Just Once: When Life Briefly Reveals Its Meaning
What if life’s meaning reveals itself only once—but that single moment is enough?
Just Once
Anne Sexton
Just once I knew what life was for.
In Boston, quite suddenly, I understood;
walked there along the Charles River,
watched the lights copying themselves,
all neoned and strobe-hearted, opening
their mouths as wide as opera singers;
counted the stars, my little campaigners,
my scar daisies, and knew that I walked my love
on the night green side of it and cried
my heart to the eastbound cars and cried
my heart to the westbound cars and took
my truth across a small humped bridge
and hurried my truth, the charm of it, home
and hoarded these constants into morning
only to find them gone.
Reflection
In Just Once, Anne Sexton captures a fleeting moment when life briefly reveals its meaning—then quietly withdraws it. The poem reminds us that clarity often arrives unannounced, luminous and temporary, like city lights mirrored on dark water. Sexton shows how truth can be felt deeply yet refuse to stay, how meaning can be carried home in the heart only to vanish by morning. Still, the experience matters. Even when gone, such moments leave behind a quiet confidence: that meaning is possible, that it has touched us once—and may again.
As you read this poem, ask yourself:
Have you ever experienced a brief moment when life felt perfectly clear—and how did it change you afterward?