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Chuunibyou

Chuunibyou (Tag name: 中二病) is a form of mental sickness.

Introduction

Chuunibyou (中二病), or "Middle-school 2nd Year Syndrome", is a colloquial and rather derisive term in Japan which describes a person who is around fourteen years old who either thinks or acts like a know-it-all adult despite being a kid, or who has special powers no one else has. Some of them even go as far as being obnoxious, arrogant, and often look down on adults or older people. This way of thinking or acting is mostly seen in teenagers during adolescence. However, the problem is that there are people who still act like this even after they reach adulthood. Although chuunibyou uses the word for "syndrome" or "disease", it does not actually relate to any medical condition or mental disorder.


Chuunibyou can also be written as 厨二病 in Japanese, where the word "厨" roughly means "-fag" in the *chan sense. In English it is often abbreviated to chuu2.


Origin


Hikaru Ijuin (hikaruijuin@twitter) is said to be the first person to use this term as it was heard in his radio programme Hikaru Ijuin's UP'S (伊集院光のUP'S). During an episode which aired on 11 November 1999, Ijuin mentioned, "I'm still contracting 'chuunibyou' myself". In the following week, Ijuin started a corner called "Am I sick? Oh, it's just Chuunibyou." in which Ijuin reads "cases" contributed by his radio listeners in his radio.


Ijuin originally described chuunibyou as the things people normally do during their 2nd year in middle school. As the term grew more popular, it became a slang term among Japanese internet users. Other derogatory terms such as "High School 2nd year Syndrome" (高二病, kounibyou), "Pre School 2nd year Syndrome" (小二病, shounibyou), and other similar derivatives started appearing and also became internet memes.


It was then that Ijuin himself tweeted a message regarding this issue by saying, "I have no interest in this word anymore because it has lost its original meaning from when I first described it.".


Masakazu Amahisa and Katsuki Tanaka's "Bakadrill" featured an article related to chuunibyou while Boushi Chino of Kadokawa's "Yomazu Kirai" (『角川書店』 読まず嫌い "Didn't Read It. Hated It.") mentioned that this "vicious circle" makes him want to add "Chuunibyou after Fifty" as a sub-header on the novel Don Quixote for the following quote:


"The protagonist perceived the world through coloured glasses. When people talk to him, they will not deny his delusions and play along, but that makes him go deeper into his fantasies."

The Three types of Chuunibyou

According to the "Chuunibyou User Manual" (中二病取扱説明書, Chuunibyou Toriatsukai Setsumei Sho), there are three types of people who have chuunibyou traits:


DQN (DQN系, dokyun kei)

Pretends to be anti-social or acts like a delinquent when in fact he or she is not or cannot become like either one. Tells made up stories about gang fights or crimes, or boasts and pretends to know about that subculture. "DQN" is slang for "antisocial person" or "annoying deliquent".


Subcultural/Hipster (サブカル系, SubCul kei)

Prefers non-mainstream or minor trends and establishes themselves as being special. People of this type do not really love the subculture itself but rather strive to obtain the "cool" factor by not having the same interests as others.


Evil Eye (邪気眼系, Jyakigan kei)

Admires mystical powers and thinks that he or she has a hidden power within them as well. It is with this trait that he or she creates an alias specifically for said power. This is also known as the delusional type.


Examples

The following examples are provided from the "Fundamentals of Otaku Terminology" (オタク用語の基礎知識, Otaku Yougo no Kisochishiki):

  • One starts listening to Western music (Classic/Baroque/etc) to be unique.
  • One starts drinking coffee even though they don't need it and don't really like the taste.
  • Desperately insists on having known a band before they went gold or became mainstream.
  • One thinks one could do anything--it's just that they didn't feel like putting in the effort.
  • Becoming enraged at one's mother saying, "Respect my privacy!"
  • Just reading about society makes one believe that they are fully aware of history, making one say generalizations like, "The USA is horrible."

More

If someone admires idols, celebrities, foreign cultures, or starts acting like one of these, it might be labelled as a variation of chuunibyou, but in psychology, it is actually called "identification". This means that they exhibit a defence mechanism (a psychological reaction trying to stabilise one's mentality at least temporarily) of the same kind as when someone subliminally intakes an admired person's definite skills or achievements. Things like clothes of popular people becoming fashion and variants of this are the same.


Related Tags

Chuu2byou, Kounibyou, Dark History, Shounibyou, Rashness of Youth, Kitchen, Evil Eye, Eternal Force Blizzard, Nightmare Buster, Mary Sue, Chuuni Character


Chuunibyou Characters (Your Milage May Vary)


Hiei

Squall Leonhart

Killua

Kazuma Ardygun

Koromo Amae

Ruri Gokou - Kuroneko

Reisen Udongein Inaba

Sanae Kochiya (see Fruits lol)

Rintarou Okabe - Kyouma Hououin


People Using Chuunibyou in Related Works


Article in Other Languages

中二病

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