# Migrations ## Roots Upended In spring of 2026, as birds trace ancient paths across skies, I watch the quiet unraveling of what holds us. Migrations begin not with fanfare, but a gentle tug—a job lost, a home too small, a heart seeking soil that fits. We pack what we can: a favorite mug, faded letters, the scent of soil from a childhood yard. The rest stays, not as loss, but as compost for what comes next. It's a surrender, this leaving, teaching us that holding on too tightly stifles growth. ## The Weight We Carry What moves with us matters most. Not belongings alone, but the invisible: - Stories etched in laughter lines. - Lessons from stumbles and small wins. - The quiet strength of those who came before. This baggage lightens over time, refined by wind and rain. In transit, whether across borders or screens, we sift: some memories sharpen, others fade like distant hills. Migration strips us bare, revealing what endures. ## Soil Renewed Arrival feels like breath after holding it. New places demand we plant again—roots tentative at first, then deep. Here, in unfamiliar earth, old seeds sprout differently: a recipe adapted, a language blended, friendships forged from shared displacement. We don't return unchanged; we multiply, weaving past into present. Migration isn't escape; it's expansion, a reminder that home lives in us, not just places. *Every step forward carries the whole world within.*