
I still remember the first cup of tea I drank after returning from a long trip. It was nothing remarkable, a simple black tea brewed in my kitchen but it tasted different from any cup I had drunk abroad. It wasn’t the leaves themselves. It wasn’t the water or the pot. It was the familiarity of the surroundings, the quiet hum of my own home, and the sense of being back.
Tea has a curious way of doing that.
It carries memory more subtly than words ever could. A smell, a warmth, a taste can instantly pull you back to a moment long past. I have cups of tea tied to rainy afternoons, to conversations that stretched too long, to mornings that felt impossibly calm despite the day ahead.
Sometimes I wonder if I enjoy tea as much for the drink itself as I do for these connections it evokes.
There is one tea I keep for particularly ordinary days. Not a rare or expensive tea, but a humble oolong I discovered years ago. I pour it into a small cup, sit by the window, and watch the world move outside. The tea doesn’t demand attention. It doesn’t ask for ceremony. It simply exists, and in doing so, allows me to exist as well.
I have shared that same tea with friends who were passing through, strangers who lingered longer than planned, family members who needed a quiet hour. Each time, it reminded me that the ritual of tea is less about precision and more about presence.
There are teas I have tasted that were technically perfect, harvested in distant mountains, aged and processed with skill. They were remarkable in their own way, yet they never carried the same comfort as that humble oolong.
Maybe that is the quiet truth about tea: it is rarely about perfection. It is about the moments it accompanies and the memories it quietly gathers along the way.
Sometimes the best cups are not those that impress others, but those that remind you of who you are, where you’ve been, and the quiet corners of life worth savoring.
With quiet regard,
N. P. Lim
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