Walking Away

This image took immense planning and raw effort to bring into existence. I composed and captured it in the heart of New York City, using a camera I built myself — one that shoots on dry plates, pulling that haunting, almost otherworldly grain and depth from a bygone era. This image took immense planning and raw effort to bring into existence. I composed and captured it in the heart of New York City, using a camera I built myself — one that shoots on dry plates, pulling that haunting, almost otherworldly grain and depth from a bygone era.Euismod in pellentesque massa placerat. Risus quis varius quam quisque. Fermentum leo vel orci porta non pulvinar neque. Pretium vulputate sapien nec sagittis aliquam malesuada bibendum arcu vitae. Viverra aliquet eget sit amet. Platea dictumst vestibulum rhoncus est. Leo integer malesuada nunc vel risus commodo viverra maecenas accumsan.


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This image took immense planning and raw effort to bring into existence. I composed and captured it in the heart of New York City, using a camera I built myself — one that shoots on dry plates, pulling that haunting, almost otherworldly grain and depth from a bygone era.

There’s a story carved deep into this frame, one that aches more than it speaks.

All my life, I’ve kept my circle razor-small — right now, I can count true friends on the fingers of one scarred hand. It isn’t picturesque or enviable. But it’s survival. Pure, deliberate self-preservation.

The world has thrown too many blows: jobs that ground me down, betrayals that left fresh scars on old ones, moments that forced me to watch trust shatter like thin ice underfoot. Each one layered another coat of armor over my heart until it became this heavy, impenetrable shell — cold iron wrapped around something still bleeding underneath. I’m jagged at the edges, honest in a way that cuts, and I see everything in brutal black and white. Gray areas feel like lies I refuse to tell myself.

People drift into my orbit — some for a fleeting afternoon, others clinging for months like shadows at dusk. But inevitably, they fade. Sometimes they choose to leave, footsteps growing fainter until silence swallows them. Other times, I force the distance myself, turning away before the next wound can land, before the PTSD that simmers just beneath my skin ignites into something I can’t control. My humor? It’s armor too — sharp, deflecting, a barbed-wire laugh to keep the ache at bay. Ask my real opinion and you’ll get it unfiltered; most don’t ask twice.

This photograph breathes that loneliness I’ve carried like a second skin. Look at the man receding down the path, his back to the world, shoulders hunched against an invisible wind. The bench sits abandoned in the foreground, its slats still warm from no one, slick with the damp promise of rain that never quite falls. Fog swallows the edges of everything — trees dissolve into ghosts, lampposts bleed soft halos that never reach far enough. The figure blurs not from motion, but from the slow erosion of being unseen, unfelt, unheld. Every step pulls him farther from connection, from the hopes that once flickered like distant streetlights, now dimmed to nothing.

It’s me walking away before I can be left. It’s others vanishing into the mist of my guarded life. It’s emotions slipping through cracked fingers, dreams trailing off like smoke in the cold. The emptiness isn’t just space — it’s a hollow echo in the chest, the quiet roar of choosing solitude over another fracture.

I guard this tiny circle so fiercely because letting more in risks letting the shell crack wide open. And some breaks don’t heal — they just scar deeper, darker, until the next photograph, the next walk into the blur, feels like the only honest way forward.