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Have you ever been touched by someone at work who showed you a little kindness? This time, we're talking about the kindness we've experienced and the feelings we had at the time. However, it's hard to do it when you're busy. I respect people who can naturally be kind! --- BGM is available from here. BGMer http://bgmer.net --- ■ Program homepage (various links available) https://tonari-connect.jimdosite.com/ ■ We look forward to your letters! https://forms.gle/uMJvXaQ6ieZK2SV38 ■ There is also X (feel free to take a look) / tonari_kojima / andc_funada --- ■ Kojima has written his first "novel" (synopsis) The story of Yuka and Hayakawa, two protagonists in the apparel industry. The year is 2005...29-year-old Yuka is the top manager of a rapidly growing apparel shop and leads a fulfilling life. Yuka realizes that she has a strange ability to sense the future...just a little ahead...and begins to use her original ability even more. Meanwhile, in 2025, 50-year-old Hayakawa, who once achieved success with Yuka, is now living a dull and down-and-out life. One day, he goes back 20 years and meets Yuka again when she was young. Hayakawa struggles to change the future so as not to repeat the mistakes of the past, in this sci-fi story about the apparel industry where the past and future intersect. https://note.com/tonari_kojima/n/nc49... (The whole story is free) ■ Kojima has written his first book in his life, "Working in apparel, I'm 30 tomorrow: What I want to tell people struggling in the retail industry" At the age of 30, he left the apparel industry while facing various hardships, and then he desperately survived for 15 years as a "food, clothing and shelter consultant", so he can write about the reality of the industry and his career after that. Satoshi Kojima of the podcast "Working People's Stories" has contributed his first article from his own perspective on the reality of the apparel industry, which is not usually discussed. Dedicated to all workers struggling in the apparel and other retail industries. https://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/B0CV7HK4S9 Available on Amazon Kindle e-book. (Free for Unlimited members) --- ■ Materialistic Insight! Satoshi Kojima, who runs "Working People's Stories," talks about what he thought before buying something he wanted as a solo activity, asking himself questions as [n=1]. There are basically no reviews of the products themselves. He reflects on his own consumption behavior, which is complex, hobby-like, easy, and trendy, intertwining the perspective of a 40-something male consumer and the perspective of a food, clothing, and shelter consultant. https://open.spotify.com/show/5eJCPev...