Why it's almost impossible to lose things in Japan - BBC REEL

If you lose a wallet or a phone in Japan, you will most likely be reunited with it. The country has one of the most effective Lost and Found processes in the world. The success of the system relies not only on the honesty of the finders, but also on a national culture of reporting, cataloguing, and storing lost property.
Video by Terushi Sho
Executive producer: Camelia Sadeghzadeh
#bbcreel #bbc #bbcnews

Пікірлер: 3 300

  • @eddvcr598
    @eddvcr5982 жыл бұрын

    I grew up in Japan, and I remember my first time when I turned in a lost property to my neighborhood kōban (it was a 50¥ coin, roughly worth 50¢.) I was a little kid, and I felt so proud as the police officer thanked me for my service. I felt like I was making my neighborhood better and felt like a hero for a whole week!

  • @Demeraaa

    @Demeraaa

    2 жыл бұрын

    How sweet 🥺

  • @eddvcr598

    @eddvcr598

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Demeraaa It really was; the officer even gave me a sticker :)

  • @Enforcedcraft

    @Enforcedcraft

    2 жыл бұрын

    In reality really this can only work in Japan cause they are brought up like this. Whilst in Eastern Europe if shopkeeper that doesn't have a lot of stores say one store like ordinary shop not exactly supermarket but if that shopkeeper doesn't have say say 10¥(it's not our currency but using so you can understand) or even sometimes up to 20-40¥(the most common is 5-10¥) shopkeeper will just take that and if you remember give you back next time you shop there and that if that Shopkeeper remembers which is quite unlikely. There is definently case where shopkeeper doesn't have to give you back even 100¥ but that is very much memorable cause you have bigger selection to pick from 100¥ then from 5-40¥. Whilst big shop chains of Supermarkets or even Hipermarkets will give you even 1¥ back. Like in Restaurants there is definently a lot more "stealing" but in a sense of final receipt of what you ordered. Say when there is not a lot of people chance of people ripping you off is low from 100-200¥ as lowest amount but when there are bustling crowd and you are in a group a lot of people are ordering food and drinks probability of ripping you off is higher in the lowest of 200-500¥ amount but that to work there is need to be at least 6 or 6+ people ordering. But don't get me stated when going out to drink in a group in a club where there is a lot of stuff happening and when you get to paying you are drunk as heck in less known clubs you'll be very likely to be ripped off anywhere from 700-1000¥. In bigger ones known better and more popular like where it is partying hard where drinks are quite expensive if you are drinking hard and make your tab(reciept) quite high it can really go anywhere from 2000-4000¥ sometimes even more.

  • @teebu

    @teebu

    2 жыл бұрын

    How does someone go about claiming that lost 50 cents or any amount? That seems impossible.

  • @Aru_im

    @Aru_im

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@teebu probably no one did. As you see in the video, not everyone claimed the lost stuff, most of them came from thing such as small amount of money or cheap umbrella.

  • @eric336
    @eric3362 жыл бұрын

    I left my iPad at a subway station in Tokyo. When I realized it, I quickly got off the train and alerted the staff. He was very helpful and treated my distress with great sense of urgency. Surprisingly (or not surprisingly) they found it! I went back to the station, a staff was at the ticket counter expecting me. He handed me my iPad, and apologized for going through the trouble (ご心配をかけて申し訳ありません). I should be the one who apologized! I really miss Japan.

  • @rabbit251

    @rabbit251

    2 жыл бұрын

    Maybe because of the value they searched for it. Once in Nagoya I returned from the US and just as I got off the local train at the station near my home a bag fell and the doors quickly closed behind me before I could grab it. I quickly reported it to the station personnel and they told me there was nothing they could do.

  • @user-cs9by8jd6l

    @user-cs9by8jd6l

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@rabbit251 I think what you had to do was to go to one of those centers a few days later, or on that day to report it and ask them to let you know when it arrives there. Perhaps they could have reported the case to the staffs at the next station to pick it up there for you, but that's not how it works I suppose. One of my friends had such a case when we were travelling across the nation. He noticed that he left his wallet on the train, when we were about to exit the ticket gate, and as far as I remember, he reported it to the staffs right there, but, they asked him to report it at the service desk dedicated for lost items, which usually being found at a big station. Then he did, probably provided his phone number or something for contact, then we kept going, and eventually he got his wallet back. You might have noticed it if you've been living in Japan for a while, but each staff in Japan has their own job, and for other matters, they have to transfer you to the staff whose job is to deal with that matter. And when it repeatedly happens to one, we call it "たらい回し". Hopefully you had or having good time in Japan except for losing your bag.

  • @JanineAnita

    @JanineAnita

    2 жыл бұрын

    I had a similar experience in Hiroshima. I left my camera in the public toilet when I went back for it over an hour later it was still there untouched. The lady in the kiosk told me they would have found it on the next cleaning round and saved it in lost property for me. She was apologising that it had not been noticed sooner!

  • @zebrafigs8450

    @zebrafigs8450

    2 жыл бұрын

    I left my tablet in a phone booth and came back an hour later and it was there. Also super cute they even appoligized while returning your ipad!

  • @condorX2

    @condorX2

    2 жыл бұрын

    A bit off topic. Japan literally copied their culture from China. When China discovered Japan, it was starving tribal nation, so Chinese taught them how to grow rice to feed themselves, how to cultivate silk for their clothing, and even how to read and write Chinese characters (Hanzi 汉字which they call Kanji), calligraphy and poetry. They learned how to use chopsticks, build Chinese architecture, how to govern themselves, how to create bonzai, etc, from China. When China was strong, Japan copied Chinese culture, Chinese characters, chopsticks, Chinese architecture, etc. Then when the Portuguese visited Japan, Japanese borrowed Portuguese loanwords like pan (bread), sukupu (scoop/shovel), kappa (raincoat), tempura (fried veggies). Now that America is powerful, Japan started copying English words like aidoru (idol), aisu (ice-cream), anime (anime), apato (apartment), arukoru (alcohol), baiku (bike), basu (bus), biru (beer) kohi (coffee), chiketto (ticket), konpyuta (computer), doraiba (driver), erebeta (elevator), faito (fight), and so many more English words. Its like Japan is good at copying other countries culture that's all. -神州 Shenzhou Relations between ancient Japan and China have a long history, and in certain periods the exchange of political, religious and cultural practices between the two was intense. China, the much older state and the more developed, passed on to Japan (sometimes indirectly via Korea) a long list of ideas including rice cultivation, writing, Buddhism, centralised government models, civil service examinations, temple architecture, clothing, art, literature, music, and eating habits. Trade relations greatly outlasted cultural and diplomatic ties, with Japan beginning to develop its own unique cultural path from the 9th century CE onwards.

  • @sistemaremaestro1436
    @sistemaremaestro1436 Жыл бұрын

    I forgot to take my credit card at the self-checkout counter in the supermarket in Japan.I realised it a while after I left the shop and rushed back to the shop. The shop assistant saw my face a short distance away and ran up to me, credit card in hand. She told me she was sorry she didn't recognise me sooner and handed me the credit card. I was very impressed by her kindness. A professor from Kyoto Sangyo University said in the video that people deliver lost property because they are concerned about being seen, but I think that is not true. I think the motivation of people who deliver lost and found items is not out of concern for publicity, but out of sincerity.

  • @kmidori0930

    @kmidori0930

    Жыл бұрын

    right! Some Japanese left comments that it's not what other people think. We simply worry about the person who screwed up to loose their possession .

  • @piyopiyoazarashi

    @piyopiyoazarashi

    4 ай бұрын

    その京都産業大学の教授なにもわかってないな😂

  • @user-us3lp8de2f

    @user-us3lp8de2f

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@piyopiyoazarashi12年前から釣りコメしてるんだな可哀想に😂

  • @piyopiyoazarashi

    @piyopiyoazarashi

    3 ай бұрын

    @@user-us3lp8de2f ちょっとなに言ってるかわかんないです。シンプルに気持ち悪いです

  • @user-us3lp8de2f

    @user-us3lp8de2f

    3 ай бұрын

    @@piyopiyoazarashi コメント消してんのばれてんで笑 堂々としろよ笑

  • @user-lm5kx8fz9m
    @user-lm5kx8fz9m2 жыл бұрын

    わたしの娘が、わたしのお気に入りのヘアゴムをして登校したのですが、下校中にどこかに落としてしまいました。 ままの大切なものだったのにと、娘は泣きながら下校していて、途中たまたまお巡りさんが通りかかって「どうしたの?何かあった?」と声を掛けてくださり、娘が事情を話したら 「大丈夫、お巡りさんと一緒に探してみよう!もし無くても、お巡りさんが一緒にままに謝ってあげるよ(^-^)」と、学校まで一緒に探しながら戻ってくださったそうです。 ヘアゴムは、優しい誰かが拾ってくださって、車などに轢かれないようにと高めの目立つところに置いておいてくださっていて、すぐに見つかりました。 わたしは日本人として、この地域の人間として、本当に有り難く思いました。そして、わたしもそういう人間であろうと改めて気を引き締めました。

  • @womankinggg
    @womankinggg2 жыл бұрын

    I lived in Japan for several years. One time, I forgot my phone in the bathroom of a major train station. I went back for it 5 minutes later and it was already gone. Instead of worrying, I went and got a glass of wine to wait for it to inevitably go through the process of being reported between the train staff. I ended up having to go back for it the next morning as lost and found closed, but I never had a moment of worry that it had been stolen. Sure enough, they had it and had even charged it for me overnight.

