How do Japanese Kids React to Foreigners?

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  • Опубликовано: 7 янв 2025

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @OrientalPearl
    @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +7575

    WHERE'S OUR VIDEOS!? Well, this one took over 20 hours to make. I've just graduated with a master's degree in June and am hunting for an office job here in Japan. More videos to come once things settle down. The next video will be a day in the life at my old workplace.

    • @Bounceoo7
      @Bounceoo7 3 года назад +74

      Glad ur doing well. Hope everything goes well and your able to settle down soon.

    • @sowmyashree6849
      @sowmyashree6849 3 года назад +32

      All the very best for your job hunt. 👍Hope you get a job soon 😇🙏

    • @Solace_S
      @Solace_S 3 года назад +26

      Congratulations

    • @steviemack9
      @steviemack9 3 года назад +34

      Congrats on the masters degree . Hope you find work you enjoy. And make allot of money. But most of all stay happy and healthy. I always enjoy your vids. Thank you.

    • @whatiskungfan
      @whatiskungfan 3 года назад +11

      Can I suggest marrying first, based on surveys housewives in Japan are happier than working husbands.

  • @Heyitsbecklol
    @Heyitsbecklol 3 года назад +35862

    I remember on my first trip to Japan. I came across a class of kids who were out practicing their English on foreign tourists, reading off scripts and giving out paper cranes. It was probably the most adorable thing I have ever seen

    • @colenthree
      @colenthree 3 года назад +776

      My dad visited japan and the same thing happened to him

    • @Jabroniville
      @Jabroniville 3 года назад +896

      I had a similar one, but it was nervous high school boys awkwardly shaking my hand and asking my name, plus "Do you like Kyoto?" and "Do you like Japan?". They were clearly waiting for tourists by a temple. I ended up in a group and got stopped by three of them one after the other, haha.

    • @Lily-gz3ip
      @Lily-gz3ip 3 года назад +48

      niice

    • @sukiyomie
      @sukiyomie 3 года назад +233

      @@Jabroniville Same i stood out a lot when i visited japan cause im dark skinned and the same happened but it was a group of girls i think they were like in 3rd grade.

    • @AmidaNyorai48
      @AmidaNyorai48 3 года назад +6

      😯

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak 3 года назад +7892

    Japanese kids are really polite and friendly

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +409

      Thanks so much for watching! I love Malaysia.

    • @jaywhypee2030
      @jaywhypee2030 3 года назад +180

      I Grew up READING all your comments

    • @pinkish3300
      @pinkish3300 3 года назад +63

      You're everywhere-

    • @l1azt0nybff58
      @l1azt0nybff58 3 года назад +29

      They really are they have such great manners!

    • @ashleytaros7913
      @ashleytaros7913 3 года назад +16

      Omg why are you everywhere??

  • @robguyton3577
    @robguyton3577 3 года назад +24100

    Kids have no "filter" - they say and do whatever pops into their head. Years ago, (after finishing my meal) a small kid came out of the restaurant to grab my hand and said "Hey Chinese man, come home with us." His mom came running out to stop him, and scolded him that you can't do that with a stranger. That's when I realized that small children are inhabiting a parallel universe in which ALL things are possible.

    • @thebluerena
      @thebluerena 3 года назад +1303

      haha that's cute

    • @eatmyshiitake1876
      @eatmyshiitake1876 3 года назад +756

      What a nice way to word that!

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +3291

      That’s exactly right! Back when I was 4 I remember seeing a woman in the library with a little facial hair and asking my dad loudly in front of her “Daddy why does that woman have a beard?” My dad was mortified. 😄

    • @kat3.14
      @kat3.14 3 года назад +686

      so...did you go home with them?

    • @alextogo8367
      @alextogo8367 3 года назад +419

      Children are innocent when they young.

  • @ynengyneng3453
    @ynengyneng3453 2 года назад +346

    Japanese kids r so cute and respectful.they always have smile on their faces.they r so approachable and friendly.

  • @PixxieDevil
    @PixxieDevil 3 года назад +7121

    Hahaha, died when the kid said your tummy is different from mine 😂

    • @gloriahui3490
      @gloriahui3490 3 года назад +428

      So cute! No judgement, just an observation 😁

    • @alextogo8367
      @alextogo8367 3 года назад +327

      Naw I died when he started to tap it.

    • @BrandonHeat243
      @BrandonHeat243 3 года назад +382

      Kids don't even give that stuff a second thought. One time I gave my 5 year old nephew a hug after having put on some weight since I last saw him and mid hug he says to me "Whoa Uncle, your tummy got big!!". Obviously the next day I went on a diet...

    • @davipenha
      @davipenha 3 года назад +78

      Just raw honesty. It's sad that we adults lost the ability to manifest our feelings so pure as kids but it's understandable

    • @ojcubz
      @ojcubz 3 года назад +55

      @@alextogo8367 fun fact, that's how Japanese generally signal you that you're getting fat(adults/teens) since being fat is frowned upon in Japan.

  • @Kanjicafe
    @Kanjicafe 3 года назад +5367

    Best memory of kids in Japan was walking near an elementary school baseball field
    in Naha and the entire team surrounded me and asked me to make a muscle. Talk about making you feel like Arnold.

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +361

      That’s awesome! They were impressed with your muscles lol

    • @adamlorden5666
      @adamlorden5666 3 года назад +75

      Okinawan kids are the best

    • @shinjaokinawa5122
      @shinjaokinawa5122 3 года назад +75

      Me and some Amercan Cousins decided to ditch Kokusai Dori in Naha and go into the back allies where people rarely see Americans, kids were just coming out of the woodwork many yelling '' This is a Pencil'' and giving us the Peace sign. It seemed a real treat for them to see us. It was a bigger treat for us to see them.

    • @zhouwu
      @zhouwu 3 года назад +11

      @@shinjaokinawa5122
      This is probably a stupid question, but why is the peace ✌️☮️ sign a pencil ✏️? I don't get the logic. Is it a misunderstanding of the English, maybe?

    • @shinjaokinawa5122
      @shinjaokinawa5122 3 года назад +33

      @@zhouwu I do know that all the kids and girls give the peace sign.
      The first phrase anyone learns in English Class is This is a pencil. when there is a group of small kids
      they will simultaneously say this is a pencil while while doing the Peace sign.
      The two fingers spread has become iconic and goes back to the 60's.
      I remember it being everywhere by the 70's. So it is not unusual for kids to hold up a pencil and give the peace sign at the same time.

  • @Tan-fe5wz
    @Tan-fe5wz 3 года назад +5676

    "Are u with the Olympics"
    Lol

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +1043

      I feel honored to be asked that lol

    • @Tan-fe5wz
      @Tan-fe5wz 3 года назад +92

      @@OrientalPearl i would be too 😆

    • @herokerrey
      @herokerrey 3 года назад +276

      @@OrientalPearl that's when you know all your hard work at the gym has paid off. :)

    • @natevizzi2901
      @natevizzi2901 3 года назад +61

      @@OrientalPearl proper response … “yes I throw javelin” 😝

    • @stuartmcewan7928
      @stuartmcewan7928 3 года назад +3

      Nah, im mostly Japanese lol

  • @kourtxkobain
    @kourtxkobain 2 года назад +102

    I lived in Japan for three years and I absolutely adore your videos. I hope I get to go back one day and appreciate and learn the language to converse because your videos are so inspiring.

