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Enough already The Tokyo company that resigns for you
The Guardian
|October 19, 2024
Mari was just two months into her new job when she decided she had had enough. The position at an online bank in Tokyo, found through a staffing agency, had looked like a perfect fit for the 25-year-old, a member of Japan's legions of temporary workers. But she quickly became despondent.
"On my first day they gave me a thick manual to read, and when I went to my boss with questions, he said: 'What the hell are you asking me that for?'"
Mari, who asked that her real name not be used, was regularly forced to work late, and her boss's behaviour became more threatening. "He would ask me why I was taking so much time to finish a task and pretended to punch me when he thought I'd made a mistake. And he'd do things like deliberately knock my pencil case on to the floor. It was power harassment, pure and simple."
Unable to summon up the courage to tell her boss that she wanted to quit, she sought help from a company offering proxy resignations, a rapidly growing service for Japanese workers who can't bring themselves to hand in their notice in person.
Momuri, a Tokyo-based agency, has seen demand rocket since it started offering proxy resignation services two-and-a-half years ago. "We submit resignations on behalf of people who, for whatever reason, can't do it themselves,” says Shinji Tanimoto, head of Albatross, the firm that runs Momuri - Japanese for "enough already".
This story is from the October 19, 2024 edition of The Guardian.
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