Beloved Photography – Be Good Gifts

I’ve been fortunate enough to be getting a lot of inquiries (and booking!) for Beloved sessions since I launched a few weeks back.  One thing I’m noticing is a lot of people want to give these sessions as gifts, and (unbiasedly ;)) I think that’s really a fantastic idea.

So I’m just throwing that idea out there.  People are giving Beloved sessions as wedding gifts, engagement gifts, anniversary gifts, and even “just because” gifts (those are the best kind of gifts, no?).  Maybe your friends already have a wedding photographer but they for whatever reason, don’t have an engagement session in their package.  It seems to work within everyone’s budget because people can split up the cost of a session with friends and relatives.

If you’re thinking about something to give your parents this year, how about a Beloved session?   When was the last time they shared a moment just by themselves, thinking and reminiscing of the years they’ve spent together?  Think about all of the years that have gone by, all the things that have changed, all of the things that have remained the same.  All the struggles, the challenges, losses and victories.  Maybe there are some funny stories of bringing you up in this world that they’ve completely forgotten about that Beloved could help unearth.

***

I just had a birthday a couple days ago.  The big 3-something (ha!).  I celebrate my birthday a little differently than most.  My philosophy, if you could call it that, is that I don’t consider my birthday a big deal (besides the fact that it reminds me I’m getting older and rustier).  But as I get older, I like to spend time with my parents on my birthday.  Especially my mom.

I figure 3o-something years ago, she was the one that went through all the pain and agony.  She was the one that had the greatest worries but also the grandest dreams for me.  Why would I spend my birthday with anyone else, you know?  She’s been there since Day 1 (ha).  My mom makes a bigger deal out of my birthday than I do, and that feels kind of nice, no matter how old I get.

I spent most of my time back home with my mom looking through old photos.  It was nice to hear her talk about them.  It made me appreciate photography even more, if that’s possible.  Or rather, it reminded me of the sheer power photographs have.

***

I think those moments of remembering something that you had long forgotten always warms the heart a little.  It’s not chicken soup for the heart (changed up the wording a bit to avoid any litigation – it’s probably trademarked) because I only drink chicken soup when I’m deathly ill.  Think of it more like hot chocolate for the heart.  It’s just nice to have once in a while (in the winter).  And think of Beloved as the mug that holds the hot chocolate.

Okay, I’m getting a bit too far-fetched.  Before I lose you all, I leave you today with this:

It’s a good life.  I like to think Beloved Photography helps set the stage and puts a spotlight on all those moments that we just don’t have the time to think about every day.  And I think whether you give it as a gift to a friend or relative, or if you gift it to yourself, the return on investment is incredibly valuable in the present… and it will be even more valuable in the future, because it will help remind you and your children about a special moment in life.

Have a fantastic day everyone!

Feel free to contact me if you have any questions, suggestions or ideas at jase@jasekim.com.

~ Jase

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My Dad and Photography

I remember a few months ago, I was out in LA for a Beloved photographers conference that my man, Jesh de Rox was leading.  It was a chance for all of us to meet, learn and grow as artists.  It was an amazing experience and I met so many talented, kind human beings who I’m so happy to still keep in touch with from time to time.

There was one point during a q&a session where one photographer stood up, bearing her soul to the rest of us, and contemplated how an artist who’s never been in love such as herself, can be a photographer who captures and documents love for a living.  How can one capture something one has never felt.  In other words, she felt like she was a fraud.

By this time, half of the attendees were in tears.  Why, because we felt sorry for her?  No, because I think as artists, we all have inner demons we battle every single day.  That is why we ARE artists.  Because somewhere in life, we realized creativity was the only medicine for whatever illness we were suffering from whether it be from depression, loneliness, abuse, what have you.  And I think in every artist’s journey, we come across a moment where we feel like the biggest fraud.  And that’s why we were all able to relate.

***

I don’t have a functional relationship with my dad.  Never had.  He’s the typical Korean dad in many ways – workaholic, doesn’t talk much, hardly ever present.  But he’s an extreme case.  In fact, to this day, I don’t think I’ve ever had a heart to heart discussion with him about life or his past or his dreams as a younger man.  Quite frankly, I know nothing of the man.

The one thing I do know of him though, is that he loves photography.  I know this because when I was growing up, his pride and joy was his Contax IIIa rangefinder.  And I came across a shoebox full of old photos he took while he was in the Korean army once.  He also owned a one hour photo lab while I was in high school and college (which killed my summers because as a child of immigrants, it’s mandatory the kids help out whenever they’re not in school!).