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 3 года назад +10242

    "They're all bad. Nobody's feelings are hurt, they're just all bad"
    *ah yes, true equality*

    • @olethea5475
      @olethea5475 3 года назад +128

      i literally look at this comment when she said that

    • @poweresh4712
      @poweresh4712 3 года назад +161

      Americans are so sweet that's why they put nuclear in Japan

    • @pardolagames8994
      @pardolagames8994 3 года назад +59

      I mean, sometimes even I hate the west.

    • @waohope
      @waohope 3 года назад +191

      ”I can't say I hate any country, because you know human are all bad.”
      *Asia philosophy*

    • @pardolagames8994
      @pardolagames8994 3 года назад +33

      @@waohope And then there is China

  • @fullpeace4435
    @fullpeace4435 3 года назад +6062

    I’m a Japanese high school students who learning English. I have a strong feeling to want to create peace as many countries as possible, so I started studying English! and your voice is so beautiful✨ clear and easy to catch!! also your Japanese is so wonderful and perfect! I’m really happy you like Japanese! also the video was so much fun!! Thank you so much! 👍
    And I love America! also all nations💫
    I love you guys!!

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +497

      That’s you so much! I wish you the best of luck with your English studies.

    • @drivestowork
      @drivestowork 3 года назад +125

      It's nice that you are learning English!! I hope you do very well! I was an exchange student to Japan in Showa58. I have many many pleasant memories of Japanese speaking English to me. 🇯🇵🇺🇸✌🏻

    • @jakaylagoodrum3477
      @jakaylagoodrum3477 3 года назад +20

      hi! I'm in Highschool 2! we should be friends :) It would be cool if we taught each other or just to be friends in general.

    • @mayshusakuhanamurasufferli5438
      @mayshusakuhanamurasufferli5438 3 года назад +23

      Sweet kid lol

    • @no_maidens
      @no_maidens 3 года назад +14

      Good luck with your studies!

  • @Paul_Wetor
    @Paul_Wetor 3 года назад +1739

    At 0:36 covered in sand running to the water: "No, I'm not with the Olympics, I just swam here from America and now I'm swimming back."

  • @IMMerrySan
    @IMMerrySan Год назад +456

    修学旅行で、外国人に英語で話しかける、というミッションのようなものがあったの思い出した
    しかも2組以上だったはず…!
    中学生には難易度高すぎだよ😢て思ったけど皆さん笑顔で気さくに応じてくれたし、中学生の拙い発音でも理解しようと耳を傾けたりしてくれてめっちゃ嬉しかったなあ🥰
    動画で似たような子達出てきてて、微笑ましくなった

    • @Lordobsidian630
      @Lordobsidian630 8 месяцев назад +2

      👏🏻♥️

    • @あんちゃん-r4j
      @あんちゃん-r4j 7 месяцев назад +4

      もしかして京都?
      東京か?

    • @huayell
      @huayell 7 месяцев назад +6

      自分もありましたw懐かしい
      でも一向に話しかけれないままその日は終了しました
      今までその日の為に同じチームの子と沢山練習してきたのに結局水の泡になりましたww

    • @neriwasa-B
      @neriwasa-B 5 месяцев назад +18

      あれ、観光に来てはる外国の人に対してめっちゃ失礼やよね
       子どもの時は先生が神だったんで、なんも思わんかったけど

    • @IrishBiteGirl
      @IrishBiteGirl 4 месяца назад +1

      They still do this. It's cute to most foreigners.
      We had a group of kids trying to speak English to us in Kyoto when I was just there.
      I'm sure I sounded just as bad to them with only my 6 months of Pimsleur lessons in Japanese.

  • @genzapha
    @genzapha 3 года назад +12899

    “Your tummy is different from mine” That kid was going for it 💀

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +2266

      Kids are savage. Lol

    • @fezzik7619
      @fezzik7619 3 года назад +874

      No different from a three year old in America exclaiming “She’s faaaat!” They need to be taught to censor themselves 😂

    • @fezzik7619
      @fezzik7619 3 года назад +210

      @@joeycorsi9142 Not sure where you get that from, but you’re 100% incorrect. Only 3.6% of the adult Japanese population had a BMI of 30.0 or higher. Compare that to 43% in the US. That might account for the young boy’s curiosity. Just watch videos of people walking around Japan. You won’t see overweight people. This is not because of a social status of wealth. In fact, the opposite is true. The Japanese see overweight people as lazy and inefficient. So your assertion is likely based on conjecture or crossed wires about another culture you may have heard about on a random documentary you watched. I believe this may be true in some tribal African colonies, but as I haven’t researched it I won’t say it with any amount of confidence.

    • @Ok-pq5ro
      @Ok-pq5ro 3 года назад +52

      @@joeycorsi9142 no, that was in the older times when the wealthy people ate a bunch of food and didn't do work opposed from the citizens who worked all day and had a balanced diet.

    • @-LucidDreamer-
      @-LucidDreamer- 3 года назад +23

      @@Kirbyystomp y'all act like it's not though. People take offense to it. You can't be body positive for someone ruining and killing themselves. It's a sad pathetic thing to be. So preventable.

  • @GaryTurbo
    @GaryTurbo 3 года назад +8659

    Reminds me of that video where an afican kid was scared of a guy because he "looked like a ghost" that was hilarious

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +1012

      I want to interview a few of my African-American friends here in Japan. Some of them have some crazy stories to tell about their experiences.

    • @jeffsama7601
      @jeffsama7601 3 года назад +114

      @@OrientalPearl kindly do it

    • @youwantmyname9208
      @youwantmyname9208 3 года назад +174

      @@OrientalPearl African kids are not ready for round two ghost

    • @anraccoon2896
      @anraccoon2896 3 года назад +31

      Oh hey I just clicked from that video

    • @laylashapiro9738
      @laylashapiro9738 3 года назад +23

      I actually just saw that video!

  • @paulnone9984
    @paulnone9984 3 года назад +4923

    Kids are very fascinated with foreigners for sure. Keep in mind, about 90% of the population is Japanese and the rest are foreigners. When kids or even elderly see foreigners, they are sometimes surprised. I've even had times where an old woman will start randomly speaking to me in Japanese, it's pretty interesting haha. (keep in mind, I said about 90%. You don't need to message me telling me it's more, I was just estimating lol.)

    • @nyancatbeatcreature.3782
      @nyancatbeatcreature.3782 3 года назад +4

      Think it’s actually 92%, but that is just a few thousand different from 90%

    • @nikolessard6860
      @nikolessard6860 3 года назад +76

      @@nyancatbeatcreature.3782 that's like a 2.5 million difference

    • @wzz7380
      @wzz7380 3 года назад +57

      i dont know about the numbers exactly but when you say 90 - 92% are Japanese, among these 8 - 10%, a lot are Korean / chinese well.. asian . In term of non asian i think the number is much much smaller than that right ? I saw on another videos that most of the foreigners are mostly in big cities too. i assume that if you go to the country side as a western person black or latino etc... people would be like that : O _ O

    • @sankujamatia525
      @sankujamatia525 3 года назад +16

      @@wzz7380 Actually people don't know much about Japan, In Hokkaido there's large Russian, Polish, Danes and Australian population. They are Japanese citizens

    • @wzz7380
      @wzz7380 3 года назад +3

      @@sankujamatia525 is it only in Hokkaido ? I think i thought that Hokkaido was a special area 🤔 its the big island to the north with Sapporo right ? i saw an anime (sorry for the cliché) about Aïnou people and got interested into their story. Its like a mix of Russia and north japanese if im not mistaken. Didnt know about polish australian and dane though. What do you say by " large" ? Because as a french i live into a very very mixed country, i think we dont have the same notion of " large" when it comes to count the non native :')

  • @shoryuken3305
    @shoryuken3305 2 года назад +74

    I found my visit to Japan amazing, everyone was so warm and kind and helpful we had many people walk up to us just to say hello and practice their english with us. Even at the train stations we never wondered for too long people always came up and offered to help , amazing beautiful country! sugoi!

