About Wending Lines
Wending Lines started with a curiosity about Chinese characters—their shapes, their histories, their meanings. It’s become a space for following thoughts where they go, and noticing what takes root along the way.

The name comes from the idea of movement through reflection. Wending is slow and attentive. Lines can be strokes on a page, or the invisible threads between memory, language, and experience.

This isn’t about answers so much as about noticing. Thanks for being here—for reading, pausing, and maybe seeing something in a new way.

What You'll Find Here


Photo Gallery 📷

Moments and impressions, captured and collected.


Making Sense 🔦

Figuring things out, writing it down.

Cindy Liu lives in Queens, NY with her cat Elva and her friend Andrew. She used to make a lot of lattes, and still thinks about the way hearts pour into things—especially the character 心 (“xīn”), which shows up in both love (愛) and thought (想). It’s also part of her Chinese name.

She writes, reflects, and tries to notice what holds things together. Not quite a student, not quite a teacher, she’s someone who learns by circling back and tracing the lines again.

Also: she’s only skimmed that Dr. Seuss book. Once.
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