# Migrations of Belonging ## The First Stirring Every spring, as April light lengthens, something inside us stirs. On April 13, 2026, I watched swallows return to the eaves after months away. Their migration isn't flighty whim—it's a deep pull toward seasons unfolding elsewhere. We feel it too: the quiet urge to shift homes, jobs, or even how we see the world. It's not running from; it's leaning into what calls. ## What We Pack Lightly In these moves, we learn to travel light. Not just clothes or files, but habits and hopes: - A worn notebook of half-formed ideas. - Stories from old friends, tucked like seeds. - The soft ache of what we leave, shaping who we become. Heavy grudges stay behind. We carry forward the warmth of shared meals, the laugh of a child discovering rain. Migration teaches discernment—what truly nests in the heart endures the miles. ## Roots in New Soil Arrival feels like exhaling. The swallows weave mud and song into home. We do the same: plant gardens in cracked city lots, share evening tea with strangers who become kin. Each migration redraws our map, not erasing the past but layering it. We belong not to one place, but to the rhythm of going and staying. *In every journey's end, home finds us anew.*