  • @rjl310
    @rjl310 3 года назад +538

    My first time in Kyoto, I was standing next to a group of school kids and a few of them shouted "Hello" at me and asked where I was from. It was obvious how cool they felt, speaking to a foreigner in English.

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +84

      There are quite a lot of Japanese teachers that take their students to tourist sites in Kyoto to practice speaking English with the foreign tourists.

    • @rjl310
      @rjl310 3 года назад +27

      @@OrientalPearl Wow, I had no idea. Very cool! It's cute when you see them trying to get up the courage to speak to you. I could never imagined doing that, as a kid.

    • @trentgay3437
      @trentgay3437 3 года назад +13

      Same thing happened to me in taipei. I got lots of children wanting to practice English and even plenty of 30 to 40yo who were taking an English class. Approached me with a set of almost identical questions. All of them were very polite and I enjoyed being able to help them out. I also helped a grandmother find a museum, I was going to it as well. Her cute little grandson spends half his time in England. So I had a nice conversation with him on the bus to the museum.

  • @seanyoung9014
    @seanyoung9014 3 года назад +3557

    When I was in Japan a few years ago, absolutely no Japanese people paid attention to me, which, as a afro American, kinda surprised me. The Chinese tourists, however, wanted me to pose for pictures with them for no reason. One guy put his arm around me and said "Kobe!" Lmao I look like Kobe Bryant the same way Paul Rudd looks like Charlie Sheen. 😂

    • @bangawa3441
      @bangawa3441 3 года назад +30

      LOL we dont hate anyone but weebs

    • @seanyoung9014
      @seanyoung9014 3 года назад +42

      @SpidermaN79 It's the 14th Street Bridges in Washington D.C. where I'm from. They connect VA to DC.

    • @uncletiggermclaren7592
      @uncletiggermclaren7592 3 года назад +11

      @@bangawa3441 That must be awkward, because us weebs LOVE you !.

    • @o_o9220
      @o_o9220 3 года назад +13

      The "Kobe" tho😂

    • @seanyoung9014
      @seanyoung9014 3 года назад +26

      @@bangawa3441 There was this one super weeb on our trip who was bowing to random buildings and refused to speak English for most of the trip. 😂🤦🏾‍♂️

  • @MoroFullmetal
    @MoroFullmetal 3 года назад +1369

    I remember when I traveled to Japan as part of a special credit system for a month and we visited a children’s elementary school and I got up in front of the class and introduced myself in Japanese, and they asked me about my favorite movie (I said it was The Lion King) and the teacher gave me a ball game - the one with the wooden post with multiple sides that are shaped to hold a ball, which is attached by a string, and the goal is to flip the ball up by force and land it on top without it falling off. I flipped it over [it was my first time playing with this toy] and it landed perfectly on top, and the entire class was a singular chorus of “OOOOOOHHHHH”. They asked me if I’d ever done that before and I said no, and they were amazed, lol. Then as I was leaving a group of kids ran out and asked me if I was coming back. They are such adorable beings.)

    • @suburbanbanshee
      @suburbanbanshee 3 года назад +49

      Funny thing is, the cup and ball game has been in the West so long that it is old-fashioned here now. Heh!

    • @仕事したくない-s1h
      @仕事したくない-s1h 3 года назад +31

      日本人です。
      グーグル翻訳で読みました。
      おそらく『けん玉』ですね。Kendama
      英語でKendamaじゃ伝わらないのですね?
      細かく説明されてますね。
      説明上手です😊

    • @safaltagrg
      @safaltagrg 3 года назад +14

      @@仕事したくない-s1h yes yes its Kendama.

    • @rachelcookie321
      @rachelcookie321 3 года назад +12

      Even I would of been impressed. I never could do that game as a kid.

    • @isaiasg2961
      @isaiasg2961 3 года назад +5

      @@suburbanbanshee it was popularized in the west, kendama is originally japanese.

  • @lewgoogle5530
    @lewgoogle5530 2 года назад +1175

    I remember when we were visiting the Silver Temple in Kyoto with our son who is fluent in Japanese. A bunch of kids got off a school bus to tour the shrine at around the same time. When they discovered that Dan could converse with them in Japanese, they were utterly delighted and flooded him with questions. They also tried to speak to my wife and I in English. It was great fun, and they were very sweet.

    • @Cat-killua
      @Cat-killua 2 года назад +14

      Awww

    • @BariumCobaltNitrog3n
      @BariumCobaltNitrog3n 9 месяцев назад +1

      *...my wife and me... They tried to speak to me in English.

    • @tomperkins5657
      @tomperkins5657 8 месяцев назад

      @@BariumCobaltNitrog3n Grammar Nazi...😆

    • @DeletedDevilDeletedAngel
      @DeletedDevilDeletedAngel 8 месяцев назад +10

      @@BariumCobaltNitrog3n thats not an actual correction, my wife and I works as well mate

    • @BariumCobaltNitrog3n
      @BariumCobaltNitrog3n 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@DeletedDevilDeletedAngel Nope. "They tried to speak to I in English." That sounds right to you?

  • @user-kj3qw4dt2s
    @user-kj3qw4dt2s 3 года назад +602

    Kids are the cutest at that age. Savage and straightforward and you can’t be mad at them for being brutally honest😂

  • @MisterDutch93
    @MisterDutch93 3 года назад +2078

    The best reaction me and my friends got EVERYTIME we came across schoolchildren in Japan, was about our height. We are all around 190cm, which meant we pretty much towered over everyone there. The kids would look up to us in awe and start saying 'Woah, se ga takai!!', which was the funniest thing.

    • @elpino8503
      @elpino8503 3 года назад +9

      What does se mean

    • @noodlesdorkenson4674
      @noodlesdorkenson4674 3 года назад +48

      Height

    • @devbrothonath9396
      @devbrothonath9396 3 года назад +176

      @@elpino8503 it's something like "wow, amazing height"

    • @elpino8503
      @elpino8503 3 года назад +32

      @@devbrothonath9396 I'm starting to learn japanese, and I understood all the words except "se". I know Takai is tall

    • @devbrothonath9396
      @devbrothonath9396 3 года назад +89

      @@elpino8503 As far as i know, here "se" means height then "ga" is subject particle( used to refer to the person ) and "takai" means tall or high. All in all, it means "That person is tall" or "He has a tall height"

  • @lukesofian3031
    @lukesofian3031 3 года назад +508

    3:21 OMG! I’m a foreigner living and studying in Japan and i was shocked to see my classmate posing,that was our little trip from 2019 in Asakusa!

    • @rishabhgoyal2958
      @rishabhgoyal2958 3 года назад +26

      Wowww , thats really an awesome coincidence

    • @zehelsumi1845
      @zehelsumi1845 3 года назад +15

      Wow talk about coincidence xd

    • @ines1084
      @ines1084 3 года назад

      That's so cool!

