Five silent witnesses to our absolute chaos
The White Bed Linens: Starch-stiff and smelling of a sharp, citrusy soap that fought a losing battle against the scent of midnight convenience store fried chicken. Witnessed the 2 AM debate on whether the rooftop pool was actually warm enough for a midnight dip.
The Independent Bathtub: A deep, porcelain basin that felt like a cold, clinical altar until the steam rose in thick, opaque clouds, blurring the room into a watercolor painting. Witnessed the collective, frantic confusion as we tried to figure out which knob controlled the temperature.
The Coffee Maker: A humming little machine that breathed out the scent of burnt earth and early morning regret, producing a brew that tasted like a wake-up call from a very angry alarm clock. Witnessed the silent, glazed-eyed stares of three friends who had stayed up far too late talking about nothing.
The Heavy Curtains: Thick, charcoal-grey velvet that clung to the February chill, shielding us from the silver Taichung mist that pressed against the glass like a ghost. Witnessed our synchronized, unspoken decision to ignore the 7 AM alarm and sleep until the buffet was nearly empty.
The Room Key Card: A thin sliver of plastic with a jagged scratch on the corner, feeling unexpectedly heavy with the guilt of being left on the nightstand. Witnessed the third time we had to awkwardly explain to the staff why we were locked out again.
If these walls could roast us
I often wonder if the rooms at Tai Zhong Zhong Xin Jin Yu Jin Xiang Jiu Dian were designed for a level of poise that we, in our collective, frantic energy, were entirely unqualified for. We were a whirlwind of mismatched socks and half-finished conversations, a chaotic contrast to the hotel's refined, muted tones. "Do we really need to wake up at six?" someone had whispered, the question hanging in the air like the damp, silver mist that settles over Taichung in February. We spent hours in the rooftop pool, the water a warm embrace against the biting morning air, debating the merits of various dim sum while the city unfolded below us in shades of slate and pearl. The hotel became a strange, temporary sanctuary—not because of the luxury of the suites or the hushed, cedar-scented silence of the sauna, but because we had successfully transformed a space of curated elegance into a fortress of discarded luggage and loud, pointless arguments. There is a peculiar intimacy in that; the way the most expensive linens feel like home only when they are littered with crumbs from a 3 AM convenience store run. As the laughter finally died down, the silence that remained wasn't empty; it was full of the kind of exhausted contentment that only comes from a trip where nothing went according to plan, and yet, everything felt exactly right.
A single, dim lamp casting a long, lonely shadow.
- Soak in the rooftop pool at dawn while the city is still silver.
- Ditch the map and follow the scent of the nearby night markets.