Home is more than walls and concrete. It is the quiet witness to your entire becoming – absorbing your laughter, holding your silence, offering comfort that words cannot provide. The luggage never feels heavy while leaving home because it is the weight of leaving that is already overburdened.
Farhanna Shafiq
Dear Reader,
I hope you have never had to leave your home for long, no matter the reason. Because leaving home is not just a physical act; it is an intense, emotional departure.
Home is more than a structure of walls and concrete. It is the quiet witness to your entire becoming. It has seen you as an infant, helpless and unaware; as a child, restless and curious; and as someone slowly learning the weight of the world. The walls have absorbed your laughter, but they have also held your silence. They have supported you in moments of pain, offering a kind of comfort that words often fail to provide. Within those walls, a family exists; not just as people, but as a shared rhythm of life, where everything, even the smallest details, is known and understood.
To leave such a place is to detach yourself from something deeply rooted.
The moment of departure carries a strange heaviness. It begins subtly, almost unnoticed. As you prepare to leave, your surroundings start to feel distant, as though they are already slipping away from you. Your vision blurs; not entirely, but enough to make you aware of your own fragility. Sounds lose their sharpness, as if the world is lowering its volume out of respect for the moment. Your throat tightens, breath grows uneven, and something as ordinary as swallowing becomes an effort.
It is not the journey ahead that unsettles you; it is the act of leaving itself.
Whether you are standing alone on a quiet railway platform or surrounded by the chaos of a crowded station, the experience remains the same. You avoid looking into the eyes of your family members, especially your parents. Because in their eyes, everything you are trying to suppress finds its reflection. And once you see it, it becomes impossible to hold yourself together.
Goodbyes are never simple. They demand a kind of strength that feels unnatural. Your eyes resist blinking, as though holding back tears is the only way to maintain control. In that moment, you feel exposed—stripped of composure, reduced to something raw and unguarded. It is a vulnerability that feels almost out of place, especially for someone who is supposed to be moving forward.
There is a rush of adrenaline, but it does not empower the heart inside you. Instead, it unsettles you. Your heart feels heavy, yet hollow at the same time, as if something within it is being rearranged—making space for absence, for distance, for the weight of memories that suddenly feel more significant than before.
And then, the departure happens.
Not with a dramatic shift, but quietly. Gradually, almost imperceptibly, you move away. Ironically, the luggage never feels heavy while leaving home because it is the weight of leaving that is already overburdened. The place you called home becomes just another point behind you. The noise returns, your senses stabilise, and the world begins to feel normal again—but something within you has changed.
It is only after some time that you become fully aware of it.
By then, home is already miles away. You notice the dampness on your eyelashes, the heaviness in your chest that hasn’t quite lifted. And in that moment, you realise how strange it is to carry such an intimate emotion in a public space, surrounded by strangers who remain untouched by it.
You sit there, composed on the outside, but quietly undone within.
Perhaps that is what leaving home truly is: not just a departure from a place, but a quiet breaking and rebuilding of the self. A reminder that no matter how far you go, some part of you remains behind, held within those walls that once held you. At some point in life, one should leave home and learn to live without comfort. There is a profound lesson in stepping away from familiarity and ease. Such a journey should be embraced as an experience of growth rather than endured as a necessity.
And maybe, that is why returning never feels like arriving; it feels like reclaiming something that was never entirely lost.
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