive about it, and to continue on like nothing is wrong.

It really depends on the company, but if it's an old-school company with old-school board members, it's highly unlikely they'd let go of a worker for any reason at all unless they caused such a massively public ruckus that there was no choice (we're talking about criminal charges that are extremely public, not this rambling senility). So, in this guy's case? Yeah, he's probably got a job until either his relatives force him to retire by getting a medical order, or he dies / stabs someone.

...record him ranting about incorrect info and post it on social media tagging the company he works at /s
 
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In Japan, the work culture is that once you're in with a company, you're in for life - you leave university and are hired that spring / hiring period, or else you're looked at like an albatross around the neck of others for the rest of your life, and will find it very difficult at best to find a proper job.
I have heard of this being the case in the past, but is that still true now? Back in the day people would stay at the same company in other countries too, it wasn't just a Japanese things. But things have changed drastically, and from what I hear, some people say that as a young person staying at the same company for more than just 2 years is becoming less common.
Has this shift in culture not affected Japan?
 
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In Japan, the work culture is that once you're in with a company, you're in for life - you leave university and are hired that spring / hiring period, or else you're looked at like an albatross around the neck of others for the rest of your life, and will find it very difficult at best to find a proper job.

On the other hand, like I said, if you do manage to get hired, you're expected to work for that company for life, and the expectation is that the company will take care of you as well (though they frequently do not, and do not take care of issues of power harassment from middle / upper management, either). Generally speaking, mental health issues also still have massive stigma in Japan, so the effort is frequently to hide the issue rather than do anything positive about it, and to continue on like nothing is wrong.

It really depends on the company, but if it's an old-school company with old-school board members, it's highly unlikely they'd let go of a worker for any reason at all unless they caused such a massively public ruckus that there was no choice (we're talking about criminal charges that are extremely public, not this rambling senility). So, in this guy's case? Yeah, he's probably got a job until either his relatives force him to retire by getting a medical order, or he dies / stabs someone.
Or that he's caught doing illegal drugs. Those are a bigger deal over there than attempted murder, apparently.
 
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images

"You like-like her a lot, don't you, Boy ?"
 
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I really really really like how she did not need to be saved by the charming prince but actually did the whole thing herself in this shitty situation
Yeah, usually it's the trope of seeing your crush helping you or getting angry for you. Well, he did, but Hayamiya resolved everything before he could say anything. So it's not Hayamiya who learns something about Haruno, it's the opposite.
 
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I have heard of this being the case in the past, but is that still true now? Back in the day people would stay at the same company in other countries too, it wasn't just a Japanese things. But things have changed drastically, and from what I hear, some people say that as a young person staying at the same company for more than just 2 years is becoming less common.
Has this shift in culture not affected Japan?
It's becoming more common in modern-day Japan, due to the prevalence of black companies who literally work people to death and the power harassment of middle managers. It's decidedly not common, mind you, but it's becoming more frequent to the point where there's at least one company I'm aware of that will quit someone's job for them because the power harassment is just that bad otherwise.

On the other hand, the societal culture hasn't really changed - it's still expected that you get hired your spring of graduation, and you're looked down on significantly if you aren't.
 
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Dementia is awful, for both people in that situation. Not always easy to handle it as kindly as she did.
 

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