
„Früher liebte ich es zu trinken, zu rauchen und auswärts zu essen“, sagt Premierministerin Takaichi, die während ihrer täglichen Fahrten zwischen der offiziellen Residenz des Premierministers und dem Büro des Premierministers mit Schlafmangel zu kämpfen hat.
https://www.dailyshincho.jp/article/2026/04270450/
21 Kommentare
She just like me fr fr
„Cry me a river“ larper.
You mean two hours of sleep a night isn’t sustainable?
Welcome to the real world, now you drink and smoke to cope with work and never dine out
Is dining out considered a bad habit like smoking or drinking for a woman in Japan?
Maybe stop working, working, working, working then?
So normal!!! ❤️
I mean… A person who struggles to organize their time… Is tasked with the welfare of a country?
Sounds kinda weird to me.
Yeah, she’s got a very long commute, right? /s
Maybe cut down on your drum practice sessions…
She looks like she drinks and smokes a lot.
Has she considered retiring? She could have it all back!
Dance! The economy demands it!
Instead of attending poly sci lectures?
Her work schedule gives: look busy but accomplish little.
Does an awful lot of complaining for someone with their own personal driver and entourage to do things for them.
Why aren’t the Prime Minister’s office and residence closer together?
She’s the ultimate “do nothing-er” from every single corporate office in this country. Looks busy, accomplishes little no nothing. Yaps a lot. And brags about working a lot, while actually is all just a pretend show. Ngl being a politician seems a very nice career. To people who are a*holes.
As if she wasn’t bad enough already now we have to factor in how she’ll be when even more sleep deprived. Common symptoms include: difficulty focusing, forgetfulness, slow decision-making, poor judgement, irritability, mood swings, low motivation, feeling overwhelmed, depression, and even hallucinations.
Just what you want for the leader of a country in crisis.
>struggling with sleep deprivation during her daily commutes between the Prime Minister’s official residence and the Prime Minister’s office.
The residence and office are in the same building. How is this at all contributory to sleep deprivation as the title wording suggests?
So relatable!