Iโd never heard the term โQuiet Quittingโ until I came across a video earlier yesterday. At first, I dismissed it as buzzword jargonโbut as I watched, something struck a chord.
It described people who, without formally resigning, simply do exactly what their job requiresโno more, no less. Not out of laziness, but as a conscious decision to reclaim time, energy, and sanity. As I listened, I realized I had done something similar years beforeโeven without knowing the term.
My Own Quiet QuittingโBefore I Called It That
Around four years before I was dismissed, I had already shifted to partโtime hours in my role as an account manager and insurance consultant. I chose to do just the basicsโenough to meet job expectations, nothing more. It wasnโt financial necessity; it was selfโpreservation. The fullโtime desk job had become draining, and I needed boundaries to stay sane.
At the time, I didnโt realize it was called Quiet Quitting. In hindsight, though, thatโs exactly what I didโquietly stepping back, refusing to burn out for a job that offered little in return.
What Is Quiet Quitting?
Despite the dramatic label, Quiet Quitting doesnโt mean leaving a job.
It means:
- Doing only whatโs in your job description.
- Rejecting unpaid overtime or unspoken demands.
- Leaving work on time.
- Mentally detaching from work outside hours.
It emerged more visibly during the pandemic, as people everywhere reassessed what truly mattered. In essence, itโs not about lazinessโbut about not letting your job consume you.
Quiet Quitting vs. Dutch Work-Life Norms ๐ณ๐ฑ
In the Netherlands, partโtime work isnโt unusualโitโs normal.
- Over 44% of Dutch workers aged 15โ74 work partโtimeโthe highest in the EU.
- Among Dutch women, 60โ65% work partโtime.
- Dual partโtime households have nearly doubled to over 400,000 households in the past decade.
While this shift is mainstream and culturally supported, it echoes the quiet quitting mindset: choosing wellโbeing over hustle. In the Dutch model, balance is a lifestyle backed by policy. In quiet quitting, itโs often a reactionโpushing back emotionally and personally against unsustainable work expectations.
Japanโs Resignation Agencies: A Cultural Mirror
Perhaps uniquely, Japan offers proxy resignation servicesโpaid agencies that submit resignations on employeesโ behalf. This reflects a deeper cultural tension.
- A flat fee typically around ยฅ22,000โ50,000 (~USโฏ$150โ350) allows clients to resign without direct confrontation .
- Usage has surged: hundreds of cases handled each month, thousands per year .
- Nearly 60% of users are in their 20s, followed by 30s .
- Employer-side surveys show 23.2% of companies in early 2024 had at least one resignation via agency .
Why it matters: resignation in Japan often involves emotional, hierarchical, and performative challenges. Many employees fear backlash or shame. These agencies remove that burden and signal a generational shift: younger workers increasingly reject outdated norms, harassment, or forced loyalty .
The very existence and popularity of resignation agencies reveal systemic discomfort with open confrontation. It underscores why many Japanese feel the need to outsource even quitting.
What It Says About Japanese Work Culture
- Resignation seen as shameful or confrontational: Many prefer to avoid personal confrontationโeven at the cost of agency fees.
- Generational tensions: Younger workers prioritize wellโbeing and workโlife balance over hierarchical obligation.
- Corporate resistance: Some companies refuse to accept resignations, demand replacements, or retaliateโforcing employees into proxy resignation service use .
- Rise of resignation agencies may prompt corporate change: Employers facing turnover via proxy may reassess retention practices or internal culture .
In short, the prevalence of these services speaks volumes: Japanโs work culture is at an inflection point, between traditional expectations and a new generation demanding boundaries and respect.
Final Thoughts: Quiet Quitting & Resignation in Context
Modern Quiet Quitting is a personal boundary.
Proxy resignation services in Japan reflect a cultural boundaryโan externalized pause on confrontation and obligation.
Whether you quietly step back or pay someone to silently quit for you, both practices highlight a shift: workers reclaiming time, autonomy, and dignity.
Quiet Quitting, partโtime Dutch norms, or proxy resignations in Japanโtheyโre all expressions of the same impulse: refusing to lose yourself to work that doesnโt value you.
Have you ever felt the need to outsource your quitting process, or found it impossibly awkward to hand in resignation yourself?
Drop your story below.








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