Katimi Ai Katayama | 片山カティーミ愛
“Living in a more multicultural country than Japan, do you still feel different from the majority?”
日本より多様な文化を持つ国に住んでいた場合、それでも自分は一般の人とは違うと感じると思いますか。
Please share your answer in the comment area below. どうぞページの下部に質問にお答え下さい。
Father | Nigerian |
Mother | Japanese |
Age | 26 |
Born in | Japan |
Lived in | Japan |
Speaks Japanese | ⚫⚫⚫⚫⚫ |
Reading and Writing | ⚫⚫⚫⚫⚫ |
Speaks | Japanese - English |
父 | ナイジェリア人 |
母 | 日本人 |
年齢 | 26歳 |
出生地 | 日本 |
今まで住んだ国 | 日本 |
日本語会話のレベル | ⚫⚫⚫⚫⚫ |
日本語読み書きのレベル | ⚫⚫⚫⚫⚫ |
話せる言語 | 日本語|英語 |
Not especially cause of culture or ethnic background. The US is more multicultural and multiethnic that Japan but in the end we are all humans. Being different isn’t a bad thing though, variety is the spice of life.
I live in Ireland which is not so multicultural so I do still feel different at times. Not as much as I do in Japan though because appearance-wise I blend in more here. But I do always wonder what it would be like to live somewhere like London.
I’m half Japanese and mixed with white and latin. I will say I feel Japanese more than white. But I do look more of a whiter complexion.:(
I speak more in Japanese than most hapa/ Hafu people who don’t live in Japan.
As a quarter Japanese-Indonesian-Chinese-Dutch I grew up in Indonesia, and I don’t feel different. My background is what makes me, me.
I do and I don’t. I feel different from a lot of people, but not because I’m half Japanese.