• Log #3: Why We Inhabit Incompatible Realities (And How to Escape Them)
    2026/04/23

    Have you ever sent a simple, one-word email and received a furious, five-paragraph essay in return?

    In this entry of The Connect Logs, we explore why we constantly collide with people who seem to be living in completely different realities. Based on Kenneth J. Gergen's "Social Constructionism," we deconstruct the illusion of objective truth and discover that reality is just a constantly negotiated mutual agreement.

    From everyday office standoffs to the profound, war-torn origins of the Japanese superhero Anpanman, we learn how to step out of our own worldviews and renegotiate the contracts of our lives.

    Inside this Log:

    • The "Avatar" Identity: Why you are a shifting web of relationships (and how this connects to the Buddhist concept of Ku or Emptiness).

    • The Auditor's Secret: How to resolve fierce corporate conflicts by simply validating the other person's "map."

    • The Anpanman Philosophy: Why ideological justice is an illusion, and true justice is simply feeding the hungry.

    • Finding "Yoyu" (Mental Bandwidth): How to help yourself and others escape toxic environments (like "Black Companies") by rewriting the labels of your life.

    Join Itari and Kisuke as they give you the ultimate psychological toolkit to create room to breathe.

    Note: This episode is an AI-generated English edition of the original Japanese program "Connect Log," powered by NotebookLM.

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    23 分
  • Log #2: Why Your Perspective is a Trap (The Curse of Knowledge)
    2026/04/20

    In this entry of The Connect Logs, we decode Meta-Thinking, the cognitive tool that allows you to step outside your own mental map.


    Why is it so hard to truly understand your boss or a client from a different culture? From a Japanese contractor's eye-opening experience at an overseas site to Henry Ford’s legendary "faster horse" quote, we discuss how "useful" functions are shifting toward "meaningful" identities in the modern world.


    Inside this Log:

    The Illusion of Perspective: Why players and managers completely misunderstand each other and how the "Please Teach Me" stance can bridge the gap.

    Abstracting the Need: Learning from Ford and iPhone examples to stop building "Frankenstein products" and start creating true value.

    The Architecture of Self: Comparing the "Alias" model with the radical "Bunjin"(dividual) theory to find psychological freedom.


    Join Itari and Kisuke as they rotate the camera to find freedom through a higher vantage point.


    Note: This episode is an AI-generated English edition of the original Japanese program "Connect Log," powered by NotebookLM.

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    45 分
  • Log #1: The Groupthink Trap: Why "Excellent" Teams Fail
    2026/04/20

    Ever wondered why brilliant professionals sometimes make catastrophically wrong decisions?

    In our premiere entry of The Connect Logs, we dive into a major Japanese corporate scandal to uncover the invisible mechanics of Groupthink (Shudan Senryo).

    Drawing from Fumitake Koga’s analytical work, we explore how high cohesion and homogeneity—the very traits most companies strive for—can actually create dangerous collective blind spots.


    Inside this Log:

    The Prescription Glasses Metaphor: How joining a cohesive group quietly distorts your baseline for reality.

    The Phantom "Everyone": Dismantling the deceptive power of the phrase "For the sake of the company" and why it removes personal accountability.

    Omoiyari vs. Omoikomi: How genuine compassion can mutate into arrogant assumption when we fail to ask others what they truly need.

    Diversity as a Survival Strategy: Why true diversity is a mechanical necessity to break the echo chamber, not just a moral ornament.


    Join Itari and Kisuke as they connect organizational psychology to the practical realities of the office and even the family dinner table.

    Note: This episode is an AI-generated English edition of the original Japanese program "Connect Log," powered by NotebookLM. 

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    43 分