The BBQ Grill: Smelling of singed corn and stubborn charcoal smoke. It witnessed the absolute chaos of three people claiming to be the "grill master" while the pork remained stubbornly raw.
The Pool's Concrete Lip: Cold, damp, and smelling of chlorine mixed with the biting winter air. It saw us bet on who would dive in first, only for all of us to stand frozen in a circle of mutual hesitation.
The Humming Mini-Fridge: A rattling metal box that felt like a relic from the nineties. It guarded our stash of midnight convenience store snacks and the heavy silence of a shared, exhausted truce.
The Parrots' Wooden Perch: Weathered grain beneath a canopy of neon feathers. It observed our pathetic attempts to mimic bird calls, which the parrots responded to with what I can only describe as genuine pity.
The Stiff Cotton Sheets: Smelling of industrial detergent and the crisp, damp air of Taichung. They bore witness to the 2 AM debate about whether we were actually "finding ourselves" or just really, really tired.
If These Walls Could Whisper
I suspect the walls of Mei Lin Qin Shui An, which have absorbed decades of family reunions and the rhythmic echoes of children's splashing, find our specific brand of adult disorientation quite amusing. We arrived with a vague intention to be still, which translated to a forty-minute argument over the most efficient way to organize a cooler, while the February mist curled around the plum trees like a slow, indifferent curtain. "Are we even relaxing?" I whispered to myself, watching the grey light filter through the canopy. There is a necessary tension in traveling with friends who know exactly how to push your buttons; it is a constant tug-of-war between the longing for monastic silence and the irresistible urge to make a joke at the precise moment someone is trying to be profound. We weren't seeking a destination, but a space where our collective noise could finally feel small, an invisible home carried in the rhythm of shared laughter and the scent of damp earth.
The scent of plum blossoms lingers on a forgotten sweater.
- Pack extra charcoal for the BBQ and a heavy wool sweater.
- Leave the itinerary in the car and follow the sound of the creek.