The youngest, barely five, treats the long corridors of Tai Zhong Zhong Xin Jin Yu Jin Xiang Jiu Dian as her own private runway. Her small feet drum a frantic, joyful rhythm, but the plush, muted carpet swallows the sound, turning a potential riot into a soft, rhythmic thumping. "I'm a rocket!" she whispers, her breath a tiny cloud of excitement. I realize then that children don't perceive space as a distance to be traveled, but as a challenge to be conquered.
There is a specific moment of surrender when I first collapse into the bed of our refined suite. The sheets offer a crisp, cool greeting that quickly yields to the body's warmth, smelling faintly of sun-dried cotton. I lay there for a long time, watching the ceiling, feeling the friction of the day—the navigation of city streets, the small negotiations over dinner—simply dissolve into the mattress. It is a stillness that feels earned, a heavy, velvet peace.
The elevator chime is a polite, metallic note that punctuates the silence, a reminder of the world moving outside. Beyond the glass, Taichung hums with the restless energy of the December Christmas Carnival, but inside the room, the sound shifts. It becomes the heavy, satisfying shush of the curtains being drawn shut, a fabric barrier that seals us into a warm pocket of the world where the city's roar becomes a distant, unimportant murmur.
At the buffet, the steam from a bowl of hot soup rises in slow, lazy curls, blurring the edges of the room. My daughter’s plate is a colorful, chaotic map of flavors that only a child could curate. As I taste a piece of slow-roasted pork, the fat rendering into something buttery and rich on my tongue, I realize this is the true center of a family trip: the shared, noisy indulgence of a meal that tastes of winter and togetherness.
The 4 PM winter sun is a pale, honeyed gold, spilling across the rooftop pool area. The water remains a deep, inviting blue against a grey-white sky, its surface shimmering like a fallen piece of the twilight. The light doesn't burn; it merely touches, casting long, leaning shadows across the deck. The air is dry and crisp, carrying the faint scent of distant tea leaves and the quiet anticipation of a city preparing for sleep.
The bathrobe is a heavy, oversized thing, white and smelling of laundry steam and citrus. I watch my husband wrap himself in the thick terry cloth, the fabric absorbing the last of the December chill. He looks like a soft, walking cloud, his shoulders finally dropping as he stops checking his watch. The weight of the robe is a physical signal: the time for doing has ended, and the time for simply being has begun.
The room becomes a sanctuary when the lights are dimmed, and we find ourselves piled together, a tangle of limbs and shared breath. I think that home is not a fixed point on a map, but rather this portable arrangement of people, the way we fit together within the walls of Tai Zhong Zhong Xin Jin Yu Jin Xiang Jiu Dian, finding a strange, comforting stability in the middle of a city that is not our own.
The soft, amber glow of the bedside lamp.
- Take a dip in the rooftop pool to soak in the honeyed December sunlight.
- Indulge in a slow family feast at the buffet to savor the rich flavors of winter.