# 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 2026, I watched mist rise from a river near my home. For a few minutes everything looked gentle and possible. Then the sun burned through, and the vapor was gone. What stayed with me was not the mist itself, but the way it changed how I saw the ordinary world. We live surrounded by things that feel permanent: plans, identities, possessions. Yet most of what matters arrives and leaves like vapor. Love, clarity, grief, joy, none of these can be held in a fist. They move through us, altering our shape for a time before continuing on their way. ## Learning to Let Go I used to believe that holding tightly was the responsible thing to do. If I could just keep my hands closed around a moment or a person or an idea, I could protect it. The river taught me otherwise. The water does not cling to the rocks; it finds its path around them. Vapor does the same. It rises without resistance and falls again when the air cools. There is a quiet freedom in this. When we stop demanding that good things last forever, we become better at noticing them while they are here. A conversation with a friend. The particular light on a summer evening. The sudden easing of an old worry. These are not meant to be collected. They are meant to pass through us. - A child’s laughter that disappears into the wind - The scent of rain on dry pavement - The peace that arrives after tears ## A Gentle Reminder Vapor reminds us that disappearance is not the same as failure. Some things are supposed to evaporate. Their purpose is not endurance but transformation. They lift us, blur what is too harsh, and then make room for whatever comes next. *What we cannot keep may still change us for good.*