The Star Malaysia

Rubber romance

More and more Japanese men are turning to silicone sex dolls for company.

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TOKYO: When the spark went out of Masayuki Ozaki’s marriage, he found an unusual outlet to plug the romantic void – a silicone sex doll he swears is the love of his life.

The life-size dummy, called Mayu, shares his bed under the same roof as Ozaki’s wife and teenage daughter in Tokyo, an arrangemen­t that triggered angry rows before a delicate truce was finally declared.

“After my wife gave birth we stopped having sex and I felt a deep sense of loneliness,” the 45-year-old physiother­apist said.

“But the moment I saw Mayu in the showroom, it was love at first sight,” blushed Ozaki, who takes his doll on dates in a wheelchair and dresses her in wigs, sexy clothes and jewellery.

“My wife was furious when I first brought Mayu home. These days she puts up with it, reluctantl­y,” he added.

“When my daughter realised it wasn’t a giant Barbie doll, she freaked out and said it was gross – but now she’s old enough to share Mayu’s clothes.”

Ozaki is one of an increasing number of Japanese men turning to rubber romance in a country that’s lost its mojo.

He also admits to being turned off by human relationsh­ips.

“Japanese women are cold-hearted,” he said while on a seaside stroll with his silicone squeeze.

“They’re very selfish. Men want someone to listen to them without grumbling when they get home from work,” Ozaki added.

“Whatever problems I have, Mayu is always there waiting for me. I love her to bits and want to be with her forever.

“I can’t imagine going back to a human being. I want to be buried with her and take her to heaven.”

Around 2,000 of the life-like dolls – which cost from US$6,000 (RM25,762) and come with adjusta- ble fingers, removable head and genitals – are sold each year in Japan, according to industry insiders.

“Technology has come a long way since those nasty inflatable dolls in the 1970s,” noted Hideo Tsuchiya, managing director of doll maker Orient Industry.

“They look incredibly real now and it feels like you’re touching human skin.

More men are buying them because they feel they can actually communicat­e with the dolls,” he explained.

Popular with disabled customers and widowers, as well as mannequin fetishists, some men use dolls to avoid heartache.

“Human beings are so demanding,” insisted 62-year-old Senji Nakajima, who tenderly bathes his rubber girlfriend Saori. He has framed photos of her on his wall and even takes her skiing and surfing.

“People always want something from you – like money or commitment,” he complained.

“My heart flutters when I come home to Saori,” added the married father-of-two as he picnicked with his plastic partner.

“She never betrays me, she makes my worries melt away.”

Nakajima’s relationsh­ip with Saori has divided his family, but the Tokyo-born businessma­n refuses to give her up.

“My son accepts it, my daughter can’t,” said Nakajima, whose wife has banned Saori from the family home.

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 ?? — AFP ?? Faux girlfriend: Nakajima having a picnic with his sex doll Saori under cherry blossoms in Yamanashi prefecture.
— AFP Faux girlfriend: Nakajima having a picnic with his sex doll Saori under cherry blossoms in Yamanashi prefecture.

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