I am noticing that more people are treating their DSLR or Mirrorless cameras like their phones regarding photo storage, which is a mistake.
Workflow with photos
Take photos, preferably RAW, which are stored on your memory card in the camera.
Take the memory card out of the camera to transfer images to a computer. Leaving in the camera and using your cable to connect to the laptop drains your camera battery, and if it goes out while moving, you can corrupt the card and lose images.
Put the card in the card reader if your computer doesn’t have one.
Download all the images, select all that you want to keep, and transfer those to a folder on an external hard drive. I call the folder “PROJECT NAME RAW.”
Edit photos in Adobe Lightroom or similar software. Export the finished files as JPEGs to a folder on the external drive. I call the folder “PROJECT NAME JPEGs.”
Make a backup of your RAW and JPEGs to another external hard drive.
Put memory card back in camera and format in the camera.
According to a SanDisk technical support specialist:
There are two methods to erase the images stored on your memory card.
Using the camera’s menu to ‘format’ removes all files and sets up the memory card for use in the camera. ‘Delete’ (i.e., erase), on the other hand, removes one image after another. Therefore, it is a good idea to occasionally format a memory card (in the camera and not on a computer). Delete the images if you wish to clean up the memory card daily.
Formatting helps clear the card of extraneous issues from everyday use. Erasing images tells your camera that it’s okay to write over the photos already on your card. So you will not remove images but take pictures over the existing ones. This always leaves ‘traces’ of data on the card. By formatting it, you remove the images before taking new ones. So you will start with a new data-free card.
Many people have corrupted images due to deleting images on their cards because it leaves ‘traces’ of data that corrupted the photos.
There is one more method for handling images and memory cards. Keep your pictures on your card and buy new memory cards.
I know many people who buy many memory cards and use them once. This then becomes one of the backups for the images.
For example, you can buy SD Memory cards for as low as $4 for 32GB. Most of the highly rated 32-GB SD Cards hover around $15 – $20 at the time of writing this post.
Summary
When you start a new project, you want your camera’s freshly formatted memory card. You will avoid more problems with losing images rather than putting a card in the camera with pictures on it.
There is only one thing better than this practice: owning a camera with two card slots that you record the images simultaneously to two cards—either a duplicate or RAW on one and JPEGs on the other. If you are shooting something that can’t be done again, i.e., a wedding, you better have a second card slot.
If you are like most photographers we like to question why people/companies who know us will hire someone else to do a photography job. When I get together with other photographers you can feel the disappointment when they have their clients hiring someone other than them these days for some jobs if not all the jobs.
Everyone feels like at some point you have earned the right, but this isn’t true.
We need to remind ourselves what a privilege it is to do any work.
Once you have accepted the fact that you are asked to do a job the better you will be in executing it for the client.
I must remind myself I am a service to my clients and they have many other choices they can make. What this does in my head is making me realize I am there to win them over every time I do something for them.
Be a friend you’d want to have. … Make them feel good. … Find the good in them. … Put in the work to keep the friendship. … Don’t badmouth others or gossip excessively. … Don’t take it personally if not everyone wants to be friends.
The very hardest thing in that list of things we have all heard is that last one–that everyone doesn’t want to be your friend.
Intellectually I understand that I am just not going to be good friends with everyone.
We have all seen the overlapping of circles that show the intersections of interests between groups and people. If the other photographer has more overlapping interests with the client than you then it is easier to accept that you lost a job due to the other person having something more in common with the client.
What you need to keep the competition away are barriers. Now if for example, your specialty in photography is underwater photography you have cut your competition down by just creating a barrier.
Your competition needs to be an expert diver, buy special camera gear, and market to your clients to even compete with you.
Well, today there are many more people than 20 years ago that are competing in that space. This is true for extreme sports photographers. Once TV started covering these sports there has been a spike in participation. Twenty-five years ago there were a handful of rock climbing photographers and today there are hundreds, if not thousands competing with each other.
There’s a brutal truth in life that some people refuse to accept–you have no control over many of the things that happen in life.
