1 منشور · نصائح سفر صينية مختارة
My neighbor Auntie Wang has a key to our apartment. She feeds our cat when we are away, waters the plants, and once even picked up my younger daughter from kindergarten when I was stuck in a client meeting. I did not ask her to do these things. She just does them. This is normal in China. In the residential community (小区) where I live in Chongqing, the neighbors know each other. Grandmas watch each other's grandkids. Homecooked food gets shared across floors. If someone is sick, someone else will show up with soup. My Western clients often ask: "How do you build trust with people here?" And I tell them: you do not build it through contracts or formal agreements. You build it by showing up consistently. Same vegetable stall every morning. Same tea house every week. The fruit lady remembers what your kids like. The noodle shop owner knows your usual order. Over time, you stop being a customer and become a familiar person. When I first moved to this neighborhood 12 years ago, I barely knew anyone. Now I cannot walk to the grocery store without stopping to chat three times. That is how community works in China. It is not convenient — sometimes I just want to get home. But it is real, and I would not trade it.