Tanghulu at Forty
My son will grow up in a world where culture is platform-native. Where he can learn thosai from YouTube, tanghulu from TikTok, pasta from Italian grandmothers who've monetised their nostalgia. Where "traditional" means whatever the algorithm surfaces.
The Architecture of Second Acts
We'd mapped our itinerary carefully, but weather narrowed our radius to what stood beside our accommodation. How often do we pause to consider our last days somewhere? A peculiar telescoping of perception, a painful receptivity to detail that transforms the ordinary into the archaeological.
Threshold: The MRT and the Art of In-Between
I want to say something profound about thresholds, about how we're suspended between departure and arrival. But what I'm actually thinking about is whether I positioned myself at the right door. This is the gap between how we think we experience the world and how we actually do.
On Solitude and Self-Possession: What We Learn When We Travel Alone
Without conversation, you notice flavour differently. Without accommodation to another person's pace, you discover your own. The focaccia is gone. I have traveled much farther than the distance from my hotel.