Goodbye, oh cruel life!

More importantly, you value the people who generously gave you the camera, not the camera itself. To me, a camera is still a camera. When you are past this low point in your life, the lesson learnt would be to remember the thoughfulness of others, and give it back some day.
 
Nikola,

I started out many moons back very tight, paying for my ex-wifes Physician Assistant degree and supporting her and myself on an entry level programmers job in NYC. She drove every day over a toll bridge to get to school then the new US President closed it down and after a lot of scrambling she landed going way out on Long Island (further to drive). We had to pay agency fees to find our first apartment, ate lots of pasta with home made sauce and had produce crates for book shelved. I did little photography for many years. Things got better.

Of late, I've been without a job for three months, have lots of medical bills to pay off and two kids and a much better wife to feed. I've sold off my Leicas and am going to sell my Nikon SLRs now. I will start a new job next week but money is tight.

Look into westernunion around you. They should not charge you anything for your side of the transaction, that's the idea. Selling prints is a lot better and could generate a small but steady flow of cash.

Sorry to hear, hang in there.

B2 (;->
 
If everything in your life is going just great, it will get worse.
If things are not so great now, they will get better.
🙂
 
Back
Top Bottom