# The Quiet Pull of Elsewhere ## Leaving What We Know Migrations are not always about distance. Sometimes they begin with a small restlessness, a sense that the shape of our days no longer fits. We wake up one morning and feel the tug, gentle but persistent, toward a different way of living. It rarely arrives as a grand decision. More often it comes as a series of small turnings, each one quiet enough to ignore until we cannot. I have moved houses four times in my life. Each time I learned the same lesson: what we carry matters more than where we arrive. The photographs, the books, the cracked mug we cannot throw away, these become the quiet anchors that tell us who we still are when everything else changes. ## The Space Between There is a moment in every migration when the old home is no longer home and the new one is not yet. We live in the in-between, surrounded by half-packed boxes and the strange silence of rooms without their familiar sounds. This middle place teaches patience. It asks us to sit with uncertainty without rushing to fill it. During one such season I watched my neighbor, an elderly man preparing to move into a smaller apartment. Each evening he sat on his porch and told stories to whoever would listen. He was not sad about leaving. He seemed to understand that a life is not a place but a collection of moments that travel with you. ## What Remains The truest migrations happen inside us. We leave behind old versions of ourselves, old angers, old certainties. We travel toward kinder ways of seeing. These inner journeys often require more courage than crossing oceans. *We do not move toward better places. We move toward becoming better travelers.* *July 4, 2026*