
There is something about photographs that only reveals itself when you are sitting in the middle of them, not just looking, but feeling them, and that is exactly where we found ourselves one evening right after my mom passed. The plan was simple, gather photos for her services, choose a few meaningful ones, and move forward. At the same time, my daughter was also looking for photos for her wedding tables, wanting to bring pieces of her childhood into a new beginning. What we did not expect was how quickly the evening would shift from a memorial task into something much deeper.
Three large storage containers were pulled out, filled with albums, loose photos, negatives, and decades of life. What started as sorting became hours of sitting together, laughing, smiling, and remembering. Each photograph held more than an image, it held a moment, a version of people and places that no longer exist in quite the same way. The room filled with stories that had been tucked away, and for a while, time felt less linear, as if the past and present were sitting side by side.
Photographs have a quiet way of holding on to what life changes. They preserve people as they were, places as they felt, and relationships in the seasons they existed. Even when families shift, whether through loss, distance, or divorce, those images remain steady. They tell a truth that is easy to forget in the middle of change, that love existed, that it shaped what came after, and that it does not simply disappear because life looks different now. Children are still made from that love, connected to it, even when its form has changed.
There is also something to be said about the person behind the camera, the one who is often missing from the frame, and in this case, that person was most often me. I was the one trying to record it all, to hold onto it in real time, to make sure that nothing slipped by unnoticed. So many parents spend years capturing everything, every angle, every milestone, every ordinary day that somehow feels worth saving, and I was no different. If anything, I leaned all the way in. My kids will tell you that I was always stopping, always turning back, always saying, “wait, just one more,” because I saw something I didn’t want to lose. There were plenty of groans, plenty of “oh mom… not again,” and more than a few dramatic sighs, but they also learned quickly that the faster they cooperated, the sooner it was over. It became our rhythm, my insistence on capturing the moment, and their reluctant, but very practiced, compliance.
It is easy to overlook that those photographs were never random. They were not just moments I happened to catch. They were intentional acts of noticing. I was paying attention, watching the small shifts, the quiet growth, the details that might otherwise be forgotten. I saw the moments as they were happening and, even then, I understood that they would not remain in that way ever again, so I did the only thing I knew how to do. I tried to keep them, the best way I could.
Photographs reflect that kind of seeing. They show smiles changing over time, hands growing steadier, rooms that once felt full, and ordinary days that, in hindsight, held more meaning than anyone realized at the time. They capture the in-between moments, before childhood gives way to independence, before voices deepen, before homes feel different, before time rearranges everything in ways no one can fully anticipate or comprehend.
In that way, photographs are not just records of what happened, they are evidence that it mattered. They hold onto the versions of people that existed in a specific moment, the ones that may not live in memory as clearly as we would like. They allow us to return, even briefly, to a time and place that we would otherwise continue to move further away from.
Sitting in that room, with one generation being remembered and another preparing to begin something new, it became clear that this is what photographs do. They bridge what was with what is coming next. They carry love forward, not perfectly, not without change, but faithfully.
And the truth is, I am still doing it. I am still stopping along the way, still turning back, still trying to catch the light just right before it disappears, convincing myself that this sunrise or that sunset simply cannot be missed before the day begins or ends. I am still capturing the moments, especially the ordinary ones that do not feel like anything special until they are gone, trying in my own way to hold onto them just a little longer, to keep them somewhere safe. If my camera roll is any indication, along with the millions of photos living on my phone and floating somewhere in a cloud I am not sure I fully trust or entirely understand, I have not slowed down. And yes, there are probably twelve nearly identical versions of the same sky, because clearly each one felt necessary at the time. Because even now, I know what I knew then, that these moments will not last.
And one day, when those photographs are held again, whether for a service, a wedding, or simply a quiet moment of reflection, the hope is that they are seen for what they truly are. Not just images, but reminders that people, especially my children, were deeply known, fully loved, and carefully noticed, even on the most ordinary days doing the most ordinary tasks. Because in the end, photographs are one of the ways we hold on, not just to what was, but to what mattered most.
Peace,
#tutulady
#forwardisapace