  • @tclass99
    @tclass99 2 года назад +239

    I remember my first time in Japan (Narita) almost 20 years ago… seeing the little school children walking to school in their uniforms and huge backpacks made me smile. So darn cute!

  • @nickn1635
    @nickn1635 3 года назад +2483

    Oh god, those boys at the beach probably thought: "just like the simulations"

    • @tentedkarma7465
      @tentedkarma7465 3 года назад +52

      ?なに

    • @Ryan.2
      @Ryan.2 3 года назад +84

      "Watch those wrist rockets!"

    • @emperana636
      @emperana636 3 года назад +118

      "I thought these only happened in anime. How much lies have I been told?"

    • @furrosama
      @furrosama 3 года назад +53

      They had the best time in their lives

    • @marvinsatparam5333
      @marvinsatparam5333 3 года назад +14

      The comment i was looking for xD

  • @41tinman41
    @41tinman41 3 года назад +6162

    Honestly, I'm glad that Japanese natives are getting exposed to foreigners at such an early age. There will come a time where seeing someone THAT different from you will not be a big deal and it would be a moment of coexistence that we should strive for.

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +281

      I feel the same way.

    • @41tinman41
      @41tinman41 3 года назад +284

      @@OrientalPearl Japan has an issue with xenophobia, and I've heard horror stories of foreigners living there having a hard time. From renting/buying a home to something as simple as commuting. They wont sit next to you nor engage you in conversation. They shy away from helping when you're clearly in need. But hopefully, there will be a time that negative incidents like those wont be the norm.

    • @RonLarhz
      @RonLarhz 3 года назад +100

      They have a wide range of weird. Dont have to be worry. At most it's Just xenophobia,not with the individual. More like ignorance of other countries' culture,just like americans.

    • @henrynishimura4104
      @henrynishimura4104 3 года назад +66

      Sometimes it's not a good thing. A lot of foreigns fetishize and harrass Japanese people because of 4nim3.

    • @kyupified2440
      @kyupified2440 3 года назад +118

      @@41tinman41 they wont sit in because they dont speak english in the first place, they value their own language which is what I envy in Japan. Foreigners should atleast be able to study Japanese language (the basics) and dont expect the locals to adjust for them. This is happening in my own country, foreigners doesnt bother studying our language who is living in our own country, some live for decades yet doesnt even try

  • @OrderedEntropy
    @OrderedEntropy 3 года назад +3300

    I love how kids often are basically like, you are fat or sometimes might even say you are ugly or something that might seem harsh, but they will still want to get to know you, they will still be your friend. They accept you the way you are unconditionally. They arent subjective yet, they see you as is AND take you as is. (Which ironically is how you develop your subjective views you have later in life)

    • @SingingPhatpants
      @SingingPhatpants 3 года назад +147

      I get this in my school. I'm a big beardy dude. I'm a teaching assistant. Comments are made innocently. I just tell them it never matters what anyone looks like, just how they treat you 😁

    • @EarthSurferUSA
      @EarthSurferUSA 3 года назад +5

      @@SingingPhatpants So what do they say when they have not been treated well enough to do math? They graduate not being able to figure anything out. Great treatment, but I bet your nice about it.

    • @SingingPhatpants
      @SingingPhatpants 3 года назад +58

      @@EarthSurferUSA your comment makes zero sense. My kids are all taught according to the Wales curriculum set and we work within the abilities displayed upon our first assessments. This was a side comment about personal remarks.

    • @Nuriyya91
      @Nuriyya91 3 года назад +30

      Yeh. when my big sister was still little she was on the bus with our mum when a really old lady get in. She obviously had some back problems and a big nose. My sister said "Mum! A witch!! 😱" Mum was so embaressed, but the old lady just laughed and said she hears this all the time xD

    • @earlysda
      @earlysda 2 года назад +1

      Nobody accepts anybody "unconditionally".

  • @dranker5959
    @dranker5959 2 года назад +73

    5~6歳ぐらいの頃かな、近所の公園で、金髪の子供たちと遊んだ記憶がかすかにある。
    お互い何話しているかわからないけど、何かわからないけど、楽しく遊んだ。

    • @penntopaper9305
      @penntopaper9305 5 месяцев назад +6

      aww that's so sweet 😭😭I guess since I'm american I just kinda take for granted living around people of many different races all the time. It's interesting to hear about how different it is for people in other parts of the world.

    • @Finity_twenty_ten
      @Finity_twenty_ten 3 месяца назад +1

      Did they speak Japanese?

  • @Peteski-0
    @Peteski-0 3 года назад +1492

    When we visited Vietnam, we stayed mainly in rural areas. Everyday children would come up to us and practice their English. They were so polite and respectful

    • @alexg2903
      @alexg2903 3 года назад +3

      Ok?

    • @baizuo_6246
      @baizuo_6246 3 года назад +72

      @@alexg2903 come on David ride your tiny bicycle and clean the tables.

    • @mindytaylor4950
      @mindytaylor4950 2 года назад +9

      That's so sweet. It happened to me and my friends but in Hanoi. We're Filipinos and obviously tourists. A group of middle school aged boys came up to us to talk when they saw us looking for something. They told us the directions to the opera house we were looking for and they were happy to speak in English.

    • @johnbrookhaven7134
      @johnbrookhaven7134 2 года назад +3

      Vietnamese culture is so good..parents teach the kid to respect and polite to older people , teachers, and help people when they need help..

    • @TheCaptainSplatter
      @TheCaptainSplatter 2 года назад

      ​@@alexg2903 hey i enjoyed his comment.

  • @whushaw
    @whushaw 3 года назад +486

    Kids really know how to keep you humble with the reality check.
    I'm very glad to see another upload, I hope all is well. Best of luck with the job hunt as I know times are tricky right now.

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +33

      Thanks for being a loyal fan! RUclips stats said you are the #1 commenter!

  • @funkyvibes77
    @funkyvibes77 3 года назад +578

    This was amazing ! that little kid patting on that big guy's stomach was so funny and cute lol ... glad to see you back Anming. Awaiting more awesome uploads.

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +20

      I loved hat clip with the slide and that kid. Gotta love those moments.

  • @hossenmilon7641
    @hossenmilon7641 Год назад +78

    Japanese people are known for their courtesy and respect towards foreigners. It's a beautiful cultural exchange when kindness bridges any language barriers.

  • @liduvinasanchezhernandez1154
    @liduvinasanchezhernandez1154 3 года назад +1690

    The day of the entrance ceremony at the school I'm working at, a 1st grader came to me and asked "外国人ですか?" (which means "are you a foreigner?"). Didn't expect that one 😂😂 Also, because I'm overweighted, some 1st graders used to run to me to touch my tummy 🤣🤣🤣
    But my funniest experience was about 1 year ago, when I was living in Otsu (a small city in Shiga prefectura, near Kyoto). It was raining, so I was using an umbrella. A kid (maybe 8 years old?) passed by while I was waiting to cross the street, and then he looked up and realized I looked different. His face suddenly changed and he opened his eyes wide, and he kept staring directly at me with that shocked expression while he walked away (yeah, he was walking backwards so he could keep looking at me) 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +117

      Thank you for sharing your stories. If only those moments were caught on camera.

