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Highlights:
What clearly distinguishes Japan from the West is that Japanese men are not so bound by love and intimacy in their relationships with women. That is a traditional Japanese characteristic.
The traditional view of sexuality in Japan is, to put it simply, that love and sex dont go together. In other words, it is ok to have sex without love. This is considered natural in Japanese culture.
Japanese men are said to be married twice, once to their wives, and again to the company.
"Even the vibration of my mobile phone is enough to set me off," she says. "My friend said there's something called Iku Iku byo (Cum Cum Disease). I guess I've got that."
"We'd only need to stare in each other's eyes and they'd start wiggling about, gripping tightly onto whatever was around them and their bodies would start to shake."
'Will Tokyo' is a love hotel in the capital that has the perfect answer following a session of breathtaking sex -- pure oxygen pumps, according to Spa! (11/14).
And if speed is your thing, it's hard to go past Room 505 at the Towers Hotel in Osaka, which boasts of having its own go-kart and 3-meter-square circular track to allow for a buzz between bonks.
"...you need to think a bit. Tell a woman who likes movies, for instance, that you guys can go to a room with a 100-inch projector but it's in a love hotel and she'll be more likely to go there because it seems the reason for doing so is to watch a movie and not just bonk,"
"During the 20 minute session, the trip takes you from Ikebukuro to Meguro (about one-third of the Yamanote Line's 60-minute complete loop). With each stop, the doors of the carriage open and the girls get on and off the train. We use actual recordings of the conductors' announcements and LCD screens outside the window display actual footage of the trip along the Yamanote Line," Train Cafe's operator tells Weekly Playboy. "We cannot be beaten when it comes to reality."
"I loath real chikan. But if I'm attacked by one, I'm too scared to do anything and just shut up. I really, really hate it," 20-year-old Rin tells the weekly. "But here, all the customers are members. You know you're going to be felt up and it's a good place to make friends, so I enjoy it."