# The Quiet Art of Moving On ## What We Carry Migrations are never just about distance. They are about deciding what to keep when the old life no longer fits. A favorite mug, a worn photograph, the way your mother pronounced certain words. These small things become anchors in unfamiliar waters. We rarely speak about how heavy even light objects can feel when you are the one carrying them across years and borders. The weight is not in the suitcase. It is in the remembering. ## The Space Between There is a moment, brief and easy to miss, when you have left one place but have not yet arrived at the next. The old address no longer belongs to you. The new one still feels like someone else's. In that in-between, many people discover who they are when no one knows their story yet. I think of my neighbor who moved here from Lisbon in 2019. She told me she spent her first three months saying good morning to the same barista every day until one morning the barista said her name without being asked. That small recognition, she said, felt like the exact moment she stopped migrating and started belonging. ## Becoming Native Every place eventually asks the same gentle question: will you learn our rhythms or keep measuring everything against where you came from? The people who stay long enough begin to answer without thinking. They know which market has the good tomatoes in July. They stop explaining their accent. Migration, in its deepest sense, is not about leaving home. It is about slowly, carefully, growing a new one inside yourself that can travel with you. *Some journeys end the moment we stop looking back.*