The Salaryman Blade Manifesto
The Nanamin Manifesto
Topic: Why 'Kento Nanami' is "Boris Thuginski" in a Suit.
Who is Kento Nanami?
Kento Nanami, from Jujutsu Kaisen, is the ex-salaryman turned jujutsu sorcererâa man who hates overtime as much as he hates pointless chaos. Heâs blunt, pragmatic, and serious to the point of comedy.
Nanami calls work what it is: âshit.â He doesnât glorify suffering. He doesnât dress pain up as âcharacter-building.â Nanami sees life for what it is, but he still fights because every small bit of appreciation from others matters. Thatâs why I respect himâheâs efficient, human, and brutally honest.
Nanami is stoic and reserved, but not cold. Heâs blunt, hates overtime, and refuses to waste energy on drama. Beneath that sharp exterior is someone who values intelligent conversation and sees through false optimism. He became a sorcerer again because, unlike his salaryman life, this path gave him something real: the ability to help people and walk away without regret.
Thatâs exactly the Boris mentalityâcutting through noise, recognizing whatâs worth the swing, and letting the rest burn out on its own. Nanami doesnât need a crown or applause. He just needs the job done right.
Chaos vs. Order: Goku & Gojo vs. Nanami & Boris
Gojo Satoru is the Goku of Jujutsu Kaisenâoverpowered, untouchable, and absolutely unhinged when it comes to his personality. Heâs a walking chaos engine who can save the world in one breath and spend the next minute drawing dicks on love letters to Nanami. (Yes, this actually happened.)
Nanami, on the other hand, is the anti-Gojo. Heâs the suit, the tie, the guy who wonât stay a minute past his shift unless the job truly calls for it. Heâs not there to joke or show offâheâs there to finish things.
This dynamic is exactly like Goku vs. Vegeta or Boris vs. the World:
- Gojo/Goku = Raw Power + Chaos. They thrive on fun and unpredictability.
- Nanami/Boris = Precision + Discipline. They donât swing until they know itâll matter.
And honestly? You need both types to win. But Iâll always lean toward the guy who clocks in, slices through the nonsense, and clocks out with zero wasted motion. Thatâs Nanami.
Part 1 â Nanamin.exe: The Salaryman Blade Mindset
Most people burn out because they think anger equals power. They flail, they yell, they swing wildlyâ and waste all their energy fighting battles that donât matter.
But what happens when you stop? Not because youâre numbâ but because youâve reached a point where you can see everything clearly, and only move when it matters?
Thatâs Nanamin.exe.
What Is Nanamin.exe?
Itâs the mindset of calm precision. Think of it as mental overtime:
- No wasted emotions.
- No hidden agendas.
- Just observation, judgment, and a single decisive strike if itâs worth your time.
When youâre in this mode, you donât ask, âShould I react?â You ask, âIs this even worth a blink of my energy?â Most of the time? The answer is no. And when the answer is yes⌠you donât miss.
Why Itâs Powerful:
People expect rage, or at least noise. Silence? Calm? That unnerves them. Itâs the quiet blade, the steady gaze, the clock that says:
âIâm not angry. Iâm just finished with this nonsense.â
Part 2 â When to Sheathe the Blade
Power isnât always about the swing. Sometimes, the deadliest move is the one you donât make.
Most people lose not because theyâre weakâ but because they burn energy fighting battles that donât deserve them. They swing at every slight, every noise, every pebble in their path. And in the end? Theyâre exhausted, dull, and empty-handed.
The real strength? Knowing when the blade stays sheathed.
Why Restraint Wins
Silence rattles louder than shouting. When you donât react, people spiralâconfused, unsettled. Your calm becomes the warning sign they canât read.
Every swing costs you something. Time, energy, focusâeach one is a currency. Why waste it on skirmishes when the real battle hasnât even arrived?
Patience is a weapon. Waiting can be just as deadly as acting.
The Core Rule:
Not every battle deserves you. Ask yourself:
- Does this problem truly matter, or is it just noise?
- Will this still matter in a week, a month, a year?
- Am I about to swing because Iâm strategicâor because Iâm triggered?
If youâre swinging just to vent, youâre already losing.
Part 3 â The Overtime Cut
You waited. You watched. You let the noise burn out.
Now? Itâs time for the one strike that ends everything.
The Overtime Cut isnât about rage or chaos. Itâs the quiet, deliberate moment where patience turns into actionâ and the move is so clean, thereâs nothing left to argue about.
How to Deliver It:
Wait Until the Opening Is Clear. Overtime cuts donât miss because theyâre delivered when the time is right.
Move Without Hesitation. No overthinking, no second-guessing. When you act, you finish it.
Leave No Debris. A clean strike means no messy aftermathâjust silence and results.
Why It Hits Harder:
Because you didnât waste noise. Your silence lulled them into thinking you were done.
Then the blade drops, and all they can do is stare.
Catford Commentary
đž Mrs. Catford:
âEfficiency cuts deeper than spite. Why? Because they never see it coming.â
đž Mr. Catford:
âClaws hidden until necessary. Walk away purring. Let them wonder why youâre so calm.â
Practical Drill â Activate the Salaryman Blade
Step 1: The 10-Second Audit Pause before reacting. Ask, âWill this still matter in a week?â
Step 2: The Sheath Test If itâs not worth your energy, let it die. Chaos burns itself out.
Step 3: Deliver the Overtime Cut When itâs time, move onceâclean, final, no over-explaining.
Final Takeaway
Nanami is the ultimate example of power without noise. Heâs not trying to be the strongest or the loudest. Heâs just trying to finish the job, and thatâs exactly what Boris does.
Stop wasting energy on what doesnât matter. Observe. Wait. Move once, with precision.
Tagline: Be calm. Be sharp. Be final.
#Mindset #NanaminProtocol #SheatheTheBlade #OvertimeCut #BearBlog #MentalClarity #EnergyDiscipline #SalarymanBlade #GlitchOS