# 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 fanfare. On a cool morning in 2026, I watched mist rise from a lake near my home. For a few minutes everything looked gentler, quieter. Then the sun burned through and the vapor was gone. Nothing dramatic happened. The lake simply returned to its ordinary self. That quiet coming and going feels like many things worth keeping in life. A kind conversation. A moment of understanding. The small kindnesses that pass between people. They appear, change the atmosphere for a while, and leave no visible trace. Yet something in us is different afterward. ## Holding Loosely We often chase permanence. We want guarantees, solid proof, things that will not change. Vapor teaches the opposite. It shows that the most natural state of many good things is to be temporary. Love, attention, presence, these move through us rather than stay fixed in place. Trying to trap vapor in a jar only shows how impossible the task is. The same is true for joy or peace. They cannot be stored. They can only be noticed while they last. This realization brings a gentle kind of freedom. When we stop demanding that moments last forever, we become better at meeting them when they arrive. - A child's laughter at breakfast - The unexpected kindness of a stranger - The peace that sometimes settles during an evening walk These are vapor moments. They cannot be scheduled or owned. They can only be received. ## Learning to See Clearly The beauty of vapor is how it reveals what we usually ignore. It makes ordinary air visible. It turns the invisible into something we can watch and wonder at. Perhaps the real practice is learning to notice the invisible parts of our daily lives before they evaporate: the tone in someone's voice, the way light falls across a room, the feeling of being understood without many words. *What disappears can still leave us changed.*