2019 - A Year of Healing | Mai + Yasser Engagement

I am quite late to the “year/decade review” party, as I don’t think 2019 was a particularly glorious year for me. However, when I’ve finally got a chance to give it more thoughts, I realized there was something personal and important, although not at all “glorious”, that I wanted to share with you. If I have to pick a word for my 2019, it will be “healing”. To me 2019 was a year of healing.  

Around this time last year, I had a full-on panic attack in the office. After a short meeting on a Monday afternoon, I started feeling…weird – for the lack of a better word, something I had never experienced before. My anxiety was shooting through the roof all of a sudden; I felt my “spirit” was floating outside of my body (I learned from my doctor later on this is called “depersonalization”); I walked back and forth in the hallway; my heart started racing; and I was breathing faster and faster to the point that I felt I might pass out at any minute. Although I was extremely embarrassed for acting so abnormal in a professional setting, I managed to drag myself to my manager’s office and said this: “Hey, I don’t know how to say this, but I think I am having a panic attack.”

I spent the next 30 minutes in his office. Surrounded by three colleagues trying to calm me down, I drank some water, sweated like crazy, (politely) rejected the idea of calling an ambulance (as I heard it was very expensive), and also (politely) declined the proposal of breathing into a brown paper bag to alleviate my hyperventilation (as I didn’t want to look any more ridiculous although I learned afterwards it could be helpful). After a while, I finally felt that my “spirit came back to my body” and was sent home.

I slept for 15 hours that night. I woke up the next day feeling exhausted and frightened. After a full day of flashbacks of my panic attack, at the end of that day, I was neither sure that it wouldn’t happen again nor confident that I knew how to deal with it if it happened again. Therefore, I decided to take a leave to figure out what was going on with me.

I did not know how long this leave would be, and it turned out to be 75 days. When I started my leave, I immediately went on a desperate search for psychiatrists and received a consistent diagnosis from all (four!) of them: Generalized Anxiety Disorder (“GAD”), with panic episodes. I was prescribed with medications and took them religiously as I thought those would work magic to make me feel normal again, soon. Well, while meds definitely helped stabilize my emotions, nothing was really “magic”. Per the suggestion from my doctor, I simultaneously worked with a therapist up to a point that I finally felt less frightened to go back to work in April.

While I can go on and on to bore you with all my frustrations, fears, and doubts I experienced during those 75 days, more importantly I am hoping to share a few thoughts on what to do if you encounter a similar incidence:

  • It’s so easy to think you are the only one in this world suffering through this, but please believe you are not alone. You really aren’t.

  • Start with a consultation session with a doctor/a few doctors to get a sense of what is going on and if you feel connected to the doctor.

  • Be prepared for a long haul (as I am still seeing my psychiatrist regularly since this time last year).

  • Take medications as directed but manage your expectation that there are no magic pills.

  • Find a therapist if possible to figure out the root cause of your issue. I ended up seeing a therapist specializing in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (“CBT”) and it helped me realize that some of my biggest fears were not caused by other people but my cognitive bias.

  • Time could heal some wounds. Something that used to scare you may not be that way some time later. However hard it feels at that moment, it will be over.

Besides the professional help, another factor that I cannot emphasize enough is the support system. I was immensely fortunate to have all the resources to help me get back on track. My parents insisted on waiting until I woke up to Facetime me so that they could make sure I was doing alright (there was a 13-hour time difference). Blowfish accumulated quite some firsthand experience dealing with mental breakdowns, and he stuck through it. My friends who knew my situation checked in with me and encouraged me throughout those not-so-easy days, shared their own experiences dealing with mental struggles and recommended various resources. Among those friends, there was Mai.

Frankly, besides seeing doctors, the only thing that was actually on my to-do list during those days was an engagement photoshoot scheduled a long time ago with Mai and Yasser. While I was looking forward to it all along, as the shoot came closer, I also grew increasingly anxious as I wasn’t sure if they would still like to have me as their photographer, given my psychological condition then. I gave Mai a full disclosure and you know what, the only word I got from this lady was a firm “Yes”. Therefore, we had this 6am shoot at the iconic Brooklyn Bridge.

