Why am I spewing all this nonsense? Because I want to, and because I can.
However, a friend of mine and I, in a fun discussion came up with a new term that sort of takes the sting away from the term corporate whore, by ascribing it with a name that adds a new dimension to the entire term altogether.
A Corporate Geisha is, surprisingly, a unisex term used to refer to someone who has been so mired into corporate life that he’s willing to forsake his soul to the devil, but is still holding onto his Mizuage, with the fervent hope that someday soon, salvation and redemption will both arrive simultaneously, riding on a golden chariot to save the day.
As a pertinent aside, a Corporate Geisha is different from a Geisha because the latter is a Maiko until after the Mizuage, whereas the former is a Corporate Geisha as soon as he/she lands up into the corporate world.
My friend gave me this example out of some Manga to help illustrate things better:
A businessman walking along on a busy road in Japan was enthralled by the variety of ladies clamouring for his attention in return for his money, and he was having a tough time picking someone who’d be his companion for the evening.
He walked along, to notice how a pretty, well dressed lady was sitting in a small hut of sorts, far away from the madding crowd, not bothered about whether she’d have a client for the evening, and this intrigued the businessman no end.
Finally mustering the courage to walk up to her, he went over and asked her why she was not out there along with the other women, to which she replied -
“It is the bee that comes to the flower, not the flower that goes to the bee.”
Maybe, just maybe, this new system of classification will help assuage those that seem to have lost faith and think that they’ve sold their soul. All is not lost.
I’m kidding. You’ve crossed the Rubicon a long time ago.
your creativity just had a Mizuage
p.s.- I commented this because I didn’t get the intention of the post :
the intent is to give the reader an idea of what a corporate geisha is. The statement – “your creativity just had a Mizuage” doesn’t make sense to me, can you please elaborate?