This article was originally published on Lizanest.com

Japan redefines Christmas with KFC dinners, features high-tech toilets, and equips cars with live TV tuners. It hosts festivals where crying babies bring good fortune; even restaurants are dedicated entirely to canned food. Japan offers a cultural experience like no other, blending futuristic innovation with centuries-old customs. Whether bathing in ramen broth or revering lucky black cats, the country embraces the unusual with charm and precision. This seamless fusion of tradition and modernity makes Japan uniquely captivating.
#1: Monetizing Affection in Japan
In the neon heart of Tokyo’s Akihabara district, a peculiar response to loneliness took shape in 2012: Soineya, the “cuddle café.” As fewer young adults pursue romantic relationships in Japan, this shop offers companionship without strings, just the quiet comfort of lying beside someone.

Customers pay for time spent dozing next to a professional cuddler, who might offer hand-holding or soft conversation. But there’s a strict line—no sexual contact is allowed. It’s intimacy with boundaries, warmth without expectation. In a society wrestling with emotional distance, Soineya carved out a strange, tender niche: human closeness, rentable by the hour.