Overcoming Creative Doubt in Photography
This week on the podcast, I explore something that’s been quietly reshaping how I approach photography: the idea that we’re responsible for the work — but not the outcome. What started as a simple social media post about the Bhagavad Gita turned into a deeper reflection on creative doubt, purpose, and the freedom that comes from letting go.
Enjoy
Overcoming Creative Doubt in PhotographyEvery photographer has stood on their own version of a battlefield.
Camera in hand.
Scene unfolding.
That small voice whispering:
- Is this good enough?
- Will anyone care?
- What if I fail?
Creative doubt in photography doesn’t usually look dramatic. It looks like hesitation. It looks like comparison. It looks like scrolling instead of shooting.
In this episode, I talk about how much of that fear is tied to outcome — likes, validation, recognition, sales. When we attach our creative identity to the response, photography becomes heavy.
But what if the only thing we’re actually responsible for is the act itself?
Photography and Purpose: Show Up, Do the WorkAt its core, photography is about attention.
Not applause.
When we shift from asking, “Will this succeed?” to asking, “Is this mine to photograph?” something changes. The pressure softens. The work becomes honest again.
Finding purpose in photography isn’t about building a brand or chasing relevance. It’s about:
- Seeing clearly.
- Acting intentionally.
- Trusting your creative instincts.
- Honoring the way you uniquely experience the world.
Purpose is less about outcome — and more about alignment.
Creative Freedom Through Non-AttachmentOne of the central ideas discussed in this episode is simple:
We control the effort.
We don’t control the result.
For photographers, that means:
- Frame what matters.
- Press the shutter with conviction.
- Release the need for validation.
- Stop measuring your worth by engagement metrics.
Ironically, when we loosen our grip on the result, our work often becomes stronger. More present. More grounded. More real.
Non-attachment isn’t indifference.
It’s creative freedom.
In a culture obsessed with performance and productivity, practicing mindful photography can feel almost rebellious.
But showing up fully — without obsessing over how it will land — may be the most sustainable creative discipline there is.
So this week’s question is simple:
What would you photograph if outcome didn’t matter?
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