# The Nature of Vapor ## What Remains I have always liked the way vapor behaves. It appears from nowhere, lingers for a moment with surprising presence, then slips away without resistance. On a cool morning in early July 2026, I watched steam rise from my coffee and thought about how much of life follows the same pattern. We spend years building names, plans, and versions of ourselves that feel solid. Yet everything we hold eventually turns into something lighter. Memories. Relationships. Even the body we inhabit. They do not vanish completely, but they stop being what they were. This is not tragedy. It is the quiet order of things. ## Learning to Let Go My grandfather understood this better than most. He worked forty years as a welder, then spent his last decade sitting on the porch watching the weather. When I asked him once what he thought about as he grew older, he said simply, “I’m learning how to become mist.” He meant he was practicing the art of taking up less space, of speaking more softly, of holding opinions more loosely. The man who once shouted over factory noise now spoke in near-whispers. His stories grew shorter. His needs grew smaller. I see now that he was not diminishing. He was evaporating with intention. There is grace in this movement from solid to vapor. Solid things break. Vapor simply drifts. ## A Gentle Presence We do not need to fear this change. The water that becomes steam still exists. It travels, cools, and returns in another form. Our lives do the same. The love we give, the attention we offer, the small kindnesses we manage, they rise and spread and settle somewhere beyond our sight. - A child remembers a grandfather’s quiet laugh - A stranger carries forward a moment of unexpected patience - A single honest sentence finds its way into someone’s future These are not losses. They are vapor doing what vapor does best. *What we release with care often becomes the air someone else breathes.*