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Delivery Health Work, Migrant Gigs, Omiya

A breakdown of delivery health work and migrant (dekasegi) gigs in Omiya, from Taniguchi — 20-plus years in the fuzoku trade, writing from real experience.

Delivery Health Work, Migrant Gigs, Omiya

"Delivery health work, migrant gigs, Omiya" — some people hear that phrase and immediately get it, and some don't.

I'm 42 and still out walking these streets, so I'll pull it together from a real, on-the-ground view.

Why this topic matters

Information about fuzoku (Japan's licensed adult-entertainment business) is surprisingly disorganized. Beginners especially tend to end up not even knowing where to start looking.

Elon
ElonOn a delivery health (delihealth) phone booking, ask "what kind of girls do you have?" — the way they answer tells you the shop's level. A receptionist who gives you three or four girls with real personalities is sharp. An answer that's just "they're all cute" earns low trust.

What that means in concrete terms

In a word: whether you know or you don't know changes the quality of the experience.

Elon
Elon42, single, living alone. When nearly your whole paycheck disappears into this stuff, you naturally develop an eye for it. That's not a brag and it's not regret — just a fact I'm putting on the record.

What I've written here is the distilled essence of the knowledge I've built up over 20 years.

To close

Elon
ElonAfter phimosis surgery and a pearl implant, I now carry a real "I'm ready" kind of confidence. The range of play opened up, sure, but the bigger difference is the mental ease. To anyone on the fence about work done — I can tell you I've got zero regrets.

If you've got questions on this topic, drop a comment or hit me on social. And while you're at it, check out First Class Ruby too.