Japan is a hard working society, and the spread of productivity-sapping sickness is always a concern at schools and workplaces, but that doesn’t seem like reason enough for a large number of facial coverings that sometimes make Tokyo offices look more like an operating room.
Health concerns are only part of the reason why the Japanese wear masks. Until recently, masks were primarily worn by people who had already come down with an illness. If you were feeling under the weather but couldn’t take the day off, common courtesy dictated that you cover your mouth and nose with a mask, as not to breathe your germs all over you class or office mates or fellow commuters.
In 2003 medical supply maker Unicharm released a new type of mask specifically designed for hay fever sufferers. Most masks had been made of cotton, with an inner pouch into which gauze was placed. After taking off the mask users threw out the gauze, washed the cotton mask for reuse, and restuffed the pocket.
Unicharm’s anti-hay fever masks were made of non-woven material, which was more effective in blocking pollen. They were also completely disposable and could be cheaply bought in large amounts. This new type of mask was a game changer, and business research firm Fuji Keizai now says non-woven masks account for 86% of the market today.
The introduction of these cheap, easier-to-use masks also made it more practical to wear one in order to prevent getting sick in the first place. Commuting in Japan often means spending an hour or more pressed up against your fellow passengers on a train or bus. Mask sales have more than tripled over the last decade, with particularly large spikes caused by influenza outbreak fears in 2009 and worries over micro particulate matter following the earthquake and nuclear accident of 2011. But some people are using them for purposes that have nothing to do with physical health.
But the recent surge in masks’ popularity isn’t entirely the result of a desire to give people the cold shoulder. Instead, an increasing number of people are using masks because of their desire for warmth. Japan gets pretty chilly during the winter. As the temperature drops you can bundle up with tights, undershirts, sweaters, parkas, gloves, scarves, and caps. One thing that’s hard to do, though, is keep your face warm.
You could always pick up a ski mask at the sporting goods shop, but effectiveness aside, you’re going to get some strange looks wearing one anywhere other than on the slopes. But since Japanese society has already gotten used to people wearing surgical masks outside of the hospital, you can safely put one on to keep your nose and cheeks warm without attracting any attention.
There’s even a mask whose seller claims it’ll help you lose weight. Cosmetics maker T-Garden has jumped into the mask arena with its Flavor Mask. Not only does it feature a pretty-in-pink design, each disposable mask comes scented with raspberry, which T-Garden says will boost your metabolism. Personally I am not entirely convinced that a mask can help you lose weight it seems like a food-based fragrance that is going to do more to ramp up your appetite than your metabolism.
Like any mask, it should help prevent you from passing a cold around, keep your face a little warmer, cut off unwanted social interaction, and stop the need to wear extensive makeup, none of which is necessarily worthless by the unproven calorie-burning mask.
-The more you know~
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