We bet the room would be a cramped afterthought, but it turned out to be an elegant suite wide enough that we could almost pretend we weren't sharing it. I sometimes think the true scale of the place only revealed itself at three in the morning, when the walk to the bathroom felt like a lonely trek across a silent tundra. The cold marble tiles beneath my feet provided the only honest map of the distance, and I wondered if the walls were made of paper; the echo of a single cough bounced with a peculiar clarity, making our whispered jokes about snoring sound like a conspiracy in a cathedral.
For me, the room was less about the space and more about the light—that heavy, golden August haze that seeped through the curtains, creating a soft, saturated weave of warmth. I remember lying on the bed, feeling the high-thread-count sheets pull tight against my skin, watching how the humidity of Taichung pressed against the glass like a thick, invisible weight. I thought, "this is the only place I can actually breathe," as the humming air conditioner fought a losing battle against the heat, making the cool, filtered air feel like a small, stolen victory we had all won together.
A Buffet of Conflicting Memories
I mostly remember the yogurt at Tai Zhong Jin Dian Jiu Dian ( Wu Xing Ji Fan Dian ) the splendor hotel-taichung, a tart, cool shock to the system that felt like a sudden clearing in a dense forest. It was crafted by a chef whose enthusiasm was so visible it was almost overwhelming, the way he would gesture toward his creations as if they were pieces of a puzzle he had finally solved. It was a specific kind of morningness—the scent of fresh berries and the clink of crystal—a moment where the quality of the ingredients felt like a quiet, respectful conversation between the kitchen and the guest.
Honestly, I remember the noise more than the flavor. The breakfast hall, one of the three restaurants on-site, was a chaotic symphony where we spent more time teasing each other's eating habits than actually tasting the food. The air was a thick soup of toasted sourdough and loud laughter, while a server navigated the crowd with a bewildered sort of grace. We spent the hour in a state of collective indulgence, laughing at the absurdity of a five-star buffet at eight a.m., basking in the lazy realization that we had absolutely nowhere important to be.
The Blue Consensus
There was a singular, luminous moment in the outdoor pool, where the August heat had become a physical presence, a heavy cloak we couldn't shake. The water felt like a catalytic reaction, stripping away the grime of the city and the friction of our arguments. We all agreed, without saying it, that floating there under a sky that smelled of ozone and threatened a thunderstorm was the only honest way to experience the city. The peace bled into us like a drop of ink on wet paper, blurring the edges of our individual stresses until we were just shapes in the blue.
A single damp towel left on a wicker chair.
- Wander through the Sixth Market to find tastes that don't exist in malls.
- Spend an hour in the outdoor pool just as the afternoon rain begins.