感情大渋滞

Japanese Slang Japanese ★★★ 3/5 casual かんじょうだいじゅうたいkanjō dai jūtai
読み かんじょうだいじゅうたい
ローマ字 kanjō dai jūtai
漢字の分解 感 (feel) + 情 (emotion) + 大 (big) + 渋 (congested) + 滞 (stagnate)
発音 /kaɴ.dʑoː.dai.dʑɯː.tai/

意味

Massive emotional traffic jam — when so many intense feelings hit at once that you cannot process any of them, leaving you emotionally gridlocked.

A creative internet-born metaphor that compares overwhelming emotions to bumper-to-bumper traffic. Just as cars cannot move when a highway is jammed, your emotional processing shuts down when joy, sadness, anger, nostalgia, and excitement all arrive simultaneously. The term is especially popular among anime, manga, and drama fans reacting to complex story developments — a beloved character's death followed immediately by a hopeful scene, for instance. It captures a very specific modern emotional experience with poetic precision.

例文

  1. 最終回で感情大渋滞して何も言えなかった。
  2. 推しの卒業ライブ、感情大渋滞で涙止まらなかった。
  3. 嬉しいのに寂しいのに誇らしいのに、完全に感情大渋滞。

使い方ガイド

場面: social media, fan communities, emotional reactions, anime/drama discussion

トーン: overwhelmed, emotionally vulnerable, poetic

正しい言い方

  • 卒業式で感情大渋滞して泣き笑いしてた。 (I was an emotional wreck at the graduation ceremony, crying and laughing at the same time.)
  • あの映画のラスト、感情大渋滞起こすから覚悟して。 (Brace yourself for the ending of that film — it causes a total emotional pile-up.)

避ける言い方

  • 本当に精神的につらい人に対して「感情大渋滞だね」と茶化すのは不適切 (Using 'kanjō dai jūtai' to make light of someone's genuine mental distress is inappropriate)

よくある間違い

  • Using it for single emotions — it specifically implies multiple conflicting emotions happening simultaneously, not just being very sad or very happy
  • Mispronouncing 渋滞 as じゅたい instead of じゅうたい — the long vowel matters

起源と歴史

Internet coinage combining 感情 (emotion) + 大渋滞 (massive traffic jam). Emerged in Japanese fan communities in the mid-2010s as a way to describe the complex emotional overload caused by powerful fictional narratives, and quickly spread to describe real-life emotional overwhelm.

文化的背景

時代: Mid-2010s internet coinage

世代: Teens to 30s, fan communities

社会的背景: Internet-native, especially anime/manga/drama fans

地域メモ: Used across Japan in online spaces. Particularly common on Twitter/X during anime season finales and live events.

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