My stories in 2019 were not particularly fun, but I was not a tad less grateful for the overwhelming love, care and support I received. It was a year of healing, thinking and growing. I learned some lessons the hard way, but sometimes it is the hard way through which one could learn.

Mai and Yasser are off to a new chapter in Chicago soon. Although this blog is “just a few months” late, I guess it is never too late to reciprocate the love to the ones who loved you, and to pass that love forward.

2020, here I come.


When God takes away your apartment, he gives you ... | Izzy + Matt Engagement Session

To me, one of the most important steps in a photography session is brainstorming, because that's when I really get to know my subjects, observe them interact with each other, and understand how they would like to be portrayed in the photos. Therefore, a big advantage I get out of shooting my friends is that I usually have had a multiple-year-long “brainstorming session” by the time when the actual shoot comes up – like the case with Izzy and Matt. Different from meeting some amazingly interesting NEW friends and discovering the romance along the way, such as the session with Fiona and Edgar, this time I had the opportunity to do a “mental walkthrough” of my friendship with two old friends during the shoot, and get to share that memory afterwards with whoever is reading this blog now.

So… how did I meet Izzy? I think the friendship goes back to 8 years ago, when both of us were starting out our internship at the same company. After a long day of orientation, Izzy, who happened to be sitting next to me that day, mentioned that her car was broken and needed a ride home. As I would never imagine myself doing (again) - I offered her a ride, and she accepted it. To clarify, I am not saying that I am not a nice enough person to give people rides. What I am saying is - well to give you some context – one of my closest friends still wouldn’t let me drive her car today, and to be honest, I had actually just obtained my driver’s license 10 days before I started my internship. So, without knowing any of those key info, Izzy, my dear friend - thank you for the enormous trust. 

Fast forward a year, Izzy and I both decided to leave the beautiful Virginia and moved to New York for work. The second year after we both settled down in downtown, Hurricane Sandy hit. Izzy was evacuated from her apartment. What was the old saying again? When God takes away your apartment, he gives you a husband. Exactly – that’s how Matt got into the picture.

I love Izzy and Matt. Looking back at these past years, together we ate a lot, talked a lot, and most importantly, I learned a lot from both of them. For example, one of the life-changing tips that Izzy taught me when we were indulging ourselves in Shake Shack is that, you gotta mix black pepper in ketchup when eating French fries. It is delicious and I am not joking. As for Matt, the lesson is equally legit, which is that you gotta learn to control yourself a bit when showing affections of other people. What was this about? Well… a couple of summers ago when we were still neighbors, Matt and I happened to share the same morning run schedule along the Hudson river and I ran into him for 3 days straight. Every day during those 3 days, I somehow had this amazing ability to spot Matt from quite a distance, shouted his name excitingly (like “Maaaaatt”), ran to him and caught up for 5 minutes. After those 3 days, for some reason, I never saw Matt running again. And after that year, they moved to, Jersey.

Coming back to this engagement brainstorming session, Izzy and Matt told me they liked the idea of doing the shoot in their apartment and recording some everyday moments, which I am always a fan of. Personally, I also LOVE those madly romantic elopement sessions I have seen on Instagram and really want to try a few one day, in the mountains, by the seaside, in the desert etc. But in-home sessions, especially the homes in the New York area, “forced” me to be more creative in more confined space, to constantly look for interesting angles and to detect the extraordinary moments/emotions from the seemingly ordinary life. However, when I was just beginning to ask about the details on their apartment setup and the type of moments they would like me to capture, Izzy cut me off and said that they also wanted to do a few photos in this beautiful park in Jersey and continued to offer more details on the park. I listened on, but couldn’t resist the voice in my head – “Really? A beautiful park, in...JERSEY?” And the fact? Yes, a very beautiful park in Jersey.