  • @womankinggg

    @womankinggg

    2 жыл бұрын

    Another time I lost my train pass card on the platform. I realized it was missing while still on the platform and backtracked, but it was gone. By the time I got down to the station guard to explain my situation, it had already been turned in and processed in their lost and found system.

  • @alessomartinez2076

    @alessomartinez2076

    2 жыл бұрын

    They even charged it!!!

  • @victorlin4645

    @victorlin4645

    2 жыл бұрын

    They even charged it??? Savages! Absolute savages!!!! What's next? You lose a jacket and it comes back to you laundered, ironed, and folded?

  • @iROChakri

    @iROChakri

    2 жыл бұрын

    They even *charged* it 😂😂😂

  • @clemmyw.1967

    @clemmyw.1967

    2 жыл бұрын

    They CHARGED it!?? WoW 😲

  • @rolandocastaneda4429
    @rolandocastaneda44292 жыл бұрын

    The only thing I lost that I never got back in Japan was my weight. 42 pounds in 6 months. Thanks Japan you taught me well.

  • @vestaosto

    @vestaosto

    2 жыл бұрын

    I hope it was due to healthy diet.

  • @Manik_khanna

    @Manik_khanna

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@vestaosto Less greasy and light food

  • @nordiin88

    @nordiin88

    2 жыл бұрын

    Most of the Japanese food is healthy!

  • @musicismoreimportantthanyo9246

    @musicismoreimportantthanyo9246

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nordiin88 it explains how they hosted olympics 1964, 1972, 1998, 2021

  • @brodriguez11000

    @brodriguez11000

    2 жыл бұрын

    Somewhere out there, someone found it.

  • @momogouta699
    @momogouta6992 жыл бұрын

    2度ほど財布+クレカ諸々入ったバッグごと公園のベンチにそのまま置き忘れ、駅でバッグがないことに気づいたことがあるが、1度はそのままの場所にあり、1度はどなたかが公園の管理事務所に届けてくれていた。忘れたって気づいたときの血の気がなくなる瞬間と、あったときの安堵感。届けてくれた方に未だに感謝してる。

  • @user-hg9rq2tr8s

    @user-hg9rq2tr8s

    3 ай бұрын

    背筋凍るよなー。分かる

  • @tamayura1988
    @tamayura19882 жыл бұрын

    拾ったものを届けるのは落とした人が困っているだろうから。 子供と拾った落し物を盗むことなく一緒に交番に届けるのは子供に誠実で正直な心を育んで欲しいから。 人目を気にしてやってるんじゃない。

  • @boy-dt9hc

    @boy-dt9hc

    2 жыл бұрын

    そこが日本(人)の良いところの一つだと思う

  • @hit3325

    @hit3325

    Жыл бұрын

    その通りです。また、人が見てなくても、お天道様は見てると考えるのが日本人です。

  • @sor.m17

    @sor.m17

    11 ай бұрын

    本当その通りですね。落とし物を届ける時に人の目は気にするという概念はない。届ける事に理由なんてあまり考えたことなかったけど、何か考えてるとすれば、「届けなかったらバチが当たるだろうな」です。

  • @user-kodokujanaigenta

    @user-kodokujanaigenta

    11 ай бұрын

    人目を気にしてるからに決まってる

  • @GTA-iu1ok

    @GTA-iu1ok

    11 ай бұрын

    @@user-kodokujanaigenta黙れカス

  • @mitchf01
    @mitchf012 жыл бұрын

    While travelling in Japan with some friends one of our party left their backpack on the metro train with his $2000 camera, passport and wallet inside. Several hours later it was returned to him everything intact. Virtually every other city in the world you'd be lucky to get an empty bag back. Japan is incredible.

  • @p6h14

    @p6h14

    2 жыл бұрын

    YES

  • @Ass_of_Amalek

    @Ass_of_Amalek

    2 жыл бұрын

    here in germany you'd have pretty good chances to get it back, I think. on a train there's the upside that it's very easy for somebody who noticed to get the train crew to deal with it instead of having to carry it somewhere. that leads to the stjff being out for a shorter time, reducing the risk that somebody willing to steal notices it. pickpockets are also active on trains though, and I think they might notice and take abandoned luggage. I lost my wallet once and got it back with the cash and everything, and one time I (rather stoned and distracted) kleft a guitar in a case on the sidewalk, only noticed hours later, and found it in the bar next to the spot.

  • @bzdtemp

    @bzdtemp

    2 жыл бұрын

    Japan is amazing, but it is not unique that people handle lost items with care and hand them in so they can be returned to their owner - and that includes valuable items as well as items with cash. It is really about treating others as you would like others to treat you.

  • @lang-ed3bk

    @lang-ed3bk

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Ass_of_Amalek is weed allowed in germany?

  • @qidongxu7339

    @qidongxu7339

    2 жыл бұрын

    I went to Japan a few years ago. People just left their bikes in front of the grocery store unlocked. All these bikes would have been long gone if in other countries

  • @endofyraaaaryfodne3389
    @endofyraaaaryfodne33892 жыл бұрын

    I remember forgetting to collect my 10 yen coin from a vendor in a food court and happily walking away. Poor lady must have seen my little coin after I left, ran around the counter and literally hunted me down half way across the food court just to give me my coin back. I didn't even remember or think 10 yen was worth her effort, but she did. I'm always amazed with the Japanese people and their sense of integrity.

  • @cookiemadoka7656

    @cookiemadoka7656

    2 жыл бұрын

    amazing indeed. its counted in the saying "its not about the money, its about sending a message" and a positive one that is.by you and you sharing your experience, everyone who heard you will receive the message, thank you

  • @satorudo

    @satorudo

    2 жыл бұрын

    I forgot that in Japan you don't tip, so I left a tip for a meal. The waitress came running and hunted me down like some kind of cheetah. I thought I had shorted them on the bill or something. She was so apologetic that I had forgotten money at the restaurant.

  • @schrodingersdino

    @schrodingersdino

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well... If you are about to buy something that costs ¥10.001 with tax and total, and you only have ¥10.000 (ten thousand Yen note/bill) because of ¥1円, forget it. You won't take it home. That's how it works in here.

  • @SMGJohn

    @SMGJohn

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@satorudo You do not tip in most countries, its mostly Italian - Spanish custom, then brought over to america which is a toxic way of waitresses and servants to earn money in america because their hourly pay is so low.

  • @Corrado_Moro

    @Corrado_Moro

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SMGJohn From what I know here in Italy you usually tip only if you liked the service, not like in the States, where you tip almost always.

  • @superp2222
    @superp22227 ай бұрын

    I travelled to Japan with a few friends of mine over the summer. My airpods fell out of my pocket as we ran to catch the bullet train. I realized 15 minutes after and another 15 minutes later we were back in the station. Not only had they been able to pick up such a tiny item in the middle of Tokyo Station, one of the busiest train stations in the world, and turn it into official authorities. It was there ready for me to pick up with the signing of some paperwork. My respect to the Japanese, their lost and found is centuries ahead of the craziness in America

  • @user-ny5mp6ko3i
    @user-ny5mp6ko3i2 жыл бұрын

    落し物を届ける人が多いところも好きだけど、 落ちているものをわかりやすい所に置いてあげる人がいるのも好きだなあ。

  • @user-dy9op8rl8m

    @user-dy9op8rl8m

    2 жыл бұрын

    確かに!キーホルダー、ハンカチ、などは特に。

  • @nagi_0701

    @nagi_0701

    2 жыл бұрын

    日本人を発見する嬉しさ

  • @simple.1829

    @simple.1829

    2 жыл бұрын

    こないだ1000円落ちててネコババしてしまった

  • @user-OMANGEMANGE

    @user-OMANGEMANGE

    2 жыл бұрын

    財布落ちてたら金抜いて交番届けるで、俺は

  • @simple.1829

    @simple.1829

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@user-OMANGEMANGE まあ落とした本人からしたら財布の中身のカードとか返ってくるだけでありがたいもんな。金くらいネコババさせてくれてもいいよ。

  • @ryanaiden
    @ryanaiden2 жыл бұрын

    This is really true. I lost my bag that had all our passports, laptops, money… everything. Somehow they managed to track it down 200km in Nagoya and bring it to me the next morning in Takayama. I offered to give them something as a token of my gratitude but they didn’t accept because this is considered normal in their country. Absolutely amazing 🙌

  • @Sharpest-Madman

    @Sharpest-Madman

    2 жыл бұрын

    We like to be happy with each other.