Recognize that sometimes, all you can control is your effort and your attitude. When you put your energy into the things you can control, you’ll be much more effective. Work on your portfolio and marketing materials.
To have the most influence, focus on changing your behavior. Be a good role model and set healthy boundaries for yourself.
You might be thinking, “I can’t allow my business to fail,” but you don’t take the time to ask yourself, “What would I do if my business failed?” Acknowledging that you can handle the worst-case scenario can help you put your energy into more productive exercises. You may need a “Plan B”.
If you are actively solving a problem, such as trying to find ways to increase your chances of success, keep working on solutions. If however, you’re wasting your time deliberating, change to a new thought. Acknowledge that your thoughts aren’t productive and get up and go do something for a few minutes to get your brain focused on something more productive.
Your lifestyle can be adding undue stress. Exercising, eating healthy, and getting plenty of sleep are just a few key things you need to do to take care of yourself.
The hardest part of living life with these issues is getting a healthy perspective. I recommend the Serenity Prayer by Reinhold Niebuhr:
God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, Courage to change the things I can, And wisdom to know the difference.
Talking with friends and asking them to be honest with you can help as well. Don’t just complain, seek to understand what you can do and what you have no control over.
There is a reason Amazing Grace is sung so much around the world. Take those words to heart.
Amazing Grace, How sweet the sound That saved a wretch like me I once was lost, but now am found I was blind but now I see
T’was Grace that taught my heart to fear And Grace, my fears relieved How precious did that grace appear The hour I first believed
Through many dangers, toils, and snares We have already come. T’was grace that brought us safe thus far And grace will lead us home, And grace will lead us home
Report: 6 of 10 Millennials Have ‘Low’ Technology Skills
By Dian Schaffhauser
06/11/15
Digital natives aren’t as tech-savvy as they think—not according to their bosses. American millennials (those between 16 and 34) may be the first generation with computers and Internet access. However, all that time spent glued to a small screen hasn’t translated to technology competence. While they spend an average of 35 hours weekly on digital media, nearly six out of 10 millennials can’t do basic tasks such as sorting, searching for, and emailing data from a spreadsheet.
The 60% number is pretty accurate in my teaching of millennials.
Mobile Consumption vs. Laptop Production
Consuming content is better on a mobile device than on a laptop. Our mobile devices are always with us, always ready to go. With our mobile devices, we can lean back, walk around, and use them on the go.
Conversely, our laptops are much better for producing than for consuming.
The problem is that so many know how to consume the technology, but when it comes to producing it, you need to know a LOT MORE.
This morning, I got an email from one of my students saying, “I am having trouble uploading my photos because it says that I don’t have enough storage on my computer.”
Every time I teach photography, I start with some computer basics that will become problems if they are not taken care of immediately.
First of all, your photos will be at least a thousand times bigger in file size than most of your documents.
I first recommend putting all photos and videos on external hard drives like the ones pictured above.
Hard Drives work like filing cabinets. You need to think of a file structure for organizing because it doesn’t take long for this to get cumbersome.
Rename your Hard Drives. You can use anything, but even something like “Stanley_2018” will work.
I have two folders for all my photos. “NAME OF PROJECT RAW” and “NAME OF PROJECT JPEGs.” All the images I ingest, which are shot as RAW, are ingested into the RAW folder, and after I work on them in Lightroom, I export those to the JPEG folder.
So, move all your photos and videos off your hard drive.
Clean Computer
Empty Trash–This means on your computer and in programs like your email.
Download Folder–Delete all your downloads. It’s time to kick some of these files to the curb. It would help if you were transferring all your downloads to the proper folders where you need them later. If you’re on a Mac, you’ll find your Download folder next to the Trash Bin in the Dock. If you’re on a PC, you can find it by navigating to c://users/username/AppData/local/temp. Sift through the files and toss the ones you no longer need into the trash. If you’re a frequent Internet user, you’ll be surprised at how many files are in there and how much space you free up.