Enough blah, let the photos talk a bit.

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Each photography session is of course about making good photos and lasting memories. But meanwhile, to me, it is always a discovery process as well: the discovery of the outside world, like a new park, a new friendship, a new photo angle, as well as self-discovery, like the emotion I resonate with most, the quality of my friends that I cherish most, and the type of the relationship I would not trade for anything in this world. 2018, more discovery coming up – stay tuned.

Last but not least - congrats again to this lovely couple!!! 

New York, New York | Fiona + Edgar Engagement Session

I have never been a crazily popular person in my life, and I don’t have a crazy amount of friends. However, what I can say for sure is that I have a few very good ones, including this guy from Puerto Rico whom I called “Fab”, as this is pretty much his name as well as the fact that I think he is truly “Fabulous” (the same way as I use the word “Fantastic” to explain my name when ordering take-outs on the phone). Something that I have learned with time is that fabulous people always introduce you to other fabulous people, such as this time, Edgar and Fiona.

Now after this session is over, I think I can be honest here on my blog: I was so fr**king nervous before this session! Fiona and Edgar would love to have their photos taken in Central Park and the Brooklyn Bridge, two of the most well-known icons of New York City. Don’t get me wrong - I love both places to death (esp. given that Blowfish is a landscape architect, I kinda have to…) However, as for an engagement shoot, what do I do with the people in the background? More importantly, just as I ask myself before every session: how do I get some photos that are very “Edgar & Fiona”, and “Edgar & Fiona” only? However, the reality proved that I worried too much, as this fabulous couple made it super easy for me.

Of course, at the beginning, there was this little “Man... this is awkward” moment, for all of us - even I felt weird at first when Blowfish and I did the self-portrait! So I used these moments for the standard yo-we-are-engaged-and-look-at-that-thing-on-my-left-hand poses. Once everybody got over this hump, the authentic “Edgar & Fiona” stuff started flowing out... and man, it never went back :P

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Oh, did I also mention that Edgar basically gave me a free concert by humming Salsa music throughout the entire session? Although it appears that he thought he was only keeping it to himself. I am not sure if he used that tactic to ease his “photo anxiety” but that made me wanna dance almost immediately… You might wonder what I think is the most “Edgar & Fiona” moment of this photo shoot? Com’on, what beats it when a Puerto Rican grabs the hand of his love and starts dancing salsa in Central Park???

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As we were walking out of the park at the end of this session, Edgar finally told me that they were moving to Seattle this fall and these photos would be the memory of their life together in this city. To Edgar and Fiona, Central Park and the Brooklyn Bridge are New York. Then I couldn’t help asking myself: after spending six years here, what does “New York” mean to me? What photos would I want to take, one day, that symbolize “my” New York?

Hmm… Maybe it is the Halal Cart downstairs that almost became my "cafeteria" when I first moved to New York; or maybe it is the countless subway encounters that were either amazingly lovely or unbelievably crazy. Maybe it is Cafe Lalo where Blowfish and I go grab our favorite Tres Leches cake at 1am… A friend visiting from Hong Kong last week told me that she still gets butterflies every time she is in New York. I didn't ask what her butterflies were like, but that made me think, for me, maybe it is not really the chicken over rice, the South-Ferry bound 1 train, or the 3-layer cake that make this city so special to us, but the people, the moments, the stories, and the emotions that we have already secretly captured in our hearts …

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My friends, next time when we meet, tell me about your butterflies, will you?

 

The Proposal in the Woods | Vira + Tony Engagement Session

Ahhh… I love proposals. Hear me out.

Just like a few gals/guys out there (no sexist forgiven here – who says guys cannot be proposed to??), a few years ago I watched tons of Youtube proposal videos, one linked to another, and another, and another, and couldn’t help fantasizing about myself in those videos. Bryant Park marching band? Flashmob proposal? A bit too much but fine, I will take it. However, since I missed that one chance in my life two years ago, I have shifted my hope towards friends who are getting close to that milestone in their relationship, wishing that one day I can, at least, participate in a proposal that is somewhat close, or closer, to the “fantasies” Youtube created for its audience like me. Finally the day came last summer.

