What's the saying?Hell yeah that’s some good OL yuri addressing workplace hidden prejudice and micro-aggressions women and LGBT people face
There's a time and place for everything.
Sad that keeping quiet is sometimes the best you can do for yourself in general.
Yes, very robotic. Like "oh, here's the time I'm supposed to smile and appear accepting right? Ok, got it." Purely surface level but that can be better than nothing, sometimes.thanks for the translation!
heres to hiroko at the end there
when you chameleon yourself for so long and you just get so used to being a specific dull hue you fail to realize that there are more hues in the space you are in (hope that analogy makes sense)
and oog that assassin blade kindness from peers is just as sharp and annoying to read as it is to experience it personally
Kumi Goated for sure.That coworker Kumi is a real one. I love allies like her. I had no doubts about Yuuya either, he always seemed like a good egg, but I like Kumi's anger.
Also, the bisexual woman that approached Ayaka alone also didn't seem to have any bad intentions, at least from that short conversation, I'm not sure why that was treated the same as everything else.
Haha no I don't mean Ayaka turning her down, but Risa watching all of this made it seem like the chapter was putting her the same as the others. I thought it was a nice gesture of the bi-coworker to talk to Ayaka one-on-one and tell her that she has dealt with this before. Sure, it was unsolicited advice, but I thought it was also a sincere gesture of support in a way the other coworkers weren't.Kumi Goated for sure.
As for Bi-Coworker, my guess is that Ayaka didn't want to get unsolicited advice from a random coworker. It's not that odd she'd turn her down. As for how Ayaka turned her down, she's always been blunt and earnest and a little odd. It probably came across as more rude than intended.
Anyways who thinks they can give advice to a honey badger like Ayaka? The audacity! 😜
Agreed, she's probably a nice lady.Haha no I don't mean Ayaka turning her down, but Risa watching all of this made it seem like the chapter was putting her the same as the others. I thought it was a nice gesture of the bi-coworker to talk to Ayaka one-on-one and tell her that she has dealt with this before. Sure, it was unsolicited advice, but I thought it was also a sincere gesture of support in a way the other coworkers weren't.
I think the issue was that her advice was general and Ayaka wanted specific advice about Hiroko (advice that woman could not give). As for Risa, she felt something was off but didn't understand what that was until after the bisexual woman talked with Ayaka. So I don't think the scene was meant to paint that woman as badly as the others but was meant to show that even she wasn't providing specific, useful advice (for different reasons than the other coworkers). Ayaka isn't worried about being a lesbian and what that represents--she's not really "going through" anything and didn't even notice that she "came out"; she's just worried about cornering Hiroko, getting in those work pants and seeing her in a Kimono, apparently lol. Very simple minded and direct. But I can see what you mean though.Haha no I don't mean Ayaka turning her down, but Risa watching all of this made it seem like the chapter was putting her the same as the others. I thought it was a nice gesture of the bi-coworker to talk to Ayaka one-on-one and tell her that she has dealt with this before. Sure, it was unsolicited advice, but I thought it was also a sincere gesture of support in a way the other coworkers weren't.