The seventh Japanese proverb in some versions of the Iroha Karuta puts together two familiar but incompatible items from Japanese life: tofu and a carpenter's nail...
The closest "dynamic equivalent" in English is,
"like nailing jelly to the wall."
It can be applied to a few of familiar situations.
One is where you are dealing with a slippery person who you can't pin down or get to commit to anything... Maybe you have had a few prospects like that in your online business!
Another, as the Daiso illustration suggests, is when talking to someone gets you nowhere and you feel as if you are wasting your breath because your words go "in one ear and out the other."
One more case is when you are engaged in a useless endeavour or are using inappropriate tools for the job.
The Japanese goes like this:
Tofu ni kasugai.
A "kasugai" is really a big staple that is commonly used in Japan to fix two pieces of wood together when constructing a building; so the proverb is really telling us that something is "as useless as trying to staple two cubes of tofu together with a carpenter's staple."
Is there anything you've been doing recently that gives you the impression that you've been banging a nail into tofu?
In my case, surfing for credits on a useless bunch of traffic exchanges and expecting to get results is one wasted effort I have experienced.
Another, I often feel, is attempting to get anything I teach my "World History" students to stick. Nothing seems to gain any purchase with them! LOL!
Cheers!
David Hurley
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