5 lakh Japanese live isolated life

More than half a million young people in Japan have shunned society and chosen to live isolated lives, according to a survey released by the government.

The phenomenon, called “hikikomori“, is defined by the Japanese health, labour and welfare ministry as people who have stayed in their home for six months or more without going to school, work or venturing out to socialise. The survey found that 541,000 Japanese in the age group of 15 to 39 were living in isolation. The figure is actually lower than was estimated in the 2010 cabinet office survey , when 696,000 were thought to be suffering from hikikomori.

However, those who do withdraw are doing so for longer, according to the study, as those who have shut themselves in their homes for at least seven years accounted for 35% of the total. Another 29% have lived as recluses for three to five years, The Japan Times reported.

There are more older recluses too -the number of those aged between 35 and 39 has doubled in six years, according to the survey .

Having first emerged as a mass behaviour in the 1990s, the condition is not yet classified as an official disorder and there is no recommended treatment.

Doctors believe psychological and cultural influences combine to make yo ung people feel they need to withdraw entirely. The condition is far more common in men, who face huge pressures to succeed early in life, both at school and in their careers. It is also more prevalent among the middle classes -those who isolate themselves are often well educated.

Hikikomori sufferers often play video games or read comics at home, rather than interacting with others. But psychologists say this is not caused by laziness.

Tamaki Saito, a Japanese psychologist has described living with the condition as being “tormented in the mind“.“They want to go out in the world, they want to make friends or lovers, but they can’t,“ he told the BBC.

The phenomenon is not limited to Japan. A study in 2015 found documented cases of hikikomori-style social reclusion in US, China, and Spain among other nations.

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