    • @nemoatlantis7148
      @nemoatlantis7148 3 года назад +27

      it'd be perfect, if you gave him acorn that day

    • @ericbailey6779
      @ericbailey6779 3 года назад +48

      LOL. When i worked in schools, the kids used to pat my belly and say, "Pon, Pon , baby?" As a dude, it got old really quick.

    • @AlexSDU
      @AlexSDU 3 года назад +9

      For some reason this make me thinking of that scene from My Neighbour Totoro.

    • @ayeayecaptain6249
      @ayeayecaptain6249 3 года назад +2

      Sugoi.😂

  • @eva_0168
    @eva_0168 3 года назад +339

    We went to Japan 2019 and while we took photos from the Temple in Nara some kids popped up out of nowhere and asked my husband to take photos with them because he looks so cool (he is Vietnamese/Chinese but was born and raised in Germany) 🤣 that was so cute. He also got a little present from them 🤗 wonderful memories

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +16

      Awww, that was sweet to give them a present.

    • @pantera141000
      @pantera141000 3 года назад +1

      He wouldn't look much different since he is Asian too.

    • @eva_0168
      @eva_0168 3 года назад +4

      @@pantera141000 true but the kids recognized that we speak a different language and asked us where we came from :)

  • @DustinThomas
    @DustinThomas 3 года назад +2807

    Those kids don't seem any different than....well...any kids. They don't see the world through any political or socioeconomically inspired lens, they are just exploratory and honest. God bless them.

    • @jacsa6634
      @jacsa6634 3 года назад +42

      @The Goddess Alice they are the same my little cousin told a police officer fat and most of them just walk around being curious and the reason why they do or say bad things sometimes is because of the culture around them but being from latinamerica doesn't make you automatically a bad person it is just being born around bad people

    • @HarryCaneNo1
      @HarryCaneNo1 3 года назад +18

      And they luckily dont believe in gods unless some dumb adults tell them to...

    • @bubblyfloof5550
      @bubblyfloof5550 3 года назад +3

      @@HarryCaneNo1 Lol we tell our sister to cuz we have a Religion so

    • @LK-pc4sq
      @LK-pc4sq 2 года назад +3

      they only know life in there own little bubble.

    • @coffee_bearzz2261
      @coffee_bearzz2261 2 года назад +1

      @InstultMeOnTheInternetYouSadPos
      There's one real god, but ofc people have different beliefs and religions

  • @taipoku2000
    @taipoku2000 6 месяцев назад +5

    3:53 かわええな〜投稿者さんも言葉遣いすごく優しくて素敵だわ😀

  • @aprili.3802
    @aprili.3802 3 года назад +928

    Kids. Are. SAVAGE. My favorite was a student of mine around 6 years old who pointed to a drawing of a queen with curly hair and her say “ew, she has weird hair like sensei ” 😅😅😅

  • @Dilandau3000
    @Dilandau3000 3 года назад +718

    My favorite interaction with a kid in Japan was during a trip with some friends. We were talking to the 10-year-old daughter of the owner of the inn we were staying at. One of my friends, who is Slovenian, was pretending he was Japanese. The girl, of course, wasn't buying it. When he asked her why she thought he wasn't Japanese, she said, "because your nose is too big."
    That was apparently a bigger clue than his skin, or his hair, or anything else. 😂

    • @thomas5585
      @thomas5585 3 года назад

      Wow, I never expected to see you here. The internet is so small. Shorah t'shem!

    • @976K
      @976K 3 года назад

      omg i am slovenian as well

    • @gigia95421
      @gigia95421 3 года назад +19

      Asians always point out that Westerns have big noises in the same way Westerns point out Asians'eyes as their characteristic feature... like they were a bigger clue than their skin, hair, or anything else :)

    • @eliasaba2727
      @eliasaba2727 3 года назад

      Thats funny

    • @anonygent
      @anonygent 3 года назад +8

      You can spot a Western artist immediately from a Japanese artist because the Western artist will always draw a noticeable nose, while a Japanese artist will draw a dot or the slightest curve for a nose.

  • @stuartmcewan7928
    @stuartmcewan7928 3 года назад +203

    Beautiful video! I went to the Philippines for the first time in January 2020, and as always children are the best (anywhere in the world) especially in the province where not alot of foreigners visit. So many smiles and some confusion of a pasty white person was walking their streets. A beautiful people the Filipinos ❤

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +22

      I had the same experience in the Philippines especially the first day I was alone there.

  • @nucopia
    @nucopia 2 года назад +17

    I can really relate to your observations about the children in Japan i taught English to elementary and junior high school students for almost 5 years in Japan and enjoyed every moment of teaching children which was a lot more fun and rewarding then teaching adults ..

  • @sakurabender
    @sakurabender 3 года назад +442

    I remember being in japan and we went to Hiroshima memorial park and there was a group of Japanese elementary kids and they were so excited to see us. They all waved hi and wanted to talk and speak with us, sadly we didn’t get to but it was very cute.

  • @TheGamingSpartanA113
    @TheGamingSpartanA113 3 года назад +855

    Kids are so pure that they're so brutally honest with everything no matter what nation or ethnicity they are.

    • @toyaleejb7714
      @toyaleejb7714 2 года назад +15

      My little cousin only speaks French and he always tells me how bad I am at speaking French 😭😂

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 2 года назад +2

      @@toyaleejb7714 I tell my students that learning French is easy, because 2 year olds in Paris can do it! but somehow they don;t believe me

    • @alonenjersey
      @alonenjersey 11 месяцев назад

      Like my beloved Mom would say until her dying day: "If the innocence could last forever."

  • @oanapisiii
    @oanapisiii 3 года назад +380

    I’ve been working at a hotel in Okinawa and honestly the best part about this job is that I can meet and talk with the kids. At first they are a little bit reluctant, but after they notice that I can speak Japanese, they would be so excited about it and start talking with me. Whenever they would see me in the lobby, they would greet me and high-five me and it is just so motivating man.

  • @Luv_brd
    @Luv_brd 2 года назад +13

    "Go all in or just go home" Girl, you're so inspiring!

  • @atomicphilosopher6143
    @atomicphilosopher6143 3 года назад +448

    As a fat guy who has lives in Japan for a few years, I absolutely lost it when that kid patted the guy's stomach. I understand that pain. XD
    Also, yeah. My Japanese is like a preschool level and the kids are still SUPER psyched when I say something in Japanese. Blows their minds.

  • @johnzaknich3979
    @johnzaknich3979 3 года назад +236

    My experience when traveling in Japan was that kids they are very inquisitive, funny and I even got a free lunch when a group teenagers in Osaka asked if they could talk / have a conversation with me in English during their lunch break so they could practice.

  • @Flyerjet228
    @Flyerjet228 4 месяца назад +6

    Japan is a country people very politely and friendly,really good place.

  • @CalciteSerendipity
    @CalciteSerendipity 3 года назад +127

    Love the intro.
    I can see how this took a long time to edit -- the quality is so good.
    We missed you!

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +6

      Thanks. I really enjoy editing the parts with the natural scenery.

