Tea comes in many varieties. For tea drinkers, if possible, one should sample different types of tea. The more you taste, the more precise your understanding of tea becomes, and the richer life feels.
In the TV series Prime Minister Liu Luoguo, the 'Confused Prince' had a remarkable skill: when officials invited him to taste wine, he could accurately name every variety and vintage without error. Similarly, tea drinking calls for such mastery—not to show off, but to multiply the joy and deepen the knowledge of tea.
Just as tea varieties are diverse, so are life’s experiences. The more teas you savor, the more aromas you discover; the more you live, the sweeter the memories—even initially bitter ones. The first sip of bitter tea might make you frown, and homemade dried-osmanthus tea may not delight at first, yet these are part of tea’s charm. Life, too, teaches that repeated 'bitterness' eventually loses its sting.

The world is vast—explore it. More journeys mean deeper insights into life. Tea plantations thrive with vitality; teahouses brim with warmth. The sweat on a tea farmer’s brow and the songs of tea-picking girls echo through the fields—all part of tea’s story, vivid and real, blending toil and leisure, bound by joy. Drink tea happily, in all its forms. Live joyfully, embracing every flavor of life. This is the true essence of a tea lover’s existence.