
I don’t know what this is, but I know I need it. I know it keeps me present, in the present moment. All I have is, now. This image-making, this creation, this photography, this is the record of my presence. The evidence of my existence. My little way to cheat time.
This is my way of staring at humanity. Being present and feeling. Walking. On city streets-inside the flow, the pulse of life. There is no mystery here, we are one, connected at any given corner.
-r
Categorised in Finding my way back

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The man in the hat shows up again and saves me.
Street photography can be a cruel lover. Hours of walking and hunting with no results can be tough. A few days ago, I was out, looking to the streets for a shot of photographic love, but she didn’t want to give it up. Then, the man in the hat came along and that’s all I needed.
He’s been with me since the first days of my street photography. Sometimes I don’t know if I’m following him through life or he’s following me. His appearance prompted me to look back at my work and remember just how many times he’s been there, saving my ass from never coming back to the streets. One bad day of street photography can keep me away for a long time. He showed up and I was able to go home with a smile on my face.
Recently I’ve been struggling with something I call the ‘photojournalist syndrome.’ It’s the creative feeling that one must be constantly producing photographs. That after the end of one year, you should have 20 or more images to put into your portfolio. More, more, more, seems to be the battle cry.
Everybody is so damn prolific nowadays. The constant stream of Flickr images coupled with the idea that you are what you share, I feel like it’s a bad thing to slow down and take your time. But in my heart I know the turtle wins.
I’d like to be happy with one good picture a year. That way, when I’m 95, I’ll have enough good images for a book and I can say, “I’m done.”
80 f’ing outrageous images by the time I’m 95. A new goal.
I think that’s the lesson I’m going to take from the man in the hat. I can hunt for a day, or a year, but as long as the man in the hat shows up once a year, I’ll be a happy street photographer.
-r
Categorised in Finding my way back

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there is something to be said about the ‘doing,’ not the beginning, where i am motivated by outside forces, with my need to be someone, to be noticed. and, not in the end, when i no longer have an appetite, but in the being-there and nowhere else, cutoff from perceived reality, in the doing, i am free.
Categorised in Finding my way back

I’m trying to find my way back to where I started. I lost myself along the way. So I picked up the camera again. I feel at home. I have an appetite again. I’ll see where this takes me.
Categorised in Finding my way back