  • @lamar_actual
    @lamar_actual 3 года назад +1470

    In I believe 1993 when I was about 20 years old I was walking through the parking lot at Tokyo Disneyland.
    I noticed far off in the distance a few girls coming towards me but they were pretty far away.
    As the gap closed I could tell they were probably high school age or possibly college age and they seemed oddly focused on me for some reason.
    As the distance began to close even more between us I kind of naturally and subconsciously shifted my path to avoid a head on collision between us but I noticed as I moved left or right they moved with me.
    After doing this for several minutes across the very long parking lot they were finally coming very close and I could see by the look on their faces that they were simply amazed to be seeing me up close. Why exactly I had no idea. I mean I was a fairly handsome 20 year old, sure, but it was Tokyo Disneyland not the middle of Saga Prefecture or something like that.
    Anyway as they apparently had a tractor beam locked on me we finally ended up literally face to face and so feeling a little awkward by the situation I said, "hello" in English and they literally started jumping up and down screaming like I was Tom Cruise or something.
    It's the only brief moment in my life that I experienced ever so slightly what it might feel like to be famous. lol
    PS. You ladies were rocking those bikinis. Yes, I'm old now but I'm not dead. :)

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +291

      I love the ending. I’m old, but I’m not dead. 😆

    • @lamar_actual
      @lamar_actual 3 года назад +27

      @@OrientalPearl 😇

    • @exudeku
      @exudeku 3 года назад +36

      @@lamar_actual
      Like Arnold put it: old, but not obsolete

    • @xXUnoriginalNameXx33Meygaera
      @xXUnoriginalNameXx33Meygaera 3 года назад +75

      @@OrientalPearl Put that on your gravestone. People will be like "Oh that's nice.....wait, wtf?"

    • @tychodancer
      @tychodancer 3 года назад +40

      @@exudeku I'm dead, not decomposed!

  • @apersonyoushouldlistento8713
    @apersonyoushouldlistento8713 3 года назад +338

    “Old people are the easiest to talk to because they are lonely” -funniest words I have heard all day

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +52

      It’s funny, but true.

    • @kantocoder5046
      @kantocoder5046 2 года назад +4

      It is sad reality of Japan, actually. If you talk to old Japanese, you will learn quite a bit. Like, bombings of Tokyo or Hiratsuka.

  • @minu586
    @minu586 2 года назад +22

    I want to be a Exchange Student in Japan someday when I am old enough. I’m 13. And I’m still following my dream sense I was about 9. and if I end up moving to Japan, I want to be an English Teacher. I love your vids! You really inspired me to follow my future dreams!

    • @user-xs3lf5
      @user-xs3lf5 5 месяцев назад +1

      9歳の頃の夢を追い掛ける…とても素晴らしい事です!今でも日本の留学、英語の教師の夢を追い掛けていると良いな…私は貴方に尊敬を示し、応援しております!❤

  • @janetclaireSays
    @janetclaireSays 3 года назад +1464

    My son is a 6'8" American of European descent and when he went to Japan he was like a child magnet in the streets. They crowded around to get their photos taken with him!

    • @wezerd
      @wezerd 3 года назад +300

      If you're 6'8" you're gonna be an eye magnet everywhere i imagine

    • @JD-jc5hg
      @JD-jc5hg 3 года назад +169

      @@wezerd Especially in Japan or Asian countries where the height average is shorter. I'm Asain & I'm considered talled & I'm 5"11 ish. 6"8 is a fucking monster in Japan

    • @Hero4fun77
      @Hero4fun77 3 года назад +38

      @@wezerd Especially in a short country.

    • @heatwaves8790
      @heatwaves8790 3 года назад +108

      @@Hero4fun77 6'8 is tall even for european country ngl .

    • @tt-ir4im
      @tt-ir4im 2 года назад +36

      @@heatwaves8790 idk anywhere where 6'8 would be considered average tbh.. maybe nordic countries but idk

  • @JUPITER11119
    @JUPITER11119 3 года назад +532

    I think what the guy at the beginning was trying to say was, "I hate them all equally". Lol To a Japanese, that's probably more polite than just naming one. 🤣

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +77

      Exactly! That’s his strategy.

    • @Mwoods2272
      @Mwoods2272 3 года назад +56

      Japanese never give a straight answer especially if it's something negative.

    • @missplainjane3905
      @missplainjane3905 3 года назад +1

      I think it was already indicated in the video ?

    • @elpino8503
      @elpino8503 3 года назад +2

      @@Mwoods2272 I hate and fear that

    • @JUPITER11119
      @JUPITER11119 3 года назад +34

      @@アシキン My impression is that he doesn't actually "hate" any of them, he was just caught off guard by her question. Having a Japanese mind, his two main choices were, "None, I like all foreign countries" or "I can't choose, so all of them". He just chose the second option.
      Also, in Japanese, the commonly used "dai kirai" literally means "big dislike" which is translated as "hate", but I think the English word "hate" is much stronger than "dai kirai", and there are several other Japanese words to denote stronger levels of hatred.

  • @rorschach5184
    @rorschach5184 3 года назад +119

    I’ve only ever been to Japan once and I’ve never felt so happy and free in a different country ever it’s a great experience I think everyone should take a trip to Japan it’s a beautiful country

  • @kevinreily2529
    @kevinreily2529 2 года назад +7

    Pearl you are such a wonderful good will ambassador, thank you for setting such a good example, for Americans abroad. I live in Thailand and can speak some Thai and it goes such a long way, and people respect you for trying to learn. Sometimes westerners think the locals are saying something bad, they are not, most often they are only curious.

  • @aruku4round
    @aruku4round 3 года назад +158

    Aaah it reminds me when I lived in Japan, I'm a tall Spanish girl and really stood out. I loved how people were always kinda reluctant to help me when I approached then but when I spoke Japanese, they would feel relived and talk to me asking me a lot of questions ahah

    • @adlorin
      @adlorin 3 года назад +9

      The last couple of times that I was in Tokyo, I found myself taking to most people in Spanish as it was difficult to find any Japanese that could help me out in English. :)
      One South American store clerk tried to hold back her tears when talking to me, and explained that she had not spoke her native language in nearly 20 years, and was so happy to do so... that was experience.

  • @brookcrow
    @brookcrow 3 года назад +630

    I’m watching this at my friends house who learned Japanese years ago… I had no idea he knew Japanese and he was writing stuff down and he just laughed and went ‘yeah America’s pretty messed up’. And I looked up at him and was like ‘wa… how… what?’…. Umm so he’s gonna teach me Japanese now 😬 guess you learn something new everyday…

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +86

      Alright! You have a Japanese teacher now.

    • @MrOoglebog
      @MrOoglebog 3 года назад +17

      Ahh I wish I had an in person friend that just happened to be learning Japanese or already learned it.

  • @tedpreston4155
    @tedpreston4155 3 года назад +60

    Thanks for reminding me of joyful experiences with Chinese children!
    One boy around seven or eight years old saw me reading on a flight to Inner Mongolia, and then asked, very shyly in English, if I was reading about Temujin (Ghengis Khan). I asked if he could read English, and he told me "I can read some words." His mother looked mortified, worried that her son was bothering me. I gave her a big smile to let her know I was enjoying the interaction. I kept that smile for the rest of the fllight, while he and had a great conversation. When we arrived in Ho Hot, I gave the boy all the American change in my pocket, as a souvenir. What a memorable smile! 🤩
    Later that week, I was reading again, outdoors, when an elementary school got out nearby. I found myself surrounded by ten or twelve children, all joyous that they could practice their English with a foreigner. They made me feel joyous too! As it happens, I was a guest at the home of their school principal. When he learned how much I enjoyed interacting with the children, he took me to school the next day to talk to children in their English class. Those are some of my favorite memories from a trip that was full of great memories! 🙂

  • @panhandlejake6200
    @panhandlejake6200 2 года назад +10

    I worked in Japan for 4-1/2 years - my family accompanied me. It was a fantastic experience. An adjustment at first but we did not want to leave. In the populous areas, it is possible to 'survive' on just a very basic ability to speak the language but making an effort to learn helps you truly experience living in Japan - even without being fluent. My middle son was in preschool and went to a Japanese school - he became fluent amazingly fast (typical for kids). As we travelled the world, westerners were more amazed that he could speak the language.

