Let $\alpha$ be irrational, and define a map on the torus $T : \mathbb{T}^2 \to \mathbb{T}^2$ to be such that $T(x_1, x_2) = (x_1 + \alpha \mod1,\ 2 x_2\mod 1)$.
Define metric $d$ on the torus to be the usual metric (i.e. the length of the shortest path on the torus).
Given a point $(y_1, y_2) \in \mathbb{T}^2$, construct a point $(x_1, x_2 ) \in \mathbb{T}^2$ such that there exists a subsequence $n_k \to + \infty$ such that $$\lim_{k\to \infty}d(T^{n_k}(x_1, x_2), (y_1, y_2)) = 0.$$
My thoughts so far: There exists a point $x_1 \in \mathbb{T}$ whose orbit under the irrational rotation is dense in $\mathbb{T}$ (in fact every point satisfies this). Also, we can find a point $x_2 \in \mathbb{T}$ whose orbit is dense under the doubling map. Thus we can find a subsequence of the orbit of $x_1$ which converges to $y_1$, and similarly for $x_2$ and $y_2$. But I'm not sure how to combine these subsequences to get a sequence $n_k$ so that $T^{n_k}(x_1, x_2) \to (y_1, y_2).$