Saturday, December 29, 2007

What is Kata?

I labeled kata on the last blog. What is kata? It's a Japanese word and you might not know the meaning, so here I explain it to you.

Kata is translated into 'form', but because it's Japanese, I would rather translate into 'a way, an order of doing something'.
There're thousands of katas here everywhere in Japan: you see they follow them when they eat food, talk, celebrate something, bow, so on and on. As kata comes out of traditions and a tradition will fade out as time goes by, this Japanese original traditions have the same principle. There used to be much more in old days. But there are still many.

As one grows up, they learn katas at home, school and a daily life. I think that learning them is a a very important way to be regarded as an adult in Japan. If you were Japanese thirty's or fourty's and you didn't know much about them, people around you might think you were lower-classed or ineducated.

Though out-of-katas is getting telorated especially among young people, as for the business world, Japanese workers must learn and follow them. Some of them might not be forced to, but again these people are thought they work in a lower-classed job.

Kata is so powerful that it often affects Japanese's mind and thought. Japanese people often say "Shikataganai". You see "kata" in the phrase, and it literally means "do not have any kata" and it implies the speaker thinks there's no ways to put something through so it makes no sense to even try. It's ok to say so after you push hard to manage it somehow, but Japanese often say shikataganai even before they try. This reflects one aspect of the Japanese culture: when a bad thing happens to them, Japanese don't complain, don't argue and accept. They think shikataganai and give up, and think that's how an adult do. If they make a fuss complaining, they are thought childish.

No comments:

About this blog

In this blog, I tell you what Japanese workers do while they are working. I believe it's very mysterious to other country's people, especially Europians, because it is said that Japanese work style is different from other areas, and it is not easy for other country's people to come into the Japanese worker's territory, as not so many of them work in Japan. You have little chances to learn it from Japanese workers, because they're pretty busy working all the time. Even if luckily you meet some of them, unluckily they probably don't speak English. Remember that most of Japanese can't speak English.

Shortly, I reveal 'the real world of Japanese workers' in this blog. I also tell you something different about Japan and Japanese: life, culture, customs, etc. I hope you enjoy reading my blog.