By Ken Y-N (
September 6, 2007 at 23:08)
· Filed under Lifestyle, Polls
Japan could do with more slow lifestyles and slow food, as the impression I get in my working life is that I myself barely get any time to breath, so I don’t know how my colleagues who are in the office far longer than I cope. To find out how the average person felt about their leisure or lack thereof, MyVoice performed a survey about lifestyles.
Demographics
Over the first five days of August 2007 12,308 members of the MyVoice online community successfully completed an online survey. 54% of the sample was female, 2% in their teens, 17% in their twenties, 39% in their thirties, 27% in their forties, and 15% in their fifties.
For the sake of this survey, Slow Life was explained as “even if it is inconvenient, live the natural life for yourself surrounded by nature”; Fast Life was “even if it takes money, live a luxurious and convenient life with all the city benefits in a gadget-rich environment”.
I’d love to see the breakdown of the answers in Q2 by type of employment. I feel I have little room to spare for me alone (although we have enough time as a couple) but I don’t know how my colleagues feel. I suspect (or worry) that they are resigned to week-days being written off, and the image of Japanese salarymen is that at weekends they more often than not do their own thing golfing, fishing, gambling or whatever.
Research results
Q1: Which set of ideals do you agree with, Slow Life or Fast Life? (Sample size=12,308)
| Strongly agree with the Slow Life ideals |
10.5% |
| Tend to agree with the Slow Life ideals |
51.8% |
| Tend to agree with the Fast Life ideals |
33.0% |
| Strongly agree with the Fast Life ideals |
4.6% |
Q2: In your everyday life, do you have “time to breath”, time you can use freely doing your own thing? (Sample size=12,308)
| Think I have enough time to breathe |
13.7% |
| Think I have some time to breathe |
32.1% |
| Can’t say either way |
19.4% |
| Don’t think I have much time to breathe |
28.5% |
| Don’t think I have any time to breathe |
6.3% |
Q3: In your everyday life, do you have financial “room to breath”, money you can use freely on your own thing? (Sample size=12,308)
| Think I have enough room to breathe |
2.6% |
| Think I have some room to breathe |
21.6% |
| Can’t say either way |
24.6% |
| Don’t think I have much room to breathe |
35.1% |
| Don’t think I have any room to breathe |
16.1% |
Q4: To what degree do you think you have the necessary knowledge and information in order to improve your lifestyle? (Sample size=12,308)
| Think I have enough knowledge and information |
3.4% |
| Think I have some knowledge and information |
34.2% |
| Can’t say either way |
40.5% |
| Don’t think I have much knowledge and information |
19.9% |
| Don’t think I have any knowledge and information |
2.0% |
Q5: How much of a human network do you have? (Sample size=12,308)
| Think I have a quite a wide network |
2.5% |
| Think I have a not-so-wide network |
18.1% |
| Can’t say either way |
27.6% |
| Think I have a quite small network |
33.0% |
| Think I have a very small network |
18.8% |
Q6: In order to improve your lifestyle, which of the following points are important? (Sample size=12,308, up to three answers)
| Have room in my heart |
59.2% |
| Pay more attention to health, physical strength |
39.4% |
| Hold family relationships dear |
38.1% |
| Proactively gather knowledge and information |
30.8% |
| Hold my human network dear |
28.4% |
| Hold my own free time dear |
26.6% |
| Be a doer |
18.2% |
| Get into hobbies |
15.4% |
| Hold my friends dear |
14.2% |
| Just take a little more time |
13.6% |
| Put sufficient effort into things |
13.4% |
| Just spend a little more time |
6.3% |
| Be focused on work |
4.6% |
| None of the above |
2.2% |
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Christopher said,
September 9, 2007 @ 07:59
Thank you for the survey results. All of us here at the IINDM (International Institute of Not Doing Much) keep an eye out for all things slow. We would like to know how many years did it take to decide upon creating this survey? How many years did it take to collect the data? As you probably know, we frown upon doing anything quickly.
While we respectfully appreciate your effort, or the effort of those producing the survey, we feel it would have yielded more meaningful results if you would have redefined slow. Slow for us is simply doing fewer things, and doing those things slowly. Slow promotes civility, fun, and respect. We honor unstructured time or to use our technical term, putting about.
We agree with whomever it was who said that no civilized man was ever in a hurry. We even allow for some multitasking (for women only because they are more advanced than we brutish men). You see, we don’t think about slow as being anything to do with nature, money, or gadgets.
We would consider the survey to be more meaningful if you had only tabulated information from one group and limited your questions.
You are a Scot. We respect that. We particularly respect your Scottishness if you hail from one of the Western Isles where the Spanish word mañana has a terrifying urgency to it. If that is the case, slow will be in your blood.
Thank you for your post on this most slowly pressing subject.
Slow regards,
Christopher
SlowDownNow.org , The ‘almost’ serious antidote to workaholism