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If there is no beauty gene, why are Japanese women regarded as beautiful by so many worldwide? How do they manage to look 10, 20, or more years younger than their actual age?To get more news about 国产全黄a一级毛片视频, you can visit our official website.

Japanese women are more interested in skin and hair care than color cosmetics and fragrances. According to a study by EU-Japan Center for Industrial Cooperation, skincare and hair care products comprise nearly 2/3 of the Japanese cosmetics market. Fragrances stand at the very bottom at less than 1%.

Japanese women take care of their skin and hair—regularly and meticulously. They eat right, dress well, and don't overdo makeup either. To top it all, they are graceful and well-mannered. They prefer not to show off and like to be appreciated rather than noticed.
Proper cleansing with a good facial cleanser is where skincare begins. Natural soaps such as Artemisia (yomogi) or activated charcoal (sumi) are excellent choices. Always wash your hands before cleansing the skin to avoid transferring germs and bacteria. Treat cleansing as a gentle massage using fingertips in soft, circular motions. Use lukewarm water; hot water over-strips skin's essential oils and opens pores, causing dryness. Pat dry with a clean, soft towel. Washing the face twice a day is sufficient (or only once a day for very dry or sensitive skin). It is essential to clean the face if it becomes sweaty because perspiration irritates the skin and can trigger various skin conditions, including itchiness, breakouts, and rashes.

Unferined Rice bran oil is a fast-absorbing, gentle, effective, and non-comedogenic moisturizer. Since it does not undergo high-heat or chemical processing, it retains exceptionally high levels of vitamins E complex (tocotrienol), B1, B3, and the anti-aging Gamma-oryzanol antioxidant. Rice bran oil improves texture, diminishes wrinkles, evens tone, and reduces blemishes. Its natural plant Squalene forms a protective barrier against moisture loss and keeps skin soft and supple. Rice bran oil is also excellent for removing mascara, eye shadow, lipstick, and even waterproof makeup.

For centuries, Japanese women have used rice bran (nuka or komenuka) to beautify and maintain their much-admired complexion. Shiro nuka tones, hydrates, improves skin's texture and diminishes wrinkles and fine lines. It contains high levels of vitamins E complex (tocotrienol), B1 (thiamin), B3 (niacin), plus a potent anti-aging antioxidant called Gamma-oryzanol. There are a variety of ways to use Shiro nuka. The traditional Japanese way is to apply it with a "sarashi-cotton" applicator bag. It also mixes well with water to make a brightening face wash. There is a detailed page on our site for shiro nuka step by step how to use instructions.

Exfoliating once or twice a week can do wonders for the skin. Proper exfoliation removes accumulated dead surface skin cells, which make it look dull, and promotes cell regeneration. While abrasive or AHA (alpha hydroxy acid) type chemical exfoliants can be effective but harsh for delicate skin, natural enzymes in azuki beans offer a significantly gentler alternative.

Matcha and yomogi masks are rich in anti-aging antioxidants and contain tannins which lift the skin and give it a smoother appearance. Mix five grams with four tsp of warm water. Apply to face and neck in thin layers. Leave for fifteen minutes, rinse and moisturize.
freeamfva Oct 13 '22 · Tags: best film
SHIROI, Chiba Prefecture--A woman gets a haircut here and then reports doing so to the local authorities, as all women must, along with the reason for altering her appearance.To get more news about 精品国产, you can visit our official website.

Her reason better be good, or she'll face punishment for transgressing societal norms since only men are allowed to cut their hair freely.

The scene is recorded in a newly found document nearly 150 years old that one resident submitted to justify her decision to deviate from her standard chignon bun hairstyle.

The document turned up during a recent study of archives kept at the residence of the Inoue family, one of the oldest households in Shiroi city's Yata district. The study was carried out by the Shiroi municipal board of education.

The Meiji government in 1871 issued an edict allowing men to freely choose their own hairstyles, letting them decide whether to continue to knot their top-hair, a practice dating back centuries, or cut their hair short.

The order was designed to promote the Westernization of Japan just after it emerged from more than 200 years of national isolation under the feudal rule of the Tokugawa Shogunate.

But women were not permitted to switch to short hair without a convincing reason and had to maintain an elaborately done chignon bun otherwise.

Women were punished if they failed to report they had changed their hairstyles to local authorities.

Atsushi Totani, a member of the Shiroi board of education, hailed the document's discovery as a testament to an era when women had limited options.

“It is a valuable find that illustrates the prevailing value of the time that women should adhere to the traditional notion of beauty,” he said.