  • @k9healthy

    @k9healthy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Incredible nation!

  • @Mirpuria

    @Mirpuria

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's called honesty and there are such people all over the world.

  • @k9healthy

    @k9healthy

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Avishar I have been to S. Korea and found its people to be racist and very rude. Also, your message is hateful, crass, and angry. You indeed show that you are precisely the type of people that you yourself complain about. In case you edit your message, I am copying in full it below: "My god have you ever visited South Korea then ??? you will be amazed its even better cuz Japanese people do racism by simply ignoring ... while Koreans a re just so kind well mannered friendly and disciplined LOL in South Korea if you leave your laptop in a restaurant then after 1 month you can claim it back from there as well..... STOP HYPING UP A SINGLE NATION !!!!! FOR GOD SAKE to be honest I visited both nations and south korea is much more advance not only in technology but their society is sooooo honest and cozy"

  • @ryanaiden

    @ryanaiden

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Avishar That's really great to hear, but don't be so upset because the video wasn't about South Korea. I am sure they are just as well mannered there. No one is discrediting your country. I would love to visit it still!

  • @dn6127
    @dn61272 жыл бұрын

    When they speak about statistics of returned and unreturned items... they actually measure their service. Amazing!

  • @8964TS

    @8964TS

    2 жыл бұрын

    I suppose it makes sense for them to know so they can assign the appropriate amount of space. If they know they keep only 10% of phones handed in for the duration, they need only a small space. They also know which items to keep close at hand. Again, using phones as the example, they know to place lost phones nearer the service desk so they can be easily retrieved. Umbrellas on the other hand need a bigger space, but it can go far away at the back where nobody ever goes. It’s not just service, it’s smart, productive management.

  • @c8Lorraine1
    @c8Lorraine18 ай бұрын

    When I traveled throughout Japan I accidentally left my expensive camera and my passport on the seat in a train. I was tracked down via embassy and immigration authorities. Both items were returned by courier the next day. Only in Japan would I experience this kindness from strangers.

  • @noism6397
    @noism63972 жыл бұрын

    これで怖いのって日本人っていい人なんだ!って思って油断しちゃうことだよな。 日本人も海外と同じで悪い人もいるし良い人もいるからから気をつけてほしい。

  • @kohaluto

    @kohaluto

    2 жыл бұрын

    こういう動画を見る度に、他国の方々に安心で油断しても大丈夫だと思ってもらえる国でいられるよう心がけていきたいと思わされます。

  • @yusuke_8093

    @yusuke_8093

    3 ай бұрын

    市橋達也...

  • @user-hg9rq2tr8s

    @user-hg9rq2tr8s

    3 ай бұрын

    アナルアナシン…

  • @marcmckenzie5110
    @marcmckenzie51102 жыл бұрын

    For decades I frequently traveled to Japan on business. One time I was changing trains in Tokyo Central very late at night, and due to fatigue left my briefcase with passport, money, and important papers on a bench. I proceeded to wend my way to a distant connection. A minute or two after getting to the other gate, a young man breathing heavily and sweating profusely ran up to me, handing me my briefcase. Because it was the right thing to do, and was in my eyes immensely honorable. I was stunned with gratitude. Indeed in a great many ways, the world could learn from the ethical underpinnings of Japanese society, which I deeply love.

  • @78deathface
    @78deathface2 жыл бұрын

    Imagine having a cohesive society where everyone is in it together instead of every man for himself

  • @ohm1945

    @ohm1945

    2 жыл бұрын

    Oh yeah, I yearn for this. We just all get along nicely. Don’t have to all be friends but we are all friendly and accepting

  • @Lommy9999

    @Lommy9999

    2 жыл бұрын

    The opposite of the Western culture.

  • @junrosamura645

    @junrosamura645

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Lommy9999 Agree, that's kind of the problem with the West and their "It's all about me" and "I'm special" views.

  • @jerkchickenblog

    @jerkchickenblog

    2 жыл бұрын

    everyone isn't together. they are fiercely repressive and racist to foreigners and in the absence of a foreigner to scapegoat. they turn on each other. a little more experience with the culture would make this clear

  • @78deathface

    @78deathface

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jerkchickenblog sounds like America, dude

  • @user-yh1ms8tg6w
    @user-yh1ms8tg6w Жыл бұрын

    昨年の10月、交通系ICカードを道で拾ったので近くの交番に届けました。 そしたら今年の3月、今度は私が交通系ICカードを駅で落としてしまいました。でも数時間後、その駅から電話が掛かってきて、私のICカードが誰かに拾われて駅に届いていることを伝えられました! 親切な行いが自分にも返ってくる日本最高です!

  • @Buonarotti10

    @Buonarotti10

    11 ай бұрын

    Great story. I wonder how they could trace your IC card to your phone number.

  • @Teumessus
    @Teumessus2 жыл бұрын

    Can I just say how incredible the Japanese are for lost and found? I visited Tokyo in 2018 and - SOMEHOW, SOMEHOW, I left a laptop bag on one of their public trains. A hotel worker got in contact with the local train manager office and they found it - brought it to the nearest station to the hotel - and had it out and waiting for me to collect. Honestly, absolutely and utterly blown away with how great they were for my own silly mistake. In the UK, that bag would have been gone - and never seen ever again!

  • @bewareofchan
    @bewareofchan2 жыл бұрын

    Japan is by far the only place I travel worry free. A trip with zero worries about getting pickpocketed, mugged, or harassed in any form is truly a dream holiday.

  • @missplainjane3905

    @missplainjane3905

    2 жыл бұрын

    What other countries you have visited ?

  • @brodriguez11000

    @brodriguez11000

    2 жыл бұрын

    Travel brochure: Come to Japan, see the sights, don't get robbed.

  • @opappi

    @opappi

    2 жыл бұрын

    you need to watch out for yakuza bars or whatever they are. There are some scammy restaurants and bars, but generally waaay less dangerous than most other countries I believe.

  • @rachelcookie321

    @rachelcookie321

    2 жыл бұрын

    New Zealand is also very safe. But I do think I might of been pickpocketed when I went on a school trip to Wellington from Christchurch. I always kept my wallet in my back pocket and that’s when I learnt I probably shouldn’t do that anymore, I know put it in my bag.

  • @Loriani93

    @Loriani93

    2 жыл бұрын

    You must be a man🥴 (not being negative btw, just the harassed part stuck out to me as a woman lol)

  • @freshmacarons
    @freshmacarons2 жыл бұрын

    Left some items in Japan on a subway and they were amazingly retrieved on the same day. Thank you Japan!

  • @user-xz5zj4se3i
    @user-xz5zj4se3i2 жыл бұрын

    こうやって日本が海外で褒められているのを見て嬉しい気持ちになれるのは、日々小さなことも大切に対応してくれる人たちがいるからこそなんだな。日本人だけど、こういう人たちにお礼が言いたい。

  • @WilliamEvans-kh1gj

    @WilliamEvans-kh1gj

    11 ай бұрын

    Just amazing people many respects to 🇯🇵 from 🇬🇧

  • @tehtarik9102
    @tehtarik91022 жыл бұрын

    went to japan in 2014. Lost my iphone. The very next day they contact me through the notification. They even charged my phone battery 😂. Japan is something else.

  • @ibnewton8951
    @ibnewton89512 жыл бұрын

    I believe that Japan has a fundamentally more decent and honest society compared to most other countries.

  • @physics77guy

    @physics77guy

    2 жыл бұрын

    its taught to them as a part of Japanese culture from day 1

  • @justpassingthroughman

    @justpassingthroughman

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@physics77guy what's the main thing to drive that? Is it just decency or is there like the idea of karma or anything behind it? I love this 🤗

  • @sasorishino

    @sasorishino

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@justpassingthroughman, japan teaches their students social values at a very young age.

  • @justpassingthroughman

    @justpassingthroughman

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sasorishino I really wish we were more like that here.

  • @jjw3046

    @jjw3046

    2 жыл бұрын

    I wouldn't say more decent or honest, but they're definitely more systematic and thorough about things. There's still a ton of racism and discrimination especially towards other Asian ethnicities that gets filtered out of English language reporting on Japanese society. The idea of Japanese people being polite is more about in-group harmony and conflict avoidance than compassion. Japan being a homogeneous society is the confounding variable here. It's a great place to live...if you fit in.

