snegron
Member
While taking pics on a family outing recently I began thinking about something; am I spending too much time behind the camera capturing precious family memories instead of being an active participant in those memories?
When I shoot weddings it is an entirely different philosophy, I get paid to be behind the camera capturing the "precoius moments". But, maybe due to force of habit, I find myself during my personal time behind the camera as well. Many years ago I thought that if I wanted good pictures I would have to take them myself. This included pictures shot during every family event.
Thinking back to the birth of my daughters, I was behind the camera as well! I was literally holding a camera filming the birth of my two daughters (second time almost got kicked out of the hospital due to an overzealous idiot nurse-luckily the PJ in me kicked in and I was able to shoot despite her protests).
When I look back to most of the memorable moments in my life all I can recall are the small images I saw through a viewfinder.
Anyone else here experience this? Will I regret my lack of "living the moment" later in life? Is there a time to put the camera down and be a participant in the action? Does anyone else here have trouble knowing when to put the camera down?
When I shoot weddings it is an entirely different philosophy, I get paid to be behind the camera capturing the "precoius moments". But, maybe due to force of habit, I find myself during my personal time behind the camera as well. Many years ago I thought that if I wanted good pictures I would have to take them myself. This included pictures shot during every family event.
Thinking back to the birth of my daughters, I was behind the camera as well! I was literally holding a camera filming the birth of my two daughters (second time almost got kicked out of the hospital due to an overzealous idiot nurse-luckily the PJ in me kicked in and I was able to shoot despite her protests).
When I look back to most of the memorable moments in my life all I can recall are the small images I saw through a viewfinder.
Anyone else here experience this? Will I regret my lack of "living the moment" later in life? Is there a time to put the camera down and be a participant in the action? Does anyone else here have trouble knowing when to put the camera down?