Leaving, Before Arriving
Leaving happens in layers.
First the skyline thins out. Miami pulls back just enough to notice. The port feels busy until it doesn’t. Distance does the quiet work quickly.
That’s when the ship takes over.
Smoke lifts from the top deck—not dramatic, just functional. Proof that movement has consequences. The engines don’t pretend to be invisible. We’re going somewhere now.

Movement makes itself known.
Once we’re clear of land, the ship stops feeling like transportation and starts feeling like a place.
Central Park is already open. People wander without direction. Trees, lights, paths—familiar elements, rearranged. It’s possible to forget the water for a moment.

A neighborhood at sea.
Dinner comes next, not as an event but as routine. A counter, a seat, something hot. The kind of meal that doesn’t mark time, just occupies it.




Routine arrives before the destination.
The Bahamas are ahead. That part is certain.
But this space—leaving, settling, letting the pace reset—feels complete on its own. Arrival can wait.
I wasn’t in a hurry to get there.