  • @sj4iy
    @sj4iy 3 года назад +84

    When I lived in Nagoya, I actually loved the kids. They aren't shocked you speak Japanese, they take it as a given. The lack of a filter means they'll tell you anything (I had one kid tell me how much he loved the movie The Ring, even though the teacher didn't want him to say that). I love Japanese, the culture and the people, but sometimes getting into the "in group" is difficult to westerners...especially in a place like Nagoya, where westerners aren't as common. Kids, though, they just said anything and asked you anything. I even had a kid get surprised by me when he ran around the corner at the grocery and screamed for a second and then asked "what are you buying?". So yeah, I really enjoyed when I got to teach classes (as a part time job, I went to school, as well).

  • @Angelsilhouette
    @Angelsilhouette 3 года назад +275

    I asked a group of children for directions when I was in Suzhou, as soon as they understood where I wanted to go they grabbed my hands and pulled me along. They really seemed to enjoy meeting a westerner.

  • @robertlee8400
    @robertlee8400 3 года назад +60

    Japanese people seam to be a curious & kind people . I absolutely respect their culture . I always wanted to go to Japan .

  • @なにゆえいかに
    @なにゆえいかに 2 года назад +41

    私は日本人です。
    日本に来てこのように楽しんでいる姿を見てとても嬉しい!!

  • @JustinBrehm
    @JustinBrehm 3 года назад +63

    What a great video Anming. Interesting video, most of them seem to think nothing of it as much as 20 years ago where we were less common frequently going to other countries

  • @redsamurai192
    @redsamurai192 3 года назад +82

    it's hard to get straight answers from adults because they try their best to answer something which doesn't offend you, while kids just say whatever that pops in their head, because well, they're kids. 😂

  • @paecpc
    @paecpc 3 года назад +81

    AnMing is always such an easy-going, nice and friendly lady, never take things too hard; there will always be some nice people out there. Take care and stay safe!

  • @aimi369
    @aimi369 14 дней назад +2

    地方住まい(観光地)で、子どもの頃は海外旅行者の外国人といえばほぼ欧米人だったし、それなりに珍しかったけど、子ども心にもじっと見たら失礼だと思ったし(というかじっと見つめるほどの好奇心もなかった)、すれ違いざまにさりげなく「Hello」って言ってみたりして、返事がかえってくるとそのフレンドリーさが嬉しかったりしたものです。

  • @ANS1E
    @ANS1E 3 года назад +81

    I remember when I was in Mongolia a couple students approached me when I was walking down the street and asked if I could help them with their English homework. I was on my way to one of the museums, so we ended up walking and talking. It was just them asking me questions about my travel (Where are you from? What do you like most about Mongolia?) and them writing down my responses, but clearly the learning was from them having a conversation with a native speaker. This was back in 2018, but hopefully they got a good mark!

  • @iambumbo7534
    @iambumbo7534 3 года назад +43

    "your tummy is different then mine"
    so young yet so savage.

  • @aneng64
    @aneng64 3 года назад +9

    You are a very genuine and kind person. I love the way that your first instinct is to care for the happiness of the people you meet. If only the world had more like you.

  • @Sev3617
    @Sev3617 2 года назад +13

    The aesthetic of Japanese and just Asian culture in general is so pretty, it just looks like such a cozy place, their restaurants, buildings, roads and streets, the way trees are placed between buildings, dunno something about it just really speaks to me, I feel like it’d be a cool place to visit someday.

  • @etherdog
    @etherdog 3 года назад +113

    When we said we wanted to see more of you, we weren't expecting the beach scenes :-) There was a TV show in the 60s with Art Linkletter called "Kids Say the Darnedest Things" which was all about the honest unfiltered speech of kids, and it was quite popular (albeit, there were only 3 channels back then).

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +7

      Ha ha, be careful what you ask for.

    • @granand
      @granand 3 года назад +2

      Can we have more of more of you 😉❤️👍

    • @paulghencea9037
      @paulghencea9037 3 года назад

      Yeah it's probably one of those shows that got versions of it in every single country as i remember watching a show with The same premise and title 00's Romania

  • @haileyrigsby5209
    @haileyrigsby5209 3 года назад +50

    I ounce said hello to a little kid in Japanese and his face lit up like it was Christmas it was so cute. We started talking and everything it was so adorable I can’t even. I love Japan and I’m blessed to be able to have and opportunity to live in it.

  • @jazzhandsthebored3950
    @jazzhandsthebored3950 3 года назад +57

    I want to go to Japan and many other places in Asia some day. I'm currently learning Japanese at school in hopes to become fluent in the language and reach my dream of becoming am interpreter. Love your videos, such an inspiration to continue my studies.

    • @jeffreypayne5228
      @jeffreypayne5228 3 года назад +2

      Hope it work out i also working on my japanese Keep going!!

  • @ここ見た人幸せになってくれ

    私は日本人です6歳ぐらいの頃初めて外国人を見たときイケメンだなぁ~と思いました貴方達は差別的に見られてるのではなくイケメンや美女 身長が高い 髪の毛金髪でカッコいいのような気持ちでみています

  • @potatopatooti
    @potatopatooti 3 года назад +379

    I went to Japan and managed to learn just enough to make sure I could be polite and respectful (I'm bad at languages so I did my best). And they praised me SO MUCH and I definitely didn't deserve it 😭

    • @earlysda
      @earlysda 2 года назад +21

      Potato. When you actually do get pretty good, most of them will stop praising you on your attempts at Japanese.

    • @RizwanKhancovers
      @RizwanKhancovers 2 года назад +3

      You my friend got jouzu'd

    • @TheDramacist
      @TheDramacist 2 года назад

      They will tell you you're good when you're bad. It actually means you are bad, but the rubbish attempt is entertaining them.
      When you get proper good, they'll not comment.
      That's japanese culture. It's not as well meaning as foreigners think.
      This is especially true in Kyoto

    • @かませ犬-k2j
      @かませ犬-k2j Год назад +9

      日本語はインターナショナルな言葉ではないので、学ぶ人が少ないからこそ
      『上手ですね』と褒めるのです
      それは、みんな本心から出てる言葉なので
      素直に『ありがとう』と言えば相手も喜びます

  • @NewYorksFinest
    @NewYorksFinest 3 года назад +138

    Nice to see you're still enjoying your time in Japan! Congrats on the master's degree too! :D

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +9

      Thank you so much! Nice to see you here again!

    • @NewYorksFinest
      @NewYorksFinest 3 года назад

      @@OrientalPearl Always here. 🙏🏽😁

  • @camerong9391
    @camerong9391 3 года назад +19

    This video was so fun!!! Talking to kids can be brutal, but it's worth it because they're so adorable! Can't wait for the next video!

  • @FR_STARZI3
    @FR_STARZI3 5 месяцев назад +7

    2:45 WAIT IS THAT THE TEMPLE AT SHINJUKU OR ASAKASA?! I WENT THERE A FEW WEEKS AGO!! (I forgot which one, sorry if I spelled it wrong!)

