It's the Little Things
What else my friends ask? What is Hong Kong really like? What have you noticed Andrea!?! This is a hard call. I grew up in Asia, so much of what is see around me feels so familiar that I don't really notice that it might seem "different" for other people, but there are little things. Those sun brollies for instance. It's a very common sight in the outlying districts to see elderly gentlemen cycling, with one hand on the handlebars and the other holding a pink, silver or purple umbrella aloft on a brilliantly sunny day.
What else? The beauty and sophistication of most of the people I see around me. They're tiny. They're mostly perfect. I think I've seen only one truly hefty girl so far in the entire city of Hong Kong - and boy do they eat! The entire population of Hong Kong appears to be gifted with the most extraordinary metabolisms. But, to be fair, they eat little and often, and it's mostly delicious but healthy food. There is local concern about the advent of processed snacks, so I hope they resist.
The T-shirts. They're ubiquitous, riotous and interesting. The other day I passed a solemn gentleman of advanced years whose T-shirt had just one word printed on it: "Drone". The mind boggled. Bertie Wooster, I wondered?
The general air of safety. This is probably the safest large city I've ever been in. The lack of public drunkenness. What a relief. The fact that everyone lives in apartments, and where the apartments stop, the slopes of the mountains begin. I've hardly seen any houses. For such a large city there's hardly any sprawl. Just skyscrapers, water, and mountains.