Caleb had a glow night dance at school. Holden doesn’t even go there yet. Different school, different building, different everything. But we all went.
At the entrance, each kid could take two glow stick bracelets. Holden took his two like it was a personal inconvenience, as if he already suspected they wouldn’t be enough. Caleb took his and moved on.
The second we walked into the gym, Caleb was gone, straight to the dance floor, jumping, spinning, fully committed to the moment. Holden stepped inside, looked around, and immediately found something else to focus on.
He started picking glow sticks up off the floor. One by one. Quiet. Methodical. Like a man on a mission.
I asked what he was doing. “I’m finding the owners.”
That lasted maybe five minutes.
After that, he just kept collecting: from the floor, from chairs, from anywhere a glow stick had been abandoned for even a second. He moved through the gym like a tiny, determined scavenger. At one point, he came and sat next to me.
“Count them.”
I did.
Twenty.
Across the gym, Caleb was still dancing. No breaks, no hesitation, just music and movement and sweat and joy. Holden sat beside me like a very satisfied businessman.
Then the DJ played "Bye Bye Bye," which felt wildly out of place at an elementary school dance in 2026 and also completely correct. Suddenly I was ten again. Or thirteen. Somewhere in that *NSYNC era where this song was everything and you knew the hand motions whether you admitted it or not.
I lit up. “THIS is my music.”
Caleb kept dancing. Holden did not.
The dance was exactly one hour long. At 7:30 on the dot, the DJ cut a song off halfway through and turned everything off. Lights up. Done.
The next day, the school posted photos on Facebook. There was one of Holden, standing there with his pile of glow sticks like he’d just won something. Caleb wasn’t in any of them.
It was his school. His dance. He spent the whole night exactly where you’d expect him to be: in the middle of it, moving, laughing, not thinking about anything except the music. Holden spent it differently. Drifting, noticing, gathering things no one else cared about, until somehow he was the one with something to show for it.
It wasn’t even his dance, but Holden made it his own.
Caleb was just happy to be there.
This post is part of my One-Minute Memoir series — short reflections on small moments that still manage to say something big.