by Lost Coast Photo on Sat Aug 18, 2007 11:22 pm
It's normal, I think. Lots of us have those "oh what's the point" days. Our own little personalized existential crises of the visual. One of the downsides of being bright is that we insist on questioning everything, and sometimes that has a personal cost.
Just went through it a few days ago. The first sign: Not being able to get excited about a series of scheduled Bay Area shoots. The next sign: After scheduling with two models, realizing that the timing wasn't going to work with the third one... and not caring.
The first shoot I really was a little off. Me, not her, she did fine, but I still hadn't really been able to shift my headspace out of the earlier business meetings. The photos will be competent only because of long years of practice, it's nearly automatic now.
The second shoot changed everything. The excitement came flooding back. Against all odds... this with an art model, too short, too plain, relative to the people I usually work with, and deaf on top of all that so we had to scribble notes instead of being able to talk concepts. Yet she worked so much harder than most, contributed an idea that tapped into concepts I'd been thinking about but were still half-formed.
So for now, it's fun again.
Here's hoping you find that next awesome shoot before long.