The morning begins not with a whisper, but with the rhythmic clatter of plastic plates and the high-pitched negotiations of two children deciding which piece of fruit is the most superior. I sometimes think that the energy of a family in the morning is like a storm that has forgotten how to break—a swirling mass of half-dressed bodies and urgent, overlapping questions. "Is this hotel a castle?" the youngest asks, her eyes wide with wonder, while the eldest insists on carrying the map, though he has no intention of following it. In the breakfast hall of Lai Lai Shang Lv, the air is a warm tapestry of toasted bread and the faint, clean scent of steamed rice, while the October light filters through the windows in long, pale strips that make the dust motes dance in slow motion. There is a specific kind of grace here, a softness in the way the staff navigate the chaos, moving around the children with a patience that feels almost ancestral, ensuring the coffee is steaming and the napkins are plentiful before the day's first real collision occurs.
14:00, back to the room
We returned from the Autumn Red Valley in a state of collective exhaustion, the kind of bone-deep fatigue that only comes from walking along wooden boardwalks while trying to convince a toddler that the sunken green landscape is not a giant swimming pool. As the door to our room clicked shut, there was a lingering echo of the street—a short delay where the hum of Taichung's traffic still vibrated in our ears before the silence of the room finally took hold. This slow translation of sound is where I find the most peace; it is the moment the world outside ceases to be a demand and becomes a memory. The children collapsed onto the bed, their limbs sprawling in every direction, the generous space of the room allowing them to be loud and still all at once. I watched the way the light hit the linens, a soft, muted grey that seemed to absorb the noise of the afternoon. I suppose that is the true luxury of Lai Lai Shang Lv—not just the amenities, but the way it provides a sanctuary where the friction of four different wills can finally settle into a shared, quiet rhythm.
19:00, after the night market
Dinner was a messy, glorious affair in the heart of the Yizhong Shopping District, a place where the smell of fried chicken and grilled squid forms a thick, invisible canopy over the crowds. We found a small shop serving Fuzhou noodles, and I remember the specific, elastic chew of the noodles paired with a savory pork gravy that tasted of old recipes and patient simmering. "These are too springy!" the eldest complained, though he didn't stop eating, while the youngest simply wore a smudge of gravy on her cheek for the rest of the evening. The walk back to the hotel was short, a humming journey through streets lined with neon signs and the laughter of students from the nearby universities. As we approached the entrance, the air felt cooler, the October breeze carrying the distant, brassy notes of the Jazz Festival. For a moment, the city felt less like a destination and more like a conversation we were lucky enough to overhear, a tapestry of urban vitality that we could step out of whenever we chose.
22:00, children asleep
Now, the room has become a different country. The children are asleep, their breathing heavy and synchronized, and the only light comes from the city skyline shimmering through the window like a fallen constellation. My wife and I sit in the quiet, our attention drawn to the small plastic squares by the bed—the adapter sockets that have now accepted a tangled web of chargers and tablets, a digital umbilical cord keeping us connected to a world we are glad to have paused. I think about the way we carry home with us, not in suitcases, but in these small, repetitive rituals of care. There is a gentle joy in the silence, a feeling of being exactly where we need to be, supported by a mattress that finally lets the tension leave our spines. We spoke in low tones about the day, our voices barely disturbing the air, realizing that the most honest part of the journey is not the sightseeing, but this specific, late-night stillness where the noise of the world is replaced by the sound of our own contentment.
A small bottle of water left on the bedside table.
- Try the savory Fuzhou noodles at the old market near the hotel.
- Wander through the Autumn Red Valley during the soft October sunset.