"Don't get on a crowded train with a stroller!" Surge, tongue -fluttering ... No More "Bokubiku commuting" questionnaire | Tokyo Sukusuku |

"Don't get on a crowded train with a stroller!" Surge, tongue -fluttering ... No More "Bokubiku commuting" questionnaire | Tokyo Sukusuku |

Saori Hiramoto (Chuo's back) and her husband Tomoki (right), who complain of the difficulty of commuting with children, and the eldest son Riki -kun = in Shinagawa -ku, Tokyo

 "On the Odakyu Line, I don't forget. On the Chiyoda Line."At the end of last year, her husband, Tomoki (31) and a design company, wrote on her Twitter at the end of last year.

 Seeing that riding a train with children was a hot topic during the rush hour, the scene two years ago was revived.When I got on a crowded train with a stroller, a man in her 50s in her suit was screaming, "Don't ride a stroller at this time."

 I wrote, "I said," If you have a kid, you'll be dead! The stroller is also distorted.rice field."I was yelled at me," "Mother, do your best."Empathy and encouragement are continuous.

 Hiramoto gave birth to his eldest son Riki (Ritsuki) in June 2016, and returned to work three months later.At first, at around 8 am, I commute two stations to the Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line to a temporary childcare facility.In April 2017, she was able to leave the fifth hoped licensed nursery school and went to four stations on the Odakyu Line.


Thomas welcomes a stroller ride!The first in the Toei Oedo Line in the "Child -rearing Support Space" public transportation

「満員電車にベビーカーで乗るな!」 罵声、舌打ち…ノーモア「びくびく通勤」 当事者がアンケート | 東京すくすく | 子育て世代がつながる ― 東京新聞


 I had a different time to work, and I couldn't hold a computer or a child changing my child's clothes, so I had to go with a stroller.However, cold words are hit or tongue on the train.She was sometimes told by passengers to go down by the elevator.She did not see her when she was with Tomoki.

 It is not just Mr. Hiramoto who was depressed, saying, "I was almost unbelievable."

 Miki Nomoto (42), a group employee in Nakano Ward, said, "I was afraid that I shouldn't make me cry. I'm really tired of apologizing to my surroundings."When her daughter cried in her car in her car, she was called "Urusseka no guys" when her daughter cried in her car.She takes a breath, saying, "If she gives her sweets to keep her crying, she can be seen with white eyes."

 Mr. Hiramoto criticized the post, "How much would you be willing to impose your demands?"She still started a questionnaire on the Internet asking about her child's safe movement, saying, "I don't want to cry."She said, "I have her husband replaced the transfer, but some mothers can't do that."The aim is a child -friendly society.

To the Oedo Line, to set up a children's room -style "support space"

A space where a stroller can be placed on the Toei Oedo Line.The new vehicle has a "child -rearing support space"

 In 1998, the use of strollers on the train was approved in the Tokyo metropolitan area.The rules were to fold for reasons such as "annoying passengers", but the railway companies accepted the requests of their mothers and realized them.In 2014, the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism decided the priority space mark that could be used without folding a stroller.The introduction of a space for wheelchairs is progressing, but many women have narrow shoulders.

 A professor of Yuko Fujita, a professor at Meiji University, who has written "One Open Childcare", is that the number of people who are not used to the child's voice and feel uncomfortable due to the declining birthrate, and says that "women are raising children at home."He pointed out that there are old values.She says, "It is natural that there are children in public spaces, such as Europe, and it is necessary to be aware that children grow up in society."

 Tokyo is a part of the Toei Oedo Line in FY2019, and plans to provide an "child -rearing support space" with illustrations in the space where a stroller is placed.The person in charge said, "I want to decorate like a children's room and appeal to passengers to warmly watch the people who are raising children."