Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Welcome To The Dollhouse: Japanese Men Are Finding 'TRUE LOVE' With Sex Dolls

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Jul, 2017 12:26 AM
    When the spark went out of Masayuki Ozaki’s marriage, he found an unusual outlet to plug the romantic void -- a silicone sex doll he swears is the love of his life.
     
     
    The life-size dummy, called Mayu, shares his bed under the same roof as Ozaki’s wife and teenage daughter in Tokyo, an arrangement that triggered angry rows before a delicate truce was finally declared. “After my wife gave birth we stopped having sex and I felt a deep sense of loneliness,” the 45-year-old physiotherapist told AFP in an interview.
     
     
    “But the moment I saw Mayu in the showroom, it was love at first sight,” blushed Ozaki, who takes his doll on dates in a wheelchair and dresses her in wigs, sexy clothes and jewellery. “My wife was furious when I first brought Mayu home. These days she puts up with it, reluctantly,” he added.
     
     
     
    “When my daughter realised it wasn’t a giant Barbie doll, she freaked out and said it was gross -- but now she’s old enough to share Mayu’s clothes.” Ozaki is one of an increasing number of Japanese men turning to rubber romance in a country that’s lost its mojo. He also admits to being turned off by human relationships.
     
     
    “Japanese women are cold-hearted,” he said while on a seaside stroll with his silicone squeeze. They’re very selfish. Men want someone to listen to them without grumbling when they get home from work,” Ozaki said, adding, “Whatever problems I have, Mayu is always there waiting for me. I love her to bits and want to be with her forever. I can’t imagine going back to a human being. I want to be buried with her and take her to heaven.”
     
     
    Removable head
     
     
    Around 2,000 of the life-like dolls -- which cost from $6,000 and come with adjustable fingers, removable head and genitals -- are sold each year in Japan, according to industry insiders.
     
     
    “Technology has come a long way since those nasty inflatable dolls in the 1970s,” noted Hideo Tsuchiya, managing director of doll maker Orient Industry. “They look incredibly real now and it feels like you’re touching human skin. More men are buying them because they feel they can actually communicate with the dolls,” he explained.
     
     
    Popular with disabled customers and widowers, as well as mannequin fetishists, some men use dolls to avoid heartache. “Human beings are so demanding,” insisted 62-year-old Senji Nakajima, who tenderly bathes his rubber girlfriend Saori, has framed photos of her on his wall and even takes her skiing and surfing.
     
     
     
     
    “People always want something from you -- like money or commitment,” he complained. “My heart flutters when I come home to Saori,” added the married father-of-two as he picnicked with his plastic partner. “She never betrays me, she makes my worries melt away.”
     
     
     
    Nakajima’s relationship with Saori has divided his family, but the Tokyo-born businessman refuses to give her up. “My son accepts it, my daughter can’t,” said Nakajima, whose wife has banned Saori from the family home.
     
     
    “I’ll never date a real woman again -- they’re heartless,” he insisted back at his cluttered Tokyo apartment, sandwiched between two dolls from previous dalliances and a headless rubber torso. Reconciliation with his estranged wife is unlikely, admits Nakajima. “I wouldn’t be able to take a bath with Saori, or snuggle up with her and watch TV,” he said, slipping the doll into some racy purple lingerie. “I don’t want to destroy what I have with her.”
     
     
    To me, she’s human
     
     
    While the pillow talk is decidedly one-way, Nakajima believes he has discovered true love, saying: “I’d never cheat on her, even with a prostitute, because to me she’s human.” As Japan struggles with a plummeting birthrate, a growing number of men -- known as ‘herbivores’ -- are turning their backs on love and traditional masculine values for a quiet, uncompetitive life.
     
     
    “In the future I think more and more guys will choose relationships with dolls,” said Yoshitaka Hyodo, whose home is an Aladdin’s Cave of dolls, kitsch toys and Japanese erotica. “It’s less stress and they complain a lot less than women,” he added.
     
     
    Hyodo, a military buff who lives alone but has an understanding girlfriend, owns more than 10 life-size dummies -- many of which he dresses in combat uniform to play out wartime fantasies. But he claims to have cut down on doll sex.
     
     
    “It’s more about connecting on an emotional level for me now,” said the 43-year-old blogger, whose curiosity was piqued at a young age when he found a charred mannequin in the street. “People might think I’m weird, but it’s no different than collecting sports cars. I don’t know how much I’ve spent but it’s cheaper than a Lamborghini,” he said.
     
     
    Future doll users can expect more bang for their buck as researchers work to develop next-generation sexbots able to talk, laugh and even simulate an orgasm. But for now, Ozaki’s long-suffering wife Riho tries hard to ignore the rubber temptress silently taunting her from her husband’s bedroom.
     
     
    “I just get on with the housework,” she sniffed. “I make the dinner, I clean, I do the washing. I choose sleep over sex.”

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Universe Not Expanding At Accelerating Rate: Study

    Universe Not Expanding At Accelerating Rate: Study
    Challenging a standard cosmological concept, a team of researchers led by an Indian-origin scientist has found that the universe may not actually be expanding at an accelerating pace as was previously believed.

    Universe Not Expanding At Accelerating Rate: Study

    Expat Voting Ban Legit, Liberal Government Argues Despite Promised Change

    Expat Voting Ban Legit, Liberal Government Argues Despite Promised Change
    TORONTO — Allowing long-term Canadian expats to vote in federal elections is not a Constitutional requirement but a policy decision that Parliament has the right to make, the government plans to tell the country's top court.

    Expat Voting Ban Legit, Liberal Government Argues Despite Promised Change

    University Groups Try To Stave Off Offensive Costumes In Lead-up To Halloween

    TORONTO — Geishas are out. Feathered headdresses are forbidden. And if you're planning to wear a Bill Cosby or Caitlyn Jenner costume, you may not be welcome at your Halloween party of choice.

    University Groups Try To Stave Off Offensive Costumes In Lead-up To Halloween

    World's Most Expensive Potato Chips Cost $11 A Piece, Come in Boxes of Five

    World's Most Expensive Potato Chips Cost $11 A Piece, Come in Boxes of Five
    In an attempt to create a special snack to go with their high quality beer, Sweetish brewery St. Erik's has created the world's most expensive potato chips.

    World's Most Expensive Potato Chips Cost $11 A Piece, Come in Boxes of Five

    Chinese Restaurant Adopts 'Pay What You Want' Policy, Loses $15,000 in a Week

    Chinese Restaurant Adopts 'Pay What You Want' Policy, Loses $15,000 in a Week
    A naive restaurant owner in Guiyang, China, who thought that appealing to people's inherent goodness would be a good way to attract customers to his new karst cave-themed restaurant, managed to lose over 100,000 RMB in just seven days.

    Chinese Restaurant Adopts 'Pay What You Want' Policy, Loses $15,000 in a Week

    World's Most Exclusive Social Network Charges Rich Snobs $1,000 a Month

    World's Most Exclusive Social Network Charges Rich Snobs $1,000 a Month
    Snobby rich kids sick of sharing the social media space with plebs can now sign up for the "world's most exclusive social network". It's even named after them and only costs $1,000 a month. What's not to like, right?

    World's Most Exclusive Social Network Charges Rich Snobs $1,000 a Month