The carousel. A blur of crimson and gold spinning into a dizzying vortex. The youngest, eyes wide with a mixture of terror and triumph, grips the cold metal pole with a white-knuckled intensity. I stand there, a human anchor, clutching three oversized bags and a lukewarm water bottle. "Is it magic, Daddy?" he screams over the calliope music. I suppose this is the part where I am meant to feel the enchantment, even as the humid June air clings to my skin like a damp sheet.
The bathtub at Zhong Ke Da Fan Dian, a vast porcelain valley. I let the oppressive Taichung humidity slide off my skin in sheets, the water steaming and heavy. It is the kind of searing heat that doesn't just cleanse the body but seems to press the jagged noise of the city out of my very bones. I close my eyes, listening to the rhythmic drip of the faucet, finding a humming, hollow silence that feels, for the first time in days, entirely my own.
Rain. A sudden, heavy percussion against the windowpane at 3 PM. Outside, the asphalt transforms into a shimmering river. Inside, the second-floor children's playroom is a sanctuary of neon plastic and muffled shrieks. The clatter of building blocks creates a chaotic symphony that makes the storm outside feel like a distant, quiet whisper. I lean against the wall, the scent of sanitized plastic and childhood excitement filling the air.
The scent of charred fat and fermented soy from Old Well BBQ. The table is a battlefield of sizzling marbled beef and spilled dipping sauce. The eldest insists on the premium cut, while the youngest decides that lettuce wraps are a personal affront to his dignity. "Just one bite!" my wife pleads, her voice competing with the hiss of the grill. We eat until we are breathless, the savory smoke swirling around us, blending with the damp, heavy air of the afternoon.
The light at 6 AM, a pale, tentative blue filtering through the curtains of our spacious four-person room. It illuminates dust motes dancing in a single shaft of gold and the sight of my wife, already awake, watching the children sleep. They are a tangle of limbs and soft cotton sheets, their breathing synchronized in a slow, rhythmic tide. It is a moment of stillness so fragile I am afraid to breathe, fearing the slightest sound might shatter this porcelain peace.
The self-service laundry room on the third floor of Zhong Ke Da Fan Dian. The rhythmic, industrial thrum of the machines vibrating through the floorboards and the sharp, clean scent of detergent. I watch the clothes spin in a blurred cycle—a crisp white shirt, a tiny, mismatched sock. There is a grounding absurdity to performing domestic chores in a hotel; a ritual of home transplanted into a foreign space, a very expensive way to fold laundry.
A slow walk to the Taichung Folk Park, the air thick with the scent of wet earth and crushed grass. We walk in a line, the city's distant hum fading into the background. No one speaks; we simply listen to the sound of our own synchronized breathing and the soft scuff of sneakers on pavement. In the quiet, I realize that the emotional distance between us, stretched thin by the stress of travel, has shrunk to the simple, warm width of a held hand.
One wet footprint on the lobby tile.
- Stroll through the Folk Park at dawn to enjoy the greenery before the June heat peaks.
- Reserve a table at Old Well BBQ early to avoid the hungry impatience of traveling children.