  • @Alfredo.Taboada
    @Alfredo.Taboada2 жыл бұрын

    I forgot my watch at Narita airport’s security checkpoint and I was able to recover it a month later. When I went to the lost and found office asking if they had it they were very strict, they asked me for all posible characteristics of the watch to see if I was the owner. They only gave it to me when I told them the local time it had, I live in Mexico and did not adjusted Japan´s time so when I told them the exact hour it was showing there was no doubt it was mine.

  • @anpdgbe

    @anpdgbe

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same thing when I lost my wallet! The police questioned and questioned me about its contents before handing it back to me haha there were a whole bunch of them crowding around my wallet and blocking it from view too

  • @sonsuzoyun7350

    @sonsuzoyun7350

    2 жыл бұрын

    WoW You've got awesome memory you remembered what time set when you're lost your watch

  • @ahmh8411

    @ahmh8411

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sonsuzoyun7350 The clock doesn't stop when he loses it but the time shown on the clock would be different than the current time in Japan. Most clocks are synced to the time of the country they are currently in. So if it is 9pm in Japan and the clock tells you it is 6am then you know the original owner when he mentions the discrepancy in the time.

  • @sonsuzoyun7350

    @sonsuzoyun7350

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ahmh8411 is it a way to change GMT at watch clocks? i mean... i said that because i thought there could be way to change time at clock so person wouldn't confused about what time is it.

  • @SirZeck

    @SirZeck

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sonsuzoyun7350 what?

  • @donboston7728
    @donboston77282 жыл бұрын

    I lived in Japan for 8 years. It was a wonderful experience. I once left my wallet on a seating bench on the platform of a local commuter train station. I realized it missing, when I was on the train traveling after about 4 stops had passed. I got off at the next station crossed over and went back to the station of my mistake. To my amazement, it was still on the bench that I was sitting. This was a busy station and many hundreds of people must have seen it. Yet, no one took it. Amazingly honest society.

  • @Marc-io8qm

    @Marc-io8qm

    2 жыл бұрын

    Great place. Are you from Beantown too? I wonder how it would be to live there now that the West is being ripped apart by Globalists - morally, historically and culturally. You just cannot respect your national history or preserve your people anymore. That stands in the way of their agenda. I hope Japan never succumbs to it.

  • @Tz3952ii

    @Tz3952ii

    2 жыл бұрын

    But be careful at airport and foreign tourist intense area like Shibuya and Asakusa. No longer Japanese only communities there.

  • @KaotikBOOO

    @KaotikBOOO

    2 жыл бұрын

    Not honesty, it's a camera heavy area, no one wants to be seen taking it that's the real reason

  • @Tz3952ii

    @Tz3952ii

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@KaotikBOOO Outside Japan most likely your wallet will be gone in a few seconds if at a busy train station. And in Japan if there're not many people, most likely you'll get it back. Hope it's not opposite in your country.

  • @KaotikBOOO

    @KaotikBOOO

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Tz3952ii was not talking to you When I saw your first racist comment, it was just obvious that it would be pointless, you'd be defending the "Japanese superior race" anyway

  • @kirsteta17
    @kirsteta172 ай бұрын

    I lived in Tokyo on a Working Holiday Visa when I was a(n Australian) university student in 1994/5. I found an enormous bundle of big note yen on a street wrapped only in an elastic band. I handed it to the first police (Koban?) station I could find. They were so kind and carefully explained the system to me. I hope that if the owner did not claim the money that it was given to the young ramen shop couple who lived in my apartment (I left their names as I was about to return home). Watching this video brings a fond memory and reminds me of good things.Thankyou! 😅🎉

  • @neilmanx1001
    @neilmanx10012 жыл бұрын

    I lost my camera on shinkansen train on the way to Himeji and it was returned to me an hour later at another station when I got down to change trains. The lost & found place staff with in that train station made me talk to a guy on video who was at another station where my camera was handed over by someone and he showed me the camera and asked if it was mine and then returned to me. Now that is Japan!

  • @rabbit251

    @rabbit251

    2 жыл бұрын

    Not my experience on trains. Twice I forgot things on the train, talked to station staff and was told there was nothing they could do. But if lost in public I have had things turned into the police.

  • @hayek218

    @hayek218

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@rabbit251 I do not believe this. Which train is this?

  • @rabbit251

    @rabbit251

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@hayek218 Once was on the Shinkansen Hikari bound for Shizuoka, the other was on the subway in Nagoya. The Shinkansen I didn't have an interpreter with me, but the station staff spoke basic English. In Nagoya my friend met me at the airport and she spoke Japanese fluently, but the station staff refused to help us.

  • @hayek218

    @hayek218

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@rabbit251 That is not possible. Never happens.

  • @rabbit251

    @rabbit251

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@hayek218 What never happens? That Japanese are possibly racists and unwilling to help someone who is a foreigner? Or are you in complete denial of everything which basically makes you a fool. On second thought, regardless, you are a fool August. Hate to spoil your image of a perfect Japan, but in reality things are not perfect.

  • @kevinj2261
    @kevinj22612 жыл бұрын

    In my last visit to Kyoto of Japan, a waiter of a retaurant chased us for a block to return my daughter's metro card even before she noticed it had lost. I guess in other countries the waiter would just throw this low value item into trash bin. What a civilizied society -- Love from China.

  • @missplainjane3905

    @missplainjane3905

    2 жыл бұрын

    How many times have you visited ?

  • @darkingo123
    @darkingo1232 жыл бұрын

    Honestly I want to go to Japan just to experience this genuine culture. So respectful.

  • @keisimmons
    @keisimmons2 жыл бұрын

    I’ve lost my wallet 3 times, phone once and my backpack with a MacBook inside twice and got it back everytime, god bless Japan

  • @infiniteIdeaHub

    @infiniteIdeaHub

    2 жыл бұрын

    u have an issue, dude..

  • @macr0z_

    @macr0z_

    2 жыл бұрын

    you need to get better at keeping track of your items lmao

  • @keisimmons

    @keisimmons

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@macr0z_ yeah lool

  • @macr0z_

    @macr0z_

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@keisimmons Very cool you got it back every time tho! in Finland this would never happen haha

  • @User-cb4jm

    @User-cb4jm

    2 жыл бұрын

    Buy an AirTag mate. Or use Find My for the phone and MacBook.

  • @SabrinaLovesPuffins
    @SabrinaLovesPuffins2 жыл бұрын

    I remember when I was rushing to board a train in Tokyo, I dropped my gloves without realising. Almost immediately, a tall Japanese man chased me down to return it. I was so shocked because I’ve never seen someone so desperate to help a stranger! And this is why I will always remember Japan fondly. ❤️

  • @LisaN

    @LisaN

    Жыл бұрын

    This image of this man rushing desperately to give you back your gloves is so cute ♥️

  • @MemorablePopCulture
    @MemorablePopCulture2 жыл бұрын

    As an Australian, this is why my wife and I have been to Japan 8 times in the last 12 years and we will still love going there. The society, the food, the respect…

  • @user-cz1my2fh7e

    @user-cz1my2fh7e

    2 жыл бұрын

    please come to Japan again!

  • @josephc8675

    @josephc8675

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah

  • @josephc8675

    @josephc8675

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@user-cz1my2fh7e come back right

  • @pcl1559

    @pcl1559

    2 жыл бұрын

    same! Every time I got time for a vacation, I ended up in Japan! I actually begin the planning to find a new place to go, but always decide to go to Japan in the end 🤣 13 times in 8 years! Sometimes it is just a weekend trip to Japan if I'm staying in Asia at the time, sometimes I stay for 2 months, because I had to endure long flights from the US, but all were fun times. My last trip there was in Jan 2020.

  • @user-cz1my2fh7e

    @user-cz1my2fh7e

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@pcl1559 Wow! Arigato (╹◡╹)

  • @ame_ame7
    @ame_ame72 жыл бұрын

    When I was in the second grade of elementary school, there was a handkerchief on the street, so I delivered it to the police box. There was no one in the police box, and there was a piece of paper and a telephone saying, "If you need anything, please leave a message on the phone." I played rock-paper-scissors with my friends and lost, so I left a message.I was very nervous and shy, so I hated it, but I tried my best to say it. Later, when the police called my house, my mother was worried, "Did my daughter do something?" but it was a thank-you call from the police. "Your daughter delivered a handkerchief to the police box.Thank you very much." When my mother told me that she had received a call from the policeman, I was very happy that I had the courage to call her. I'm glad I got the courage. Thank you for the policeman at that time.

