I'm in England, and, in some other part of the world, you are too. Our journey's been long, and we move the sky with us like the people of old. Across green fields, red brick houses and old factories. Far beyond the sadness in the face of somebody you see everyday in the bus - a sadness you can relate to, because you are the same, after all, but can't explain (and what would be the point?). Leaving behind green lakes and desolated mountains and tiny villages, there is a place someone like us once called home. It might be a small house, sorrounded by trees, or maybe a bright flat where children once laughed. We follow in the footsteps of a thousand nations. That's why when we leave, we'll be back, and when leaving again, we'll still be here. Is this country a refuge in the night where we sleep until the morning of our lives, or the embodiment of the unattainable? We keep moving forward, and I'm blinded by the lights - but I embrace it. This is me now.
Being an inmigrant in the UK is an ongoing process.