Start here · A letter

A Letter from Chi

Please read, if this is your first time here.

Hi, this is Chi. Good to see you here.

A few years ago I started a Study With Me channel on YouTube — a place for companions who learn, read, and share. I knew the niche was meant for students; most adults go for gaming and entertainment. But I started it anyway. I’m not good at filming or editing. I simply had one goal: to attract the right people. People who carry depth in their inner world, who insist on growing, who never surrender to the dark. The right ones don’t hang around aimlessly — they’re always between missions. And the best way to meet them is not to find them. It is to become one.

Why reading?

At a certain age, we realise society is a little different from what we were told. What school taught us is functional, not practical. We keep looking for a better education, but the best one isn’t in a classroom — it’s in your life. You see a problem, you look for a way through it. Reading isn’t about collecting more theory; the words were written by someone who actually lived those situations. Many of them are no longer on Earth — so they gathered the wisdom of a whole life and left it on the page.

Plenty of people read and find it boring. It is! No one wants to read or hear anything that has nothing to do with them — none of my business, who cares. But as you age, as you meet more people and more of their stories, the reading suddenly makes sense. When a writer describes a certain state, you can picture it, you relate to it, because you’ve been there. That’s the best part — you find someone inside a book who understands exactly what you’re going through.

Having someone who understands what it is — that is rare.

People say adults should learn to bear pressure and digest emotion. But how? Most reach for the easiest version of happiness — overeating, alcohol, porn. That isn’t digesting; it’s escaping. Most adults have only aged physically, not grown mentally. The root of pressure and emotion is that we’ve lost the compass for what is right for us. When a shoe is too big or too small, you know — you see it, you feel it’s uncomfortable. Changing to the right size isn’t an emotional decision; it’s an obvious one, based on fact. Simple. But what about when a job is selling you short, when a relationship isn’t empowering you? What are the signals then? You know something is wrong — and talk yourself into believing it’s something else.

Pain doesn’t appear overnight. It’s the daily practice of putting yourself in the wrong shoes. You haven’t noticed that you’re already overloaded.

There is too much in a life: parents, a baby, a mortgage, an intimate relationship, several social circles, colleagues, clients — everything. They aren’t separate missions; they all crowd around for attention the moment you open your eyes each morning. Everything gets handled, but only on the surface; nothing carries any depth. And in the end you forget something. You forget yourself. You own every item on that list, maybe more, and still feel unsatisfied, lonely, unhappy.

At some stage, you become the servant of your belongings. They boss you; you work for them.

This is where the stress comes in. Not because someone says you’re not good enough — but because everyone keeps telling you how great you are, urging you to go further, do more — because surely, people with ability could never feel miserable. (?) That’s where the strange dark-hole loop widens: dissatisfied → more relationships → lonely → more social circles → unhappy → another baby… on and on. By society’s maths, more belongings means more success. From the inside, you’re being consumed by something obvious and invisible at once.

In my understanding, by then it is already a situation. Nothing collapses overnight — but once it does, nothing rebuilds overnight either.

By now you may have sensed that the way to live is lighter — minimalism. Yet the moment you step back into your familiar daily environment, it flips straight back to more is more. Not because you enjoy it — but because you’ve come to rely on those things, emotionally, to reassure you that you exist. People gather around shared values, and now you want to change your value system. Do you think they’ll let you?

This is what this space is for — not a shortcut to success, not a life-changing pitch. It’s a space to sit with someone who gets to know you, sees your strengths, understands your weaknesses, and slowly connects the dots. Connecting the dots — the things that seem meaningless and scattered already carry weight in your life — they just haven’t been connected yet. The small things you questioned but let slide, the everyday spark others skip, the feeling you can’t quite name.

There’s a lot to work through in that process: the priorities, the lessons, the conversations, the stories. When you stop providing for certain people, things fall apart. Some relationships only exist because of a weakness in you that you’ve never named. Some belongings only stand for memories that no longer mean anything. Not everything will fall into place right after one talk — but you’ll untangle a little, and get one step further than last time.

Somewhere in there, you might need someone. Someone who has been through it. A conversation that keeps you grounded. A witness who understands the ache of growing up — someone to reach for when you feel miserable.

This isn’t a turbo button to do everything at once. It’s more like learning to ride a bike — someone steadying you from four wheels to two. You can’t name the day you’ll be ready — you’ll just know it when you are. And along the way, there is someone. When you fall off, there is someone. When you feel unsure, there is someone. When you drift off track, there is someone. Not every move is a win, but each one holds meaning — and there is someone to talk it through with.

Until one day, the training wheels come off — and you ride wherever you want. Freely. Happily. Own your compass.

I hope I can be riding beside you, until you don’t need me.

Connect the dots,
Chi

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由此開始 · 一封信

給讀者的信

如果你是第一次來,請讀一讀。

你好,我是 芷嶠。很高興你來到這裡。

幾年前,我在 YouTube 開了一個 Study With Me 頻道——一個一起學習、分享閱讀心得及想法,彼此作伴的地方。我知道這類型本來是給學生的,大部分成年人會選擇打機和娛樂。但我還是開始了。我不擅長拍攝或剪接,我只有一個目標:吸引對的人。那些內在世界有深度的人,那些堅持成長的人,那些從不向黑暗投降的人。對的人不會漫無目的地閒晃——他們總是在使命之間奮鬥。而遇見他們最好的方法,不是去找,是去成為他們。

為什麼閱讀?

