When I first arrived in Albania, everyone insisted I try burek.
Not suggested.
Insisted.
One day someone practically placed it in my hand and said,
“Eat. If you don’t eat, we cannot continue this friendship.”
So I took a bite.
And instantly I understood why this pastry has national-level respect.
Golden, flaky, warm… it felt like being hugged by a very confident grandmother.
And at that exact moment I said to myself:
“Wait… this is dumpling energy.”
Because in China, dumplings do the same thing.
You eat them and suddenly all your problems shrink down to a manageable size.
The Cooking Process: Two Cultures, Same Drama
Making burek:
- Stretch dough across an entire table,
- Hold your breath,
- Pray to at least three ancestors.
Making dumplings:
- Fold small circles for three hours,
- Pretend your fingers don’t hurt,
- Grandma judges your folding technique silently.
Both come with:
- Family,
- Opinions,
- And one person who believes their way is the only correct way.
So yes — Albania and China? Cousins.
Spiritual cousins.
Flour-based cousins.
But Life Doesn’t Stop So We Can Eat Forever (unfortunately)
Between work, family, appointments, WhatsApp messages, remembering birthdays, solving small emergencies, and politely pretending we are relaxed…
Our shoulders become tighter than bakllava layers.
Our backs start sounding like old wooden chairs.
Our minds run like Google Chrome with 42 tabs open.
One day I was eating burek and I realized: My neck was so stiff it could qualify as a weapon.
That Was My Moment of Enlightenment (Without Meditation)
In China, when we are stressed, we go for massage and acupuncture.
Not because we are fancy.
But because we would like to continue living without sounding like a door hinge.
Here in Albania, I discovered people also have stress —
but many just say:
“Eh, do kalojë.”
(Translation: I shall simply ignore my suffering.)
No.
Your body is not a fridge.
You cannot just close the door and hope the problem disappears.
This Is Why I Do What I Do
I treat pain, yes.
But more importantly, I treat the consequences of pretending we are fine.
Sometimes the back pain comes from:
- lifting heavy things,
- working too much,
- or thinking too much (very serious condition).
Sometimes it comes from having one cousin with strong opinions.
I understand.
Massage and acupuncture do not just fix muscles — they return peace to the system.
They let your body say:
“Finally… thank you… I have been waiting since 2019.”
So Here Is My Official Recommendation from One Human to Another
Eat burek with joy.
Eat dumplings with the same joy.
(Preferably not both at midnight — trust me.)
But also:
Rest.
Breathe.
Let someone take care of you for once.
Your back will not file a complaint.
Your muscles will not protest.
Your mind will probably applaud.
I’ll be here — with warm hands, herbal oil, and no judgment.
Yang Wang