Dahab is a small town on the Red Sea. We arrived in Egypt by boat from Jordan, but this place did not feel Egyptian at all, but was occupied by a large group of Europeans and Americans. We were surprised when we arrived, and in less than two hours we joined the vast army of foreigners and stayed in this carefree town for more than 20 days. Due to natural geographical conditions, coupled with the sharp depreciation of Egypt's currency in recent years, Dahab has become the cheapest place to learn diving in the world. For 300 dollars, you can get two AOW+OW diving certificates, and you can live in a bed for 10 yuan. A delicious seafood meal also costs only more than 20 yuan to include invincible sea views, and the beauty and cheapness of the scenery make this magical town a backpacker's paradise. After the tense travel of the first two months, the pace of arriving in Hab gradually slowed down. Every day I wake up naturally, I meet a few friends to go to the beach to hang out, I find a seaside cafe when I am tired, smoke water smoke at night to face the sea and the mountains, and I stay for a week to walk down the street and meet several friends. Every time I left, I saw the sparkling sea outside the window, and my heart decided to stay a few more days. Dahab accidentally stole our time. Dahab is like a utopian community, accepting people from all over the world, borderless, unbounded, and Russians as neighbors, diving with Koreans, and Australians smoking a hyena, even the Egyptian grandfather who sells soda in the store is happy.