Skip the State Capital—Go to the Courthouse Town Instead
You know the type. Population under 5,000. A courthouse sits in the middle of the town square like it's still 1887. Most of the storefronts are occupied—not converted into artisanal candle shops, just actually occupied by people who live there. There's a diner. There's a hardware store that's been there since your parents were kids. This is the real America, and it's free to visit.
I'm obsessed with these places because they're the anti-resort experience. You're not paying $200 for a hotel room. You're not following a Yelp rating to a "curated dining experience." You're just... there. Existing in a place that wasn't designed for you.
Here's how to do this right: Drive to whatever courthouse town is closest to you. Seriously, just search "oldest courthouse [your state]" and pick one within two hours. Park on the square—there's always free parking because parking was invented before people cared about monetizing it. Walk around the perimeter. One side will have the actual courthouse. The other three sides will have buildings that have been there forever.
Go to the diner. Order something that comes with sides you didn't ask for. This is crucial. The surprise sides are the point. Mashed potatoes when you ordered a sandwich. Coleslaw when you ordered a burger. Some kind of bean situation. Eat it. It will be excellent and cost $9.50. Tip well because the waitress is literally the only waitress.
Here's what surprises people: the quiet. Not the nice zen quiet of a spa. The actual quiet of a place where nobody's performing being relaxed. You'll hear the coffee maker at the diner. A truck backing up somewhere. Maybe a door closing. Your own thoughts, which is terrifying.
Walk into the courthouse if it's open. Most are open during business hours. The floors will creak. You'll see the courtroom where local real estate disputes have been settled for 150 years. It's small and kind of boring and absolutely worth fifteen minutes of your time.
Grab coffee at the place near the courthouse—there's always a place near the courthouse—and sit on a bench. Watch people. They're all actually from there, going about actual life. Not performative small-town life. Real life.
Leave before sunset. Stop at a state park twenty minutes outside town if you need to make it a whole thing. But honestly, the point is the afternoon. The point is standing in a place where nothing is trying to sell you anything.
This is your weekend.
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