# The Quiet Art of Moving On

## What We Carry

Migrations are rarely about the destination alone. They are about deciding what to keep when the old life no longer fits. A favorite mug, a photograph, the way your grandmother pronounced certain words. These small things become anchors in unfamiliar waters. They remind us that we do not arrive empty-handed, even when we feel we have lost everything.

I have watched friends cross oceans with two suitcases and a lifetime of stories. Each object they chose to bring carried a silent promise: this part of me still matters. The rest we learn to release, not because it was worthless, but because holding on would make the journey impossible.

## The Space Between

There is a particular stillness that arrives after you have left one place and before you have fully become part of another. In that in-between season, time feels softer. You notice the shape of clouds in a new sky. You learn that belonging is not something you find, but something you slowly grow into through small, repeated acts of presence.

This middle ground teaches patience. It shows us that identity is not fixed to soil or street names. We are more like rivers than we admit, constantly moving yet somehow continuous.

## What Remains

Every migration leaves its mark. Not as scars, but as new layers of understanding. We become people who know how to say goodbye with grace. We learn that home is less a location and more a feeling we learn to create wherever we are.

The beauty lies in this gentle truth: we do not migrate away from ourselves. We migrate toward new versions of who we have always been, carrying the best of what came before.

*Some journeys end where we begin to feel at home in our own skin.*