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From the Memoir
Reflections from the Block to Becoming a Man
There is a version of a man that the block builds. It is not the version your mother prayed for, and not the one the schools had blueprints for — but it is real, and it knows how to survive in ways the blueprints never accounted for. I was that version once. Maybe I still carry him.
The question I kept returning to was not whether I escaped where I came from, but what I brought with me when I left. You do not walk away clean. You walk away carrying the weight of every person who stayed, every lesson that had no classroom, every moment of tenderness that had to hide itself to survive.
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From the Relationship Work
His & Her Bottle
Most couples do not fail because they stopped loving each other. They fail because they never learned to translate. Two people fluent in entirely different emotional languages, trying to share a life, wondering why nothing is landing. The bottle is not the problem. The bottle is the symptom.
What I have found, in the work and in the living, is that the hardest conversations are not the ones about betrayal or money or time — they are the ones about what we needed before we even met. The ones where we have to sit across from someone we love and say: this is what I built myself around. And I am not sure I can unbuild it, even for you.
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From the Photography Essays
Reflections in Contrast
The camera does not lie, but it does choose. Every frame is an argument. The photographer decides what earns the rectangle of attention, what gets cropped into darkness, what the light is allowed to touch. This is not objectivity. This is a point of view held very still.
I photograph cities the way I read people — looking for the moment just before the mask goes back on. The geometry of a fire escape. A woman reading in a window that doesn’t know it’s being watched. A man sleeping on the train with his hand over his heart, like a reflex, like armor, like prayer.
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From the Private Notes
The Ghostlight Letter
The name comes from a theatre tradition. When the house goes dark after the last performance, a single lamp is left burning at center stage. Not for the audience — they have gone home. For the theatre itself. For the ghosts some say it holds. For whoever comes in the morning and needs to find their way through the dark.
That is what I am trying to write. The letter that stays burning after everyone else has left. The one that says: someone was here, thinking about this, and wanted you to know.