# The Quiet Art of Moving On

## What We Carry

Migrations are never just about distance. They are about deciding what matters enough to take with you. A favorite mug, a letter from someone gone, the way your grandmother pronounced certain words. These small things become anchors when everything else shifts.

I have moved houses, countries, and chapters of life. Each time the same quiet ritual appears: standing in an empty room, looking at what remains after the boxes are sealed. The space feels larger than before, and somehow smaller at the same time. We do not leave places behind so much as we fold them into ourselves, carrying their light and weight into whatever comes next.

## The Space Between

There is a moment in every migration when you are neither here nor there. Suitcases closed, keys returned, new address not yet real. This in-between feels like suspension, but it is actually the most honest part. For a brief time you can see both lives clearly: the one you are leaving and the one you hope to build.

Birds understand this better than we do. They do not rush their journeys. They follow ancient routes, stopping at the same resting places year after year. Their migrations are not escapes but rhythms, as natural as breathing. We humans tend to romanticize or dread our own movements, forgetting they are simply the shape our lives take when change becomes necessary.

## Coming to Rest

Eventually every migration finds its landing. The new place stops feeling borrowed. You learn which floorboard creaks, where the light falls in late afternoon, how the air smells after rain. The old life becomes a story you tell less often, though it still lives in the way you arrange books or the songs you play while cooking.

*Some journeys end not when we arrive, but when we finally feel at home in our own skin again.*

*July 8, 2026*