# Migrations

## The Quiet Pull

Every migration begins with a tug we cannot quite name. It might be a change in the light, a shift in the wind, or the sudden feeling that the place we stand no longer fits the shape of who we are becoming. We tell ourselves we are moving for practical reasons, jobs or houses or schools. Yet beneath those reasons lives something simpler: the knowledge that staying still would cost us more than leaving ever could.

## What We Carry

We pack more than clothes and documents. We carry the smell of rain on old pavement, the way our grandmother pronounced certain words, the particular silence that filled a childhood bedroom. These things do not weigh on the scale at the airport, but they weigh on us. They become quieter with distance until one day we notice they have turned into something gentler, less like anchors and more like quiet companions.

I once watched an elderly neighbor prepare to leave the only street she had known for seventy-one years. She kept only three items from her kitchen: a wooden spoon, a chipped blue bowl, and a small tin that once held tea. Everything else she gave away. When I asked why those three, she smiled and said they were the only objects that had never hurried her.

## Finding Home Again

The surprise of every migration is that home eventually stops being a single address. It becomes portable, something we learn to set down lightly in new soil. We discover that belonging is less about recognition and more about recognition in return, the slow process of a place learning our name and us learning its rhythms.

The street you leave behind keeps living without you. The street you arrive on slowly begins to include you. Between those two truths sits the person who is neither fully from one place nor the other, but who now holds both with careful hands.

*Some departures are really arrivals wearing different clothes.*