  • @mitonodaisyoya
    @mitonodaisyoya Жыл бұрын

    俺もこないだ郵便局の駐車場で1万円拾ったけど、とりあえず郵便局の職員に渡したよ。 なんだろうなぁ、あぶく銭で酒飲んでも旨くないし、汗水たらして稼いだ金で飲むから酒はうまいんだよ。

  • @harumatsu3731

    @harumatsu3731

    3 ай бұрын

    素敵やん

  • @wilburwood8261

    @wilburwood8261

    3 ай бұрын

    そうかなあ。勤務先の会社の持株会の配当で飲食した時とかおいしくないか?

  • @mitonodaisyoya

    @mitonodaisyoya

    3 ай бұрын

    @@wilburwood8261 株主配当は会社法で認められた正当な収益。拾ったお金を使い込むのは遺失物横領で刑法に抵触。頭を使いましょう。

  • @healthy6422

    @healthy6422

    3 ай бұрын

    @@wilburwood8261 正当な方法で手に入れた金なら後ろめたさはないんじゃない?

  • @user-kz3qy2xl7i

    @user-kz3qy2xl7i

    3 ай бұрын

    @@wilburwood8261 まぁ、美味しいよねw

  • @theonlyladybella44480
    @theonlyladybella444802 жыл бұрын

    If we are all willing to drop our cultural boundaries and are willing to venture out our comfort zones, we can learn so much from each other. Great job Japan 👍

  • @Scho-penhauer

    @Scho-penhauer

    2 жыл бұрын

    Can learn racists from Japan?

  • @takatoshilee2855

    @takatoshilee2855

    2 жыл бұрын

    how is this related at all

  • @speedomike747

    @speedomike747

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's not lol Never heard of the tradition of ego-feeding rambling? Here's a short tutorial: 1. Falsely assume everyone has a certain characteristic (like not being open to other cultures/being racist) 2. 'Wake em up' so you can feel good about yourself 3. Feel really good about yourself, tell others you fixed/fought racism. 4. See your actions had no effect & realise your distorted view of reality 5. Reject this insight & go back to step 1.

  • @takatoshilee2855

    @takatoshilee2855

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@speedomike747 damn I see thanks for telling me

  • @luminousfractal420

    @luminousfractal420

    2 жыл бұрын

    One day. Teach your kids to love above all else. ✌️

  • @nxva8726
    @nxva87262 жыл бұрын

    Been to Japan a few times. It's another world. Their life long focus on discipline, the quiet metro lines, no pushing or shoving even during rush hour, they all wait for the exiting passengers before they step in, the way the cashier hands you the cash on a tray, the painstaking detailed formalities of their tea ceremonies, Kaizeki meals, their attention to the smallest details on even the most mundane things.....and the most highly advanced toilet seats in the world. What a place. A lot to learn from them. They're something else.

  • @Bilal_is_joking

    @Bilal_is_joking

    2 жыл бұрын

    I want to visit Japan now 😭

  • @jman140692

    @jman140692

    2 жыл бұрын

    No pushing or shoving during rush hour??? What city were you in because if you are talking about Tokyo than I am sorry but I gotta call BS that one. I get pushed and cut in front of by people almost everyday in Tokyo when it's crowded

  • @pamplantsmn5879

    @pamplantsmn5879

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jman140692 and don’t they hire people to stuff people in the trains or is that misrepresented

  • @jman140692

    @jman140692

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@pamplantsmn5879 I don't think they hire people specifically just for that but yes in extreme cases it can happen

  • @anaalves3658

    @anaalves3658

    2 жыл бұрын

    I have a good friend that lived in Japan for about 8 years, his sister went to visit and she complained about people pushing and shoving on the subway and of men feeling up women and even masturbating on the subway 😬😬.

  • @orifjanov_muzaffar
    @orifjanov_muzaffar2 жыл бұрын

    I’ve been living in Tokyo for 2 years now. In 2020, I lost my wallet which had all my important documents and a little money. The police found it in less than 48 hours and not even my 1 yen coin was touched.

  • @aha8829
    @aha88292 жыл бұрын

    落とした人の事を想像するから、盗もうとは思わないし、届けないとって普通に思う。当たり前だと思ってたけど、世界では珍しいんだね。

  • @barnesperez
    @barnesperez2 жыл бұрын

    "Japan's moral education has played an important role in shaping our attitude to lost properties." Indeed, instilling what is right to people especially on the young is very important. I have seen their honesty first hand when I lost my action camera inside a museum.

  • @redmisery
    @redmisery2 жыл бұрын

    When I visited Japan years ago, I wanted to give everyone a hug because of things like this; I wanted to thank them for giving us an exemplary moral values. But then again, physical contact between strangers is not socially acceptable there, so I refrained and bowed deeper than everyone else. 😅 -red.

  • @fruityricky4198

    @fruityricky4198

    2 жыл бұрын

    stalking a stranger for 2km is not a moral value. Add the normalization of alcohol among women and it gets even worse, many times you'll get raped without remembering it.

  • @hayek218

    @hayek218

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fruityricky4198 Where did that happen?

  • @fruityricky4198

    @fruityricky4198

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@hayek218 it's usualy big cities like tokyo or osaka, just walk outdoors, not even in bar areas, not even late at night, it starts early after the work hours are off, especially if you are a female, filming backwards with your phone. You will often see the same guy following you for about 30mn, some even catch up to walk right near you and if you are lucky they are not drunk. Not to mention the "normalized" free sexual groping in Japanese subway metros.

  • @fruityricky4198

    @fruityricky4198

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@hayek218 about the other stuff, sometimes you'll see a lonely girl completely phased out but still able to walk surrounded or even lifted by multiple men. They often head to a car to finish... It happens even in job night meetings for work promotions, it's a cultural habit of many workplaces, where many alcoholized drinks are proposed, and if no alcohol some men just toss a pill or two.

  • @hayek218

    @hayek218

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fruityricky4198 ????????? Are you taking some kind of drug yourself?

  • @Head-of-lodrome
    @Head-of-lodrome Жыл бұрын

    日本人いい人すぎて遺失物センターパンッパンなの草

  • @michaelivey4904
    @michaelivey49042 жыл бұрын

    In 12 years in Japan, I have lost my iPad once, my cell phone once, and my gym bag once. I recovered all of them by going to the lost-and-found at the train stations or by visiting the nearest Koban (police station). I have also found a couple of lost cell phones and wallets in my time, which I have dutifully turned in to the nearest Koban, and hopefully the original owners were able to get them back. It's a high-trust society where we look after each other.

  • @angelafernandachristenseng9884
    @angelafernandachristenseng98842 жыл бұрын

    When I’ve been to Japan I was amazed by how well received and polite I was treated. I could only communicate in English (mostly in Tokyo) or signs and nobody was disgruntled. On contrary they tried harder to understand. Different environment but same kindness I experienced in India. I was never mistreated or afraid. Mind you I was robbed inside Gallery Lafayette in Paris and not even got and apologizes. When I’m in US or UK people often call me out for misuse of words in English. So rude! If I dare to say “Can I come in” there’s laughing and repugnant faces all around. No wonder people disdain Americans and British people in general. See is not about richness or development. It’s about education and culture of exploitation.

  • @AtlasTwerked

    @AtlasTwerked

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm Indian. foreigners, especially those of paler complexion, witness a different India than the locals. i assure you, India is dangerous and nothing like japan! but we are striving very hard to progress, i look forward to the day where we treat one another the way we treat foreigners. I've also been robbed in Paris, seems like a right of passage 😉

  • @patientchick898

    @patientchick898

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well said. Yep, majority of English speaking countryman are quite ignorant and condescending. The word "Tolerate' and 'undesrtanding' aren't in their vocabulary. They expect others to speak English in their country and expect to be understood in English even when they are in someone else's country. Complete ignorant.

  • @blessedslave

    @blessedslave

    2 жыл бұрын

    What's wrong with can I come in? Though?

  • @SirZeck

    @SirZeck

    2 жыл бұрын

    This!

  • @suvarchaasingh3720

    @suvarchaasingh3720

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@blessedslave it should be “may I come in”. You Ofcourse CAN come in cz you have legs. That’s how teachers explained to us in school when we were lil. English isn’t my first language either.

  • @nikkosr888
    @nikkosr8882 жыл бұрын

    I dropped my wallet when i was in Kyoto with more than ¥20,000($200) inside. Someone picked my wallet and gave it to the local tourist information. I didn’t lose a single cent when I received my wallet. Japan is just awesome!

