# The Quiet Art of Moving On ## What We Carry Migrations are not only about distance. They are about deciding what matters enough to take with us. A favorite mug, a handwritten letter, the way our grandmother pronounced certain words. These small things become anchors when everything else shifts. In 2026, we migrate between cities, jobs, beliefs, and versions of ourselves more often than we admit. Each move asks the same gentle question: what is light enough to carry, yet heavy enough to keep? ## The Space Between There is a moment after leaving but before arriving that feels like floating. The old place no longer fits. The new one is still a stranger. In that in-between, we learn who we are when no one recognizes us. I remember helping my neighbor, an elderly woman named Rosa, pack her apartment last spring. She kept only three photographs, one wooden spoon, and a small clay bird her grandson had made. Everything else she gave away with quiet generosity. Watching her, I understood that sometimes the bravest migrations happen in small steps and open hands. ## Becoming Native Again Every new place eventually becomes home when we stop performing arrival and simply begin living there. We learn the rhythm of morning light on different walls. We notice which birds visit the new trees. We slowly trade our old maps for lived knowledge. The beauty of migration is that it proves we are not fixed. We can become new people in new spaces while still honoring what came before. *Some journeys end where we finally stop carrying what we no longer need.*