<p>When Japanese sumo wrestler Takuya Saito retired from the sport at 32 and began jobhunting, he had no professional experience and didn't even know how to use a computer.</p>.<p>Athletes in many sports can struggle to reinvent themselves after retirement, but the challenge is particularly acute for those in the ancient world of sumo.</p>.<p>Wrestlers are often recruited early, sometimes as young as 15, and their formal education ends when they move into the communal stables where they live and train.</p>.<p>That can leave them in for a rude awakening when their topknots are shorn in the ritual that marks their retirement.</p>.<p>When Saito left sumo, he considered becoming a baker, inspired by one of his favourite cartoons.</p>.<p>"But when I tried it out, they told me I was too big" for the kitchen space, said the 40-year-old, who weighed in at 165 kilogrammes (26 stone) during his career.</p>.<p>"I had several job interviews, but I didn't have any experience... They rejected me everywhere," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Professional sumo wrestlers or "rikishi" who rise to the top of the sport can open their own stables, but that's not an option for most.</p>.<p>Last year, of 89 professional wrestlers who retired, just seven remained in the sumo world.</p>.<p>For the others, the restaurant industry sometimes appeals, offering a chance to use the experience gained cooking large meals for their stablemates.</p>.<p>Others become masseurs after years of dealing with aching muscles, or leverage their heft to become security guards.</p>.<p>But trying to start over when non-sumo peers can be a decade or more into a career track is often demoralising.</p>.<p>Saito said he developed an "inferiority complex" and found the experience of jobhunting far harsher than the tough discipline of his life as a rikishi.</p>.<p>"In sumo, the stable master was always there to protect us," he said, adding that his former stable master offered him a place to stay, meals and clothes until his found his feet.</p>.<p>Many wrestlers leave the sport with little or no savings, because salaries are only paid to the 10 percent of rikishi in the sport's two top divisions. Lower-ranking wrestlers get nothing but room, board and tournament expenses.</p>.<p>Saito wanted to be his own boss and decided to become an administrative scrivener, a legal professional who can prepare official document and provide legal advice.</p>.<p>The qualifying exam is notoriously tough, and when Saito passed he opted to specialise in procedures related to restaurants, hoping to help other former wrestlers.</p>.<p>His first client was Tomohiko Yamaguchi, a friend in the restaurant industry with an amateur sumo background.</p>.<p>"The sumo world is very unique and I think that outsiders can't understand it," Yamaguchi told <em>AFP</em>, suggesting society can sometimes prejudge rikishi.</p>.<p>Wrestlers who go from being stopped for photos and showered with gifts can also struggle with fading into obscurity.</p>.<p>A rare few may end up with television gigs that keep them in the public eye, but for most, the limelight moves on.</p>.<p>Keisuke Kamikawa joined the sumo world at 15, "before even graduating high school, without any experience of adult life in the outside world," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Today, the 44-year-old heads SumoPro, a talent agency for former wrestlers that helps with casting and other appearances, but also runs two day centres for the elderly, staffed in part by retired rikishi.</p>.<p>"It's a completely different world from sumo, but rikishi are used to being considerate and caring" because lower-ranked wrestlers serve those in the upper echelons, explained Kamikawa.</p>.<p>Shuji Nakaita, a former wrestler now working at one of Kamikawa's care centres, spent years helping famed sumo champion Terunofuji.</p>.<p>"I prepared his meals, I scrubbed his back in the bath... there are similarities with care of the elderly," he said after a game of cards with two visitors to the centre.</p>.<p>And while the sight of hulking former rikishi around diminutive elderly men and women might appear incongruous, the retired wrestlers are popular.</p>.<p>"They are very strong, very reassuring and gentle," smiled Mitsutoshi Ito, a 70-year-old who says he enjoys the chance to chat about sumo with former wrestlers.</p>.<p>Kamikawa has also set up a group that provides advice on post-sumo careers to wrestlers and families worried their sons are not planning for their future.</p>.<p>"Sumo is a world where you have to be ready to put your life in danger to win a fight," said Hideo Ito, an acupuncturist who has worked with rikishi for over two decades.</p>.<p>"For these wrestlers who are giving it their all, thinking about the future can seem like a weakness in their armour."</p>.<p><strong>Check out the latest videos from <i data-stringify-type="italic">DH</i>:</strong></p>
