# Migrations ## The Instinct to Wander Every spring, birds lift from familiar branches, drawn by an unseen force toward distant shores. In our own lives, we feel it too—a quiet pull to leave what we know. It's not always dramatic; sometimes it's a new job across town, a relationship that shifts us, or simply the ache for fresh air. By 2026, with cities reshaping and climates whispering change, this instinct feels more urgent. Migration isn't flight from hardship alone; it's a nod to growth, a belief that staying still might mean standing in our own way. ## What We Pack We don't travel light, even when we try. In every move, we carry invisible bundles: - Stories etched in old photos, shaping who we become. - Lessons from stumbles, turning scars into quiet strengths. - Hopes, fragile as seeds, waiting for soil. These aren't burdens; they're bridges. They remind us that departure doesn't erase the past—it folds it into the journey, making the road richer. ## Roots in Motion Arrival brings its own hush. New streets feel strange at first, but soon they hold laughter, routines, even regrets turned wise. Migration reveals a truth: home isn't pinned to a map. It's the steady rhythm we rebuild, wherever we land. We've always been migrants—through seasons, ages, choices—finding belonging not in permanence, but in the willingness to adapt. *To migrate is to trust the map within.*