Audit Your Entire Computer–You need to see what directories are taking up the most space on the drive and drill down into those folders even to discover the individual files that are the culprits. There are some apps to help you do that, but since I am not using any now, I recommend you Google that for your PC or Mac.
By the way, I love that the Grady College of Journalism & Mass Communication is preparing its students to produce digital content. One of the last classes the students must take to graduate is a Capstone class where they combine all the mediums to tell stories.
I like this last paragraph from the story:
“Opportunities to learn problem-solving with technology must become the rule rather than the exception,” the report’s authors stated. “Now is the time for business to join forces with government, educators, and other STEM advocates to ensure that all young people…have the opportunity to become tech savvy.”
Waking up this Monday morning, I am ready to start a new week. There is something about Mondays being the first day of the work week and the feeling of having some time off over the weekend.
Yesterday I led my Sunday School class to discuss what it means to be a Christian. My goal for the lesson was to have people thinking about how their faith impacts how we live.
I first played this video to introduce the book I used for some of the discussion points by Scott Kelby.
The core of Scott’s book It’s a Jesus Thing is that he wanted people to know how much his faith has enriched his life and to share that with friends and family on the edges of Christianity.
I like how he explains how “Jesus spent most of His time here on earth trying to teach us how to get along with one another, live in peace together, take care of each other, and relate to God. In a new way.”
I think that Sundays are a time when I go to my church and especially my Sunday School class called “THINK” and study Jesus and get the thoughts of others and how they view what he was teaching us.
Yesterday I was reminded that God loves everyone. That is hard to take in when I find many unloving and even despicable people. The cool thing is that the creator of the universe loves me and wants the very best for me and everyone.
So that I would always feel welcome to talk to God, he gave me grace. This means there is nothing I can do that he is unwilling to forgive, and even before I ask for forgiveness, he gives it to me.
Now that is the kind of friend everyone needs. Someone who knows I have done wrong but is willing to look past whatever I have done to have a relationship with me.
My grandfather, a Baptist minister, asked me one day why I was created. That was the only time I remember he talked one-on-one with me about God. He then told me about the scripture about why I was made.
During high school, I felt God’s call and thought I might be a pastor of a church. While studying social work, my plan to go to seminary, I discovered photojournalism. This was the first time I started to feel a passion for something. This was my spiritual gift from God that would need to be nurtured.
As I grew in the faith, I also started to see how we are all called and all given gifts. Our gifts are to be used in serving others.
After spending years learning how to capture people’s stories in the most authentic way possible–photojournalism- I began to share how to do this with others.
The central turning point in my life was receiving a phone call from Dennis Fahringer asking me to come and teach lighting to his School of Photography 1 students in Kona, Hawaii.
Hearing Hawaii alone was enough to get my bags packed. That first group of students was some of the most intelligent people I have ever encountered. My family came with me, and we were treated so wonderfully.
When you are raised in a family of faith over time, you start to understand how awesome it is to experience grace and how revolutionary of an idea it is when you receive it and, more importantly, begin to practice it yourself.
I say practice because only God can honestly give that kind of grace. I am too human, and people tick me off.
What grace has done for me is to care for my students. While I want them to learn the subject, I am there to teach; I have learned through the years that why we are there may not be the life lesson needed to be discovered.
Jim Veneman, a good friend, said one time that we may be here on this earth for God to have us on a street corner at a certain point in time to help someone with something he had planned.
Two people have impacted my world and the lives of many of my friends–Billy Graham and Truett Cathy.
What they both have in common is they both had a Sunday School teacher around the age of ten that took them under their wing and changed their lives.
Today you might not be the rock star or celebrity that is impacting the world, but you could be the person moving the next leader of a generation.
Remember how much God loves you today and respond by loving others by using your gifts today to serve.
UGA’s Photojournalism program had its first Photo Night last night. This was all inspired by Billy Weeks, who has been doing this for five years in Chattanooga.
Each of the primary speakers brought just three photos to talk about.
Mark Johnson, who interviewed each guest, kept the evening moving and packed a lot in for just an hour and a half of presentation time.
