<aside> 🇹🇼 This is part 4 of the series on moving to Taiwan:

</aside>

When people ask me how my time in quarantine when I entered Taiwan was, they're almost always surprised when I tell them it was dope. Most people who've also gone through the two weeks of isolation talk about how bored they were or how they couldn't wait to get out. I, on the other hand, had a hard time saying goodbye to my room at the end of my stay. I'd honestly be pretty stoked to go through quarantine again.

I'll share how I made quarantine enjoyable for myself, but first, some background on why I found quarantining to be more pleasant than most people:

Mindset

When you think about being isolated in a hotel room all by yourself for two weeks, it's easy to focus on the things you can't do: You can't meet up with friends. You can't go out to places. You can't change up your environment. And so on.

This is also what people initially focus on during meditation retreats. You can't talk to people. You can't text your friends. You can't browse social media.

But the magic of these sorts of environments is the space created by the absence of all these things.

Rather than focus on the limitations of quarantine, I found it exciting to consider the unique opportunities now available. In quarantine, since your environment is fixed and you basically have no external stimuli, you have full control over how you spend your time and attention. That means:

If you can view the conditions of quarantine not as constraints that limit your freedom but rather as opportunities to try new things in a special environment, you'll have a lot more fun. How often do you get the chance to completely design your lifestyle?

Routine

While I flirted with the idea of letting go of time entirely and seeing what kind of schedule I'd adopt if I didn't keep track of time at all (my room also didn't have any windows which would've helped this experiment), I decided to adopt a pretty regular schedule.

I made sure to focus on establishing the fundamental pillars of well-being: sleep, exercise, nutrition, and meditation. I set up a spreadsheet with activities I wanted to make sure I did every day and recorded the number of minutes spent doing it (the goal was to spend at least 1 minute on each activity):