On the Corner of 14 St / 8 Av, New York

I am not a photographer, but photographs are an essential element of my life.

They freeze time, motion, and memory.

They distort and contort your grasp of reality, staining memory with a watermark of something that you can spend the rest of your life finding in a box under your bed and straining to remember the rest of.

When you snap a photo, you’re only telling part of the story. The rest, comes later.

LOVE IN MOTION

I was scrolling through my camera roll the other day, as I often do when in need of a bit of inspiration, when I came across the photo above.

I remember taking it. I was crossing 14th Street and 8th Avenue, lost somewhere between Greenwich and Chelsea, adolescence and adulthood, a few months back in New York. It was late July, the air so drenched in water that you practically had to forgo walking and take up the breastroke. The city was an open mouth of hot air, breathing on you, choking you with every movement you made, threatening an early death, all for the sake of saying that you were standing on a street corner in New York.

Which, you know, is worth it.

REMEMBRANCE

So that is the first part of a photo, the part that gets inscribed in it’s pixels the moment they first coalesce.

But there’s another part. The rest of it.

For when I look at the shot now, I see it in a broader stroke.

I see that I was standing in the middle of the road at a busy intersection, trying to make art. And isn’t that just a microcosm of what my life is like these days?

I also see that I took this shot not just because I loved the life that was happening before my eyes, but because I loved the life that it promised. It was a microcosm. For there is nothing more New York than seeing people hauling paintings, furniture, mattresses, chairs, and lamps across town, most likely having just picked them up from the sidewalks of the Upper East Side or some thrift shop in Brooklyn. I remember passing gorgeous, expensive, golden mirrors on the sidewalk that were just resting on heaps of black trash bags, begging me to take them home with me.

Life became a very different thing than I had ever known in those moments. It became something to be lived out in the open, for all to see. Photos like this capture an essence of that in ways that I didn’t realize when taking them, but that blink at me like neon signs now.

WISDOM FROM NAN GOLDIN

She goes on to explain that photographs can become a way to stave off loss, even if they don’t capture or accurately portray what you wish they could have. This photo, this 14th St / 8 Av memory, it staves off loss.

Loss of being twenty-one on a street corner, thanking the brick wall I ran into for being so old and gorgeous. Loss of that initial, brightly-burning love for New York, for people carrying dinky lamps, the chords trailing behind them like wagging tales in the dog-eat-dog world of Manhattan. Loss of that summer day, loss of what came after or just before.

But also resistance. The photo is proof, bagged and filed evidence, of my love. I pull it out when people tell me their own opinions about the city, about my dreams, or when I get anxious about them myself. I only have to look into those frozen pixels to remember all at once why.

And to realize that that why only ever has to make sense to me.

So no, I am a photographer. I don’t know the first thing about it. But when I look at that shot, I do know all of this.

Love, m.

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