We were halfway home from dinner when traffic stopped completely. Red taillights stretched endlessly ahead, engines humming. Exhausted, I rested my head against the cool window and closed my eyes for “just a minute.”
When I woke, dawn light washed the windshield in gold. The highway was gone. We were parked outside a tiny gas station with a rusted pump. My husband walked up with coffee and a paper bag, smiling like nothing was strange.
“Got tired of waiting,” he said. “Took an exit. Thought we’d try the back roads.”
Those roads carried us through quiet towns, rolling fields, and peeling porches that felt oddly welcoming. We ate fluffy pancakes at a faded diner, then detoured to visit friends we hadn’t planned to see. Laughter stretched what should’ve been minutes into hours.
On the drive home, I asked, “What if we did this more often?”
So we did. Random exits. No GPS. Just curiosity. We found hidden cafés, dusty bookstores, kind strangers, and stories we’d never forget. We slowed down. Listened more. Lived more.
Sometimes, getting lost is the most direct way back to what matters.