In the paper dated Oct. 25, 1876, the woman’s father-in-law and other relatives reported that she had her hair cut in July as part of a religious ritual to pray that she would recover from a lengthy illness.

The document is believed to be a copy of one submitted to prefectural authorities, given that it bears no seal.

After the 1871 edict was issued, a number of women, in addition to men covered under it, also rushed to have their hair cut short in order to be freed from the burden of maintaining the chignon.

It reportedly required half a day for women to complete washing their hair because the chignon was firmly constructed using a large amount of oil.

Many women at the time were lucky if they could wash their hair once a month, even in summer. As a result, it was not uncommon for them to develop headaches due to the foul smell of their hair.
freeamfva Oct 13 '22 · Tags: best film
Since coming here in 2008, I’ve gotten to have some downright fascinating discussions about Japanese culture and why certain aspects of the culture are the way they are. A subject that’s been discussed and rehashed, time and time again, is Japanese beauty. To get more news about 久久精品国产久精国, you can visit our official website.

Before you call me a chauvinist and put my head on a spike, please hear me out. I’ve had these conversations with more Japanese women than I have with Japanese men.

It’s intriguing to hear how the conversation on “good looks” varies from person to person, from men to women and from country to country. Beauty is a topic that pervades every culture and society.

Whenever I overhear, eavesdrop on, Japanese conversations about aesthetics, my curiosity always gets the better of me. While minor things differ from conversation to conversation, some features (whether it was a man or a woman talking) are mentioned over and over again.
1. LIGHT/WHITE SKIN

Ayase Haruka is seen as one of the most beautiful actresses/models in Japan. She is known for having beautiful skin. I think I just drooled a bit...

While smooth, clear skin is considered a fairly universal standard of beauty, in Japan it seems the lighter the skin tone the more beautiful it is.

The Japanese lighter skin phenomenon is a true mystery to me (said the brownest man in the room).

Could it be historically linked to Japanese geisha? The 19th century, female entertainers who donned kimonos, white makeup and red lipstick accents; the former pinnacle of Japanese beauty and elegance.
2. THE HIGH-BRIDGED NOSE
I remember having to get a CAT scan once at the Tsukuba University Hospital and as I was about the go in, one of the younger female nurses/trainees got super close to my face and told me “Sugoi! Hana ga takai.” She was admiring the bridge of my nose. I found this pretty interesting because in the U.S. I’ve gotten the occasional “big nose” comment, which I never really minded so much.

What makes a high bridge nose more desirable in Japan? If we just look at Western vs. Eastern cosmetic surgery patterns, we can get a bit of a hint. It’s always fascinating to find out what kind of cosmetic surgery people have done to make themselves more “beautiful.”
3. SMALL/SLIM FACE
After one particular Golden Week holiday (one of the important holidays in Japan), I remember asking a Japanese friend how his vacation was. He had taken a trip to Hokkaido and began to tell me about how good the food was and how beautiful the women were. Curious, I asked him why the women in Hokkaido were so beautiful? “They have beautiful, white skin and slim faces,” he replied. Though it wasn’t an incredibly in-depth discussion about what makes a women pretty here in Japan, I never forgot what he said.
4. THIN/PETITE
Do you know the expression “ぼんきゅぼん (Bon Kyu Bon)?” Well in Japanese it’s kind of like onomatopoeia but not exactly. This expression is used when talking about a woman’s body shape. The first “bon” symbolizes a large bust, “kyu” means having a small waist, and “bon” means having a large curve at hips. Bon kyu bon is the Japanese equivalent of an hourglass figure.
freeamfva Oct 13 '22 · Tags: best film
naomi Koshi remembers handing out flyers outside a train station during her second mayoral campaign in 2016, when an older man walked up to her and said, “You are too strong for a woman,” and kicked her. She was shocked; she’d already spent four years serving as Japan’s youngest female mayor—one of just a few female mayors in the country—and ultimately won her second term. “I felt that sometimes people hate strong women,” she says, reflecting on a cultural dynamic that, by holding back half of its population, also holds back Japan. Koshi was determined to help change it.To get more news about 日本三级在线全部电影网站, you can visit our official website.

Japan is one of the world’s richest, most advanced societies; it’s the third largest economy, beating out countries with much larger populations. But its own population is shrinking, and the nation’s economic growth has been stagnant. Household income is down. Fumio Kishida, who became Prime Minister in late 2021, has promised to usher in an era of “new capitalism” to drive faster economic growth and higher wages, but it’s not yet clear how he will address what Koshi believes to be the linchpin of the problem: Japanese women are woefully underrepresented in business.

