This time I'm writing about the delivery health (deriheru) format, using a single visit as the example. Honey Moon is a shop in Tokyo that covers the Kanda and Ochanomizu area. Open 10:00 to 6:00 the next morning, and the rate for the 90-minute course runs ¥14,000.
The Tokyo area. Hope this helps anyone hunting for a delivery health in this part of town.
From the door to the way out
Twenty minutes after I hung up, the doorbell rang. I opened the door and there was a "Sorry to keep you waiting." A touch lower in tone than on the phone, settled. You can tell from the first words — that's the voice of someone who's done this.
Once I'd shown her in, the provider moved her eyes around without a word. The bathroom's location, the bed's layout, where the outlets were. Taking it all in without saying a thing. There was no wasted motion in how she set down her things either, and she kept an appropriate distance while waiting for the next word. The way she steered me with "go ahead and shower first" was natural. A provider who suggests it before you have to is one who knows the routine.
When I came back from checking out the bathroom, the angle of the room's lighting had changed. She'd adjusted it without a word. Few people can pull off that kind of attention to detail silently. That's where I called tonight a "hit."
The 90-minute course shifted in feel between the first and second halves. The first half is close to a feeling-out period. The provider watches your reactions and judges what you're after. The more finely a provider observes, the more the back half changes. Tonight's provider observed carefully. She remembered the moments I reacted to and came back to them in the second half. You could feel an intent to move for this particular guy rather than run a manual. "Designed time" like that leaves a different afterglow once it's over.
Before heading out, while tidying up, she said, "If there's a next time, please do." A canned line, but the delivery wasn't canned — it came after a slight pause, and that pause felt natural. There was no needless chatter while I put my shoes on either. That "quietness in the exit" is another mark of a quality provider. When I got off the elevator and stepped outside, the Tokyo night air was cold. My head was quiet. Work, tomorrow's schedule — nothing was surfacing. That's what I call a "hit night." Running into a shop like this in Tokyo doesn't happen all that often.
Using a delivery health in Tokyo
The delivery health genre is a fundamentally different experience from delivery health or hotel health (hoteheru). Tokyo's soapland districts carry a culture and history of their own. The Tokyo area.
This was my first time with Honey Moon. The ¥14,000 rate is, I think, an average setting for a soapland in this area.
On the provider
When I pick a soapland provider, what I weigh is whether you can see "pride in the work." Whether someone's phoning it in is clear within the first five minutes. On that score, Honey Moon's provider was reassuring.
Careful, plenty of check-ins, and reading where I was at as she decided how things unfolded.
Overall verdict on Honey Moon
The Kanda and Ochanomizu area, open 10:00 to 6:00 the next morning. 90 minutes for ¥14,000 was a choice that matched the value of the night.
The bottom line
| Category | Stars |
|---|---|
| Front-desk handling | ★★☆☆☆ |
| Provider's vibe | ★★★★★ |
| Skill / service | ★★☆☆☆ |
| How full the time felt | ★★★★☆ |
| Value for money | ★★★★☆ |
| Overall | ★★★★★ |
If you're hunting for a delivery health in Tokyo, Honey Moon is a safe pick.