# The Quiet Art of Moving On ## What We Carry Migrations are rarely about the destination alone. They begin in the small, almost invisible decisions: what to keep, what to leave behind, and what we pretend we can live without. A favorite mug, a letter from someone long gone, the way we pronounce certain words. These things travel with us not because they are useful, but because they still hold a piece of who we were. I have moved houses four times in the last decade. Each time the boxes grew lighter, not because I owned less, but because I had learned what truly matters. The weight we carry is often measured in memory rather than kilograms. ## The Space Between There is a strange honesty in the middle of a migration. The old place is no longer yours. The new one does not yet feel like home. For a short while you exist in between, belonging nowhere and therefore belonging to yourself in a clearer way. This in-between time asks gentle questions. What habits do I want to bring forward? Which parts of me were only reflections of the walls I lived inside? The silence of half-empty rooms has a way of telling the truth if we let it. ## Becoming Native Again Eventually the new place stops feeling borrowed. The light falls differently in the mornings. The street sounds become a kind of music instead of noise. We grow into our surroundings the way roots find their way through soil, quietly and without announcement. Migration, at its simplest, is the repeated act of choosing to begin again while still carrying the best of what came before. It is how we stay alive to the world. *Some journeys end where we learn to feel at home in our own skin.*