# The Quiet Art of Moving On ## What We Carry Migrations are never just about distance. They are about deciding what to keep. When people leave a place, they rarely travel empty-handed. They carry recipes, songs, a way of laughing at trouble, the shape of their grandmother's hands. These things do not take up space in a suitcase, yet they weigh the most. I have watched friends move countries and seen how the small, ordinary objects become sacred. A chipped blue mug. A child's drawing folded many times. A coat that no longer fits but still smells like home. We do not migrate to erase the past. We migrate to translate it into a new language. ## The Space Between There is a moment, brief and strangely peaceful, when everything is in motion and nothing has arrived. The old house is no longer yours. The new one does not know your name yet. In that gap lives a particular kind of freedom. You are neither here nor there. For once, expectation cannot find you. This in-between feels like early morning fog. You cannot see far, but the air feels soft against your face. Many of us rush through this space, anxious to land. Yet something gentle happens if we let it linger. We remember who we are when no one is watching us be someone. ## Becoming Native Every migration eventually asks the same question: how do you belong without betraying where you came from? The answer is slower than we want. It happens in small surrenders. You learn the new birdsong. You forget the exact word for a certain kind of sadness in your first language. You plant tomatoes in soil that your ancestors never touched, and they still grow. We do not become new people. We become larger ones, stretched across time and place, carrying old light into new rooms. *On quiet mornings we realize home was never a fixed address, only the courage to keep moving with an open heart.*