  • @Finedeserthouses
    @Finedeserthouses8 ай бұрын

    When we traveled to Tokyo, my daughter dropped her sandal while she was on her stroller. We were in a huge mall and the mall was closing in 5 minutes. When I asked the customer service, they said no one has found it yet. She gave me the number to call later as it would probably show up eventually. We traveled outside of Tokyo for a week staring the next day so I didn’t call them but when I came back to Tokyo, I called the mall as it was a cute pair of sandals (although it was a cheap pair from Payless😂) What I found out on the phone was unthinkable. The lady carefully went through the lost and found log and told me that since they could only hold it there for one week, now it was turned to a police station. I was like….you’ve got to me kidding me😳😳😳😳😳 It’s a plastic cheap kid’s sandal. You did what with it???? 😮😮😮😮😮 But I was overwhelmed by their gesture so I took down the address and visited the police station. It cost me more than the pair of sandals to get there, but I wasn’t going to let their actions go waste. When I went to the police station and told what happened, the officer asked me to describe the sandal. I took the matching sandal and showed it to him. He pulled out a huge binder of the files and pulled out a documentation, had me fill out my information and sign it. Then he brought the sandal which was carefully placed in a ziplock bag. 😂 I was super appreciative and respectful to everyone involved. The person who found it and took it to the customer service, the customer service who kept it there for a week and took it to the police station, the officer who took a report to file this tiny sandal…. This is my country, Japan 🇯🇵 ❤

  • @LeeM-hz5ns
    @LeeM-hz5ns2 жыл бұрын

    I remember leaving my wallet in a bar in Tokyo and remembering when I got back to my accommodation. Living in the UK, I was so sure it was gone forever and sprinted back to the bar, only to see multiple people guiding me back to find my wallet! It was such a breath of fresh air being treated with such honesty.

  • @kanjanathevik5234
    @kanjanathevik52342 жыл бұрын

    I wish to be born in Japan! My instinct always loves Japanese! Look at them,how generous;polite;empathetic people! Hats off to you my dear Japan ❤️ from 🇮🇳

  • @lekha21920
    @lekha219202 жыл бұрын

    I highly respect Japanese people for their humbleness and honesty

  • @bradgreen5174
    @bradgreen51742 жыл бұрын

    This is truly amazing and makes me respect Japan even more.

  • @airratic
    @airratic2 жыл бұрын

    We were tourists in Japan. We went to Disneyland SEA and my friend left her phone in the restroom (she placed it on top of the toilet), and only realizes it after we were done eating at a food grub near the restroom. We panicked and searched the restroom. You can imagine how many people have been in and out of that restroom! There's a language barrier communicating with the cleaner, but sign language worked :))) after almost 15mins of bickering with panic together with the cleaner, the security radioed that the phone was returned to the food grub. My friend got her phone back. Japan hit different with its honesty at that time. Japan is truly different from the rest of the world, and I say it with the utmost respect.

  • @ricatorres171
    @ricatorres1712 жыл бұрын

    Japan is a role model country. Honest people, advance technology and clean environment 💗💗💗

  • @tonyharty3666
    @tonyharty36662 жыл бұрын

    Growing up in America all I heard about was the War. Iv’e been to Japan a couple of times. Japan is what a Civilized Society looks like. I admire the People of Japan. Vietnam Vet US Navy

  • @twelve11
    @twelve112 жыл бұрын

    Going to Japan was the most eye opening experience coming from the West: Everything is so orderly, so clean, so respectful and safe; the people are thoughtful, kind and considerate and the traditions and culture ensure these ideals. I couldn't believe gutters are spotless, toilets in the middle of nowhere are safe and clean, children are safe to walk the streets alone, you can lose a wallet and know nobody would ever consider stealing it. It's a paradise.

  • @beanburger5689

    @beanburger5689

    2 жыл бұрын

    Japan has its problems. Certainly not terrible but definitely not a "paradise".

  • @mman2022

    @mman2022

    2 жыл бұрын

    unfortunately, it's a paradise with one of the highest rates of suicide and with a dwindling population of around 300 thousand people a year. but there is no denying that Japan is one of the safest and most organized countries in the world and their culture influenced millions of people around the world and made them love that country including me 😁

  • @takeshmode

    @takeshmode

    2 жыл бұрын

    I currently live in Japan and can say yes it is very safe but they do have plenty of issues and there is definitely racism here that's for sure.

  • @Moonlight-se6mn

    @Moonlight-se6mn

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@beanburger5689 Japan's suicide rate per capita ranks 18th in the world, lower than Russia, North Korea and South Korea.

  • @Marc-io8qm

    @Marc-io8qm

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@takeshmode without racism Japan wouldn’t exist. Imagine if America dropped a bomb of diversity on Hiroshima. It survived a nuclear bomb but would be devastated by millions of African or middle eastern refugees. In fact once diversity is injected and forced (as it has in the West) Japan would lose its culture forever. One of the biggest problems in the West- the elephant in the room- is globalists seeking open borders for population replacement while using their controlled media to stifle any dissent to cultural dilution. You’re a racist in the West to want to protect its European/white influences but when you’re in Kenya or Korea that is acceptable. It is war with bombs most people cannot see.

  • @mariokhoe8851
    @mariokhoe88512 жыл бұрын

    I can attest to this. Lost my passport, cash and credit cards all in one bag in Japan. Returned to a police station and i came to collect it with all the content nothing missing, not a single cent. AMAZING JAPAN!

  • @banirahman4926
    @banirahman49262 жыл бұрын

    I lived in Japan for 3 years. I lost my purse 2 times. Both times they looked for the owner and found me. It’s amazing!

  • @cinderellacomplex7
    @cinderellacomplex72 жыл бұрын

    I used to live in Tokyo and it's common to show a table is occupied when going to the bathroom, for example, by just leaving your phone on the table. Or even your wallet. Did this a bunch of times and none of my stuff was ever stolen.

  • @theshuriken

    @theshuriken

    2 жыл бұрын

    yess this is also impressive! i did it many times and never lose anything

  • @GrandMasterLynx

    @GrandMasterLynx

    2 жыл бұрын

    Would be great if you could do that in America but sadly you can’t

  • @Bilal_is_joking

    @Bilal_is_joking

    2 жыл бұрын

    Don't ever do that in india, it will be gone in a second 😭😅

  • @cinderellacomplex7

    @cinderellacomplex7

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Bilal_is_joking I live in the Philippines so I know what you mean.

  • @Bilal_is_joking

    @Bilal_is_joking

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@cinderellacomplex7 Still Phillipines can't be as bad as India...trust me it's worst here

  • @amlanjyoti2
    @amlanjyoti22 жыл бұрын

    This country is so amazing, I wish I could visit it someday

  • @TheDoruchi
    @TheDoruchi2 жыл бұрын

    絵本の落とし物を交番に届けたら、後日、その交番の前を通りかかったときに警察官が「あの絵本は持ち主に届きましたよ!ありがとうございました」って教えてくれた微笑ましい思い出。

  • @paragonmusic4523
    @paragonmusic45232 жыл бұрын

    Punctuality, hard work and discipline that's what makes Japan people different from the rest. No wonder why they are so successful.

  • @isamuominae

    @isamuominae

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Jarasłaŭ Paškievič Stop with your nonsense. Japan is Japan and period.

  • @asdfghjjhgf
    @asdfghjjhgf2 жыл бұрын

    That is true I lost my phone twice and my wallet once in Japan, but they were all delivered to Koban stations and I was able to find them.

  • @vlowolvtake1797

    @vlowolvtake1797

    2 жыл бұрын

    Wow! That's quite frequent. How long was your visit?

  • @asdfghjjhgf

    @asdfghjjhgf

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@vlowolvtake1797 I actually have lived in Japan since 2013 So it's not that frequent. And I have ADHD, so I may lose my possessions more often than other people.

  • @vlowolvtake1797

    @vlowolvtake1797

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@asdfghjjhgf Good to know😂

  • @ray.gene.bowner

    @ray.gene.bowner

    2 жыл бұрын

    Did your wallet have everything, including money and credit cards?

  • @ulu4432
    @ulu44322 жыл бұрын

    落し物が見つかった時って本当にほっとするし自分が物を無くしたら悲しいから、目の前で物を落とした方が居たら拾って声をかけるし物が落ちてたらすぐ届ける。届ける方はきっとみんなそうだと思います😊

  • @user-kodokujanaigenta

    @user-kodokujanaigenta

    11 ай бұрын

    思うから何?

  • @ulu4432

    @ulu4432

    11 ай бұрын

    @@user-kodokujanaigenta そういうコメントは控えた方がいいですよ

  • @a-un7952

    @a-un7952

    8 ай бұрын

    日本人でさえ「同調圧力」とか「罰則が怖い」からと見なす人がいて、外国人もそう説明されて納得する事例があるようですが、私はそうは思いません。 やはり落とした人の気持ちを考えて届けるというのが大きいと思います。戻ってきた安堵と、届けてくれた人への感謝で、とても幸せな気持ちになるだろうと考えます。

  • @user-ux3xw3zn6e
    @user-ux3xw3zn6e3 ай бұрын

    サイフやスマホを無くした時、全身の血がサーっと音を立てて引いていくのが分かるあの感覚。二度と体験したくない。 拾って施設に届けてくれた方には本当に感謝。

  • @abdullahlataifeh2203
    @abdullahlataifeh22032 жыл бұрын

    I like how the people are so good and kindhearted to a level where they could prioritize helping other people more than stealing

  • @booboos1212

    @booboos1212

    2 жыл бұрын

    In Japan, there is an idea that a child grows up looking at his parents' backs. If adults do the right thing, things will gradually improve.

