# The Nature of Vapor ## What Remains Vapor does not announce itself loudly. It drifts in quietly, softens the edges of what we see, then slips away without farewell. On a warm morning it rises from the surface of a lake. By noon it has vanished. Nothing is destroyed, nothing is created. Only the form changes. I have come to think of our lives in similar terms. We move through days that feel solid, schedules that seem permanent, identities we polish and defend. Yet everything we hold eventually turns to vapor. Plans dissolve. People leave. Even the version of ourselves we once knew so well becomes difficult to recognize. This is not tragedy. It is the way of things. ## Learning to Watch There is a kind of peace that arrives when we stop demanding permanence. I remember standing on a porch at dawn last summer, coffee cooling in my hands, watching mist lift from the fields. For ten quiet minutes the world looked gentle and mysterious. Then the sun burned through and the ordinary landscape returned. The beauty had not lied to me. It had simply shown its temporary face. We are often afraid of things that disappear. Money, youth, health, love. But vapor teaches a different lesson: what matters is not whether something lasts forever, but whether it was real while it was here. The morning mist was real. The love we felt was real. The person we were at twenty was real. Their passing does not cancel their truth. - The vapor does not cling - It does not resist the wind - It simply moves on, leaving the air clearer ## A Gentle Return On this Independence Day in 2026 I find myself thinking about freedom in a new way. Not as the right to hold tightly, but as the willingness to let go. To watch things become vapor without panic. To trust that new forms will appear in their own time. *What we love does not disappear. It only changes form.*