"Here, smile like this. Show your teeth," my mother would demonstrate accentuating her smile with a pointed finger."You do it, now," she coaxed. I practiced in the tiny hallway, just me and my mother long enough to satisfy her. We parted, each hoping for a different outcome.
While sitting at the kitchen table, she unhinged the glass protecting each portrait-the expression was the same year after year. As I stood in line waiting for the photo to be taken, I practiced smiling as my mother had shown me. Sitting on that big black box and staring into the lens made me self-conscious and nervous. I always deferred to the default 'no smile, no teeth'-my mother's disappointment.
Even today, portraits are such a difficult undertaking. Everyone is coaxing me to smile. And, I just can't. I really don't know why.
2 comments:
Thank you for this. Such an honest post - and this is exactly how I feel, too. I just hate having my photograph taken. Excruciating. i like the one of you, though, so interesting and full of character.
Glad you started asking yourself the question, and it seems that you've described at least part of the (well-written, thought-provoking) answer. Keep going. Keep doing self-portraits along the way (did you see the NYTimes article on selfies about 8 days ago?).
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