In 1959 Alan Sillitoe published a short story titled "The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner." In 1962, it was made into a film of the same name. I never read the story or saw the film, so I don't know what it's about. But the title has always intrigued me. It seems to me to suggest persistence in a solitary endeavor.
I began this blog in 2011 while on vacation, wrote six consecutive posts, then abandoned it for eight years. In December, 2019, I came back because I thought I had some worthwhile things to say about photography and about life. I've managed to post three times a week, most weeks since then. I've repeated a few posts, but mostly it has been new material. I'm now up to almost 700 posts, and I will have to say it has been a solitary endeavor. Google stats tell me that at least some people are reading this blog, but I average only about one comment for every two posts. That's lonely.
I began my photography career in the heyday of photography magazines. In fact, it's safe to say that if it hadn't been for the magazines I would not have become a professional photographer. But one thing I learned after reading the magazines for a number of years was that photo magazines recycled their content about every five years. The writers may have been different and their approaches may have been different, but the same ideas were repeated in different forms.
I've now been doing this blog for a little more than five years. I don't want to recycle content, but every week brings a lot of head-scratching and soul-searching as I look for new things to write about.
If I had my druthers, every post I write would be about photography. But I'm running out of things to write without recycling content. So I'll be writing more posts about travel, mills, bridges, small towns, and life in general and my own life in particular.
So, please, if something I write resonates with you, send me a comment. It's fine if you comment as "anonymous," but if you do, please sign your name so I'll know who you are.
The photo above was made on assignment some years ago for a now-defunct magazine to go with an article about a marathon runner. The camera was a Canon EOS A2 and the film was Fujichrome 100.
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I post Monday, Wednesday, and Friday unless life gets in the way.