In five parts.
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I grew up between languages, cultures, and ways of seeing the world. Bilingual from the start, moving between countries and schools, always adapting. For a long time, I felt caught between two worlds. Over time, I realized this was not a flaw — it was my nature. To connect, to bridge, to combine. Between Chinese and English. Between China and America. Between content and data.
I believe the greatest laziness is the laziness of thought. Literature, history, and social thought, the three main lenses for me to understanding people, time, and systems.
For me, lifestyle is not a fixed aesthetic, but a state of motion. I need to stay in movement, to exercise, to walk through the city, to spend time in museums, constantly exposing myself to new perspectives and experiences.
It’s this rhythm of movement and observation that keeps my mind stimulated and awake. In that process, I feel continuously nourished, as if I’m being quietly reshaped, forming my own sense of pace, structure, and way of being.