# The Nature of Vapor ## What Remains Vapor does not announce itself loudly. It drifts in quietly, softens the edges of what we see, then slips away without farewell. On a cool morning in 2026, I watched mist rise from a still lake and thought how much of life follows the same pattern. We hold moments, plans, and even people with tight hands, believing they are solid. Yet everything we love eventually takes the form of vapor, beautiful while present, impossible to keep. This is not a sad truth. It is simply the way things are. The lake remained after the mist lifted. The trees stood quietly. Only my perception had changed. ## Letting Go Without Loss We spend much of our days trying to freeze time or capture experiences in perfect form. We take photographs, make lists, build careful routines. These things help us feel steady. But the vapor teaches a gentler approach. It shows that disappearance is not the same as erasure. The water that became mist still exists. It has simply changed its state, moving through the air, through clouds, through rain, and back to the lake again. There is peace in understanding this cycle. We do not need to grip so tightly. We can witness, appreciate, and then release. The things we care about leave their mark even after they are no longer visible. ## A Quiet Practice - Notice what is fading today without panic - Remember that absence often carries its own kind of presence - Trust that what matters returns in new forms This practice does not require special training or equipment. It only asks for attention and a willingness to sit with what is transient. *Some mornings the vapor returns, and for a moment everything feels possible again.*