I remember even on slow days, we never talked.  He would listen to his Korean talk radio and I would read a book or write.  Yeah, I got a lot of writing done during those down times.  It wasn’t for a lack of trying on my part, I don’t think.  At this point, I was already mildly curious about photography so I would ask my dad about it, but he never really had much to say about it oddly enough.

You know, at one point, I was resigned to the fact that I will never really know my father.  Which is crazy because it’s not like I didn’t grow up with him.  He wasn’t a thousand miles away or anything.  But sometime last year, I decided to try to change that.  You don’t have to be a trained psychotherapist to know there’s a connection between my decision to be a photographer and knowing the only thing about my dad is his love for photography.  Unconsciously, I suppose I was attempting to get closer to my dad.  To maybe understand him better.

So I was at my parents place in Westchester one day last year and I worked up enough courage to just flat out ask him about photography and running a business.  I mean, this was a HUGE step for me, to have a conversation with my dad.  And to break the ice, I asked him about his Contax IIIa.  Immediately he perked up and ran to get the camera.

He talked on and on about the technical aspects of the camera, the Zeiss lens, the ridiculously near mint condition it was in, it’s unique light meter and bla bla bla bla bla.  In my 32 years of living, he had never said so much to me.  So I started fiddling around with it and I asked him if it still works.  “OF COURSE!! But I haven’t used it in years,” he responded.

So I asked him since he never uses it, and because I wanted to get back into film photography at the time, if I could borrow it every once in a while and play around with it.  We’d be able to talk about the photos and about film and the glory days lol.  This could be the tipping point in our relationship.

But my dad said no.  He was saving it for something later.  It sounded slightly less harsh in Korean.  But the impact was still the same.

I flashbacked immediately to when I was seven or eight.  My brother and I had the Sega Master System and there was this driving video game called “Action Fighter” (kind of like Spy Hunter) that I super-duper-absolutely-had-to-have-and-I-wouldn’t-be-able-to-live-without-and-I-knew-that-if-I-didn’t-have-it-I’d-end-up-having-to-pay-thousands-and-thousands-of-dollars-in-therapy-as-an-adult-because-of-the-trauma-it-would’ve-caused-had-I-not-owned-it (this was before I discovered Jordan’s).  And one day my dad brought it home after work.

So I did what every kid that I saw on TV did when they got an awesome gift (kid rips open the packaging, puts down the gift, runs over to the dad, gives him a bear hug almost knocking the father over, the camera pans out and the closing credits begin to roll… Everyone lives happily ever after until the next episode).  So I ran over and gave my dad a great big hug but rather than a nice smooth fade to black, he basically peeled me off of him and shrugged me off.  I don’t quite remember how I reacted to that, but I remember the video game wasn’t quite as awesome as I had once thought.  And that was the last time I ever attempted to hug my dad ever again.

Fast forward 25ish years and there I was, in the very same house, in the very same living room, feeling the very same way.  Our conversation trailed off after that.  I asked him for advice about opening a small business but he went back to not having much to say.  I asked him about my career, and got pretty much the same thing.

“Um, I guess I’ll see you later,” was the only thing I could think of saying at one point.  The growing silence in the room hurt my ears.  I left and found my mom eavesdropping (what else is new?) with tears in her eyes in the next room.  She knew what I was trying to do.  Unfortunately, my dad didn’t.

That was the last time I tried to talk with my dad.  To this day, it’s back to a “Hi, bye” type of conversation that we have when I visit every so often.

***

That being said… oftentimes I expound on the importance of capturing images because they serve as a catalyst for your memories.  You don’t necessarily need a photo to remember something, but when do you ever look at a photo and aren’t instantly warped back to that moment in time.

I talk and talk and talk about the importance of capturing the moment… that life is fleeting… that even though you don’t want to take this photo right now, you’ll appreciate it in a few years.

But I’ve never taken a photo of my dad. It’s impossible not to feel hypocritical telling my friends and clients of the value of photography with that fact gnawing away at me always.  But I just can’t get myself to do it.  Maybe one day.  Which is a stupid thing to say, always.  Does that make me a fraud?  I don’t know.  Do I wish things were different?  Yes.  It’s just… life isn’t as clean cut and it doesn’t always work out like they do on TV, obviously.  I learned that lesson a long time ago.

~ Jase

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Smile!

