(did I mention she has the bank book?)

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gboothe wrote:..the wife encourages me to go out on the ville get pissed and chase skirts. Keeps me out of the house and jama shinai yo ni!(did I mention she has the bank book?)
Taro Toporific wrote:Damn, she better watch that bankbook better or you'll end up buying me lunch again (thanks). :P
dingosatemybaby wrote:but on the domestic scene, Japan really does remain a matriarchial society, where the o-jo-sama reigns supreme.
A potential avalanche of divorces is set to occur after April 1, when a new system under the public pension scheme will begin, making a divorcing wife eligible for a maximum of 50 percent of her company employee husband's pension benefits.
Many women in their middle or older years are believed to be waiting for the system to begin before divorcing their husbands, according to analysts.
With the new system to start in less than six months, civic groups have been sponsoring explanatory sessions in many parts of the country. A great majority of attendants have been middle-aged and older women.
In a meeting held in Kawasaki last month, one woman said, "My husband would be certain to refuse a 50-50 split of pension benefits [if we divorced].
"What should I do if I don't get my husband to agree to an equitable split?"
Another woman asked, "So, the wife is eligible [to get part of the husband's pension] if she applies for it within two years after divorce?"
With the system, wives and their husbands, if they divorce on or after April 1, will have the right to have benefits, covering the length of their marriage, from his or her spouse under the employee pension plan (kosei nenkin) partially shifted to the spouse, if an application is made within two years after the divorce. The system will be available also to government employees covered by the mutual aid pension plan (kyosai nenkin.)
If a woman never worked full-time during her marriage, she will be eligible for up to 50 percent of her husband's benefits....more...
Behan wrote:I used to do day shifts at an eikaiwa school and I met retired men who didn't seem to know what to do with themselves. I don't know if it's typical of the general population or not but it seems like a lot of them take up heavy drinking with a passion. Some would work up a sweat gardening in the morning, have a shower and lunch, and they proceed to get blitzed.
Iraira wrote:"....Some would work up a sweat gardening in the morning, have a shower and lunch, and they proceed to get blitzed...."
and this is a problem how?
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