1 post · Curated China travel tips
A solo traveler from Brazil asked me yesterday: "Is it weird to travel China alone?" I told her about the afternoon I spent by myself at a temple in the mountains outside Chengdu. No phone signal, no itinerary, just me and the sound of wind through bamboo. One of the best afternoons of my life. China is actually great for solo travel — especially if you want time to think. Morning tai chi in a park full of strangers who don't mind your presence. A quiet corner in a tea house with a book. Walking the Great Wall sections away from the cable car crowds. The secret most people don't know: Chinese culture values that kind of solitude too. The concept of "独处" (being alone) isn't loneliness — it's self-containment. A chance to reset. My advice: pick one city and stay 4-5 days instead of jumping cities every 2. Find a neighborhood coffee shop. Visit the same noodle place twice. Let the place find you instead of chasing it. That's where the real China shows up.