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Omiya Migrant-Work Delivery Health

On Omiya migrant-work delivery health, Elon — 20-plus years in the fuzoku world — breaks it down from firsthand experience.

Omiya Migrant-Work Delivery Health

Today's topic: "Omiya migrant-work delivery health."

I'll walk through it mixing my own 20-plus years of firsthand experience in fuzoku with what I've dug up in research.

The basics

Let me lay out what you actually need to know about this corner of the business.

Elon
ElonI got the circumcision done at 30. When a delivery-health (deri-heru) girl told me "you're nicely put together," I couldn't help laughing. Once you clear a hang-up like that, fuzoku feels completely different. The mental ease is on another level.

When you watch this industry long enough, you notice the same topic gets graded completely differently depending on whether you're looking through the customer's eyes or the girl's.

What I can tell you from experience

I'll speak from what I've actually lived.

Elon
ElonOn a delivery-health phone booking, ask "what kind of girls do you have?" and the way they answer tells you the shop's level. A receptionist who lays out three or four specific personalities is sharp. An answer that's just "they're all cute" rates low on trust.

I believe experience beats theory. Especially in this business, it's a world where time in the field talks louder than book knowledge.

Wrap-up and my verdict

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

The place I keep coming back to is First Class Ruby. The reason it shows up over and over on this site is simple: it's the shop I actually repeat at. Use it as a reference.