# The Nature of Vapor ## What Remains Vapor does not announce itself. It appears quietly, softens the edges of what we see, then slips away without trace. On a cool morning in July 2026, I watched mist rise from a still lake and thought how much of life follows the same pattern. Moments arrive, hold our attention for a while, and dissolve. What matters is not their permanence but the way they change how we see everything else. We spend so much time trying to make things last. We build, we collect, we cling. Yet the most honest parts of existence, love, memory, presence, behave more like vapor than stone. They cannot be pinned down. They can only be noticed while they last. ## The Space It Leaves When vapor lifts, the world looks different. Colors feel sharper. Distances seem clearer. The air feels cleaner. The disappearance itself becomes a kind of gift. It reminds us that clarity is often born from letting go. I have come to believe that a good life is not one of accumulation but of attentive release. We hold an experience, a person, a feeling, with open hands. We let it do its quiet work. Then we allow it to move on. The space that remains is not emptiness. It is readiness. - A child’s laughter that fades into evening - The scent of rain that disappears by noon - The tenderness in someone’s voice that you carry for years without ever owning it These things shape us precisely because they do not stay. ## Learning to Be Like Vapor There is humility in accepting our own vaporous nature. We will not last forever in the form we know. Our influence, our worries, our plans, all eventually thin out and blend into something larger. This is not sad. It is natural. The older I get, the more I want to move through the world with less weight and more presence. To appear gently. To affect softly. To leave without demanding to be remembered. Just to have been here, fully, for the short time the air allowed it. *Some things matter most when they are about to disappear.*