
There is a growing habit in Singapore that I find both comforting and slightly unsettling.
People are working everywhere now.
Cafés, co-working spaces, neighborhood bakeries, even small corner shops. A laptop seems to turn any table into an office. And in many ways, this flexibility is impressive. It reflects how life has adapted to work, rather than the other way around.
But I sometimes wonder what we are losing in the process.
Tea spaces, at least the ones I still seek out, feel different.
They resist that quiet pressure to be productive. You do not see as many laptops open beside a pot of tea. People still talk. People still pause. Even when there is silence, it feels intentional rather than task driven.
Tea, by its nature, does not encourage speed.
It asks for water to be heated. Leaves to open. Time to pass without interruption.
In that sense, tea rooms and tea shops may be one of the last environments that still protect slowness, even in a city that is constantly moving. If you’re curious where to find spaces like that, this guide to some of Singapore’s best Chinese tea houses is a lovely starting point: best tea houses in Singapore.
I recently came across an interesting piece about how people are using neighborhood cafés in Hougang as remote work spots. It captures this shift well and is worth a read here: https://neighbourhoodphotographer.com/hougang-best-coffee-shops-remote-work/
It made me think about how space shapes behavior more than we admit.
Coffee shops often adapt easily to work culture. Tea spaces rarely do, and perhaps that is the point.
Not every place needs to be optimized for productivity.
Some places exist simply to be experienced.
A good cup of tea does not ask you to reply to emails faster. It does not compete for your attention. It quietly sits beside you until you are ready to notice it.
Maybe that is why tea still matters.
In a world where every surface can become a workstation, tea reminds us that not everything has to be used for something else.
Some things are enough on their own.
With quiet regard,
N. P. Lim
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