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Shigeki (Shiba) Matsumoto and Koji Suzuki have been sharing their lives as a gay couple: first as boyfriends, then husbands, then fathers. Winning hearts and minds due to their authenticity, love and power to engage audiences on TikTok, YouTube and Instagram, Shiba and Koji are defiant in the face of the stigma that LGBTQ+ people continue to face in Japan. 30歳のライアン(仮名)はこう言う「「ゲイコミュニティに要らない」と思われた時が「ダディー」と呼ばれる時だね。 年をとって、若い人たちからは、お金の出所としか見られなくなるよ。 そんなこと本当に起こるとは思ってなかったんだけど、僕にも実際に起きたんだ! ライアンは続けて自身の経験を話す。 「僕が29歳だった頃、22歳の男の子とネットで出会ったんだ。 真剣な関係じゃなくて、お互いヤリ目だったよ。 2週間ぐらいやりとりして、会うことになったんだけど、会う前にまた年齢を聞かれたんだ。 ちょうど1週間前に誕生日だったから「30だよ」と答えたら「マジ? 30歳なの? 30歳はちょっと無理だわ」って言われちゃって。.

gay-daddyさんのブログです。 最近の記事は「すごいぞ! バレーボール男子日本代表! (画像あり)」です。.

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titles for Japan Gay Film: sai made Dotei Da to Mahotsukai ni Nareru rashii, Valentine's Day / Rokkaku, Tsuge & Minato, Forever Summer, Asymmetry, Ai no Kotodama, Ai no Kotodama 2: Sekai no Hate Made, Same Difference, Love Stage!! and A Touch of Fever. Well, perhaps if the story had been more rooted in reality we could have seen that happen. As it turns out, pre-modern Japan was exceptionally accepting, even encouraging, of male homosexuality and bisexuality.

Much like that time we found out that bushido is actually modern-day made-up bullshit , this might surprise you.

Daddy old man. 44, likes

To be honest, it surprised me, too. I came upon this information while researching an article still to come about the current state of the LGBT community in Japan. My hypothesis was that I would find my answers in Japan's ancient and medieval past, assuming that Japan would be like the West in this regard.

I would point to the Japanese version of Judeo-Christian anti-homosexuality beliefs and call it a day. I thought it would be easy. As is often the case, it turns out I was completely wrong. Japan's pre-modern society was one that not only tolerated homosexuality and bisexuality, but celebrated and even idealized it. In fact, it appeared to be the rule, rather than the exception, for a majority of Japan's pre-modern history.

How in the world did Japan go from celebrating homosexual lifestyles to being in denial about LGBT issues even existing? To understand that, we must traverse the annals of history. Let's go back to the very beginning, right at the moment when Japan was created by the gods. Japan's first main religion, Shintoism, is said to have been established as far back as 1, BC. Both relate the creation myth of Japan. In addition to this, the Nihon Shoki records some of Japan's early history.

Nothing in the Kojiki or Nihon Shoki mention anything about homosexuality, unless you count the fact that the first three generations of deities described in the Nihon Shoki are all male one Tokugawa-era author joked that the conception and birthing of these generations must have been logistically difficult. But, maybe this is the point.

There is no overt approval of homosexual behavior, but there is no condemnation, either. Let's step back a moment, however, and think about what the Kojiki and the Nihon Shoki say about sex. The basic question we're faced with is: does Shintoism view sex as inherently good or inherently evil? Part of the answer lies in the Kojiki —here's an excerpt in which the deities Izanagi and Izanami create the islands of Japan by, well, totally doing it.

She replied, saying: "My body, formed though it be formed, has one place which is formed insufficiently. Then Izanagi-no-Mikoto said: "My body, formed though it be formed, has one place which is formed to excess. Therefore, I would like to take that place in my body which is formed to excess and insert it into that place in your body which is formed insufficiently, and thus give birth to the land.

How would this be? In the Shinto creation story, sex precedes the birth of a nation and her people. In Judeo-Christian religions, the acknowledgement of human sexuality and their banishment went hand in hand. It's not surprising, I suppose, that nearly every mention of the word "sex" in the Christian bible is accompanied by ideas of punishment or shame. I'm not saying that one religion is better than the other, or that either is "right" or "wrong".

I'm simply trying to give you context for what's to come.