Daily Lives Of My Countryside Guide Site

When we think of travel, we often think of monuments: the Eiffel Tower, the Colosseum, the Great Wall. We think of bucket lists and Instagram sunsets. But every so often, a journey transcends geography and becomes a study in humanity. For me, that transformation happened not in a museum, but in the muddy boots of a man named Mr. Chen—my countryside guide.

“The rice is asking for food,” he says, scooping algae into a bucket. This is the secret of his "daily lives"—he isn't just showing me the scenery; he is doing his chores. While explaining the irrigation system (gravity, no pumps, 600 years old), he is simultaneously weeding the terrace belonging to his cousin. He will not get paid for this weeding. He does it because if the terrace fails, the view fails. And if the view fails, the tourists stop coming. The daily lives of my countryside guide reach their peak during the "golden hours" of late morning. This is when the guide becomes a therapist, a historian, and a translator of silence. daily lives of my countryside guide

That is the power of the countryside guide. And that is the life worth living. If you ever find yourself in the Longji Rice Terraces, look for the man with the red headlamp and the roosters. Tell him the city baby who spilled the water says hello. He will make you tea. He will walk you into the mist. And for a few days, you will stop being a tourist. You will just be a neighbor. When we think of travel, we often think