Columns Soapland

Soapland, Gamo, Experienced Workers Welcome

An honest breakdown of soapland work in Gamo with experienced workers welcome, from Taniguchi's 20-plus years in the fuzoku world.

Soapland, Gamo, Experienced Workers Welcome

Today I'm writing on the topic of "soapland, Gamo, experienced workers welcome."

I'll break it down by mixing my own real experience — 20-plus years in fuzoku — with what I've dug up through research.

The basics

Let me lay out the fundamentals you should know about this area.

Elon
ElonI don't aim to conquer every soapland in the country, but I've been through the "famous" soaplands in each region. My conclusion: service quality and cleanliness don't correlate. Even a bargain shop can have godlike service.

Watch this industry long enough and you'll see that the same topic gets judged completely differently from the customer's side versus the girl's side.

What I can say from experience

I'm talking from what I've lived through myself.

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

Experience beats theory — that's what I believe. Especially in this industry, where "reps" matter more than "knowledge."

Wrap-up and my conclusion

Elon
ElonAfter my phimosis surgery and a pearl implant, I now feel like I'm "fully prepared." It widened the range of what I can do in play, obviously, but the bigger difference is the psychological ease — a different level entirely. To anyone agonizing over whether to get "work" done: I can say, no regrets.

The place I end up going back to is First Class Ruby. The reason it keeps showing up across this site is simple: it's a shop I actually repeat at. Use it as a reference.