Every year in grade school, we used to take school portraits… you know, for the school yearbook and so your parents can have 64 wallet size copies of your face.  I used to hate it because my mom would dress me up in these weird outfits.  Well, not weird… they just weren’t the button down and clip on tie with slacks that all my white friends were wearing (I went to a mostly white Catholic school).  My mom put me in a bow tie, suspenders, shirts with little oddball Korean doodads on it, bla bla bla… Maybe I just didn’t rock them well.  Anyone can look good in anything as long as they accessorize it with a little confidence, knowhatimsayin’?  How the hell is a six year old supposed to know that though.  And what kid likes to be different in elementary school?  I won’t even get into bringing in kimbop/California rolls for lunch one day!  My friends acted like I was eating cooties or something.  Circle circle, dot dot!

But back to school portraits.  Not back-to-school portraits but back to… well, you know what I’m saying.  Anyways, every year, my mom would end up saying the same thing right before I jumped on the school bus that morning: “Eeb  dah muhl guh  sah jin  jee guh!  Yuhl sheem mee gong boo ha goo!!!!!!  Hah-bud, Hah-bud!” (Or something like that… my Korean is pretty not good).  Translated roughly to: Don’t smile with your mouth open!  And you better get a 100 on your spelling test or you’re never going to get into Harvard!!!!!”

My mom… ever the planner and motivational speaker.

I think my mom had a point though. I didn’t have a nice smile.  Well, when I smiled with my mouth closed it was fine, but when I smiled with my mouth open, my top teeth wouldn’t necessarily show.  It was just my top gums.  Some might think that was cute (you know, considering its their son and all and I’m like, six years old), but my mom flat out just said it looked ugly.

So I stopped smiling in portraits altogether.  Which was fine; it wasn’t that big of a deal until I got to college.  See, I didn’t have any Asian friends until college, so when I didn’t smile in my pictures, it wasn’t because I was trying to look cool.  I was just trying not to look ugly.  And then I meet all these Asian kids in college and none of the guys smile in their pictures either.  So I was like, I wonder if their moms all said their smiles were ugly when they were kids too, and that’s why they don’t smile.  But then I found out that Asian kids don’t smile in photos in order to look tough.  Even the Christian ones.  Who knew?  I gotta start smiling more often, I told myself.

And then I think one day, a girl I had a crush on said she really liked my smile.  Which was total bullshit, I thought.  But I ran with it, because let’s face it, when you have a crush on a girl and she says something nice about you, you milk that until the cows come home.  If she said I would’ve looked cute in a moustache, I’d still be rocking one right now probably.

So I went back to my dormroom and worked on my smile for probably the rest of the week, sitting in front of the mirror wondering if my gums still show in my smile.  (Why am I telling this story???) Anyways, parents, don’t tell your kids their smiles are ugly.  They’ll end up spending their Friday nights in college smiling at themselves in the mirror.  People might think you’re crazy if they catch you.  Not that anyone caught me doing that.  Err…

It wasn’t until a few years later when I was leaving my first job for a new company when at my little going away office party, one of the secretaries was like “I’m going to miss your smile.  You’re always smiling when you say hi and it always makes my day brighter.”  If she wasn’t pushing 65 I would’ve thought she was hitting on me.  But it was then that I noticed that somewhere down the line from college up to that point, I ended up being a smiler.

I was shooting a wedding a couple years ago and one of the floral vendors came up to me and was like “Hey, I’m ___.  You seem like the more fun photographer since you’re always smiling.  Here’s my card.”  If the vendor wasn’t a dude, I would’ve thought the vendor was hitting on me.  But yeah, I think smiling goes a long way.

Even underground on the subways, where you’re never really ever supposed to make eye contact with anyone (I mean, it’s more polite to cower and breathe over someone’s shoulder to read their New York Times than it is to make eye contact!  “Wait don’t turn the page, I wasn’t done!”).  When I would accidentally make eye contact with someone, I would dart my eyes away to the nearest Dr. Zizmore skin therapy ad.  But I’ve actually forced myself to instead of looking away like some creep, to just smile and maybe do the eyebrow raise that signals “Hey, yeah, I smell that too.”  When a cute girl smiles back, it actually feels really good.  Like I feel like I’m not ugly.  Maybe one day I’ll have the guts to approach one of them.  Ha.

I think everyone’s a little less ugly when they smile.  Okay, maybe that’s not the best way to put it.  But you get the point.  Which is, just smile… with your mouth open, your mouth closed… whatever you like.

🙂 😀

~ Jase

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