
Tea culture encourages curiosity. There are endless varieties, origins, and rituals to explore. Some teas are rare, some are aged, some are celebrated in distant mountains. The temptation is to try them all, to chase novelty in the hope that every cup will surprise you.
But not every tea deserves your attention.
I have learned this slowly over the years. There are teas I once rushed to sample because of hype, reputation, or the promise of rarity. Some disappointed. Some were technically impressive, yet left no mark. Others were unremarkable, yet in a quiet way, they were exactly what I needed in that moment.
Tea does not owe you excitement. It does not guarantee revelation with every cup.
In many traditional practices, the value of tea lies not in variety or rarity, but in understanding what matters to you. A familiar oolong that you return to again and again can offer more satisfaction than a new, exotic leaf that demands attention and scrutiny.
Modern tea culture often conflates rarity with quality. A limited harvest is presumed better. A mountain-grown tea commands awe. But experience shows otherwise. The teas that endure in memory, the ones we savor without thought or anxiety, are often the modest ones. The everyday teas that sit quietly in the cabinet, waiting for no occasion.
Perhaps this is a lesson beyond tea.
Not everything new is better. Not every reputation is deserved. And not every opportunity requires engagement.
Tea reminds us to pay attention selectively. To focus on the cups that matter. To savor moments without chasing them relentlessly.
So the next time you are presented with a rare or highly praised tea, pause. Consider whether it truly deserves your attention. Perhaps the cup you are holding already is enough.
Because in the end, tea does not need your approval. You simply need to notice it.
With quiet regard,
N. P. Lim
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