Talk:Hikikomori
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On Hikkikomori
Off-top discussion
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Welcome to the NHK and this video portray only half the story. There are two types of hikikomori: hardcore (Satou and the man in this video) and borderline (Nishijou Takumi from Chaos:Head). The difference is borderline hikkis go out to go to school or work and at night to buy food because although they cannot fully go outside they are willing to stay out for as long as necessary because they have enough confidence to, hardcore hikikomori NEVER go outside. The main reason for people becoming hikikomori is they have PDDs (Asperger's Syndrome etc.) and thus are socially inept and as a result get bullied. Then the person who has the PDD becomes afraid of other humans because they are intelligent people anyway and can list humanity's many faults. Basically, people are not friendly if you are socially inept and so hikkis are afraid to go outside because there are many people outside. The majority (who as usual are wrong) are the problem and not the hiki. If you want people not to be hik kikomori you must give them a reason to come outside. Why do "normal" people go outside? To talk to PEOPLE. Why don't hikis go outside? To avoid PEOPLE. Nobody is a hikki for the fun of it, it's because the choice a PDD sufferer faces is go outside and be ridiculed by everyone or stay inside. Admit it, hikis and non-hikis alike, if people are nice to you would you go outside? Of course you would! Hikkis want girlfriends too but they limit themselves to anime girlfriends because real girls don't want them because they're socially inept and the anime girls can't refuse them to their faces. The worst level of hikikomori is Satou (no job and is not an otaku so won't easily be amused), in the middle we have Nishijou Takumi (borderline and because he is an otaku he can easily be amused) and the least stressful level of hikki is otaku hikki with a job. I am an otaku hikki with a job and I love it! Although Satou has too much time to do nothing I have too little time to do many things! I'm no t saying you should become an otaku hikki with a job I'm just saying I'm happy with my situation. It is a common stereotype of hikki that they shut out the sun (Satou, the man in this video are two examples). A reason is not given in either case so I ask why? I do shut out the sun because it looks so beautiful to a boy from a wet country that I can't concentrate on my writing (which requires a lot of concentration). Sources:
I'm not sure if the above is any help but I can't let 9 years go to waste. Sioraf (talk) 18:16, 22 January 2009 (UTC)
Thank you. I had forgottten to reword it into prose (I am busy working on a novel and videogame) so I'm surprised it was of any use. I'll see what I can find, not much that is of any use with the way things currently are I think. By the way, in case anyone is wondering, Welcome to the NHK is inaccurate because it is more about Satou being a NEET rather than a hikikomori while Chaos;Head is accurate because Taku being an otaku is secondary to the fact that he is a hikikomori. Sioraf (talk) 01:51, 14 April 2009 (UTC) You're not a Hikikomori unless you live in Japan. This really can't be stressed enough. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 94.1.246.73 (talk) 13:07, 20 January 2010 (UTC)
Well, it came from Japan, it's a Japanese word etc. I'm not saying the symptoms don't exist elsewhere, and that there aren't people pretty much exactly like this throughout the West. But for an English speaking caucasian to call themselves "hikikomori" is just stupid. It's clearly only the Japanophiles doing it. If you want to reference the phenomenon in a more general context for comparative purposes, that's great. But I think forums like Hikiculture full of self-appointed "hikkis" are just going to confuse people who are new to the subject, filtering it as they do through a Western idolation of Japanese culture. The predominating ignorance is going to muddle up an already dubious sociological proposition (I mean, we're talking about something that was built on hype to begin with - I'm looking at you, Mr. "Oh, there aren't really one million shut-ins in our country" Saito). —Preceding unsigned comment added by 90.221.151.119 (talk) 