Merkin
For the Weekend
If one is looking to examine their personal art photography using a buddhist framework such as the 'empty mind' concept, one might want to consider examining the "Noble Eightfold Path of Photography" first:
First, this assumes that photography is something that you find rewarding, and it makes you happy. Since this is obviously the case...
1. Photographically, what method or combination of methods do you feel is most likely to reflect what you feel is the right or correct vision, perspective, view, and understanding for your work?
2. Photographically, what method or combination of methods do you feel is most likely to reflect what you feel helps you execute the right or correct thought, resolve, and conception for your work?
3. Photographically, what method or combination of methods do you feel is most likely to assist you in producing images that are true to your style, and to yourself?
4. Photographically, what method or combination of methods do you feel is most likely to allow you to physically produce the images that are right or correct for you, your style, and your enjoyment?
5. Photographically, what method or combination of methods do you feel most enables you to best engage in your livelihood? Note that this is not necessarily in terms of monetary income, but in the quality of your livelihood, and the enjoyment you derive from it.
6. Photographically, what do you feel is the right method or combination of methods that brings out your best effort?
7. Photographically, what method or combination of methods do you feel helps you bring the right or correct attention and awareness to your work?
8. Photographically, what method or combination of methods helps you engage in the highest level of focus and concentration in your work?
Just as Buddists (which, in the interest of full disclosure, I am not) follow the noble eightfold path as a method of reducing suffering, you might be able to reduce a bit of the photographic angst you are experiencing by honestly answering these questions to yourself. Also, don't necessarily expect every one of those questions to only have one answer. Life and photography would be too easy if they did.
First, this assumes that photography is something that you find rewarding, and it makes you happy. Since this is obviously the case...
1. Photographically, what method or combination of methods do you feel is most likely to reflect what you feel is the right or correct vision, perspective, view, and understanding for your work?
2. Photographically, what method or combination of methods do you feel is most likely to reflect what you feel helps you execute the right or correct thought, resolve, and conception for your work?
3. Photographically, what method or combination of methods do you feel is most likely to assist you in producing images that are true to your style, and to yourself?
4. Photographically, what method or combination of methods do you feel is most likely to allow you to physically produce the images that are right or correct for you, your style, and your enjoyment?
5. Photographically, what method or combination of methods do you feel most enables you to best engage in your livelihood? Note that this is not necessarily in terms of monetary income, but in the quality of your livelihood, and the enjoyment you derive from it.
6. Photographically, what do you feel is the right method or combination of methods that brings out your best effort?
7. Photographically, what method or combination of methods do you feel helps you bring the right or correct attention and awareness to your work?
8. Photographically, what method or combination of methods helps you engage in the highest level of focus and concentration in your work?
Just as Buddists (which, in the interest of full disclosure, I am not) follow the noble eightfold path as a method of reducing suffering, you might be able to reduce a bit of the photographic angst you are experiencing by honestly answering these questions to yourself. Also, don't necessarily expect every one of those questions to only have one answer. Life and photography would be too easy if they did.