2 posts · Curated China travel tips
Saturday 7:30 AM and I'm already awake — not by choice. My six-year-old was standing by the bed, fully dressed, announcing: "Mama, the sun is up! Park time!" I love that my kids have inherited this habit of early mornings. We walked to the neighborhood park, and as usual, the tai chi group was already there — the same people, same spots, same slow, precise movements. My younger one started copying them, arms wobbling, completely serious about it. An elderly lady paused her routine to adjust her posture. She held it for exactly three seconds before running off to chase a pigeon. This is one of those small China moments I never get tired of. Three generations in a park before 8 AM. Grandparents practicing qigong. Parents jogging. Kids stumbling around learning how the world works. No phones, no screens — just people starting their day together. My kids don't know it yet, but these Saturday mornings are shaping how they see the world. And honestly? They're shaping how I see it too.
You can spot the regulars in any Chinese park before 7 AM. The lady with the fan doing tai chi under the same tree — same spot every morning for ten years. The old man writing calligraphy with a sponge on the pavement, disappearing characters before your eyes. The group doing slow-motion badminton without a net. This is 养生 (yangsheng) — nurturing life. It's not a diet or a workout routine. It's a whole philosophy woven into daily habits. My aunt in Shanghai starts every day with a thermos of goji berry tea. My neighbor in her 70s does qigong on her balcony before sunrise. When I asked her why, she said: "I'm not exercising. I'm moving energy." I tell my western clients: if you want to understand China, skip a museum and go to a park at dawn. You'll see more about how Chinese people actually think about health, aging, and happiness in one morning than in a dozen history books. And honestly? After 15 years here, I think they're onto something.