Photos and Story by RJ Clarke
Photography changed the way my mind works.
As a firefighter paramedic, I live inside stress, urgency, and scenes that do not leave you easily. The job trains my mind to scan, react, and keep moving at a rapid pace. Photography gave me another rhythm. It slows me down. It brings me fully into the moment. It helps reset me. What could stay trapped as stress becomes attention instead.
To make the kind of pictures I care about, I have to be fully present. I have to slow down enough to notice how light, movement, distance, and emotion are all lining up at once. To approach people and find a common connection and earn trust enough to photograph them. That way of seeing has changed me. It has made me more patient, more observant, and more connected to what is in front of me.
That is part of what Gordon Parks’ work did to me. His projects made me feel something beyond the photograph itself. They created emotion, awareness, and a deeper understanding of people’s lives. That is what I want my work to do for someone else. There is a domino effect in it. First, what I feel when I make the image. Then how that feeling grows as I shape a series. Then the reaction someone has when they see it. Then whatever stays with them after. If a photograph can move from my own experience into someone else’s heart, memory, or awareness, then it has done something real.
Photography has also taught me endurance. You put your work into the world, face rejection, and keep going because some stories you feel worth carrying even if overlooked at first.
For me, photography is not an escape from life. It is how I return to it, with more patience, more clarity, and more feeling.
– RJ Clarke



