# 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 warm morning in 2026, I watched fog lift from a valley and thought how much of life follows the same pattern. Moments that feel permanent, relationships we believe will last forever, even our own bodies, all carry something of vapor in them. We spend years building structures, ideas, and identities, hoping they will stand against time. Yet everything we touch eventually disperses. This is not a cause for despair. It is simply the way of things. Vapor teaches that presence and absence are not enemies but close companions. ## The Grace of Temporary Things There is a particular beauty in what cannot be held. Steam rising from a cup of tea. Breath on a cold window. The scent of rain on pavement after it has already moved on. These things ask nothing from us except attention. They arrive, touch us lightly, and leave us changed in small, almost invisible ways. I have come to see my days like this. Not as possessions to clutch tightly, but as mist that passes through my hands. The days I remember best are the ones I did not try to own. A conversation with my daughter that ended in laughter. Sitting quietly with my father while he dozed in his chair. These moments had the quality of vapor, beautiful precisely because they could not be kept. - A child's drawing left on the kitchen table - The particular hush that falls after music ends - The way grief eventually softens into something gentler ## Letting Go as a Form of Love Understanding vapor has made me gentler. When I catch myself gripping too tightly, whether to an opinion, a plan, or a version of myself, I try to remember the fog lifting from the hills. Some things are meant to evaporate. Our job is not to prevent their leaving but to witness them while they are here. *What we love most often moves like vapor, and that is why it stays with us.*