# The Nature of Vapor ## What Remains Vapor does not announce itself loudly. It drifts in quietly, softens the edges of what is solid, and then slips away without fanfare. On a cool morning in July 2026, I watched mist rise from a still lake and thought about how much of life follows the same pattern. Moments appear, hold their shape for a breath or two, and dissolve back into the air. We spend so much time trying to make things permanent. We build routines, collect memories, chase certainty. Yet the most honest parts of living often feel closer to vapor, light and temporary, beautiful precisely because they cannot be held. ## The Space Between There is comfort in accepting this. When I stop gripping so tightly, I notice more. The way light falls through leaves. The sound of my daughter's laugh fading down the hallway. These things do not need to last forever to matter. Their brief presence is enough. Vapor teaches a gentle kind of honesty. It shows us that disappearing is not the same as failing. Everything changes form. Ice becomes water, water becomes steam, steam becomes nothing we can see, yet it is still there, part of the larger cycle. - We cannot own the morning fog - We cannot keep the evening mist - We can only witness and remember ## A Quiet Practice Living with this awareness feels like learning to breathe more slowly. It invites me to be present without demanding that the present stay. Some days this is easier than others. On difficult days I return to the image of vapor rising from water, patient, unhurried, becoming part of something larger than itself. The practice is simple: notice what is here now. Appreciate it fully. Let it go when it leaves. *What lingers is not the vapor, but the quiet wonder it leaves behind.*