Living and studying in China, the UK and Europe has led me to live in a nomadic state which provided me with a reservoir of humanistic information outside of academic theories. I am passionate about interdisciplinary collaboration. It prompts constant inspiration and helps me with self-reflection. My main areas of research have always been concerned with people’s inner worlds; the relationship between ruins and urbanisation, architecture and memory; and the potential between macro-narratives and personal narratives. I always focus on how personal narratives can be a new way for conducting a reflectivity perspective to rethinking the society issues; and how to think about the risks and future (hope) of East Asian curatorial practice in the context and practice of Western-dominated curating. My curatorial ethics have always been related to caring and an anthropology that goes beyond the human. My current writing project focuses on curating as a radical relational practice, embodying the potential/further relationship between people and society by rethinking the individual’s traumatic experience, etc. I bond curatorial with love and caring, to respond to this crazy, capricious world.