By Anne Jacobson
The week after college graduation, my friend Paul and I loaded his burnt-orange Datsun with musty camping gear mined from the basement corners of our childhood homes. We were driven small-town kids who had glimpsed enough of the world to know we wanted more; we were tired young adults who had carried the expectations of family and community long enough to know we wanted less.
After the first windswept night in a Nebraska field, we crossed the scrub grass plains of eastern Colorado until the blue-gray peaks of the Rockies crested in the distance. Well after dark, the old car heaved through the gates of Rocky Mountain National Park. We pitched the canvas army tent by lantern light and collapsed on some nearby boulders.
“Should we build a fire?” asked Paul, sounding unfocused and hungry.
“No,” I said, shivering in the crisp mountain air and imagining the quilted warmth of my sleeping bag. “I’ll just grab sweatshirts and whatever we’ve got to eat from the trunk.”
As I returned with a can of baked beans and two spoons, the full moon emerged from the sheltering arms of spruce and aspen. Its pewter glow blanketed the alpine meadow below, stilling us into silence, quieting something deeper.
I had not known that a shared can of beans could be an unforgettable meal, that moonglow could wrap me in wordless answers to unasked questions.
I had never been so cold and so comforted; so hungry and so full.
Image by Cottonbro Studio courtesy of Pexels


































































































































































































































































































































Short and wonderful, carries so much with it.
Gorgeous writing and gorgeous noticing of small, powerful moments. It brought me right there to the campsite with you.
Gorgeous writing that captures the small/big moments. It brought me right to the campsite with you.
As a fellow physician and writer, I so appreciate this lovely, succinct micro essay. It makes me want to get out of the office and go camping again. Plus eat baked beans!
Car heaving through the Rocky Mountain National Park, spoons, moon glow–I’m there!
Lovely vivid description and poignant contrasts. Lovely piece
I love the simplicity of your language. It allows us into the quiet simplicity and complexity of this moment.
Beautiful use of language and gorgeous imagery.
A beautifully described moment. It makes we want to go camping and bask in the gifts of nature. Thank you
Gorgeous descriptions, and holds the tensions of a time of life transition. Thank you for sharing.
So beautiful. I am sitting in the peace and beauty of it.
I loved this: “We were driven small-town kids who had glimpsed enough of the world to know we wanted more; we were tired young adults who had carried the expectations of family and community long enough to know we wanted less.”
Capturing young adulthood for these people in two sentences! Lovely.