  • @leejimmy2209
    @leejimmy22092 жыл бұрын

    Ten years ago, my dad dropped his purse in Otaru, Hokkaido. We went to the police, and as we were talking, we got a call that the purse was found. Japanese people really deserve respect.

  • @86trees
    @86trees2 жыл бұрын

    Japan is just next level, I've always been impressed by that culture.

  • @kiku6331
    @kiku63312 жыл бұрын

    I lived in Osaka before and one day at dawn I accidentally dropped my phone in a taxi, I actually thought I lost my phone and had no idea I left it in the taxi, only to found out the very next day the taxi driver went to dropped off my phone at my school (I put my student ID card on my phone case pocket, train card, etc), I remember I was shocked and thankful at that time because I got my phone back. So thank you to the very kind taxi driver 🙏

  • @1974dodgecharger
    @1974dodgecharger2 жыл бұрын

    Japan is so awesome. I hope they never change

  • @alexisbeaulieu1021
    @alexisbeaulieu10212 жыл бұрын

    I lived in Japan for 6 months during an exchange in University. My partner on 3 separate occasions lost his hydroflask water bottle. Once in an airport in Tokyo, once in a train station in Osaka, and once shopping in a market in Nara. Every single time the water bottle was returned to him, even hours after we left the location and realized it was missing. The level of respect for other people’s possessions was undeniable. I miss you Japan

  • @yzhang9080

    @yzhang9080

    2 жыл бұрын

    Your friend needs to bow and say sorry for all the trouble he caused these people for a water bottle lol.

  • @kati8688

    @kati8688

    2 жыл бұрын

    It’s about time for your friend to strap his water bottle to the neck.

  • @inefekt

    @inefekt

    2 жыл бұрын

    sounds like somebody's partner has a short term memory problem lol

  • @pablojams5152
    @pablojams51522 жыл бұрын

    I lost a bag that had passports, money, etc in it in Japan a few years back we had left it at a museum- went to the Koban to report the lost items but the employees at the museum had been looking for us at the train station and spotted my friends waiting there. They knew we lost the bag and walked us back to the museum in the rain, let us in after hours and gave us free umbrellas to walk back to the trains with. A few days later I left a bag of groceries at a convenience store and walked back an hour later, they had kept my bag safe in a back room with a note on it in case I returned. It really is hard to lose things in Japan!

  • @faith8415

    @faith8415

    2 жыл бұрын

    あなたの荷物が無事に戻ってよかった。 日本人として誇らしく思うよ(。´・ω・)

  • @kati8688

    @kati8688

    2 жыл бұрын

    You gotta pay closer attention to your belongings 😆 Glad you were ok.

  • @kmidori0930

    @kmidori0930

    Жыл бұрын

    again? 😂

  • @user-ko1bv3xp7t
    @user-ko1bv3xp7t2 жыл бұрын

    日本人として、これからの素晴らしい習慣が続いていけば良いと心から願います。 ですが、悪い人は必ず存在します。 幸福な旅行が達成できるように旅行者は気を緩めないでいてほしいと心から願います。

  • @user-in6um7dy8e

    @user-in6um7dy8e

    2 жыл бұрын

    なんか自分がすごいわけでもないんだけどホクホクする。

  • @aztv4892

    @aztv4892

    2 жыл бұрын

    日本人に悪い人なんてたくさんいるだろ。あの誤送金されたお金を返さずに逃げてる24歳とか。都合の悪いところから目をそらすな。

  • @cypher7707

    @cypher7707

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@aztv4892 「悪い人は必ず存在します」って書いとるがな。何が見えてんねん。

  • @Techno-jo5vd

    @Techno-jo5vd

    2 жыл бұрын

    悪い人は多いけど、旅行客に攻撃するような悪い人は少ないというかほぼ居ないよね

  • @aztv4892

    @aztv4892

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@cypher7707 元のコメントの趣旨って悪い人もいるけど、日本人の素晴らしい習慣や国民性があるから落し物がなくなりにくいっていうことでしょ。それが傲慢なんだよ。お前こそ何も考えずにコメントするなアホ。こういう日本人凄い的な動画やコメントは嫌い。

  • @carriehazel77
    @carriehazel772 жыл бұрын

    I was in Tokyo with my son on his Make a Wish trip in the summer of 2019, and I accidentally walked off the train with my purse left on the seat and by the time I realized what happened, the train has left. We were told to call the lost and found the next morning, but I had no hope. In The states my purse would have been stolen almost instantly. When my kiddo and I made it back to our hotel, I remembered that my cell phone has a tracker on it, so we logged on and saw that my purse was still on the train, traveling the circular route that makes up the central Tokyo line. It circled for HOURS until the signal finally went off. The next morning we called lost and found and they had it! No one touched a cent in my wallet, our passports, credit cards and cash were all untouched. I was so struck by the civic responsibility that the entire population seems to adhere to. Loved Tokyo for many reasons, but this was such an amazing thing to experience.

  • @paulobreva901
    @paulobreva9012 жыл бұрын

    Years ago, I was on a bench in Nara Park, resting after climbing Wakakusayama. It was almost night time and headed to Nara Station on my way home because I stayed in Osaka. I remember just a few meters away from Nara Station, I heard a Japanese girl shouting behind me. I looked back and saw she was running towards me - she was on high heels. I stopped walking and she stopped running, while heavily panting she just handed me my phone. I had almost gone inside Nara Station and home to Osaka from Nara Park without me realising i left my phone on the bench I was resting in. Needless to say I said a lot of "Arigato" to that girl. And it made me think: had I been in another country - my phone would have been as good as gone, sold for parts or resold in some back alley shop somewhere.

  • @kuroneko7022
    @kuroneko70227 ай бұрын

    Say what you want, but there’s no other place like Japan. The moral compass is real and a gift to society. I can’t wait to get back. ❤

  • @user-ye8mt5nn5s
    @user-ye8mt5nn5s3 ай бұрын

    物無くすたびに今回はもう無理だろうって思うのに絶対返ってくる笑っちゃうくらいすごい

  • @michhioo
    @michhioo2 жыл бұрын

    I once forgot my phone on a train in tokyo and a guy went out of his way to chase me down after I walked out in my stop, he had to wait for the next train. So grateful for people in Japan who don’t think of taking advantage of foreigners.

  • @fredflintstone5356
    @fredflintstone53562 жыл бұрын

    I think the rest of the world needs to be more like Japan. Doing something kind for someone or even just a kind deed is very rewarding to yourself and also it will make people on the receiving end very happy. Being good and kind to people is contagious, sadly being the opposite is also contagious, so let’s all get along and be kind to one another.

  • @slothintheforest17
    @slothintheforest172 жыл бұрын

    As an ADHD person living in Japan, I don’t know how many times they helped me with finding my stuffs. Once they even sent me a letter for the thing I hadn’t noticed I lost.

  • @IFArakash
    @IFArakash2 жыл бұрын

    One of many reasons why I love Japan, seems to be the only society nowadays that respects each other! I hope I can visit Japan one day! 🙂

  • @RichardTamayo
    @RichardTamayo2 жыл бұрын

    When I was in Tokyo a few years ago, I got confused when using the train ticket machine, because of course, it was all in Japanese, but I had done it before so i kinda knew what i was trying to do. Out of nowhere this nice business man came up to me and tried to help, but i knew he was wrong, so i just said 'ok sounds, good, thank you' and he walked away and I eventually figured it out. As I was walking to the train he chased me down to tell me he was so sorry for giving me the wrong instructions and me stunned was like,' no need to apologize, thank you for trying to help!' Japan is unreal, and their kindness should be something we could all learn from.

  • @thehootenberry210
    @thehootenberry2102 жыл бұрын

    Im living in japan for the past 4 years.recently i lost my phone at a clothing store. I went back and told them.they have kept it aside with a paper which included some information like lost date and time.after confirming its mine i got it. Exactly three weeks ago when i learnt that i dont have my wallet with me.it had all my registration card health insurance, my credit cards and 200,000yen which is my husbands bonus money that he asked me to deposit in the bank.I broke down and went to rhe supa( super market) and told the service desk. Oh my god even after a day they got it.they have counted cash and i had to sign a paper after that they askes me to provide my passport to verify thats me i got my wallet. Im so grateful for japan and its citizen for being so honest. People are as beautiful as the country

  • @maize09blue
    @maize09blue2 жыл бұрын

    I remember a story of a tourist losing their wallet in Tokyo. Couple of weeks afterwards, the wallet (with all its original content including all cash and now cancelled credit cards) was mailed to her home. I did not believe the story at the time, but after learning more about Japan, I began to believe it was true. I've had friends who travelled there prior to the Covid situation and all of them absolutely loved it. They even vouched about the possibility of the story being accurate after their experience in Japan. This video, confirms to me that the story was legitimate. Truly impressed with Japanese culture and its proud people. Such high standards of integrity in a large population base can only work there. Everywhere else would be a different story or even worse. Never change Japan. Only place where I don't mind if the culture remains homogenous to the Japanese people without influence or mixing from other nations.

