Monday, March 7, 2011

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La gente que duerme en el metro



The image of people sleeping on the subway in Japan is very famous.


When I lived in Japan, it struck me, but as I have 13 years living outside Japan, each time I return to my homeland, I am a little surprised to see that scene.


why people often fall asleep on the subway? Well, simply because they lack sleep. A survey Japanese NHK shows that sleep about 7 hours 26 minutes on average. Beware! This figure includes children too. There is another interesting number. In another survey they did for workers aged 20 to 50 years, over 60% of people said that the hours they sleep during the week is less than 5 hours. It is very normal to them from sleep during your commute on the subway ...


not think this also reflects that there are not many criminals on public transport in Japan? At least, there is something positive.


There are people who by chance, get your seat on the subway. Sleep at ease until its fall season. There are others who could not get the seat, but also sleep standing up. It is a technique to sleep standing up but not too hard (I also did).


freak a lot of what foreigners is the ability that people have. Is asleep, but when the subway reaches the station that have come down, wake up, without checking the name of the station and down, as if they were prgramados ... I myself slept in the subway daily, and the truth is that it's true I just woke up at the station where he had come down, there is no need, it's just a habit.


As public transport network in Japan is well advanced, most people use this medium. There are very few people who used their car to commute to work daily. Naturally, not everyone sleeps on the subway. There are also people who study, read, check their phones, or play with a console.


Recently, the education of some people is changing. Perhaps above all people of the new generation. Unfortunately there are Japanese girls who put makeup on the subway without shame from the eyes of more (is frowned on such behavior in Japan), and there are times when uniformed schoolchildren (13-18 years) sitting on the floor of the metro . And even some are so unethical that the seats reserved for the elderly, sick, disabled or pregnant women.


As underground scene has always been and will be one of the windows in Japan, I would not want my countrymen lose their ethics.




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