12:24, 2 March 2010 (UTC) I take very serious issue with the comment that 'Hikikomoris only live in Japan' proper. Sorry but I am a Nikkei and living off the islands of Japan, but on the other side of the Pacific. Is Saito Tamaki wrong, the leading expert on this situation, he himself coined the term 'hikikomori'. He also has written a plethora of many books on the subject. He has also stated that being a hikikomori is indeed international. Cases have been found (just like in Japan) in Australia, India, and indeed the United States. Thus I am indeed a Nikkei hikikomori! I even suspect that Brasil has a hiki community as well. (Brasil has the largest diaspora of us Japanese on the planet). Please don't tell me this gobbly-gook that I am not a hikkikomori being Japanese simply because I am not physically within the borders of Japan, that to me is equaly offensive. Really, there is no other real name to call this unique situation worldwide other than by hikikomori. (Many terms originating in one language are indeed 'borrowed' i.e. adopted into the lexicon of other languages as well. No exception to hikikomori. Thank you kindly.71.204.149.10 (talk) 08:11, 22 April 2013 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.204.149.10 (talk) 08:01, 22 April 2013 (UTC) The only thing 'japanese' about it is that it's recognized in Japan as an actual disorder whereas psychiatrists in other countries see the behavior as merely a sympton of depression. That doesn't make it a culturally-specific disease, it just means these other psychiatrists need to be educated about the specifics of hikikomori to prevent further misdiagnoses (and for the record: in my experience most are absolutely not like sioraf, who seems to be merely seeking a reason to hate on 'normals': most hikikomoris appear to be driven by *lack* of selfesteem as opposed to his humblebragging about being smart and finding everybody else to be full of fault. No wonder he has problems finding friends *facepalm*)Selena1981 (talk) 22:48, 3 February 2016 (UTC) |
In popular culture
Section moved here. Items could be integrated:
- In the visual novel (and anime adaptation) Chaos;Head, the male protagonist, Takumi Nishijō, is described as a hikikomori.
- The novel (and manga/anime adaptation) Welcome to the N.H.K by Tatsuhiko Takimoto is a first person account of the hikikomori lifestyle.
- In the manga/anime Rozen Maiden, the male lead, Jun Sakurada, is a hikikomori.
- In the anime, Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei, a recurring character, Kiri Komori, is a hikikomori.
- In the manga/anime series Yamato Nadeshiko Shichi Henge, Sunako Nakahara, the main character, lives a hikikomori lifestyle.
- Hideo Aiba, protagonist of Sundome, pretends to be a hikikomori in front of his gym coach to avoid being caught ditching class.
- World War Z contains a story about a hikikomori survivor, although the word itself is not used, favoring the word "otaku" to describe the lifestyle.
- In the anime Hayate the Combat Butler, the female lead Sanzenin Nagi is a hikikomori.
- In the 2002 film Moon Overflowing the character (Koboreru Tsuki) is a hikikomori.
- In the drama Ikebukuro West Gate Park, the minor character Kazunori gradually loses his hikikomori status.
- In the dorama Seito Shokun!, one of the students in class 2–3, Shirai Naoki, became a hikikomori after a mountain climbing accident.
- Ultraklystron's 2007 CD, Opensource Lyricist, features a track entitled "Hikokomori," revolving around the lives of hikikomori.
- In the video game .hack, the character Endrance is a hikikomori.
- In the drama Dicey Business, Bosco Wong plays a hikikomori in modern day Hong Kong.
- The 2008 South Korean horror film Loner is about a girl who is a hikikomori
- In the 2008 three-part film Tokyo!, Teruyuki Kagawa plays a hikikomori, in the third part of the film entitled Shaking Tokyo.
- In Cat Street, a girl becomes a hikikomori after a traumatic incident.
- In the 2007 New Yorker short story "Sweetheart Sorrow" by David Hoon Kim, the main character has a Japanese girlfriend who is a hikikomori.
- The American Philidelphia based band Conservative Man released an album entitled Mirabel and the Hikikomori in 2006.
- In the anime/manga series Gin Tama, the character Tsu Terakado writes a pop single entitled "Your Brother is a Hikikomori".
