
A ten-year-old man is like lemon tea: human nature just beginning to show, with a faintly green, mellow taste, leaving a sweet aftertaste.
A twenty-year-old man is like Yuhua tea: first awakening to feelings, true and pure, fresh and cool in flavor with a delicate fragrance.

A thirty-year-old man is like Biluochun tea; gaining life experience is a process of removing the coarse and keeping the refined,
casting off restlessness while preserving the fragrance, and thus acquiring a uniquely beautiful style.

A forty-year-old man is like West Lake Longjing tea: perfection shown through simplicity, nobility shown through maturity.
And yet that nobility is so approachable.

A fifty-year-old man is like oolong tea: after being tempered by the years, he begins to temper the years in return.
After countless things have passed, there is no need to reveal too much; true feeling naturally pours forth.

A sixty-year-old man is like Keemun black tea, harmonized by nature, gathering the essence of sun and moon, rich in flavor.














