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We received a letter from the radio name "Anko Suki". Funada responds straightforwardly, while Kojima uses his professional hazards to respond. Do you have a senior like this in your work environment? If you have any opinions such as "I would do it like this!", we think that it will also be a support for "Anko Suki", so please feel free to contact us. --- BGM is borrowed from here. BGMer http://bgmer.net Fukagawa https://dova-s.jp/_contents/author/pr... --- ■ Program homepage (various links available) https://tonari-connect.jimdosite.com/ ■ We look forward to your letters! https://forms.gle/uMJvXaQ6ieZK2SV38 ■ There is also X (please feel free to take a look) / tonari_kojima / andc_funada --- ■ Kojima has written his first "novel" (synopsis) The story of the two main characters, Yuka and Hayakawa, who work in the apparel industry. The year is 2005... 29-year-old Yuka is leading a fulfilling life as the top manager of a rapidly growing apparel shop. However, Yuka realizes that she has a strange ability to sense the future...just a little ahead, and begins to demonstrate her innate abilities 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, a certain incident causes him to go back 20 years and meet Yuka in her younger days again. This is a sci-fi story set in the apparel industry where the past and future intersect, as Hayakawa struggles to change the future so as not to repeat the mistakes of the past. https://note.com/tonari_kojima/n/nc49... (The whole book is free) ■ Kojima has written his first book, "Working in apparel, I'm 30 tomorrow: What I want to say to those struggling in the retail industry" At the age of 30, he left the apparel industry with various hardships, and then he lived desperately 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. Kojima Satoshi (Kojima Satoshi) of the podcast program "Working People's Stories" has contributed his first article from his own perspective and point of view on the reality of the apparel industry, which is not usually talked about. Dedicated to all working people struggling in the apparel and other retail industries. https://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/B0CV7HK4S9 Now on sale in the Amazon Kindle digital version. (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 generally 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 man who is an average consumer and a food, clothing, and shelter consultant. https://open.spotify.com/show/5eJCPev...