- In the Nintento DS game "Tokimeki Memorial Girl's Side Second Season", Komori Taku is a Hikikomori who refuses to go to school and stays in his house. As the heroine, he is a dateable choice in the game. You can help him get back to school after long periods of going to his house.
- Madotsuki, the female protagonist of the computer game Yume Nikki, is a hikikomori who spends all possible time sleeping and roaming through her dream world.
- There is a freeware video game entitled "Hikikomori Quest" (a near-farcical parody of the Pokemon Game Boy games) in which the protagonist is flamed on the Internet then goes to the shop to prove to himself that he can go outside and come back home in one piece.
- In the webcomic Hetalia Axis Powers, the nation of Japan is portrayed as a hikikomori for approximately two hundred years, leading up to the arrival of the Black Ships. -- Whatever404 (talk) 02:02, 27 July 2009 (UTC)
I didn't know there was this section previously. I think the best way to do this is organize it by timeline. I'll begin to do so! Y12J (talk) 07:28, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
Regarding external links
I'm restating the situation here in case anyone is missing the post above. No discussion forum related to Hikikomori should be linked. This is per WP:ELNO #10. "Except for a link to an official page of the article's subject, one should avoid...Links to...chat or discussion forums/groups". It is not Wikipedia's job to pick a favorite. If someone wants to find a forum on just about anything, they can Google it quite easily. If you don't like the guideline, you may want to discuss it at the guideline page. If you think there's a valid exception to the rule here, please justify your reasoning. Otherwise, I'll continue to remove them, thanks! -Verdatum (talk) 20:20, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
Actual prevalence
The "Prevalence" section mentions an important estimate (20% of male adolescents), but also that that estimate was probably inaccurate. It doesn't mention any more accurate estimates. Do they exist? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.227.165.106 (talk) 17:09, 20 January 2010 (UTC)
correct kanji
I consulted a few dictionaries because I wanted to know the etymology of the word hikikomori. In the article, the kanji read as the "ko" in "komori" is a kanji for "basket",籠, vs. komori as a form of komoru 篭る, to seclude or confine; neither kanji is found in my beginners dictionary. The kanji for hiki, 引き, or pull, is correct. Perhaps a few Japanese sources should be consulted to find the correct kanji for komori, and use hiragana to write it phonetically for the time being, 引きこもり. Diggnity (talk) 05:14, 15 September 2010 (UTC)
引き籠り is correct (although 引き篭もり isn't necessarily incorrect). 籠 can = basket, but it also means to cage, coop or seclude oneself. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.192.95.96 (talk) 14:05, 23 February 2011 (UTC)
recovery?
Some 引き籠もり recover and go on to lead normal lives. What is known about this? How many recover, and what can be done to help? Uucp (talk) 04:08, 18 February 2011 (UTC)
- As one, I'd like to know too >_>
-G — Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.51.111.147 (talk) 03:44, 16 September 2012 (UTC)
Discussions of recovery and treatments here: http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-23182523 — Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.245.25.57 (talk) 10:50, 3 May 2014 (UTC)
SPD
SPD (Schizoid personality disorder) could or should be added in Theories on cause. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 151.55.214.207 (talk) 00:49, 24 September 2011 (UTC)
Hikikomori Illustration
There seem to be some resistance to the image. Please avoid deletionism and base your argument wisely as to why you think the image makes this a worse article rather than better:
- When deleting the image, user Pmt7ar argued: "how does this image depicts a hikikomori child? it doesn't. for starters, there are no child hikikomoris. starts from chû or kô. average age: 31"
- Please back your claim about the absence of the Hikikomori phenomenon in children, if that is indeed the case, I think the whole article should be rewritten, but it is not the case, so it should not be rewritten and this is no excuse for the itching delete button. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Mushonz (talk • contribs) 13:41, 19 April 2012 (UTC)
- Hikikomori is not a term applied to children. There is no such thing as child hikikomoris. Even government definition doesn't include them. The article itself doesn't mention it at all. Starting from the overview: Hikikomori is a Japanese term to refer to the phenomenon of reclusive adolescents or young adults who have chosen to withdraw from social life.
