A half-eaten mango rested on the weathered wooden table, its golden juice beginning to crystallize in the heat, while a damp towel draped over a chair served as a silent witness to a morning already surrendered to the elements. The humidity of June in Taiping does not arrive as a mere weather report; it is a physical weight, a thick, invisible curtain of moisture that makes every movement feel like swimming through warm honey. My eldest insisted we leave for the city immediately, his voice tight with the restlessness of youth, while the little one remained preoccupied with a snail crossing the patio, wondering aloud if the creature carried a map to some secret kingdom. I stood there, watching the host move with a quiet, unhurried grace—a rhythmic, steady presence that I sometimes think is the only true luxury left in a world obsessed with speed. The air smelled of wet earth and ripening fruit, a heavy, sweet scent that felt portable, something I could carry back to my own sterile apartment in Japan, provided I didn't try too hard to hold onto it.
14:00, the sanctuary of the quad room
Returning from the city is less of a journey and more of a decompression, a slow release of the tension held in the shoulders, like the moment a long-held breath is finally let go. As we stepped into the quad room of Wei Xiao De Jia ( Min Su ), the sudden shift in temperature felt like a physical touch; the cool, conditioned air hit our skin, instantly erasing the grit and salt of the Taichung streets. I watched the children collapse onto the beds, their limbs splayed in that particular, honest exhaustion that only comes after a day of discovery. Beneath my bare feet, the floors of the renovated villa felt smooth and unexpectedly cool, a grounding sensation that anchored me to the present. I had initially feared that the distance from the city center would be a burden, but as I looked at the space—expansive enough for the kids to tumble without hitting a wall—I realized that the thirty-minute drive was actually a filter, stripping away the urban noise until only the essential, quiet rhythms of the family remained. We lay there in a shared, heavy silence, the kind that isn't empty but full of the day's accumulated impressions.
19:00, the balcony overlooking the valley
By evening, the afternoon thunderstorm had passed, leaving the mountains a deep, bruised green and the air scrubbed clean of dust. We gathered on the balcony of Wei Xiao De Jia ( Min Su ), the children unusually quiet, leaning against the railing to watch the city lights begin to flicker on in the distance, looking for all the world like spilled salt across a dark velvet cloth. The little one pointed to a distant cluster of amber lights and decided that was where the dragons lived, and for a moment, we all agreed, allowing the logic of childhood to override the rigid geography of the map. There is a strange paradox in staying at a place called a 'home' when it is not your own, yet the kindness of the host and the familiarity of the shared living space created a temporary rootedness that felt more genuine than any permanent address. I found myself thinking that belonging is not about the walls we own or the deeds in our names, but about the quality of attention we pay to the people standing next to us in the fading twilight.
22:00, the quiet after the storm
The house had finally fallen still, the children tucked away in a sleep so deep it seemed to vibrate through the walls, leaving the adults in the living room with the residue of the day. We sat in the dim, amber glow of the lamps, the only sound the distant, rhythmic hum of the hillside and the soft ticking of a clock. I found myself reflecting on the nature of stillness—not as a withdrawal from the world, but as a necessary preparation for returning to it. My wife mentioned how the kids had actually stopped arguing for ten whole minutes during the drive back, a miracle we attributed to the mountain air, though I suspect it was simply the result of being exactly where they needed to be. Writing this now, I am not sure if this peace is a result of the architecture or if we simply brought it with us, but the distinction feels irrelevant. We are outsiders here, guests in a renovated villa in Taiping, yet in the softness of the lamplight, the distance between us and the rest of the world felt like a protective layer, a silence that finally allowed us to hear each other.
A single yellow leaf rested on the porch, perfectly still.
- Try the local mangoes in June, eaten slowly on the balcony as the rain begins.
- Allow the thirty-minute drive from the city to be a space for conversation, not just transit.