Mind-blowing! Don't be fooled by the gentle and delicate Japanese dramas anymore!


The real state of marriage in Japan is cruel and distorted, completely reshaping your worldview after reading this!
A major survey by an authoritative Japanese women's website reveals shocking data: the extramarital affair rate among married Japanese women is as high as 49%.
The probability is bluntly alarming: randomly grab two married Japanese women on the street, and one of them has had an affair.
Meanwhile, over 40% of single women have actively intervened in married families, engaging in deep relationships with married men.
Outsiders only see the absurd ethical chaos and angrily criticize them for having no bottom line.
But digging into the truth behind it reveals: most people aren't bad—they simply "can't afford to divorce"!
Japan's economy has been persistently sluggish, long past the era when a man alone could support a family.
Countless full-time housewives are forced to work outside, yet workplace gender discrimination is severe—women face low pay and difficult promotions, making economic independence impossible.
Without financial confidence, even if the marriage is cold and oppressive and the husband is absent for years, they dare not easily mention divorce.
More deadly is Japan's extremely high divorce costs.
The law heavily favors the weaker party: a higher-earning husband, upon divorce, must pay alimony for years until the wife remarries.
Burdened by enormous expenses, the overwhelming majority of couples would rather make do than divorce.
Can't live well, can't divorce, can't endure—human nature's gaps must find other outlets.
Having affairs within marriage has become the lowest-cost emotional vent in Japanese marriages.
Many couples have even reached a twisted tacit understanding: don't interfere with each other, each seeks comfort, maintaining only a superficially intact family.
What's more terrifying than the chaos is the whole society's connivance and whitewashing.
Japan is rampant with the mind-blowing concept of a "second partner"
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