[Gu Tao Bar]
Japanese people have the following impressive living habits:
■ Wash your hands often.
Japanese love cleaning, starting with washing hands. Wash your hands before and after meals, and wash your hands after going home. These are all habits developed since childhood. Japan's tap water has a high cleanliness standard, so you don't have to worry about virus or bacterial infection when drinking raw water. Therefore, in Japanese houses, restaurants or parks, people turn on the tap to quench their thirst when they are thirsty.
■ Brush your teeth frequently.
Japanese love their teeth and have the habit of brushing their teeth after meals. Many Japanese people have to keep a set of dental instruments in the office. There are also many Japanese who rinse their mouths and brush their teeth as soon as they finish eating. Brushing your teeth after meals and removing food residue from your teeth are very beneficial to protect your teeth.
■ Take a bath frequently.
Japanese people like to take a bath at least once a day, usually before going to bed, which helps them sleep well at night. Some people even take a bath after getting up in the morning, even women with long hair, so that they can stay refreshed when they go out in the morning. The Japanese are also famous for soaking in hot springs. Before going to the hot springs, everyone will consciously wash their bodies in the shower, and then go to the hot springs.
■ Change clothes frequently.
Japanese office workers, especially women, have to change their underwear and coats every day, otherwise they will be suspected of not going home for the night.
■ No spitting.
Studies have proved that there are many viruses and bacteria hidden in sputum. The Japanese believe that not spitting is a sign of respecting others and being responsible for society, which represents the educational level of individuals. Japanese people usually throw up on the paper towels they carry with them and throw them into the trash can. In Tokyo, there are few sputum marks on the ground, which are very clean.
■ Eat without walking.
It is considered impolite to eat in public places such as subways and buses. The food stalls on the street sell fast food, but it is polite to buy and eat before leaving.
■ Bowing instead of shaking hands
Bowing is a common etiquette in Japan. People in China hardly shake hands, and occasionally shake hands when they meet foreign talents.
■ Speak softly.
Japanese people generally don't speak loudly in public, and speak softly and slowly, thus reducing the phenomenon of spitting. Droplets are the "killers" who spread many respiratory diseases. Of course, they are also one of the important transmission routes of SARS.
■ There are special bags for ash.
In Japan, when you buy cigarettes, you will also receive an ash bag attached by the clerk, and some shops will also sell ash bags. This kind of small bag with heat insulation aluminum film can be carried in your pocket. When smoking in public places, put cigarette butts into bags, collect them and throw them away.
■ Garbage sorting and storage
Garbage sorting is particularly detailed in Japan. Residents must put garbage into special garbage bags according to combustible and nonflammable, and garbage cannot be thrown out at any time. When combustible and non-combustible garbage can be thrown out, each block has a time and place, and then the sanitation workers take it away and send it to the garbage treatment plant, or reuse it, or bury it and burn it.
■ Implement a separate dining system at home.
Suzuki's home in Tokyo, there are five people in the family, and everyone has their own special tableware. Eat at home, and separate all kinds of dishes, one for each person.
■ Less visits from relatives and friends.
Compared with hospitable families in China, Japanese people visit each other less often, and they don't receive guests at home. This is probably because the average Japanese house is relatively small.
■ Housewives' daily cleaning.
Most Japanese women are full-time housewives at home after marriage, and their daily activities are not wide, so sweeping the courtyard is an important job. In the room, tatami or the floor is carefully scrubbed by the housewife every day, just like a "smart rest".
■ Japanese people have the habit of giving gifts.
Japanese people pay attention to etiquette and have the custom of giving gifts. But they usually send something that is useless to them, and the recipient can transfer it again. Japanese people like China's silk, famous wine, traditional Chinese medicine and some famous brands, but they are disgusted with things with designs of foxes and badgers, because foxes are symbols of greed and badgers represent cunning. When you visit an ordinary family, you can only send 15 chrysanthemums, and the royal badge only has 16 chrysanthemums.
■ Unity and perseverance
Most Japanese people have strong personal ability and solidarity. This makes people in many countries in the world envious. -Hard-working men and hard-working teenagers. They have dreams, unity, strong will and perseverance.