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-eng- | Camp With Mom Extend

The first extra day felt stolen. We rationed the last of the cheese and crackers. We swam not to cool off, but just to feel the weightlessness. Without the pressure to “do” anything, we sat on the dock for two hours, watching a dragonfly land on the same cattail again and again. Mom talked about her own mother, a woman I’d only known in photographs. “She would have hated camping,” Mom laughed. “But she would have loved this silence.”

“One more night,” she said, not looking at me, but at a blue jay landing on a low branch. -ENG- Camp With Mom Extend

“I needed this more than I knew,” she said. “Sometimes you forget you’re a person outside of work, outside of being… a mom. Out here, I’m just the one who can’t start a fire without dousing herself in lighter fluid.” The first extra day felt stolen

We didn’t talk about school, or bills, or the calendar. We just sat inside the small, warm circle of firelight, wrapped in a quiet understanding: that this time was a gift we had given ourselves. A pause button on the rest of the world. Without the pressure to “do” anything, we sat

“You’re the one who brought the extra marshmallows,” I said.

On the final morning—the real one—we packed slowly. The tent came down with a whisper. Mom brushed pine needles off the back of my shirt without saying a word. When we got into the car, she didn’t turn the key right away.

I looked at the lake one last time. “Extend it to a week.”