I had been longing to go camping – chatting with friends by the campfire, sleeping in a tent, and counting stars (if any) in a sleepless night sound hopelessly romantic to me. So when Tony, a good friend of Blowfish’s, suggested a double date camping trip on the Memorial Day weekend last year, we did not hesitate to say yes. Two days before our trip, Tony unexpectedly called an in-person prep meeting. Strange huh? You bet, but all of a sudden I had the sense that it was more than a prep meeting for camping only. Maybe…. something BIG is happening?

This meeting took place in the lobby of Tony’s apartment building. Friends – never underestimate a lady’s sixth sense. This was absolutely not the kind of meeting where we talked about how many pots we should bring or how to combat a bear just in case, but one where Tony officially announced that he was going to propose to his girlfriend, Vira, during this upcoming trip and invited us to become his partners-in-crime.

Not that anybody cared, but – I said yes!

Tony obviously had thought through his plan 158 times – the timeline (nearly by minute), the props (including candles, spare candles, a MAP for candle arrangements to show “Marry Me?”, rose pedals, spare rose pedals, and a handmade notebook listing the 100 reasons why she should marry him), the excuse he would use to take Vira away so that we could set up the scene after dinner, and the code that he would need from us to signal everything was ready etc. While I was sitting there carefully “examining” his props (I mean the notebook really) for any potential typos, feeling overwhelmed by the excitement of the upcoming proposal, I have to tell you that I also couldn’t help thinking what Blowfish was doing two days before he proposed… No matter what it was though, I just don’t think he thought it through 158 times… Anyways, the meeting was dismissed after Tony felt Blowfish and I sort of got it. When I was skipping along behind Blowfish out of the building, Tony suddenly stopped me from behind.

“Fan!” Tony shouted.

“Yeah?” I responded from a distance.

“Please – can you try to look … somewhat normal before I propose?”

Man, people really have trust issues nowadays. “I promise, I will try.”

The trip finally came. I behaved myself by looking quite normal during the day. Everything went as planned, except that we didn’t get the Asian cooking ingredients we wanted on the way and it took us two hours to finally start the bon fire. The night fell earlier on the campsite, but as the night grew darker and darker, my anxiety level was shooting through the roof: when is Tony going to take Vira away for a walk? What if Vira feels tired and doesn’t want to take a walk? Or what if Vira insists me and Blowfish taking a walk with them? Should I say my feet hurt, or I have a stomachache? Right then, I heard Tony saying “Hey guys, we are going for a walk and will be back soon.” Then he gave us a look and disappeared in the darkness. Simple as that…

In the next 15 minutes, Blowfish and I arranged the candles on the picnic table according to Tony’s map, sprinkled the rose pedals, and positioned the notebook meticulously, sent out the signal, and hid ourselves behind a big tree (honestly given the darkness of the camp site, I doubt if anyone could see us as long as we didn’t stand ON the table with the candles lit).

Five minutes later, we heard Tony and Vira talking as they came back closer to the campsite. The moment of truth? Let my pictures tell you now…

Let me just say that things went well and as everybody cared - Vira said yes! I was moving back and forth, tiptoeing or crouching down, busy taking the pictures with probably way too much excitement, until Blowfish dragged me away so that I could leave them some personal space…

 
 

The next morning, after the newly engaged lovebirds finally found cellphone service out of the woods to change their relationship status on FB, I got a chance to ask Vira how she felt when she saw the words on the picnic table. “What words?” she asked. “Marry me?” We three answered in a little bit of shock. “Oh, I guess I am just too short to recognize it on the table haha! I thought you two were just having a romantic night while we were away.” Oops – lesson learned.

So my dear yet-to-be-engaged friends – now I officially declare that I am an experienced proposal assist AND a photographer – count me in whenever you are ready. 

Happy Valentine's Day!