In between the prominent guests, there were two presentations by present students.
Stay tuned for the next Photo Night at Grady School of Journalism.
One of the best ways to improve your portrait session is to start with a plan for posing. My uncle Knolan Benfield had a studio in Hickory, NC, where he did mainly portraits for his business.
You may have seen some of these folios that many photographers still sell as a way to display more photos from a session for the client.
He realized he could shoot to help sell those and up his average sale. Well, it worked. He started to pre-visualize the photos in the folio.
The customers were buying more photos, and he was getting better pictures for the customer in the process.
At first, it will feel a little mechanical and formulaic, but you start expanding the poses over time.
At first, you may just be having a person face to one side and then the other. Slowly, however, you will start to experiment. You begin to learn that each basic pose of the body is endless when you start going for different expressions.
What surprised me was the likes on the fun photos versus just stunning photos of theatre students I did this past weekend.
Summary
Shoot to for a folio Add a photo each time you do a portrait Try for different expressions in each pose
I find a lot of similarities between the game of golf and photography. We talk about golf being the game of inches, and we say the same in photography.
If you move the frame slightly, it would be a much better photo.
Before a golfer takes a shot, they examine the ball’s lie. They look at the distance to the pin. They see if they need a couple of photos to reach the plug. When putting, they try and read the putt before they take a swing.
The problem I am seeing with most beginning photographers is they were playing golf. They would walk up to the ball and just hit it. They don’t look at what they want to accomplish. They don’t decide which is the best club from their bag to hit the ball with and then determine how they will swing to hit the ball.
Now at the best golf courses and for pro players, they had caddies.
In golf, a caddie (or caddy) is the person who carries a player’s bag and clubs and gives insightful advice and moral support. A good caddie is aware of the challenges and obstacles of the golf course, along with the best strategy for playing it. This includes knowing overall yardage, pin placements, and club selection.
At the very top of their game, you see pros not swinging a club before they have paused, considered everything possible, selected the club, and even do some practice swings.
Here is a tip for every photographer. Before you click the shutter, decide on each of these and why you picked them before taking a photo.
ISO
Aperture
Shutter-Speed
White Balance
Under exposed, normal exposure or over exposed
Do I need to change the light in some way [reflector, flash, etc]
Background
Foreground
Composition
If you were to talk about why you took a photo, could you tell us also why you chose different settings on your camera to capture the moment?
It all boils down to why am I taking this photo? What am I doing with the camera to ensure I have captured the best possible way to achieve my goal.
Photographers are concerned about a few things when they go to a new football stadium. Here are some comparisons between the older Georgia Dome and the new Mercedes Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia.
The light is, first of all, much more, even from one end of the field to the next. Unless you put lights in the end zone pointed straight at the area, it is impossible to make it as even as the middle of the field where some of the lights are in front of the action.
The color temperature in the Mercedes Benz is about 5400k with +8 magenta using Adobe Lightroom. Very close to daylight. In the Georgia Dome, the temperature was 4650K with +33 magenta making it closer to Fluorescent.
The other big difference is there was more of a flicker in the Georgia Dome with the lights. I didn’t detect any indication in the Mercedes Benz Stadium.
The complaints for those working the games in the new stadium are due to the size of the place. Under the stadium, behind each bench, are restaurants about the size of a football field, and outside of that is the tunnel to walk around with the locker rooms.
The press box is no longer the center field. It is in the corner. The photographer’s workroom is on the outside wall of the field-level tunnel.
You walk about double the distance to the field from the workrooms than you did in the older Georgia Dome.
I am noticing photographers are in better shape now and writers who decide to come down from the press box to the field.
Friday, August 17, 2018, was my first-day teaching Intro to Photojournalism at The Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Georgia.
The night before, Dorie, my wife, thought as much as we always take pictures of the kids on their first day, she wanted to do the same with me this year. #ThingEmptyNestersDo
For us, this turned out to be our viral photo. We have never had 383 likes on an image.
