Tag: dailyprompt

  • What was the last thing you searched for online? Why were you looking for it?

    The last thing I searched for online was “transportation from Kobe Sannomiya to Kansai Airport.”

    Since it was the day before heading back to Taiwan, I wanted to figure out whether the bus or the train would be easier.

    I even found out that my credit card offered a discount—a pleasant surprise.

    Thinking about transportation reminded me of the little mishap on my first day in Kobe.

    I was heading from Sannomiya Station to Hotel Monterey. According to Google Maps, it should’ve been just a 7-minute walk.

    But once I stepped into the station, it turned into a labyrinth—stairs up and down, endless corridors, and no sense of direction.

    That “7-minute walk” turned into nearly an hour… 😅

    Luckily, after a few days I became familiar with the area, and such adventures only happened that first day.

    Traveling is often like that—awkward at first, then gradually smoother.

  • What TV shows did you watch as a kid?

    When I was a kid, my favorite was Zettai Muteki Raijin-Oh.

    The moment the robots combined was always so thrilling.

    There was also Genki Bakuhatsu Ganbaruger from the same series.

    What stuck in my mind the most was the episode where the two even crossed paths.

    Back then, I didn’t know anything about “collaborations.”

    I just thought—wow, the heroes are really on screen together!

    I even bought the model kits to build by myself,

    because the ready-made figures were too expensive.

    (They’re even pricier now, but that time of passion has already passed.☺️)

    What remains is just a vivid memory of childhood excitement.

  • The Best Moment

    What’s your favorite time of day?

    My favorite time of day always shifts.

    Sometimes it’s the fresh air of the morning, sometimes the quiet of blogging.

    Sometimes it’s enjoying a good meal, sometimes the freedom of travel,

    and sometimes it’s simply resting before sleep.

    But one answer never changes—

    it’s being with my partner.

    When we talk, time flows gently, becoming the best moment of all.

  • My Recipe in Progress

    What’s your favorite recipe?

    When I was a kid, fried food was rare at home. The sizzling oil and smoky kitchen were things I mostly saw on TV.

    Now, with an air fryer, fries, chicken wings, or fish cakes can be ready in just a few minutes.

    Costco sells all kinds of ready-to-cook food, which makes it even easier. Somewhere between ready-made and homemade, just a little touch turns it into a meal.

    A sprinkle of pepper, a handful of scallions, or simply waiting a few extra minutes for a crispier skin—it often feels more satisfying than a restaurant.

    So, my favorite “recipe”?

    Honestly, it’s simple: an air fryer, some Costco food, and a tiny bit of creativity.

    No complicated steps, no secret ingredients—just the taste I enjoy the most.

    And the most important part… well, aside from the air fryer, everything else is still in the “work-in-progress” stage. 😅😆

  • Kobe Awaits, We Together

    Tell us about the last thing you got excited about.

    The last thing that got me really excited was traveling abroad again.

    Kobe.

    No matter how many times I travel,

    the moment I step onto the airplane always feels the same—

    pure excitement, like my heartbeat rushing ahead of me.

    The city waiting on the other side,

    the food, the streets, the unexpected moments—

    but most important of all,

    going there together with the one I love. 🥰

  • The Edge of the City

    How would you design the city of the future?

    When I was a kid playing SimCity 3000,

    I loved turning resources to unlimited.

    No fear of bankruptcy, no complaints from citizens—

    just building a city, piece by piece, the way I liked.

    The one thing I remember most

    wasn’t the skyscrapers or the parks,

    but the waste-to-energy plant.

    Expensive, highly polluting,

    yet it handled garbage and produced power at the same time.

    I always built it at the city’s edge,

    letting the pollution drift outward,

    selling the extra capacity to neighboring towns.

    Back then, it felt perfect.

    Now I see—it was just exploitation.

    The city of the future can’t work that way.

    Trash isn’t something to “get rid of.”

    It should return to the cycle, become a resource again.

    Energy shouldn’t come from burning and consuming,

    but from flowing and sharing,

    like sunlight and wind—

    no one has to be sacrificed, and everyone is lit.

    In my future city,

    it’s not the buildings or the roads that matter most,

    but people willing to share,

    willing to live together.

  • Where did my name come from?

    Where did your name come from?

    My name is Yichun Kao.

    When I was a kid, I once went to the “Xuehai Academy” to look up our family genealogy. I can’t really remember the details anymore, but at least there was some sort of lineage, a thread that connects me to the past.

    As for the meaning behind my given name? Honestly, I have no idea.

    But my nickname, that’s another story.

    For the longest time, I thought it was my grandfather who gave me the name Xiao Pi. Recently, while chatting with my sister, I found out it was actually her idea. She borrowed it from a character in some old cartoon.

    Back then, most of the cartoons we watched were imported. Their names often got “localized,” shaped by the habits and imagination of the translators. Especially the nicknames—they were loose, playful, sometimes even random.

    So maybe Xiao Pi was originally just some dubbing actor’s buddy’s nickname. And somehow, it stuck with me. 😆

  • What motivates me

    What motivates you?

    The reason I keep going?

    Of course, it’s my loved one.

    Whether it’s a simple message on my phone,

    or memories of our journeys together,

    just thinking of her

    is more than enough.

    Because love gives life its direction,

    and makes tomorrow worth waiting for.

  • I Remember the Moments, Not the Movies

    I Remember the Moments, Not the Movies

    What are your top ten favorite movies?

    What stayed with me were never the full stories.

    Not the plots, not the endings—

    but the fragments, the music, and the words that echoed long after the screen went dark.

    When I was a child, my favorite films were Miyazaki’s animations.

    Especially Castle in the Sky.

    I didn’t understand any deeper meaning back then—I was simply fascinated by the floating city and the flying machines. It felt like a secret base hidden in a dream, something I wanted to revisit again and again.

    In junior high, Titanic became the talk of our generation.

    Everyone could hum the theme song, and some even shouted “I’m the king of the world!” on the schoolyard. The plot has faded in my memory, but that shared moment of youth has stayed.

    As time went on, I forgot most of the stories, yet certain fragments remained.

    Like the U.S. president’s final speech in a doomsday movie: “God bless, and good luck to you.

    Or that scene in the Japanese drama Chance, where Takuya Kimura stood before the crowd and said: “I am the same as all of you.

    And then, there was the music.

    The grand themes of disaster films, carrying a sense of tragic heroism.

    Way Back Into Love, a gentle spark of hope from my youth.

    The soundtrack of Orange Days, soft and tinged with melancholy.

    The full stories may have slipped away, but the fragments and the music stayed.

    They are markers in time, reminding me of the moments when my heart raced, when my eyes grew warm, and when life—just for an instant—felt different.