到了某個年紀,我們會發現社會跟我們以為的有點不一樣。學校教我們的是功能性,不是實用性。我們一直在尋找更好的教育,但最好的不在課室裡——在你的生活裡。你遇到一個問題,去找解決方法的過程中就學會了。閱讀不是為了學更多理論;那些文字,是由真正活過那些處境的人寫下的。他們大多已經不在世上——於是把一生的智慧,留在了紙上。

很多人也在讀,卻覺得讀書很悶。確實悶!沒有人會對與自己無關的東西感興趣。但當你漸漸年長,遇過更多人、聽過更多故事,那些書突然就說得通了。當作者描述某種狀態,你能想像、能對上號,因為你也走過。這是最有趣的地方——你在書裡,遇到一個懂你此刻處境的人。

有人懂得「那是什麼」,本身就很稀有。

人們總說,成年人要學會承受壓力、消化情緒。可是怎麼做?大多數人找到最容易的快樂——狂吃、酗酒、色情氾濫。那不是消化,那是逃避。大部分成年人只是身體變老,心智沒有長大。壓力與情緒的根源,是我們沒有一個「什麼對自己才是對的」指南針。當一雙鞋太大或太小,你會知道,因為你看得見、感覺得到不舒服。換一個合適的尺碼,不是情感上的決定,而是基於事實、顯而易見的決定。很簡單。但當一份工作低估了你,當一段關係沒有讓你變得更好,那又是什麼?它的訊號在哪裡?你明明知道有些不對勁——卻說服自己那是別的事。

痛苦不是一夜出現的。它是你每一天,一直把自己塞進錯的鞋子裡。你還沒察覺,自己早已超載。

人生裡有太多:父母、孩子、按揭、親密關係、好幾個社交圈、同事、客戶,全部。它們不是各自獨立的任務;每天你一睜開眼,它們就全圍上來,爭奪你的注意力。一切都被處理了,卻只流於表面;沒有一樣帶著深度。到最後,你忘了一些東西。你忘了自己。你擁有上面每一項,也許更多,卻仍然感到不滿足、孤單、不快樂。

到了某個階段,你成了自己所有物的僕人。它們對你發號施令,你為它們工作。

壓力就是在這裡出現的。不是因為有人說你不夠好——而是因為所有人都在說你很好,催著你走得更遠、做得更多——因為,有能力的人怎麼可能會痛苦呢。(?)這就是那個奇怪的黑洞迴圈開始變大的地方:不滿足 → 更多關係 → 孤單 → 更多社交圈 → 不快樂 → 再生一個孩子……沒完沒了。在社會的算法裡,擁有越多就是越成功。但從個人的角度看,你正被一些顯而易見、卻又看不見的東西吞噬。

在我的理解裡,到這時候,它已經是一個「狀況」了。沒有什麼會在一夜之間崩塌——但一旦崩塌,也沒有什麼能在一夜之間重建。

到這裡,你或許已經感覺到,生活的方式應該更輕——是減法。可是一旦你回到那個熟悉的日常環境,它又會自動切換回「越多越好」。不是因為你享受,而是因為你在情感上,已經依賴那些東西來確認自己的存在。人們因共同的價值而聚在一起,而現在,你想改變自己的價值系統。你覺得他們會認可你嗎?

這正是這個空間想提供的——不是成功的捷徑,不是改變人生的推銷。它是一個空間,讓你和一個願意認識你、看見你的長處、理解你的弱點,並慢慢把那些點連起來的人互動。Connecting the Dots——那些看似毫無意義、零散的東西,其實早已在你的生命裡有份量,只是還沒被連起來——那些你曾質疑卻略過的小事,那些別人忽略的日常火花,那些你還說不清楚的感受。

這個過程裡有很多可以談:優先次序、學到的東西、對話、故事。當你不再供養某些人,有些東西會散掉。有些關係之所以存在,是因為你身上一個你從未指出的弱點。有些物件,只代表著一些早已不再有意義的回憶。不是說一次傾談之後一切就會立刻歸位——而是你會解開一點點,比上一次再往前一步。

在這個過程裡,也許你需要一個人。一個走過這條路的人,一段讓你保持踏實的對話,或者一個明白「成長之痛」的見證者,一場在你難受時可以投入的討論。

這不是一個讓你一次過完成所有事的加速器,而是像騎車一樣,有人陪你從四個輪、騎到兩個輪。你說不出哪一天你可以——但當你可以的時候,你會知道。在這段旅程裡,有人會在。當你跌倒,有人會在。當你不安,有人會在。當你偏離軌道,有人會在。不是每一步都確保勝利,但每一步都有意義——而且有一個人,可以和你一起討論。

直到有一天,輔助輪卸下——你想去哪裡,就去哪裡。自由地。快樂地。有自己的指南針。

我希望,我能一直騎在你身邊,直到你不再需要我。

Connect the dots,
芷嶠

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