We followed rumors of trumpet worms the way other kids anticipated new game releases. With knees pressed into mud and fingers sifting through soil, we searched tirelessly for proof that the world still held something free and astonishing, meant just for us. Each nest we discovered rewrote our understanding of what “enough” could truly mean.
A simple clump of dirt transformed into treasure before our eyes. A hollow in the ground became a story we would share for weeks afterward. These small discoveries held immense value, though they cost nothing at all.
Those afternoons taught us how to live within our limits without ever feeling small. We learned to share discoveries instead of hoarding them selfishly. Awe became our common language in moments when money couldn’t speak.
Now, when life feels crowded by screens, deadlines, and endless noise, those memories return like a quiet hand resting on my shoulder. They insist gently that magic hasn’t completely disappeared from the world.
It’s simply waiting, low to the ground, patient and unseen. It waits for someone willing to kneel down and truly notice. Someone willing to look past the surface and find wonder in ordinary places.
The lesson remains as true today as it was then. The most precious discoveries often hide in plain sight, requiring only our attention and willingness to pause. We carry this wisdom forward, forever changed by muddy knees and childhood wonder.