08:30, Pin Dong Xi Buffet
The morning began not with a plan, but with the sight of the youngest child's fingers, sticky and gold with ripe June mango, tracing slow, imprecise lines across the pristine white tablecloth. Around us, the Pin Dong Xi buffet was a symphony of organized chaos—the rhythmic clatter of porcelain, the distant, bright laughter of a graduation party, and the scent of steamed rice mingling with the heavy, floral sweetness of summer fruit and freshly brewed coffee. I watched my eldest insist on the largest slice of mango, a small victory fought with the intensity of a diplomatic crisis, while the youngest whispered, "Is this a castle?" as the morning light hit the lobby in long, shimmering shafts. I sometimes think that the true measure of a place is not its architecture, but how it absorbs the noise of a family in motion, allowing the friction of three different wills to soften into the simple, shared pleasure of a breakfast that tastes of salt and summer.
15:00, Pin Zhen Lou Room
Outside, the Taichung sky had collapsed into one of those sudden, heavy June downpours, the kind of rain that turns the asphalt into a dark mirror and makes the air feel like a warm, wet blanket wrapped too tight around the shoulders. We retreated to our room in the Pin Zhen Lou wing, where the transition from the oppressive heat to the sudden, sharp kiss of the air conditioner felt like a physical shedding of skin. The room was a sanctuary of warm, natural wood and muted tones, featuring a spacious layout that invited the mind to settle. I remember the specific, hollow sound of the water filling the deep tub in the separate wet and dry bathroom—a steady, rhythmic drumming that drowned out the remnants of the city's roar. As the scent of cedar and steam blurred the mirror, we spent an hour in a state of collective exhaustion, the children sprawled across the bed, their breathing slowing as the room's stillness began to seep into their bones.
19:00, The Rooftop Pool
As the rain tapered off, leaving the city smelling of wet earth and ozone, we climbed to the rooftop. The water of the pool was a shocking, brilliant blue against the darkening skyline, a liquid embrace that seemed to hold the last of the day's light. As I stepped in, the weight of the day—the navigation of crowds, the humidity, the constant negotiations of a family trip—seemed to dissolve into the chlorine and the cool. The children didn't swim so much as they collided, their laughter echoing against the glass walls like bright sparks. I floated on my back, watching the city lights of Taichung blur into a soft, golden haze above me. There is a particular kind of liberation in this weightless suspension, a feeling that for a few moments, the roles of provider and protector are suspended, replaced by the tactile joy of water rushing past the ears and the feeling of a child's small, wet hand grabbing my arm to show me a ripple in the pool.
23:00, The Quiet After
By eleven, the room had returned to a heavy, velvet silence, the kind that only exists after children have finally succumbed to the gravity of sleep. My wife and I sat in the dim light, the only sound the distant, muted hum of the city far below the windows of Tai Zhong Zhong Xin Jin Yu Jin Xiang Jiu Dian. I looked at the tangled heap of limbs on the bed, the way the high-thread-count sheets had been twisted into a landscape of cotton mountains, and I realized that home is not a fixed point on a map but this specific, portable rhythm of exhaustion and affection. I sometimes think that we travel not to find something new, but to see who we become when the familiar structures of our lives are stripped away, leaving only the raw, honest connection of people who love each other despite the chaos. The room felt smaller now, more intimate, as if the walls had absorbed the day's laughter and were now breathing it back into the silence of Tai Zhong Zhong Xin Jin Yu Jin Xiang Jiu Dian.
A single, damp towel left on the wooden floor, smelling of summer rain.
- Visit the rooftop pool during the blue hour to see the city lights begin to flicker.
- Try the seasonal mango desserts at Pin Dong Xi to capture the true taste of June.