Do you live in Tokyo? Do you want to? Recently online in Japan, people listed the good points and the bad ones of living in the metropolis with the largest population density on Earth.
Thirty-eight million people reside in the Tokyo metropolitan area, which is more than in Delhi (25.7 million), Shanghai (23.7 million) and Sao Paulo (21 million). Surely, there must be benefits to living in such a place! There are, but living in Tokyo also has drawbacks.
Below are some of the upvoted comments about the merits and demerits of Tokyo life from popular online Japanese forum GirlsChannel:
āMerits: Itās kinda fun, easy to make more connections and become successful. Demerits: High rent, lots of people.ā
āToo many people. The trains are packed.ā
āMerit: People donāt interfere with you. Demerit: If youāre poor, you can only live in bad areas (rent).ā
āYou can easily go to Disneyland.ā
āMerits: You can go anywhere by train. Youāre close to your company. Demerits: High cost of living. Thereās no land. There are no nursery schools.ā (Note: Obviously, there are nursery schools, but in some parts of Tokyo, not enough to meet the demand.)
āIn the countryside, people interfere with your life. There are rumors and lies.ā
āDemerit: It costs money.ā
āRent is high and I hate packed trains. For my wedding, I returned back home to the countryside, and while Iām from the countryside, the countryside is fucking shit.ā
āMerit: The number of job options you have opens up. Demerit: Even though houses are stupidly expensive, theyāre small.ā
āFor someone in places like Osaka or Nagoya or any reasonably sized city, where you can get work, there is no merit, I think. The land is expensive and there are way too many people.
āItās too hot in the summer!! Itās hot in local areas, but the concrete jungle is awful.ā
āThe fact that itās no problem if you donāt have a car [is a good thing].ā
āEven if the rent is high, if you think about the maintenance costs of a must-have car in the countryside, there isnāt much difference.ā
āThe biggest demerit is that the disparity of wealth is on public display.ā
āMerit: If you are a person of talent, your potential is limitless. Demerit: This is a town that for below average people makes one fully realize disparity and sadness.ā
āI worry if I had a child that the kid would be groped on the train.ā
āI think there are only merits. The only demerits would be high rent and that the trains get crowded.ā
āThere are things I donāt like, but I donāt want to go back to my hometown in the countryside.ā
āI think it is good if you want to travel abroad. There are lots of flights and you can pick from different airlines, so that makes it cheaper than in other areas. The demerit would be that commuting to work is hell. Having said that, I would not want to live in the city center.ā
āFor a topic like this, I guess anything other than Tokyo is the countryside.ā
āMerit: Iām originally from here, so there are only good things. Demerit: When my parents die, the inheritance tax is brutal.ā
āItās a good place. Thereās everything! Even if you are single, you are not lonely. The bad point is that rent is high!ā
āI think there are lots of people just scraping by in Tokyo.ā
āMerits: Convenience, you donāt interact with your neighbors, places are open even in the middle of the night, transportation is good, going drinking is no problem, you can kill time just by wandering around. Demerits: the cost of living is too high, itās too noisy, the air is dirty, thereās no nature, thereās no solace, people are stressed out, the trains get so crowded you think youāre going to go crazy, wherever you go there are people, people, people to the point of being maddening.ā
āDemerit: Your money vanishes.ā