Koshi, a lawyer who now sits on the boards of two companies, has seen this firsthand. Only 8% of company board members are women, and they hold less than 15% of managerial roles—one of the lowest rates among the world’s large economies. (In the U.S., about 30% of S&P 500 board directors are women.) The country is ranked 120 of 156 nations in the World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Index. An April 2019 Goldman Sachs report found that closing the gender employment gap could lift Japan’s GDP by 10%, and if women’s working hours rose to the average of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, the boost might be as big as 15%. Now Japan’s main business association, the Keidanren, has called for 30% of board members and corporate executives to be women by 2030.

“One of the reasons Japanese companies, the Japanese economy, hasn’t been good for 30 years is [the] decisionmaking process. They’ve been doing the same thing for 30 years,” Koshi says. “We need different viewpoints. Not only women, but also young people, foreigners, LGBTQ people. The important thing is to diversify the people making decisions.”

So last year, with fellow lawyer Kaoru Matsuzawa, Koshi founded OnBoard, a company that trains and places women in corporate board positions across Japan, with a focus on companies that plan to IPO soon. Her first seminar drew more than 65 attendees, and she says OnBoard has now trained more than 230 women. But to meet the Keidanren goal, Koshi says, Japan will need about 9,000 new female directors within the decade. In a 2021 podcast interview, she didn’t mince words: “I have to work very hard.”

Koshi’s work on gender equality began more than a decade ago. After attending Harvard Law School, she worked as an attorney in New York, where she began noticing the different ways women in business were treated. She was shocked when a male colleague told her he was planning to take paternity leave, and it made her wonder why women in Japan often had to decide between having children or careers. (Environment Minister Shinjiro Koizumi’s decision to take a 12-day paternity leave in 2020 made headlines in Japan.)

Japanese men do fewer hours of domestic work than those in any other wealthy nation, and a culture of long workdays means Japanese women are often forced to leave their careers when they have children. The cultural sentiment was underscored last year when the head of the Tokyo Olympics organizing committee said women talk too much in meetings. (“If we increase the number of female board members, we have to make sure their speaking time is restricted somewhat; they have difficulty finishing, which is annoying,” Yoshiro Mori reportedly said.) In 2018, top ruling party politician Koichi Hagiuda said raising infants and toddlers is a job for mothers. He’s now the Minister of Economy, Trade, and Industry.
freeamfva Oct 13 '22 · Tags: best film

In her 2006 book Beauty Up: Exploring Contemporary Japanese Body Aesthetics, anthropology professor Laura Miller describes her experience of teaching students about Japanese beauty standards. When she shows them photos of Japanese pop stars, who have large eyes and dyed hair, her students ask, “why do they want to look like Americans?” Indeed, it is easy to interpret certain Japanese beauty standards as being Western imports. Pale skin is most common among people of European ancestry, and a desire to have larger eyes can similarly be seen as a desire to look more white. However, these beauty standards can be traced back to premodern times. To get more news about 黄色大片, you can visit our official website.

As Miller points out, there are a wide variety of eye shapes in East Asia, and many Japanese people are born with double eyelids. Over time, this variety of eye shape became naturalized as a beauty standard. Double eyelids have become “average” in Japan, and those without them often perceive themselves to be lacking this normality. Advertisements for double eyelid cosmetics and surgery rarely, if ever, market their products and services as helping Japanese people look more white. In fact, surgery that makes eyes look more Western is typically disliked for looking “too obviously artificial” (Miller 2006: 120). Those who use double eyelid cosmetics and surgery report wanting larger eyes and a double eyelid, but eyes that still look Japanese. Likewise, the idealization of pale, unblemished skin can be traced back to the Heian Era, when court ladies were expected to have pale skin, round faces, and darkened teeth.

The Dark Side of Beauty Standards
While beauty standards are associated with fun, frivolous things like makeup and clothes shopping, they can have a detrimental impact on society. Although the beauty standard of having pale skin can be traced back centuries and isn’t based on a desire to look whiter, it becomes inextricably linked to global discourses of anti-blackness and racism today. In addition, it’s common for larger bodied people to be made fun of. Bullying, combined with the overwhelming promotion of diets and get-slim products, creates a perfect environment for disordered eating behaviors to take hold. The rates of clinically diagnosed eating disorders are lower in Japan than in the United States or Europe. However, experts believe that eating disorders in Japan are largely underreported. There are stereotypes that Japanese people are naturally thin, and being slim is viewed as ideal, even by medical professionals. Furthermore, the Japanese medical system is poorly equipped to treat eating disorders. These factors make people suffering from them less likely to seek or receive medical care.
Not everyone aspires to attain the beauty standards upheld by the majority of Japanese society. The thin, pale skinned woman seen in mainstream media isn’t everyone’s ideal body type. Subcultures are a common site where alternative standards of beauty can be seen. There are many different fashion subcultures, such as Harajuku, Dekora, and varieties of Lolita subcultures. Each of these subcultures idealizes a different look. For example, the Dekora subculture is defined by large accessories and bright colors. Subcultures provide an outlet for those who are frustrated with dominant Japanese beauty standards. They allow those who feel bored with mainstream fashion or like they can’t just fit it to explore alternative aesthetics. That being said, subcultures are about more than aesthetics. They provide a sense of community and allow people to bond over shared interests. If you find mainstream Japanese beauty standards to be stifling, don’t fret. You might be able to find a subculture where you can connect with like minded people and freely express your fashion style.

