# The Quiet Art of Moving On ## What We Carry Migrations are not only about distance. They are about deciding what matters enough to take with you. A favorite mug, a letter from someone gone, the way your grandmother pronounced certain words. These small things become anchors when everything else shifts. We migrate through life more often than we admit. From one city to another, from one version of ourselves to the next. Each time we leave something behind and choose what to bring forward. The weight we carry is rarely measured in kilograms. It is measured in memory, in habits, in the quiet hopes we refuse to abandon. ## The Space Between There is a moment in every migration that feels like floating. The old home is no longer yours. The new one does not yet feel like home. In that in-between space we learn who we are when nothing is familiar. We notice our own breathing. We speak more gently to strangers. We become, for a short while, more honest. This middle ground is where real change happens. Not in the dramatic departure or the triumphant arrival, but in the quiet days when you are neither here nor there. When you are simply becoming. ## Finding Home Again Eventually the new place begins to hold you. The light through the window feels right. The street sounds become a kind of music. You realize home was never a fixed address. It was the willingness to settle, to plant something small and tend to it with care. We migrate because something in us believes there is still life ahead worth reaching for. That belief itself is the thread that connects every version of who we have been. *Even the longest journey begins with choosing what to hold onto.*