Telling Your Story is Not About You
I love documenting people's lives. As soon as someone else pulls out a camera or other recorder, though, I get distinctly uncomfortable. I don't want anyone to think that I think my life is unusually profound. And, I'm not so sure that this is my finest moment.
To me, though, that 'little picture' voice represents the opposite of what telling one's story is really about, which is stepping away from the little picture, and into the big picture.
I've had the privilege of documenting Michelle and Mike's life for nearly four years now. Here's a glimpse at what has unfolded. In the photo above Michelle and Mike were weeks away from the birth of their first child - and probably getting their last decent nights' sleep ever since ;)
Here's what happened next:
2006
And yes, it is about all of them. But not little-picture them. Big-picture them. Their essences, steadfast even as they travel through the unpredictable storybook of life. It's about who they really are, way beyond any one moment in time.
So. Who is this documentation really for? It's for Little S. It's for Little A. It's for their grandparents. It's for their grandchildren. It's for their great-great-grandchildren, whom they will probably never meet. It's for Mike and Michelle - for today, for 10 years from now, for 50 years from now.