freeamfva Oct 13 '22 · Tags: best film

Japanese beauty queens are a sight to behold in a culture that has a strong preference for females. They possess the ideal physiques, gorgeous looks, a plethora of knowledge, and most importantly, a womanly character. To get more news about 国产免费人成视频, you can visit our official website.

They have a high global standing and are frequently asked to take part in various international endeavors. The top 5 most beautiful women in Japan as of 2022 are listed below.

1. Ayumi Hamasaki

The list of the most attractive women in Japan is headed by Ayumi Hamasaki. She can be at the top of the list of successful musicians in addition to being at the top. This beauty queen is a tireless icon for the vast majority in her country and on platforms throughout the world.

2. Kyoko Fukada

Kyoko, often known by her screen name FukaKyon, is ranked second among the sexiest Japanese women. She is a number one vocalist with the nicest curves to display on stage. She once took up the best actress prize at the Yokohama Film Festival.
3. Mikie Hara

Mikie Hara is an exquisite beauty queen with the sweetest face and the most beautiful curved body. She comes in third place among Japan’s most attractive women. She is a huge hit with fans in every production in which she appears.

4. Masami Nagasawa

Masami Nagasawa is a skilled actress who possesses the charm to keep viewers’ eyes glued to the screen.
5. Nozomi Sasaki

In Japan, Nozomi is a true symbol of beauty. Beginning her career at 14 years old, she spent her early years exclusively modeling for fashion and cosmetics. She was the ideal option for the designers and producers who took to the spotlights to ensure she served their purpose.

Would you like to meet these most beautiful Japanese women once in your life? If yes, what will you say as your first line to them? You can share in the comment section!

freeamfva Oct 13 '22 · Tags: best film

Crime scene photos, shared widely on social media, show a young woman seated on the lobby floor of the apartment in Tokyo’s Shinjuku district, while a man lay bleeding behind her, reportedly with his stomach sliced open.To get more news about 亚洲中文字幕波多野结衣, you can visit our official website.

The woman is seen holding a mobile phone with one bloodied hand, and a cigarette in the other, ignoring the police officer who is crouched down in front of her.

According to Fuji News Network, Takaoka, 21, intended to kill Phoenix Luna then herself, in a sadistic murder-suicide plot.“I did not want to go anywhere, so I sat down at the outside staircase,” she reportedly told police of the May 24 incident.

“I did not call emergency services because I intended to die after watching him die from the stabbing.

“My plan was to first kill him and then I thought about committing suicide. Since I loved him so much, I just couldn’t help it. After killing [him], I, too, wanted to die,” the Tokyo Reporter quoted Takaoka as saying.The woman’s nonchalant reaction to the alleged murder attempt has given rise to a morbid following, with many believing Takaoka is a real-life incarnation of a yandere anime character.

Yandere usually take the form of a sweet, beautiful young woman, who suddenly becomes aggressive and often turns to homicidal violence in her pursuit of love.Crime scene pictures and media coverage of Takaoka’s smiling arrest pictures are the subject of numerous memes and fan art from people calling her “too beautiful”.

The victim purportedly survived the alleged attack, with Takaoka sharing a post on Instagram which she claims was from him bragging about being alive.

freeamfva Oct 13 '22 · Tags: best film
in late 2020 Su Min left her unhappy marriage behind and hit the road. The 58-year-old retiree had raised her family and done her duties, and her husband, she says, was treating her badly. So she studied online videos about road trips and set off across China alone in a VW hatchback with her pension and a rooftop tent.To get more news about 免费一级毛片, you can visit our official website.
As she travelled, Su filmed and posted videos and diaries of her journey, speaking candidly of her dissatisfying life of housework. She also marvelled at the beauty of the country she was finally exploring, and made new friends.