  • @user-rm6ut8td9y
    @user-rm6ut8td9y4 ай бұрын

    I am Japanese. I went to Edinburgh, Scotland for a trip and got drunk at a pub called Conan Doyle and left my wallet on the counter. When I realized and went back to the pub, two men who were drinking next to me noticed my wallet and left it with the staff. In London, when I dropped my credit card, an old gentleman picked it up and ran to deliver it to me. Britain is a wonderful country.

  • @dreamslovesoul
    @dreamslovesoul2 жыл бұрын

    I dropped my phone in Odaiba a few years back. With the help of my friends, we were able to report it lost to the nearest police box with all the description of my phone and the case it was housed in. The phone was found and turned in a few days later, an hour before my flight back to my country. The police were kind enough to EMS back to me.

  • @newerakingdom7691
    @newerakingdom76912 жыл бұрын

    Many trips to Japan and had experience one circumstance myself where I lost my thing, and yes the support from everyone there was beyond amazing! Everyone did their best to help me out! I am still amazed till these days. Thank you.

  • @ne0wa
    @ne0wa Жыл бұрын

    I remember when I was in Kanazawa around the New Year's eve 2015-2016. I saw an iPad on a bench in a park. Right away I took it and returned it to a Koban (Police Box) which was surprisingly close even Kanazawa is not that big city. Quite soon I continued walking to the beautiful Kanazawa Castle Area, I saw one Asian guy very very worried and asking every person. I went to talk to the guy and he asked me that do have I seen his iPad. I said that I just took it to the Police Box. He was little bit confused that what is a Police Box and where is that kind of thing. In Japan is quite common to take the person to the place he/she is looking for. I took him to the Police Box and I still remember how happy he was when he realised that it is his iPad. I am Finnish but I have lived in Japan which thought me many times what of the bible has been talking for ages. "Treat people like you would want people to treat you". Now I am sitting at my home and crying because I have robbed few days ago in Spain. I wish that any country would be safe as Japan and more than everything, I want to move to Japan. Japan, please do not ever change.

  • @maichan000

    @maichan000

    Жыл бұрын

    Japanese police don't shoot people because of the color of their skin, they don't take bribes, they don't arrest people for complaining to the government, and Japan has less than 365 murders a year and over 100 million people in a world where one person a day is killed or not killed! How is this possible? Even though I am in Tokyo, murders in Ibaraki and Hokkaido are reported on TV. This is abnormal in a good way. Even in Kabukicho, only about one person is killed every five years, or even in the safest town in America, one person is killed a week...

  • @AhmadAshrinAbdulJalil
    @AhmadAshrinAbdulJalil2 жыл бұрын

    A friend of mine told me a funny story on 'lost and found' in Japan. A few years ago, he went to Japan for a Training Course along with participants from around the globe. After the first day, a participant from an African country decided that he did not want to bring back to his hotel room the printed daily course notes (he thought they would be too heavy to take back to his home country), so he purposely left them on the train when he disembarked. Unfortunately for him, the following day, somebody came knocking into the training room that he was in and returned the printed materials. Apparently the good samaritan saw his name and the address of the training centre written on the printed materials and decided to personally return them to the owner... Lol! Japan is just amazing...

  • @RmanceDawn
    @RmanceDawn2 жыл бұрын

    I forgot my backpack on the overhead storage on my way to Kyoto from Nara. I was freaking out badly cause my id, wallet and passport were in it. After speaking to the station master, who spoke little English but was so unbelievably patient and understanding to me, he was able to connect to the station master two stops away and hold the bag for me. I'll always be grateful for that. Even with the language barrier, everyone was so understanding, patient and helpful.

  • @DreiEUS
    @DreiEUS2 жыл бұрын

    I lost my wallet with my money and cards in Tokyo last Nov 2019.. At first I thought I was pickpocketed cause my bag was open, hated my vacation because of this.. Then I realized I might have lost it in an Ichiran Shinjuku and backtracked my way.. Asked the staff about my missing wallet and they asked for description including ID’s.. After a few mins, behold my wallet was there.. They said someone picked it up from my seat and gave it to the staff.. Really thankful for the staff and the person who returned my wallet.. Hoping we can go back to it after this pandemic.

  • @misaa4957
    @misaa49573 ай бұрын

    日本、不景気続いてるけど、でもこうして取り上げられるような点は変わらないでほしいなぁ… 恥のない生き方をしていきたい

  • @user-gn1ey1nt8b
    @user-gn1ey1nt8b2 жыл бұрын

    買ったばかりの最新機種のスマホを通勤中に落として、最寄り駅で無い事に気付いた。 急いで、きた道を引き返したけど無くて、ダメ元で近所の交番に行ったら届けられていた。お礼をしたくて、連絡先を聞こうとしたら、その方も通勤中で急いでるからと名も告げずに去っていったと。 そんな急いでる中、困ってる人が居るだろうとわざわざ届けてくれた事が本当に嬉しくて、感謝した。 自分もお金や物を拾った事あるけど、その度に交番に届けてる。

  • @kanonhosoya5874
    @kanonhosoya58742 жыл бұрын

    I grew up in Japan. After I left from Japan, I realized how much Japan is safe. People leave valuable staff such as purse and cell phone on the table when they go to restroom in the library and restaurant but no one steal it. I didn’t know that this is incredibly rare in the world. Thank you so much for civilized and hardworking people. I miss Japan so badly!!

  • @beginnerfx1784

    @beginnerfx1784

    2 жыл бұрын

    Where do you live now ?

  • @blueconversechucks
    @blueconversechucks2 жыл бұрын

    God bless Japan! This is simply amazing! This is why we have KZread. I even teach kids at my school that we can't prove who owns lost money in most cases. But that doesn't stop them from returning millions every year. Great country!

  • @boboboe5722
    @boboboe57222 жыл бұрын

    イタリアから来られていたご家族が滞在先の別の都市のホテル居室に忘れてしまっていて、対応して無事に届けられた事がありました。 他にもバス停に落ちていた財布を届けたことがありました。 微力ながら、お役に立ててよかったと思っています。

  • @ryanlindsay7360
    @ryanlindsay73602 жыл бұрын

    I left my Canon 5D Mark iii camera on a bench in a train station in Tokyo, forgot I had even put it down. I was trying to get my train pass out of my bag. Forgot to pick the camera back up again and boarded my train. Half way to my destination my heart sank when I realised I had left it there. Rushed back and to my absolutely blissful relief someone had handed it in to lost and found. Japan was awesome. Never felt safer in a foreign country.

  • @Im-fq1mn

    @Im-fq1mn

    Жыл бұрын

    I am glad that your lost and found items are back. But every one lose too much stuff😮

  • @ignorasmus
    @ignorasmus2 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful! Reminds me of the time I left my new and expensive phone on a German train. Someone deposited it to the railways lost & found department, they called the most frequently called number from my phone and I got it back within 24 hours!

  • @helgageraldine513
    @helgageraldine5132 жыл бұрын

    I once forgot my bag inside one of the toilet stalls in Kyoto Station. When I returned to get it as soon as I realized that I wasn't carrying my bag, just a few minutes later, it wasn't there anymore. I went to the station security to report and I was surprised to see that my bag was already handed to them. I got it after I showed them my wallet and passport inside. I was just relieved and happy that it happened in Japan and not elsewhere.

  • @emilydoran3506
    @emilydoran35062 жыл бұрын

    I lost a backpack with laptop, iPad, camera, gifts etc on a train in Tokyo. It was handed in that day and returned to me with everything still inside. Another reason to love Japan! Something like that would never happen where I live - you’d never see that stuff again lol

  • @anguyen1551
    @anguyen1551 Жыл бұрын

    I feel so sorry for my Japanese colleagues when I hosted their visit in the US. In just 2 weeks, some lost phones, cameras, and one lost both wallet and passport. And this happened even after I had warned them about the US. Unfortunately, when they visited various amusement parks or busy tourist spots, some became careless which was understandable, as they hardly ever had to worry about snatching and pick-pocketing in Japan. This video explains the culture shock when Japanese travel abroad.