# 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 five times in my life. Each time the boxes grew lighter, not because I owned less, but because I learned to let go more easily. The first move I carried every childhood trophy. By the last one I kept only three photographs and my mother's old scarf. The rest had quietly revealed themselves as weight instead of treasure.

## The Space Between

There is a moment in every migration when you are neither here nor there. The old place is no longer yours. The new place does not yet know you. In that fragile gap lives a strange kind of freedom. Without familiar walls telling you who you are, you get to choose again.

My neighbor Elena once told me she finally learned to sing in such a between-place. She had wanted to for years but felt too embarrassed in her old apartment where the walls were thin and the neighbors judgmental. Only when she moved did she discover no one was listening except herself.

## Becoming Native

Eventually every migration ends in belonging. Not because the place changes to fit you, but because you change to fit the place. You learn the rhythm of new streets. You notice when the light falls differently through the windows. You stop saying "back home" and start saying "home" without hesitation.

The plants you carried from the old garden begin to flower in unfamiliar soil. The recipes you brought adapt to new ingredients. You become someone who belongs here, carrying the best of there inside you like a quiet inheritance.

*In every ending there is a small, brave beginning.*