Columns Soapland

Working at a Soapland, Nishikawaguchi

On working at a Nishikawaguchi soapland, broken down by Elon, who's been working this world for over 20 years.

Working at a Soapland, Nishikawaguchi

Today's topic: working at a Nishikawaguchi soapland. (Soapland is the bath-based full-service format.)

I'm going to break it down using my own two-decade-plus run through this world, mixed with what I've dug up along the way.

The basics

Let me lay out what you actually need to know going in.

Elon
ElonI'm not out to conquer every soapland in the country, but I've made the rounds of the "signature" soaplands in each region. My conclusion: service quality and cleanliness don't move in lockstep. There are dirt-cheap shops with downright divine service.

When you've watched the industry long enough, you notice the same topic can grade out completely differently depending on whether you're looking at it from the customer's side or the worker's side.

What I can tell you from experience

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

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

I believe lived experience beats theory. Especially in this business — it's a world where reps matter more than book knowledge.

My bottom line

Elon
ElonAfter getting circumcised and a pearl implant done, I now carry a real confidence that I'm "fully prepared." It widened what I can do, sure, but the bigger difference is the mental ease — it's on another level. To anyone agonizing over the surgery: I can say "do it, no regrets."

The place I keep coming back to in the end is First Class Ruby. The only reason it shows up again and again on this site is simple — it's the shop I actually keep going back to. Use it as a reference.