# Migrations

## The Instinct to Wander

Every spring, as the earth tilts toward warmth, birds lift off from familiar shores. They don't question the pull; they follow the wind's quiet call. In 2026, watching swallows arc across a city skyline on April 20th, I see my own life mirrored there. We've all felt it—that gentle urge to shift, to seek sunlight elsewhere. Migration isn't flight from hardship alone; it's a deep trust in motion, a belief that what's ahead holds enough.

## Carrying the Familiar

What moves with us isn't just body or belongings. A woman I knew left her village with a single pot, her mother's recipe etched in memory. In a new land, that pot simmered meals that gathered strangers into family. Roots don't stay buried; they travel in stories, habits, the way we hum old songs. These migrations reshape us softly, blending old soil with new, until home becomes portable, woven into our steps.

## Arriving, Always Becoming

No migration ends at arrival. The swallows return changed, feathers worn but eyes brighter. We, too, settle into fresh routines, only to feel the next whisper. This rhythm teaches patience with unrest. Change isn't loss; it's the slow unfolding of who we might be.

*It reminds us: stay open to the journey, for every move carves a deeper self.*

*In the quiet of transition, peace waits—not in stillness, but in flow.*