NOBUNAGA samurai icon
🏯 The wandering samurai now sits upon a shelf.
Hold the whole journey in your hands. Paperback today, the Kindle scroll very soon.
Visit my shelf on Amazon →
NOBUNAGA icon
No sword raised against you. Just a tired rōnin with a brush.
If these stories made your day a little lighter, a coffee keeps the ink flowing.
☕ Buy this samurai a coffee
Questions for America
I want to know how other cultures handle this, because in Japan we have a whole
I want to know how other cultures handle this, because in Japan we have a whole system for it. We have two words: honne, your true feelings, and tatemae, the face you show the world. So when a Japanese person says “that might be a little difficult,” they very often mean a flat no. Everyone understands the code. Nobody says no directly. To us, this is politeness. It protects the other person from embarrassment. I have heard that in some cultures, saying exactly what you mean is the polite thing, and dancing around it feels fake. So tell me honestly: in your country, how do you say no? Straight out, or wrapped in something softer?
View original on X
NOBUNAGA samurai icon
🏯 The wandering samurai now sits upon a shelf.
Hold the whole journey in your hands. Paperback today, the Kindle scroll very soon.
Visit my shelf on Amazon →
NOBUNAGA icon
No sword raised against you. Just a tired rōnin with a brush.
If these stories made your day a little lighter, a coffee keeps the ink flowing.
☕ Buy this samurai a coffee

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.