Perks and perils of being married to a photographer
A hike along the Kalalau Trail, inside Napali Coast State Wilderness Park, takes visitors past stunning scenery.
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Kauai, Hawaii
Perhaps it鈥檚 not obvious, but my marriage to The Photographer involves occupational hazard. The occupation being hers. The hazard(s) being mine.
After all, one never knows when The Photographer will require of one a feat of athleticism, or daring. Lean out over there, hold up that, jump through those. Go sit by that angry peacock.
Or you might be hiking the coast of Kauai, say, when suddenly she indicates that it would be useful for you to stand across the way (she is pointing) on that promontory of crumbling lava above pounding surf. The waves, you observe, routinely shatter up and over said promontory.
Why We Wrote This
Sometimes a vacation is just a vacation. Unless your traveling partner is The Photographer. Then it鈥檚 a work of art waiting to happen 鈥 if you鈥檙e game to play along.
鈥淚鈥檒l get soaked,鈥 you say.
鈥淵ou鈥檒l dry,鈥 says The Photographer.
So you go. Of course you go. You鈥檝e long since learned that there are always three of you present: There鈥檚 you, there鈥檚 her, and there鈥檚 the camera. You鈥檝e learned that sacrifices must be made. For art.
I鈥檓 not complaining. (Does it sound like it?) Because a little stage-managed derring-do is no price at all for access to something priceless: a new way of looking. Of noticing. Of seeing things and people and places and light 鈥 and out of them making compositions that wordlessly speak. The way The Photographer does.聽
So yeah, sometimes you wait. And sometimes you get covered in ocean. Yet it excites you every time 鈥 because in the end, of course, you get pictures. Magnificent pictures. Like these.