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Chase Collum | Photography

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The Overnighter

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i have traveled quite a bit for business over the past few years, and generally it’s a pleasant experience. I roll into a city, get settled in, find my bearings, and then get to work. i use the flight in to focus on objectives and firm up my plan for how to get the results I’m after.

But traveling this week was different. on Monday, the flight to Chicago was packed. I was kind of surprised by that, to be honest. It was after I arrived in Chicago that all the alerts started from the home office that events are being postponed and travel plans curtailed.

On the flight back, there was a nervous air on a half-empty flight. people were curt but cordial and everyone was either masking or constantly dosing on hand sanitizer.

At O’hare I grabbed some McDonald’s because I knew that even Covid-19 couldn’t survive on their food. And I sat down at a semi-circular booth that was somewhat isolated. Not a minute later, a guy from India asks if he can sit across from me. He was traveling home after a trip to photograph owls outside of Duluth, Mn. It was pretty ironic because I grew up in Duluth.

Anyway, we started chatting about what we do, and then about photography, and then how weird it was to be traveling right now, and how normally we’d shake hands, but we all got the memo from the home office that we don’t do that anymore. We showed each other some images, his were amazing.

And then I heard about the lawyer who got contact Corona, and that his kids’ schools are shut down and people are self-quarantining. And conferences are being postponed.

I’m home now, about to go to a conference, and wondering if that is really such a great Idea. I mean, the guy who got it was a lawyer. How many of the lawyers and bankers that I’ll be in the room with might’ve been around that guy, or around someone he was around, in the past two weeks. In a city like this?

Wednesday 03.04.20
Posted by Chase Collum
 

The Glacial Pace of Change

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We’ve all been there. Something big is just around the corner - just out of sight but close enough that we can smell it like the steam out of a just-opened pizza box - and its mere impending existence is enough to make anything that is happening on this side of that corner feel like its holding us back from our destiny. We try to be patient, but it’s worthless.

That’s pretty much where I am right now. The pizza box of the next phase of my life is on the counter around the corner and I’m so ready to dig in, but mom won’t let me go get any until I finish my homework. Metaphorically speaking, anyway. I’m 36 years old and I haven’t had homework for a really long time. But you get the point, right?

I entered this year on a high, ready to tackle all challenges with immediacy and precision, infused with that typical January jauntiness. But life, of course, has other plans. Right now I’m playing the waiting game on so many things. I’m waiting for the sellers to be ready to close on the two-family house Shanima and I are buying so we can start moving. I’m waiting until we move to set up my new studio - which will be in the basement of the new house. I’m waiting until that studio is fully in place until I start booking new clients. I’m waiting to print off the newly-designed postcard-sized advertisements that I plan to share around local businesses in the new neighborhood. I’m waiting until all of that is in place to launch any and all video series that I might embark on since I don’t have a place to record in my current apartment.

I hate waiting. Not to say that’s always a bad thing. It’s not that I’m impatient so much as I am a hustler by nature, which keeps me from being able to truly chill on a deep level most of the time. Like, even when I’m not “doing anything” I’m kind of always in the middle of something, at least on a mental level.

All of that said, even if the waiting is a bit unnerving and anxiety-inducing, I am finding the lull to be nice in some ways. Life happens so fast, even if some things seem to take forever. Good things are worth waiting for, as they say, so it’s important not to lose faith and sabotage the success that is just around the corner by succumbing to the desire for instant gratification.

Sometimes, stillness is a virtue, and life reminded me of that over the weekend, when I met up with my brother Nai, who had just picked up some gymnastic rings to work out on. We were both hype, so we took the rings to the park and it was an insanely killer workout even though we were just doing basics. Even just regular push ups and dips became a serious challenge. The hardest part was maintaining stillness when all my arms wanted to do was shake like an earthquake as I moved through the motions. After we got back to his house, soreness already creeping in, we watched some videos of professional gymnasts on the rings and it was amazing seeing them flow through their routines and pause in seemingly impossible positions, holding themselves completely still for several seconds at a time. It made me realize that while stillness often feels like idleness, in the right context, it can be the ultimate sign of mastery.

I am taking this meditation to heart. Reminding myself that stillness and slowness are not things that I should be avoiding, but rather virtues that I should be aspiring to. The world will continue to move around me at a speed that is faster than my body can even conceptualize. And all of those major, life-changing events in my near future will arrive in due course. When they do, I know it will inevitably feel like they came too fast and were over too soon. But rather than driving myself insane by hamster-wheeling myself to exhaustion while I wait for the next major event in my life, I will take a deep breath. As I exhale I will appreciate that I am here to breathe. I will appreciate that I have the time to write. And I will prepare myself mentally to make the most and the best out of the opportunities that are just around the corner.

Wednesday 01.15.20
Posted by Chase Collum
 

Refreshing

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Today I’m starting fresh. I launched this website in October 2018 as a firm commitment to finally pursue photography in a real, serious way. In the time since I published the first version of my website, I’ve transformed photography from a casual hobby into a legitimate business, and I’ve learned a lot about myself and the work I most enjoy doing in the process.

As always, Shanima and I have so many exciting developments on the horizon that I can’t wait to share, but for now, let’s just say that 2020 is going to be a year during which so much hard work across the past seven years finally comes to fruition. Things that I/we used to only daydream about while we were in college are now just around the corner, and I don’t want to jinx anything, but in just over two weeks, I should have some HUGE news to share that is going to be a game-changer for our lives in general as well as for my photography business. Let’s just say that it will involve moving my home photo studio to a new location permanently so that I’ll finally have a place I can bring clients for family/personal milestone photoshoots.

Along with the relaunch of the website, I’m also (as this post makes obvious) relaunching my blog. I had a blog that I posted on almost daily for several months, but that blog petered out this summer when Shanima and I took our six-week trip to Australia, Southeast Asia, and China. I never really got back into it, and to be honest, I think part of it was that the voice of my blog before the trip reflected an iteration of my self that was no longer in tune with who I was when I returned. In the same way that the old version of the website has become a poor representation of who I am as a photographer, the blog was no longer a good representation of who I am and want to be as a person.

And so with this post, I am hitting the reset button. And instead of hiding my blog in the background of my website as I did with the last iteration, this time, it’s going to live on the home page. I’m going to use it to post about my photoshoots, about things that I think can be helpful for clients and photographers alike, and about life in general. But mostly it will be a photography blog because that’s what this website is about.

Enjoy the new page, and if you’re looking for something new to read, go ahead and RSS this blog.

Saturday 12.28.19
Posted by Chase Collum
 

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