Going
home is supposed to be like treading down the memory lane. It's hardly
so this time. Not many things from my childhood are left standing. The
Taipei before my eyes was something completely new, something that did
not existed in my imagination of what Taipei would be like in the future
of my past. Perhaps, it is because in the past I had never
included Taipei in my future. I belonged to the generation that "came
to Taida and went to America". I left Taipei in 1985, when buses were still
the major means of transportation and though economic outlooks were
good, personal wealth was not prevalent and not many people owned cars.
Department stores we had some but not as big and many nor were they stocked
with so many brand names and so many merchandises. Roads were being constructed
but the the boundaries of Taipei were still being drawn north to Yuen Shan,
where the City Zoo used to be, west to Wan Hwa, where the famous Lun Shan
Temple is, south to Gong Guan, where Taida is and east to Soong Shan, where
the International Airport used to be. When did it become such a sprawling
metropolitan?
Sure
Taipei was expanding even back then but a trip to Dan Shui, where the Dan
Shui River enters the ocean or to Mu Tsar where the City Zoo is today took
about two hours and could hardly be done on a spur of the moment like we
did this time. Even when I visited four years ago, the vision of Taipei
today still eluded me. The Rapid Transit was on its way but its construction
only made the traffic situation worst. I remembered not being able to cross
the street even when the lights turned green in our favor because the motorcycles
kept zooming by making right turns that one had to step in front of them
in order to cross. After watching the motorcyclists gingerly avoiding collision
with the pedestrians for a week, I finally got used to the idea that it's
a risk you'd have to take if you ever wanted to get to the other side.
What a difference four years made. Considerable amount of cars and motorcycles
stayed off the road this time we visited.
Rapid
Transit, that's what makes Taipei the modern science-fictional version
of an old childhood neighborhood. Never would I have imagined Taipei with
the subways when I was growing up. How could I? I only experienced the
subways for the very first time when I left Taipei in 1985 and landed in
New York. What New York City has is a hundred-year old system with dirty
rusty cars and dim holes in the ground. What we rode on in Taipei is a
fleet of brand new, immaculately clean, modern mass transportation vehicles
arriving in grand underground stations in jet-like speed. The Rapid Transit
took us to Dan Shui in thirty minutes, to Mu Tsar in fifteen. It took us
around town and even has a main street of its own. On one rush hour trip
when we had to take the taxi, the Rapid Transit took hundreds of would-be
competitions off the road and cut our commute time considerably shorter
than what would have been.
Perhaps
it was also the weather that made our visit so pleasant this time. It helped
to have visited Taipei in November when one could enjoy a stroll along
the city sidewalks without drenching in sweat. The humid weather still
showed its force when a couple of late year typhoons got too close bringing
flood and muggy summer-like temperature of 85 degrees Fahrenheit.
While walking around the City Hall neighborhood, I noticed there are more
small parks and tree-lined sidewalks for pedestrians now. It is not
only the City Hall area. I noticed the same when I walked from Suchou University
to the National Palace Museum. There was a little but exquisite little
park on the side of the road with a lily pond old oak trees and stone steps.
When
I was a child, the zoo I visited had animals in cages lined closely to
one another. The Taipei City Zoo we visited this time has different habitats
for animals from different climates. It took us two hours to walk from
one end to another. The Shi Lin Presidential Residence was another
pleasant surprise. The gardens there took on so many forms that one could
easily spend a half day there without being bored. The only place that
did not change much is the National Palace Museum. They must have moved
it closer, because getting there was a lot easier and quicker.
"You
can never go home again." But I have gone to a much better place this time.
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