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Life Isn’t Fair, Nor Does It Pretend To Be: What ‘Tokyo Story’ Teaches Us About Disappointment

April 6, 2026 By Nagesh Belludi Leave a Comment

Expecting Fairness Is Setting Yourself Up for Disappointment (Lesson from Yasujiro Ozu's Tokyo Story) Yasujirō Ozu’s Tokyo Story (1953) is one of my favorite films. It’s a quiet meditation on grief, disappointment, and the gradual unraveling of expectation. The story is simple: an elderly couple, Tomi and Shūkichi, leave their seaside town to visit their adult children and their families. They hope to reconnect, to spend time with the people they’ve quietly devoted their lives to.

Tokyo greets them not with warmth but with a vague sense of detachment. The welcome they receive is subdued. They’re passed from home to home, sent to a hot spring to “relax,” and treated with a distant politeness that barely conceals impatience. No one behaves cruelly, but kindness feels strained. Their children aren’t villains—they’re simply overwhelmed by their own urban lives. The pain settles not in overt rejection but in quiet absences. What stings most is the loss of expected warmth. And it’s precisely that gap—between what was hoped for and what arrives—that Ozu wants us to sit with.

The Quiet Tyranny of Expecting Fairness

Ozu doesn’t dramatize this neglect. He avoids casting blame and instead reveals a more uncomfortable truth. Life doesn’t operate on a moral ledger. It isn’t designed to reward virtue or deliver fairness in equal measure. The world resists the neat blueprints we carry in our heads, and what we so often call unfairness is really just the world’s refusal to follow our plans.

We suffer not only because life is hard, but because we believed it was supposed to be fair. The deepest disappointments tend to come from misplaced expectations. We mistake randomness for injustice and assume that kindness, offered sincerely, will always find its way back to us. It doesn’t. Life doesn’t run on emotional symmetry.

Ozu returns us to the film to make this felt rather than argued. When Tomi dies shortly after they return home, Shūkichi’s mourning is quiet and restrained. Watching the sunrise, he murmurs that it was a beautiful dawn. Later, he confesses that if he’d known things would come to this, he would have been kinder to her while she was alive. These moments aren’t staged for drama. They unfold in stillness. Ozu lingers on empty rooms and shared spaces where nothing is said. The sorrow lives in what’s endured, not in what’s spoken.

Virtue Is No Vaccine for Life's Harsh Realities (Lesson from Yasujiro Ozu's Tokyo Story) Kyōko, the youngest daughter, gives voice to the anger simmering beneath the surface, frustrated by her siblings’ indifference. But it’s Noriko, the widowed daughter-in-law, who delivers the film’s quiet verdict. When Kyōko says, “Isn’t life disappointing?,” Noriko replies with calm acceptance: “Yes. Nothing but disappointment.” The exchange is delivered without bitterness, without drama. Disappointment, Ozu suggests, isn’t just about other people falling short. It’s about watching hope quietly give way. It isn’t a personal failure. It’s part of what it means to be human.

Virtue Won’t Shield You from Indifference

The film offers something worth holding onto: the importance of separating disappointment from unfairness. Disappointment comes quietly and is often no one’s fault. Unfairness is different—it has a source, and when it’s real, it deserves to be named and confronted. But most of what we experience as unfairness is disappointment in disguise, expectation that the world didn’t honor.

Emotional steadiness doesn’t come from demanding that chaos resolve itself into something coherent. It comes from releasing the need for that coherence in the first place. We find our footing not through control but through clarity about what we can and can’t reasonably expect.

Before labeling something unfair, it’s worth asking whether the expectation behind it was ever grounded. Virtue that’s measured only by its rewards is fragile—it curdles into resentment the moment the return doesn’t come. The more durable way to meet the world is with quiet, consistent effort, independent of outcome. Kindness extended without expectation isn’t naivety. It’s a choice about the kind of person you want to be, regardless of what comes back.

Idea for Impact: We don’t control the wind, but we do choose how to sail. We don’t thrive by demanding fairness from the world. We thrive by living it ourselves—with steady grace, even when it goes unnoticed. There’s real strength in that: making virtue unconditional, and finding in that resolve something the world can’t easily take away.

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Filed Under: Health and Well-being, Living the Good Life, Mental Models Tagged With: Buddhism, Grief, Japan, Mindfulness, Philosophy, Psychology, Relationships, Resilience, Values, Virtues, Wisdom

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About: Nagesh Belludi [hire] is a St. Petersburg, Florida-based freethinker, investor, and leadership coach. He specializes in helping executives and companies ensure that the overall quality of their decision-making benefits isn’t compromised by a lack of a big-picture understanding.

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