The end goal of this class is for the students to learn how to communicate visually, control a camera, compose an image and capture a moment that others will understand. That last part? That’s the hard part!
One of the critical parts of the class is teaching ethics and specifically the ethics of photojournalism. We use the NPPA Code of Ethics.
What is remarkable about teaching at UGA is that the National Press Photographers Association headquarters is at the Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication.
On December 19, 2014, it was announced that NPPA relocated its headquarters to UGA. Mark Johnson was the initiative’s leader in bringing the NPPA to UGA. Mark sold the idea to both the Grady School and NPPA. It was his enthusiasm that created a partnership that was a win-win opportunity.
Mark is the one who asked me to teach at UGA.
So on Friday, I had two JOUR 3330: Introduction to Photojournalism classes to teach, back to back. The class size is limited to 20, and I had 17 in one class and 18 in the other.
Being nervous that first day, I packed too much into that first class. I think in the following courses, I will be more relaxed, and the pacing of the content will be better for the students and me.
I am having lots of fun looking for content to share in the class.
This is one of the videos I came across that does a great job of teaching depth-of-field by explaining how it works.
This week we will be getting a little history of photojournalism. Here is a video about Eugene Smith I will be showing, and then we will discuss it in the class.
I love preparing for class and looking forward to helping another crop of students become passionate about visual storytelling.
This is my uncle Knolan Benfield who was the first to give me a camera and teach me photography.
Knolan talked with me over his counter in his studio in Hickory, North Carolina, in 1979 about how to use this range finder camera he gave me. It took 35mm film and didn’t have a meter.
No meter meant you had no way to measure the light and see what a perfect exposure was. He gave me a roll of film and then pulled out the paper that came with the film.
I learned about the Sunny ƒ/16 rule. This is where in direct sunlight, the Aperture is ƒ/16, and the shutter speed is equivalent to the ISO. So if you had ISO 64, your shutter speed would be the closest to that; for my camera, that was 1/60. Using the chart with the film, I learned how to properly expose Sunlight, Cloudy days, Shade, and backlit photos.
This is how I took photos when I first started. I dropped that camera while ice-skating when my dad bought me my first DSLR Pentax K1000 camera. I could change lenses, and it had a built-in meter.
Now in the days of film, you buy a film that would work indoors or outdoors. You didn’t change your ISO from frame to frame as you can today with digital.
I remember Knolan taking time to explain how Aperture and Shutter-speed worked.
One of the most important things he taught me was how the Kodak Brownie box camera worked and how my camera was different.
The original Brownie camera had one aperture of ƒ/11 and one shutter speed of 1/35-1/50 seconds.
Knolan pointed out that only using the sunny ƒ/16 rule outside meant I could have saved a lot of money and bought the Kodak Brownie camera rather than the Pentax K1000.
Besides controlling the exposure, Aperture and Shutter-Speed give you creativity.
Today I am channeling all those comments that Knolan taught me. If you only shoot at one aperture all the time, you are missing out on so much creativity that your camera can do.
Assignment to do
Depth of Field & Lens Selection 4 images with the same composition, altering the aperture and focal length 1. Widest focal length, widest aperture (~ f/3.5) 2. Widest focal length, aperture between f/11-f/22 3. Longest focal length, widest aperture (~ f/4.5-5.6) 4. Longest focal length, aperture between f/11-f/22
The first days of school are happening this month all over our country. Our family always took a photo of the kids on their first day. We were all excited every year for that first.
Watching your child grow in stature through the years was just one way of seeing positive changes for them and you.
When Nelson, our oldest, graduated from high school, he was now in charge of that next school choice and what he would take. Most of us have fewer choices about what to take up through high school. We had some say in which science course or English course we would take, but we still had few options compared to the next step–college.
When it comes to the first days at college, the experience varies greatly; we came to learn when our oldest, Nelson, decided to enroll at The Citadel. My wife helps other parents each year by assisting them in navigating military college life and teaching them how best to support their students without being helicopter parents.
When the youngest, Chelle, went to college, the experience was so different.