<p>When Japanese sumo wrestler Takuya Saito retired from the sport at 32 and began jobhunting, he had no professional experience and didn't even know how to use a computer.</p>.<p>Athletes in many sports can struggle to reinvent themselves after retirement, but the challenge is particularly acute for those in the ancient world of sumo.</p>.<p>Wrestlers are often recruited early, sometimes as young as 15, and their formal education ends when they move into the communal stables where they live and train.</p>.<p>That can leave them in for a rude awakening when their topknots are shorn in the ritual that marks their retirement.</p>.<p>When Saito left sumo, he considered becoming a baker, inspired by one of his favourite cartoons.</p>.<p>"But when I tried it out, they told me I was too big" for the kitchen space, said the 40-year-old, who weighed in at 165 kilogrammes (26 stone) during his career.</p>.<p>"I had several job interviews, but I didn't have any experience... They rejected me everywhere," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Professional sumo wrestlers or "rikishi" who rise to the top of the sport can open their own stables, but that's not an option for most.</p>.<p>Last year, of 89 professional wrestlers who retired, just seven remained in the sumo world.</p>.<p>For the others, the restaurant industry sometimes appeals, offering a chance to use the experience gained cooking large meals for their stablemates.</p>.<p>Others become masseurs after years of dealing with aching muscles, or leverage their heft to become security guards.</p>.<p>But trying to start over when non-sumo peers can be a decade or more into a career track is often demoralising.</p>.<p>Saito said he developed an "inferiority complex" and found the experience of jobhunting far harsher than the tough discipline of his life as a rikishi.</p>.<p>"In sumo, the stable master was always there to protect us," he said, adding that his former stable master offered him a place to stay, meals and clothes until his found his feet.</p>.<p>Many wrestlers leave the sport with little or no savings, because salaries are only paid to the 10 percent of rikishi in the sport's two top divisions. Lower-ranking wrestlers get nothing but room, board and tournament expenses.</p>.<p>Saito wanted to be his own boss and decided to become an administrative scrivener, a legal professional who can prepare official document and provide legal advice.</p>.<p>The qualifying exam is notoriously tough, and when Saito passed he opted to specialise in procedures related to restaurants, hoping to help other former wrestlers.</p>.<p>His first client was Tomohiko Yamaguchi, a friend in the restaurant industry with an amateur sumo background.</p>.<p>"The sumo world is very unique and I think that outsiders can't understand it," Yamaguchi told <em>AFP</em>, suggesting society can sometimes prejudge rikishi.</p>.<p>Wrestlers who go from being stopped for photos and showered with gifts can also struggle with fading into obscurity.</p>.<p>A rare few may end up with television gigs that keep them in the public eye, but for most, the limelight moves on.</p>.<p>Keisuke Kamikawa joined the sumo world at 15, "before even graduating high school, without any experience of adult life in the outside world," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Today, the 44-year-old heads SumoPro, a talent agency for former wrestlers that helps with casting and other appearances, but also runs two day centres for the elderly, staffed in part by retired rikishi.</p>.<p>"It's a completely different world from sumo, but rikishi are used to being considerate and caring" because lower-ranked wrestlers serve those in the upper echelons, explained Kamikawa.</p>.<p>Shuji Nakaita, a former wrestler now working at one of Kamikawa's care centres, spent years helping famed sumo champion Terunofuji.</p>.<p>"I prepared his meals, I scrubbed his back in the bath... there are similarities with care of the elderly," he said after a game of cards with two visitors to the centre.</p>.<p>And while the sight of hulking former rikishi around diminutive elderly men and women might appear incongruous, the retired wrestlers are popular.</p>.<p>"They are very strong, very reassuring and gentle," smiled Mitsutoshi Ito, a 70-year-old who says he enjoys the chance to chat about sumo with former wrestlers.</p>.<p>Kamikawa has also set up a group that provides advice on post-sumo careers to wrestlers and families worried their sons are not planning for their future.</p>.<p>"Sumo is a world where you have to be ready to put your life in danger to win a fight," said Hideo Ito, an acupuncturist who has worked with rikishi for over two decades.</p>.<p>"For these wrestlers who are giving it their all, thinking about the future can seem like a weakness in their armour."</p>.<p><strong>Check out the latest videos from <i data-stringify-type="italic">DH</i>:</strong></p>