# The Nature of Vapor

## What Remains

Vapor does not announce itself. It arrives quietly, changes the air, and then slips away. On a cool morning it lingers near the ground, softening edges and hiding distance. By midday it has vanished, leaving only the memory of dampness on skin and the faint scent of earth. Nothing is destroyed. Nothing is built. The world simply looks different for a while.

This gentle presence and absence feels like many things worth keeping. Attention. Kindness. Even love. They appear without fanfare, alter how we see and feel, and then move on. We cannot hold them in our hands, yet they leave traces that matter.

## Learning to Let Go

I once watched my daughter chase fog across a field at dawn. She ran with open arms, laughing, trying to catch the white mist that curled around her legs. Each time she thought she had it, the vapor simply parted and reformed behind her. After ten minutes she stopped, breathless and smiling, and said, “It wants to be free.”

She was six. I was thirty-four. I have thought about that morning often. The desire to possess beauty usually destroys the very thing we love. Vapor teaches the opposite: stay open, stay light, let it pass through.

There is wisdom in transience. We spend so much energy trying to make moments permanent. We take photographs, write diaries, build monuments. Sometimes the wiser path is to notice clearly, feel deeply, and then release what cannot stay.

## A Quiet Practice

Sitting on the porch before the sun is fully up, I watch the last traces of night vapor rise from the grass. The act requires nothing but presence. No goals. No improvement. Just witnessing something that will be gone in minutes. The practice feels honest.

- Notice what appears
- Feel it while it lasts
- Allow it to leave

*In vapor we see how gracefully the world can change without breaking.*