Su built a following of millions and regularly trended on social media, featuring in a Net-A-Porter advertisement for International Women’s Day.As Su travelled and her fame grew, many women saw her as an accidental feminist icon, for rejecting the traditional expectations of a housewife and grandmother and taking control of her life. She shyly dismisses the moniker and says she’s not that famous, but enjoys how often she is stopped on the street, and how older women in particular have related to her story.

“As an ordinary housewife, someone who no one pays attention to on the street, to now have a lot of people see me and recognise me, this means there is an improvement in my life ,” Su tells the Guardian via Zoom. “I am at least acknowledged, and I think a life in which you are acknowledged is really good.”

Su had married in her early 20s. After growing up in Tibet and moving to Henan after high school she married after meeting her future husband just a few times. She says the marriage soon became unhappy, but she didn’t leave, fearing the strong social stigma around divorces.Change came in 2019 when Su saw an online video about someone living what has been popularised in the west as “van life”, and made a decision: when the grandchildren she was helping to care for entered kindergarten, she would leave, and she has barely looked back since.

“I met many like-minded travel pals, and fans who like me, so my life is wonderful on the road,” Su says. “I am very fulfilled, and so there is no feeling of loneliness or discomfort. On the road, my friends keep me company.”

Along her journey she upgraded the hatchback to a campervan. “I finally have my own home,” she told viewers in one post. “In the past, many things don’t belong to me in my family. There was not my name on those things. But my name is finally on this van now.”

Last month, after two years, 80,000 kilometres, 10 provinces and 200 cities, Su came home.

She returned to Henan province to spend the mid-autumn festival with her family, and to tell her husband she wanted a divorce. Su says her husband made no contact with her the entire time she was away.
freeamfva Oct 13 '22 · Tags: best film
A group of feminists are handing out free and discounted sex toys to women in an effort to help sexually liberate them.To get more news about 性刺激的欧美三级视频, you can visit our official website.

SexyLiberation was created by a number of women who work and live together in Indiana with the hope of not only normalising women’s sexual heath and exploration, but promoting it too.

“For most of my life, women’s pleasure has been a topic that was either ignored or treated as taboo. This became especially clear to my friends and I during school, where in sexual education courses, female orgasm was never once discussed,” Jannet of SexyLiberation said.

The friends – who are all software developers – had endless conversations on the topic before deciding to try to make a change.SexyLiberation offers an array of sexy toys to choose from and there’s no need to worry, all the orders are shipped in discreet packaging.

The website reads: “Many people don’t have access to – or haven’t been exposed to – the exciting world of sexual exploration, we want to help people, especially women, by being a stepping stone.

“Personal experimentation with sex aids can help women discover and embrace their own sources of pleasure.”We've been bombarded by emails from people who've read about SexyLiberation online and are excited about our initiative,” Jannet said.

“They almost always tell us they are thrilled with, and grateful for, the accessibility and affordability of sex toys at SexyLiberation – with people loving the free items!”

Jannet said they also get lots of emails telling them people appreciate someone is doing something to normalise and promote women's sexual health.
freeamfva Oct 13 '22 · Tags: best film
1. Maxi Pads
"Maxi-pads are the staple of the prison infrastructure," Kate Dailey writes in a Newsweek review of Piper Kerman's "Orange Is The New Black." Dailey explains, "One inmate told Kerman she 'used to make dildos out of a spork, a maxi-pad, and a finger from a rubber glove!'"To get more news about 黄色电影网站, you can visit our official website.
“They make dildos with [maxi pads],” former inmate Michelle Vaughn told The Cut, in an interview about her time spent at the Danbury federal correctional institution. “[They] roll them up, put them in a glove.”

2. Compacted Feces
In a Reddit thread entitled, "Prison/Jail guards of reddit, what's the weirdest #censored# you've seen while walking past a cell on your patrol?" poster sluuuurp replied, "I've seen people using a dildo made of dried compacted poop."
3. Soap
Women have also said they've fashioned dildos out of soap bars. One formerly incarcerated woman described her experience on her YouTube channel.While she said she didn't personally make or use a DIY dildo, she reported that her fellow inmates melted down soap in arts and crafts classes and molded them into dildos of various sizes and sold them along with jewelry and other items.

4. Produce
Good Prisoner, a database of prisoners seeking pen pals, reports that women's prisons often require that tubular vegetables like bananas, cucumbers, and sausages be chopped to prevent women from making them into dildos.

5. Snack Food
In a Reddit Ask Me Anything thread, an anonymous guard at a maximum security women's prison posted that she found "a monstrously huge dildo made from cloth, a pringles can, and newspapers."
freeamfva Oct 13 '22 · Tags: best film
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