ChatGPT's answer:
You're noticing a real pattern, and it comes from
different ways cultures chunk time and meaning, rather than a single superstition or rule.
Here are the main reasons
30 tends to matter more in Japan, while
25 matters more in the West.
Japanese culture strongly favors
round, base-10 milestones:
- 10, 20, 30, 40…
- 30 years = 3 full decades, often seen as a complete phase
- 60 years (還暦 kanreki) = completion of the zodiac cycle and rebirth
By contrast,
25 is just 2½ decades, which feels mathematically and symbolically incomplete in a culture that values
wholeness and
cycles.
In the West, 25 survives because of:
- Roman/Christian numerology
- Medieval guild traditions
- Coinage (silver anniversary)
Japan never inherited those traditions.
Especially in the postwar period:
- Lifetime employment was common
- A "generation" of workers often spanned ~30 years
- Companies that survived 30 years proved:
- stability
- trustworthiness
- social legitimacy
So a
30th anniversary (三十周年) signals:
"We're no longer new, and we're not temporary. We belong here."
A 25th anniversary doesn't convey that same sense of endurance.
In Japan, anniversaries aren't just celebrations — they're
tests passed.
Historically:
- Businesses failed often
- Natural disasters, war, and economic upheaval were expected
- Longevity itself was the achievement
So milestones cluster around:
- 10 years: "You survived"
- 30 years: "You're established"
- 50+ years: "You're venerable"
25 feels arbitrary next to that logic.
The Western
silver anniversary (25) comes from:
- Medieval European marriage customs
- Guild traditions
- Christian numerology
- Precious metal symbolism (silver → gold at 50)
Japan didn't share:
- those marriage customs
- those metals-based metaphors
- those religious frameworks
So there was
no cultural reason for 25 to stick.
Japanese symbolic numbers tend to emphasize:
- 3 (balance, completeness)
- 10 (wholeness, fullness)
- 60 (cycle completion)
25 (5 × 5) doesn't map cleanly onto:
- Buddhist cycles
- zodiacal systems
- traditional counting frameworks
30 (3 × 10) does.
Examples:
- Coming of Age Day → 20, not 18 or 21
- Major retrospectives → 30th, 50th, 100th anniversaries
- Artists and creators often do "30-year career" collections
- Companies proudly advertise "創業30周年" far more than 25
It's consistent.
Japan values completeness, cycles, and endurance.
The West values tradition, symbolism, and inherited customs.
So:
- Japan: "Three full decades — you've proven yourself."
- West: "A nice round quarter-century — tradition says celebrate."
Neither is more "logical"; they're just
rooted in different historical math.