# Migrations of Belonging

## Roots Uprooted

We all carry migrations in our bones. Not just the grand ones—families crossing oceans or borders—but the quiet shifts. A child leaving home for the first time. A friendship fading into memory. Even thoughts that wander from old certainties to fresh doubts. These moments pull at our roots, reminding us that staying still is rare. In 2026, with cities reshaping and climates shifting, these uprootings feel more ordinary, yet they ache the same.

## The Weight of What We Carry

On the path, we pack light but never empty-handed. A faded photo from a grandmother's kitchen. A melody from childhood streets. These fragments aren't burdens; they're bridges. They soften the strangeness of new skies. I've watched neighbors in my building migrate—jobs lost to machines, dreams rerouted—and seen how they weave old threads into new lives. One man plants herbs from his village in cracked concrete pots. Migration teaches that what we carry shapes where we land.

## Landing Softly

Arrival isn't an end; it's a beginning disguised as home. We build anew, blending the past with the present. Birds return to the same nests each season, but they're changed by the winds. So are we. In this endless flow, belonging emerges not from permanence, but from the courage to move and adapt.

*On March 29, 2026, may your migrations lead to unexpected gardens.*