Reading China through motion
While many travelers remember a trip through food, sightseeing or shopping, Joshua Saul found himself recording China through movement. Rather than treating exercise as separate from travel, he used walking, stretching and brief pauses for reflection as a way to feel the rhythm of each city.
In Suzhou, Jiangsu province, for example, he moved slowly through classical gardens and along slightly wet stone-paved paths. At quiet moments during the visit, he added simple movements such as push-ups and stretching, using them less as a workout than as a way to stay present in the setting.
In Shanghai, he chose to meditate near the Oriental Pearl Tower by the Huangpu River, closing his eyes amid skyscrapers and the energy of the modern city.
"This trip to China made me understand fitness isn't limited to the gym," Saul said.
For him, every step became part of the journey, helping him remember "the temperature of each city, its heights and its story". He came to see that movement could be another way of reading a place — through its landscapes, history and everyday pace.