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In Tbilisi, warmth is expressed through hospitality rather than words. A local cultural historian often notes that homes here are built for guests first, residents second. Tables expand. Conversations linger. Refusal is considered impolite.
The city carries layers of Persian, Russian, and Caucasian influence, yet daily life remains deeply personal. UNESCO recognition protects the old quarters, but tradition protects behaviour—generosity as social duty.
Tbilisi teaches that affection can be structural. When care is built into routine, connection becomes natural rather than performative.
Date: 04/02/26
Rajat Chandra Sarmah
Guwahati, Assam, India
Instagram: @rajatchandrasarmah5
YouTube: Converse With A Smile