- The references used later: The psychiatrist Tamaki Saitō defines hikikomori as "A state that has become a problem by the late twenties,. And even stats backs up its more an issue affecting adults than childs: about one third of whom are aged 30 and older.. It's too harsh to define a case of hikikomori on a child, I don't think its even possible, nor are studies of that particular group. On the contrary, studies starts from high school were social pressure starts affecting youngs. One of the earlier triggers for hikikomori's reclusion is failure in entering a high school or college. The image, also, doesn't reflect at all any charasteristic of a hikikomori. pmt7ar (talk) 14:01, 19 April 2012 (UTC)
- Fair enough, so if the main character in the illustration would have been an adolescents or young adults would that be a better fit? --Mushonz (talk) 18:30, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- And I must add, the picture was added by its own author without any base or relation to the topic (so, hikikomoris are represented by a child under ~10yo, sitting in a bed, with its drawer with a depiction of death classmates? what?), and bringing doubts of bias of pushing is own artwork. I was not the first to remove it. pmt7ar (talk) 14:07, 19 April 2012 (UTC)
- Re: accusations of bias. Why do you find visual contributions to Wikipedia more biased than textual ones? You are more than welcomed to join the discussion on these issues in WikipediaIllustrated.org an initiative aiming to develop better ways for visual contribution to Wikipedia. --Mushonz (talk) 18:30, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Reasonable doubts of bias, no accusations. I support any kind of contribution. But that image has no relation whatsoever with the article. It confuses and contradicts itself, specially with the caption "depiction of a __ child". I find visual contributions more bias-able than textual ones when it comes to an abstract concept (specially psychology related) when any representation is based purely on artistic values, thus subjective of the author. This "depiction" needs too much explanation, if even possible, to link it to "hikikomori". Why a child? What social pressure suffer a child that age? Why on bed? Why blood and death on a drawer? Hikikomoris are killers? Psychopats?. The image has a high interpretation value thus its itself a quite biased image (and its not the subject of the article, like it would be an arts or style related article).
- And there is already a popular conception of "hikikomori" (middle-aged man, using pc, small room full of garbage bags, etc) which is much more related to it that a kid on a bed with death classmates on a drawer. pmt7ar (talk) 23:34, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Re: accusations of bias. Why do you find visual contributions to Wikipedia more biased than textual ones? You are more than welcomed to join the discussion on these issues in WikipediaIllustrated.org an initiative aiming to develop better ways for visual contribution to Wikipedia. --Mushonz (talk) 18:30, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
Related disorders, citation issue templates
I recently fixed a syntax mistake in an attempt to add the {{unreferenced section}} template. It was dated by AnomieBOT to the current month. Should I change the month to read July, to correspond to the original attempt?
Do we need both {{unreferenced section}} and {{citation needed}} anyway? If not, should the latter be removed? SoledadKabocha (talk) 01:04, 1 September 2012 (UTC)
BBC news article
Can be found here. Lugnuts Dick Laurent is dead 13:49, 5 July 2013 (UTC)
Merge Dokuo with Hikikomori
Against merge [Dokuo] with [Hikikomori]. They aren't the same thing because females can be Hikikomori. Derpian (talk) 04:22, 17 May 2014 (UTC)
Against the two terms are not related. Alexlur (talk) 00:52, 15 July 2015 (UTC)
Photo
What proof do we have that that person really is a hikikomori, and not just an ordinary Japanese young man? The photo only serves to consolidate prejudices against hikikomori.--Mycomp (talk) 05:51, 11 September 2014 (UTC)
- It's from a documentary that was up on YouTube. Can't find it now for whatever reason. Although I feel like using an image in this article is pointless. Myonmiya (talk) 06:25, 23 December 2014 (UTC)
External links modified
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