Both of them embraced college and all that it entails. They did a great job picking majors that perfectly suited each of them.
Others choose alternative education, like YWAM’s University of Nations in Kona, Hawaii. These students take one course at a time for 3 to 6 months. This is a group photo of the class I taught this past February.
Most colleges and universities have some “general education” requirements, forcing students to take at least a few math and science courses. Still, many non-science majors will take the bare minimum and work hard to put those off as long as possible. Disgruntled spring-term seniors who don’t want to be in the course but can’t graduate without it are a regular and unpleasant feature of “Gen Ed” courses.
I had a one-course requirement for statistics that frustrated me to no end. I took the class three times. The professor’s English was complicated to understand my first time taking it. Later, when I retook it, I realized this wasn’t the only reason I struggled with that course.
I then retook the class at Brookdale Community College while home from East Carolina University during the summer. I still struggled. I finally passed the course during summer school at East Carolina. My motivation that last time was I needed to graduate.
In college, everyone is looking to take an easy or fun class that counts toward their degree. In these classes, students’ interest in the subject is often better than their interest in a “required” category, but from my experience, this is not much better than where their passion lies.
As an adjunct professor, I felt like this mom with a child on the back through the years at different colleges. I was carrying these students way too much. There was little self-motivation on their part.
I stopped teaching in a college’s communications program a few years ago. I had taught there for many years, but the problem was simple: the students didn’t care to master the subject.
However, I continued to teach photography workshops. There was a big difference between the two classes. In the workshops, every student I had wanted to learn the material.
I never had a student break down in the “college” courses in tears because they wanted to understand something wrong and were upset they were not comprehending the content. During my first time teaching at the University of Nations in Hawaii, I again fell in love with teaching. I cannot thank Dennis Fahringer enough for inviting me to teach Lighting and Business Practices.
Everyone seems excited when I teach the studio lighting but is not as thrilled with the business practices. Through the years, I have been able to help more of those students jump-start their professional careers as photographers. It had less to do with the lighting and more about the business practices.
Now, more than 12 years later, I hear that the reputation of the class teaching business practices has many eager to learn this topic. Still, many in the class are not as enthusiastic about it as I wish they would be.
The best students are those who are “knowledge‐seeking.” These are those who are emotionally engaged in expert work.
This photo of the two young ladies is so exciting to learn that they shared during their shooting in the Nicaragua workshop I did in the summer of 2016.
Since 2008, I have attended The Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia, to guest lecture on business practices for Mark Johnson. These were so different from the students I had taught at other colleges.
When Mark called me last fall asking if I would teach two sections of Intro to Photojournalism this coming year, I said yes. Since then, I have dug deeper into the program.
I asked if the class students were constantly engaged in the content. You see, that was what turned me off before. An instructor can only do so much to get a student excited. The student must also make an effort, or there will be no success.
Mark told me that there are two classes that they need Intro to Photojournalism to take later before they graduate. In those later courses, they must do photojournalism with videography, writing, layout, design, and posting projects on social media and blogs. If they don’t come out of the Intro class knowing photojournalism well enough to do it professionally, they will not be able to do those classes well.
Some of the students I have taught life worldwide are pretty successful today. Kongs has a successful photography business in Nigeria and West Africa. He was excited to take photography classes and kept in touch, letting me know all he was doing.
Tom Kilpatrick is an excellent example of how you are never too old to learn. Tom had trained thousands of college students to help young photographers as a newspaper photographer. He taught a few of my closest friends who went to National Geographic.
Going from film to digital was very difficult for Tom. He told me a few times he almost gave up photography because of how complex the new technology was for him to understand.
After finally making the switch, he decided to go to the Storytellers Abroad Workshop at 72 to learn how to do video editing and storytelling in this new medium.
How we value the future affects our desire to learn.
Ever since Dennis Fahringer asked me to teach, I have been working with students who had a passion for using photography as a profession. Extraordinarily, few have ever been gifted and just got the content quickly. Most have a moment where you can see a real struggle with the content on their faces.
