Columns Soapland

Nishikawaguchi Soapland: Working Flexible Hours

Elon, 20-plus years in the fuzoku scene, breaks down Nishikawaguchi soaplands and flexible scheduling from firsthand experience.

Nishikawaguchi Soapland: Working Flexible Hours

Today's topic: Nishikawaguchi soaplands and working flexible (self-set) hours.

I'll lay it out using my own firsthand experience plus what I've dug up over more than 20 years in fuzoku — Japan's licensed adult-entertainment business.

The basics

Let me set down the fundamentals you ought to know about this corner of the world.

Elon
ElonI'm not trying to conquer every soapland (soap = bathhouse-style full-service shop) in the country, but I've hit the "signature" spots in pretty much every region. My takeaway: service quality and cleanliness don't necessarily go hand in hand. Even the bargain joints can have downright divine service.

When you've watched this industry as long as I have, you learn that the same topic can read completely differently from the customer's seat than from the girl's side of the table.

What I can tell you from experience

Let me talk from what I've actually lived through.

Elon
ElonForty-two, single, living alone. When nearly your whole paycheck disappears into fuzoku, you naturally develop an eye for the real thing. That's not a brag and it's not a regret — just a fact I'm putting on the record.

I believe firsthand experience beats theory every time. Especially in this business, it's not what you know — it's how many rounds you've logged.

My bottom line

Elon
ElonAfter circumcision surgery and a pearl implant, I walk in with the confidence that I'm "fully prepped." It widened my range of play, sure, but the bigger difference is the psychological ease. To anyone agonizing over the modification: do it, no regrets.

The place I keep coming back to is First Class Ruby. The reason it shows up again and again on this site is simple — it's the shop I actually repeat at. Take it as a recommendation.