IV

My early experiences with photography were more concerned with technique and my efforts centered around making well-crafted images that simply “looked good”. I found the process of making images to be gratifying and enjoyable, but I both struggled and refused to use photography as a means of deeper expression. Four years ago, I was diagnosed with stage IV Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. Throughout that horrible journey and the three years since, I made the decision to protect myself mentally and emotionally by blocking out the pain and fear that characterized my experience. Rather than taking the time to analyze, hate, feel, appreciate, or learn, I coped by simply burying that part of my life. I convinced myself that whatever benefit were to come out of that reflection, it would not be worth that pain that would come with excavating those memories and emotions. Young Arts became the catalyst for my attempts towards transitioning from simply taking pictures to creating images grounded in my experience. Perhaps more importantly, it is the catalyst that prompted me to reflect on the most difficult part of my life. The process of reflecting upon my experience and creating images that illustrate my journey has been both scary and liberating. I’ve realized that photography has since become a means by which I am able to express emotion while addressing any number of life’s challenges.

IV is a collection of images attempting to explore and document the defining moments of my experience as a teenager with stage IV cancer. The most agonizing part of being a cancer patient often isn’t the disease itself, but rather it’s feeling like you’re a cancer patient. The images seek to depict the most sickening and painful parts of my personal experience…the parts that made me feel like I was a cancer patient. Even when I was fortunate to find some sense of normalcy to distract from the horror inside, there were certain things that would rip me back to my reality. IV aims to depict those terribly intimate things objectively and with little emotion. Because ultimately, cancer did not take me, and I will not let it define me.

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