March 12, 2015

An Ode To Selfies


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I'm currently typing this up at my new local library. It has been three weeks since I've moved house and this is my first time checking out the tiny portable building which houses a mere fifteen thousand books. But I'm not here for reading. Oh no, I'm here to abuse their free WiFi to write a blog post about selfies - of course!


When I say to people that I don't take selfies regularly, they generally don't believe me. Apparently snapping a pic of yourself in the mirror or before you go somewhere and uploading it online is somewhat of a norm now.

Recently, I’ve been trying to work up the courage to get in front of my studio lights to take a new self-portrait to update all of my social sites. As you can probably guess, I’ve been procrastinating that task like it’s a five thousand-word essay. Surprisingly, I haven’t always been like this. In fact, when I first started photography I would take self-portraits quite often to practice new techniques or play around with lighting when no one else was available to model for me. 

I can pinpoint the decline in selfies on my hard drive exactly to when my photography seriously started taking off and I was being paid to take photos of other people. I got so caught up taking photographs and capturing memories at friend’s parties and school events that I forgot to put myself in them. During my final year of high school, I photographed every sporting day, every performance, every major event including my own muck up day, and there is not a single photo of myself with my friends to be found. If I didn’t take the photos myself, one would have thought that I didn’t even exist.

However, there’s another factor that also contributed to the decline of images in my selfie folder: my self-esteem. It’s not that I think I take bad self-portraits or that I’m not photogenic, although I like to tell myself both of those things regularly. It’s the fact that every day I was seeing photo after photo of all of these attractive girls (and boys) with nice hair, enviable clothes and amazing make-up and I just felt so inferior. On one hand I wanted to say, ‘Good on you. You look good today, you should commemorate that with an image of yourself that reminds you of that,’ and on the other I was thinking, ‘Why oh why was I not born with luscious hair and a bank account to fuel my make-up and wardrobe desires?’ 

So I stopped taking selfies with my DSLR and my iPhone except for the rare occasions where I felt mildly okay with my appearance to judged by the harsh lens of a camera - which was pretty much never. The only selfies I took were the ones I would upload occasionally to Instagram. I didn’t take any selfies just for myself. In fact, there are probably more photographs on my hard drive of food taken with my phone than there are photographs of myself. 

Now don’t get me wrong, selfies can be incredibly egotistical and vain, but they can also be a tool for empowerment rather than one for self-promotion. The fact was that I essentially erased myself from any sort of social occasion and special memory all because I was too shy or too busy to take a photo of myself with my friends. 

So at the beginning of this year, I promised to take more selfies. Posed selfies on my DSLR, selfies with Paul who is also a serial photo avoider, selfies in front of landmarks, selfies at parties, crappy iPhone selfies in crappy lighting just to commemorate the fact that I was out drinking with my best friend and having fun. Just more selfies. As crazy as it sounds, it has made me happier. I now have all of these amazing photos with the people I care about in them AND myself to look back on. I’m not even posting the majority of these on any sort of social media websites, they’re just sitting there on my iPhone for me to look at when I’m feeling sad or bored or wanting to remind myself of the great time I had in Perth a couple of weeks ago. And I like that, I really like that. 

I took the selfies I’m sharing today during the winter of last year. Despite the fact that I am wearing a skirt and blouse in these photos, it was about eight degrees outside and the wind felt like daggers stabbing my skin. I wanted to share these ages ago, but I felt self-conscious about them because I couldn’t be bothered wearing any makeup in them so you can see every single imperfection - it’s kind of refreshing but at the same time it makes me nervous sharing these because these images have been private until now…

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10 comments:

  1. awesome photos :) I'm exactly the same, I just never take photos of myself. I think my main reason is that I just can't be bothered and none of my close friends take photos - I'm 9/10 the one with the camera, so I kind of fall off the face of the earth. I'm trying of late to ask my boyfriend to take my photo when we're out and about but I still have this thought "is that vain to ask that?". Also taking photos of yourself with a dslr is hard! Maybe that's just an excuse but I tried the other day with a tripod and it took an hour up jumping up and down and checking the back and tweaking focus just to get one photo that actually was technically okay. I need more photo friends or maybe to get on this phone selfie bus :) I like seeing other people so I guess other people may like to see me!

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    1. Thank you! I felt exactly the same way - and I totally don't think it is vain to ask someone/your boyfriend to take photos of you! Using a tripod is hard and requires a lot of work! I have a remote for such occasions but even then it takes a while to get the exact composure I'm looking for!

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  2. I love this, like a lot. I can definitely relate to a decline in photos of myself since I have been caught up in capturing others. And I like to think I am finding a balance between capturing what I see in my life and actually being in the memories, but it is hard.

    One of my closest friends didn't want me to do her 21st because she wanted me to be in the photos but in the end she sort of confessed that she didn't want anyone else to do it. Which kind of means a lot to me in a different way. So I guess you just have to be a little bit conscious of it and make sure you stop and have a photo.

    I kind of want to make a challenge now, like a selfie challenge sort of like Katie (http://katieshanice.blogspot.com.au) and make a point of capturing myself. You've got me all motivated now cause I'm nostalgic about times where I have a lot of photos of myself.

    Selfies, not so bad after all :)

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    1. Ah, I have so many friends who say that to me and then they end up hiring me haha! I went to a 21st recently and I didn't even bring my camera and it was the first party in a while where I was quite happy eating food and drinking rather than snapping away!!

      YES! You should do a selfie challenge. Maybe we should do like, a selfie tag or something?! Like a 52 week project type thing?!

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  3. "When I say to people that I don't take selfies regularly, they generally don't believe me. Apparently snapping a pic of yourself in the mirror or before you go somewhere and uploading it online is somewhat of a norm now."

    i can totally relate to that. apparently, teenagers are supposed to have a stockpile of selfies, of which i don't. i'm not a photographer by any means, but as an enthusiastic amateur, i have noticed recently that i don't make many of myself and have started practicing with that again. thanks for the inspiration, such a wonderful post!

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  4. "When I say to people that I don't take selfies regularly, they generally don't believe me. Apparently snapping a pic of yourself in the mirror or before you go somewhere and uploading it online is somewhat of a norm now."

    i can totally relate to that. apparently, teenagers are supposed to have a stockpile of selfies, of which i don't. i'm not a photographer by any means, but as an enthusiastic amateur, i have noticed recently that i don't make many of myself and have started practicing with that again. thanks for the inspiration, such a wonderful post!

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  5. I was lead here by Meg, and I was glad I clicked on the link she shared because this is something that can relate to a lot of people, including myself.

    I hate selfies. I hate taking photographs of myself (most days) so I tend not to, although I do wish I had more "portraits" of myself on my blog, but I don't. And I don't because I feel the way you ruled out in this post. I am not photogenic in any shape or form and I don't like the way I look behind the lens of a camera, but I know that I am not the only one.

    I appreciate this post. :)

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  6. Kudos to you! I have the same beliefs as you are when it comes to selfies. I love the option of being creative with our own body and capture it in still motion. In fact, I myself created a selfie project where every week, I take selfies - creatively. Unfortunately, I have been too darn lazy to do it. Now that you've reminded me, I should get back to it. It does feel great to capture yourself.

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  7. Ah! A 52-week selfie project! I actually did that a couple of years ago back in 2012. It's a great way to get creative and challenge yourself to come up with new concepts constantly!!

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