Flâneurs’ Lexicon: Presence vs. Living in the Present
Presence and living in the present may sound interchangeable, but they shape our experience in different ways. Presence is the act of truly showing up — attentive, engaged, and awake to what’s unfolding around you. Living in the present is the mindful practice of staying here, letting go of the pull of past and future. For a street photographer, both matter: presence to see the moment, and living in the present to feel it. This reflection explores the quiet difference between the two and why it matters for anyone who walks the world with intention.
Photograph Without a Plan: Live in the Present - Part 2 of 2
The street has a way of pulling you back into the present—into the breath, the light, the fleeting gestures most people rush past. What I’ve learned, walking as a young flâneur and later as a photographer, is that presence isn’t something you force. It’s something the streets teach you, moment by moment, if you’re willing to slow down, listen with your eyes, and let the world unfold on its own terms.
Photograph Without a Plan: Embracing Serendipity on the Streets - Part 1 of 2
To photograph without a plan is to surrender to the rhythm of the street. It’s a practice of trust—trusting your instincts, trusting the city, trusting that something unexpected will rise to meet you if you simply stay open. When you let go of intention and follow curiosity instead, serendipity becomes your quiet collaborator. The moments you could never script are often the ones that stay with you the longest. Trust the process!
The Street Poets Lexicon
The streets speak in subtleties — a glance, a gesture, a moment that almost slips past. Over time, I’ve gathered the words that help me make sense of these fleeting encounters. This “Vocabulary of the Streets” is a small collection of those ideas: the concepts that shape how I walk, how I see, and how I photograph the world unfolding around me.