There is a fundamental difference between these students who come up against a wall they push through. When I went to pass statistics, I wasn’t interested in ever using it again. These students are overcoming all the struggles of mastering the content because they want to use photography in the future.
I have autism, and I think Aspergers Syndrome best describes my situation. One of the traits is an obsession with specific, often unusual, topics for those with autism. It was all about G.I. Joe when I was young. Thankfully, I grew out of that obsession.
Over the years, I would find different topics from playing trumpet, chess, toy models, and today, photography.
I was blessed with Autism. This helped me overcome difficulties because my wiring wouldn’t let it go.
Try to learn the content in all your classes this new school year. You may not see it now, but this will help you live a better tomorrow.
“The most powerful words ever said to you are your own,” said Garrett Hubbard. The self-talk we do can be the most damaging or uplifting. We are in charge of which that will be.
“Walk with the dreamers, the believers, the courageous, the cheerful, the planners, the doers, the successful people with their heads in the clouds and their feet on the ground.” – Wilfred Peterson.
I have some of my best friends. James Dockery, who currently works as a top video editor for ESPN, is leading the way in incorporating innovative editing and communication techniques.
James has me laughing as much as anyone these days. I love his teaching style, and most of all, I love his positive attitude and joy in living.
We didn’t drink all these by ourselves. We had a few students in the workshop help us with all these macchiatos.
When I first met Morris Abernathy, I knew I had found a good friend. No one has ever had me laughing as hard as Morris. He has helped me see the world in new ways.
Morris provided coverage for the Dallas Cowboys, the Tennessee Titans, the Texas Rangers, California wildfires, the Oklahoma City bombing, 9/11, and five U.S. presidents.
Morris and I have had so many heart-to-heart conversations. He was a good friend who helped me during tough times with work and personal life. He is one of the best listeners I know.
Everyone needs a Morris in their life.
For many years my agency was Black Star. Howard Chapnick had told me about Robin Nelson, another Black Star photographer, in Atlanta when I first moved here in 1993, but it would be more than ten years later that we would meet.
Robin has a passion for social justice and human rights issues, which I also have a heart for doing. I quickly realized how outstanding Robin is at capturing people’s stories. Robin always says, “Everyone has a story if you dig deep enough.”
Now my best friend of all is my lovely wife, Dorie Griggs. She has helped me grow in so many ways. Her heart for serving others is truly inspiring.
I have met more interesting people from all walks of life because Dorie has made it her purpose to be inclusive of people from so many different backgrounds.
Now, my family has also been a great support system for me. My and Dorie’s family have been there for us throughout everything.
Now with all this support, you would think this is the key to success, but people with this type of support and more have been depressed and even suicidal.
So every Friday on my Facebook feed, I see this:
Garrett continues to build up each other. He knows this can help each of us with our inner voice.
If your self-talk is negative, then it needs to change. One of the best ways to do that is to surround yourself with positive people. I have done this all my life.
Whatever you do in life, surround yourself with smart people who’ll argue with you. – John Wooden
Surround yourself with the right people, and realize your worth. Honestly, there are enough bad people out there in the world – you don’t need to be your own worst enemy. – Lucy Hale
While finding your support system, also remember to be the one who lifts others.
“Some say, “Once you learn to be happy, you won’t tolerate being around people who make you feel anything less.” My Christ says, “Your job is to get off your self-righteous butt and start reaching out to the difficult people because my ministry wasn’t about a bunch of nice people getting together once a week to sing hymns and get a feel-good message that you may or may not apply, depending on the depth of your anger for someone. It is about caring for and helping the broken-hearted, the difficult, the hurt, the misunderstood, the repulsive, the wicked, and the liars. It is about turning the other cheek when someone hurts you. It is about loving one another and making amends. It gives people as many chances as needed because God gives them endless chances. When you do this, then you will know me, and you will know true happiness and peace. Until then, you will never know who I am. You will always be just a fan or a Sunday-only warrior. You will continue to represent who you are to the world, but not me. I am the God that rescues.” ― Shannon L. Alder