  • @sleuthentertainment5872
    @sleuthentertainment5872 3 года назад +166

    I was in Japan two years ago with my fiancee, then girlfriend (she's japanese). She came into a convenience store and I was waiting in the street.
    In that moment many children were coming back from the school, all together. The little bag of one of them, a girl, fell down
    I picked it up and I gave her; maybe she didn't expect that from a foreigner, so she felt embarrassed, and I told her in japanese "Don't worry, here is, be careful next time".
    She bowed several times while her classmates were a little bit surprised and stopped and started looking at me, like, so....surprised
    Two of the teachers were smiling and thanked me too, in english (even they turned around to look at me sometimes while walking.......).
    A beautiful and a little bit strange moment to remember.....and my fiancee didn't see anything of that....goddammit

    • @JustXvynz
      @JustXvynz 3 года назад +2

      😂 she would’ve fallen for you all over again

    • @joemendyk9994
      @joemendyk9994 3 года назад +2

      Excellent comment....till that last word.

  • @staywell1682
    @staywell1682 3 года назад +18

    Dear Anming, You are back, and wow! You make it look like entertain ment, but it is a story of truth, of observation and a demonstration what communication with the world around you can do for you. How artistic and aesthetic you demonstrate to us what communication can do.
    An eye opener that one should communicate more. It is a masterpiece, it communicates straight into the heart that one should learn and be able to do what you do. That production tops the top of your videos. Thank you for being there.

  • @doorran
    @doorran 3 года назад +48

    They are curious.. especially in the more remote areas of Japan. the great thing is Kids never get tired of repeating things when you are trying to learn Japanese.. after living there for 3 years I can honestly say that kids helped me learn more quickly.

  • @BookishDark
    @BookishDark 2 года назад +5

    I have to show my daughters your channel - my 13 year old really wants to learn Japanese and her nine year old sister wants to do everything she wants to do lol they’ll love you!

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  2 года назад +1

      I’m so thrilled that your daughters love the channel too!

  • @SootherousNoise
    @SootherousNoise 3 года назад +24

    That's why I love kids. They are straight forward and speaks what's on there mind.

  • @jerometsowinghuen
    @jerometsowinghuen 3 года назад +54

    Greetings from Hong Kong. Hello, Miss Anming. I found your RUclips channel as a suggestion from Miss Amy's channel, Blondie in China. And congratulations on graduating in university, so that you can have more time make videos since the last video in 2 months ago, or once everything are settled.
    Anyway, it is interesting to see the reaction from Japanese kids, when they see foreigners, this helps them broadening their curiosity about culture from other countries.

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +4

      That's so cool. I love Amy's channel!

  • @Magnetorheological
    @Magnetorheological 3 года назад +75

    It's always fun to surprise people with language! Being a native HKer that grew up in the US, I blend in completely in Hong Kong appearance-wise. So whenever I strike up conversation with tourists and foreigners or when they ask me for directions or something, they're always surprised at how fluent my English is 😆

    • @OrientalPearl
      @OrientalPearl  3 года назад +3

      That’s great! I bet they are very impressed with you.

  • @suge6973
    @suge6973 10 месяцев назад +34

    日本人です。
    日本語とてもお上手ですね。
    素敵な動画をありがとうございます!

  • @coaster6777
    @coaster6777 3 года назад +22

    I really appreciate how open Japanese people appear, as I am looking forward to visit Japan. Already learning Japanese since 2 years. ビデオ本当楽しいです。

  • @mycroft16
    @mycroft16 3 года назад +71

    I lived in Brazil for a few years and that's how I knew I'd gotten a handle on the language too. When I realized the kids weren't laughing the moment I opened my mouth. When you can talk with the kids and joke and have fun, you're doing pretty good.

  • @chocoporkstew.01
    @chocoporkstew.01 3 года назад +724

    The two dudes putting sand on her were enduring hard
    *They have my respect*

    • @comradeskulerr8522
      @comradeskulerr8522 3 года назад +31

      pog moment

    • @vioIetharmon
      @vioIetharmon 3 года назад +7

      @@comradeskulerr8522 ..

    • @chocoporkstew.01
      @chocoporkstew.01 3 года назад +78

      @Togos Na70 nah.. prob better if u dont find out..

    • @hermaeusmora424
      @hermaeusmora424 3 года назад +23

      @@comradeskulerr8522 I give you a pog moment.
      At 6:29 I am pretty sure I have seen doujin with that title.

    • @dylanreeves4339
      @dylanreeves4339 3 года назад +12

      @@hermaeusmora424 You can't say that without providing the sauce.

  • @millennial_fairy
    @millennial_fairy 2 года назад +7

    Those children are too adorable for words!

  • @vincentgilbert8550
    @vincentgilbert8550 3 года назад +18

    I live in a small tourist village here on the coast of Oregon, and a few years ago a Japanese woman with a tiny daughter holding her hand passed me as I was entering our only store. Im 6'4" and the little girl came up to my knee. As we passed, she stopped looking at my knee, tugging at her mom to stop as well. The mother became embarassed but I quickly motioned "No no no Its Ok" . This adorable little girl started looking up and up and up until she was looking at my face. She broke into a smile that could melt all the ice on earth as if to say " Oh it IS a person". I carry that smile with me to this day. Children can be our greatest teachers.

  • @brandtc.7991
    @brandtc.7991 3 года назад +76

    When I lived in Okinawa, it was so much fun talking to Japanese kids! I am American, but they loved how my skin and hair was, even though it was just brown hair, they could not believe my Hazel eyes. You just have to accept it, they are not purposely being rude, they are just curious, they never said anything mean, so we let them touch our hair and carried them on our shoulders because we were SOOOO tall compared to the Okinawans, its was a ton of fun!

    • @Mayfrancisxavier
      @Mayfrancisxavier 10 месяцев назад +2

      Ooh, I loved living in Okinawa in the 90’s. So much fun!!

  • @joegreenslade4122
    @joegreenslade4122 3 года назад +47

    Yes. The most common comment I heard, especially from children was "foreigner!" In Taiwan and Japan, accompanied by a pointing finger. I found it more common in out-of-the-way areas of course, where visitors are less common.

  • @AlvinAnakMudaPlayedAGame
    @AlvinAnakMudaPlayedAGame 7 месяцев назад +3

    I remember in Japan when i was hiking with the school, children squished my face playfully and then one of them hugged me.
    Also a baby kept looking at me while walking so i wave my hand at her, she waved back then bounced in total excitement.
    Lastly, a customer’s toddler for some reason called me “Papa”. It was an accomplishment for me personally.
    Those memories will never left my mind😇

  • @licecotomihsik
    @licecotomihsik 3 года назад +21

    すごく分かりやすくまとめられていて丁寧に編集されたのが伝わります✨
    この動画以上にたくさんの人と接してたくさん動画撮ったんだろうなぁ

  • @oliviacomeau1978
    @oliviacomeau1978 3 года назад +18

    2:50 the girl in the red shirt is absolutely gorgeous

  • @Brandon11746
    @Brandon11746 3 года назад +12

    I've never been to Japan, but i've always wanted to go there. So i'm so jealous. Thanks for this. it's interesting to see how they react to foreigners. All i knew about the people there is that they are very respectful, and in general intelligent as well.

  • @TheCgelarden
    @TheCgelarden 6 месяцев назад +2

    This video is so heartwarming. Thank you for sharing. You made my day!