# The Nature of Vapor

## What Remains

On a warm July evening I watch mist rise from the river and disappear before it reaches the trees. Vapor does not announce its leaving. It simply thins, spreads, and becomes part of the air we breathe. There is no drama in its vanishing, only a quiet return to something larger.

I have been thinking about how much of life follows the same pattern. Plans, worries, even the sharpest joys, eventually lose their distinct shape. What felt solid at noon often feels weightless by dusk. Rather than fighting this, I am learning to notice the beauty in things that do not last.

## The Space Left Behind

When vapor lifts, it leaves the view clearer. The opposite bank of the river appears again, the hills regain their edges. Absence creates room. I wonder how often I have mistaken permanence for value, when the most meaningful moments were the ones that passed through me and moved on.

A childhood memory of my grandfather smoking his pipe on the porch comes to mind. The smoke would curl upward and vanish against the evening sky. He never tried to hold it. He simply sat inside the scent of cherry tobacco and the sound of crickets, content that both would fade in their time. That acceptance felt like wisdom even then.

## Learning to Let Go

- Notice what is here now without grasping
- Allow thoughts and feelings to rise and fall
- Trust that what matters will leave its trace

The river keeps moving. The air keeps receiving. Nothing is wasted. Vapor shows us that departure can be gentle, that dissolution can be honest, and that everything, in the end, finds its way into something else.

*What we release often becomes what sustains us.*