You Think You Got It Bad? by Scott Bourne
Earlier this month my buddy Scott Bourne wrote the following on www.PhotoFocus.com. I read it, liked it a lot and just thought it deserved another moment in the spotlight. What got me thinking about his post was a complaint I got from somebody who didn’t like the idea of my upcoming Summer School being held in Las Vegas.
I chose Vegas for a very simple reason, it’s the best bang for the buck this time of year. Is it hot out? Of course it is, but no worse than Ohio’s humidity on the 4th of July weekend! We’ve put together a great program that’s cost effective and fun without breaking the bank for anybody. I don’t want to be insensitive, but after thinking about the issues Scott pointed out, I’m even embarrassed to be complaining about somebody complaining!
So, Scott says it far better in this guest post – we’ve all got to recognize everything we have instead of getting so wrapped up with what’s wrong in the world and what we don’t have. It’s you, your family and friends who are the foundation for why you should be doing everything you’re doing!
Thanks Scott, for getting it in perspective!

Copyright Scott Bourne 2010. All Rights Reserved.
Let me say right off the bat that this is a simple rant.You’ve been warned. I hope you’ll stick around, read this and pass this message on the next time you hear a photographer complaining about their gear – or their lack of it.
I am constantly amazed by some of the stuff I read online. People complain about everything. They’re mad because they have to shoot with last year’s camera. They feel offended because they didn’t win the last photo contest. They’re irate that they had to wait in line 10 minutes at the camera store to buy a lens.
These are all first world problems people. The next time you feel like complaining about stuff like this, try taking a look around you.
The people in the Gulf of Mexico have just had their lives turned upside down by the BP oil spill. People are losing everything. Wildlife is perishing.
Two weeks ago in Arkansas, dozens were hurt or killed in a flash flood that took infants downstream screaming for their mothers.
In third-world countries around the globe, mothers worry about how they will feed their starving children.
Yet we complain about not having enough money for the 1.2 lens and settling for the 1.8 lens instead!
Perspective – it has a special meaning in photography. Why can’t we apply the proper perspective to our “problems?”
I’m using “WE” here because I too have complained about small things. As I grow older and face new challenges associated with my circumstances, I learn more and more to be thankful for what I can do. I spend less time worrying about what I can’t do.
So my charge to all who read this is simple. Why not focus (pun intended) on what you do have? Why not focus on the opportunities that are within your grasp. Instead of being mad that the guy next to you is eating steak while you eat hamburger, remember that there are many who’d love the hamburger.
If you waste time complaining about what you don’t have, I’ll almost bet my bottom dollar that you’re not making the most out of what you do have.
Go out and photograph with the gear you have today AS IF it were the best gear around. Go photograph the local park AS IF it were Yosemite. Change your mindset and I’m betting you’ll change your results. For the better that is.
Scott Bourne, July 7, 2010
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This post has 4 comments
July 15th, 2010
Wow! So meaningful and something we should all work hard to remember. Thank you for you wonderful words of wisdom!!
Julie Renner
July 15th, 2010
Scott, I think that you’re right about the new camera equipment. I used to get a little bummed that I wasn’t able to upgrade my camera every year but it occurred to me why I was getting upset. I was upset because I couldn’t use the new equipment as a crutch. The better technology the easier for me to fudge on exposure, the easier it was to feel better about myself and my work.
I finally just had to focus more on the basics of exposure and realize that if there are people paying me to photograph them then I can save and wait to buy, with cash, new technology.
July 15th, 2010
Amen! Everyday is a gift in our world and you stated it beautifully! In our business and personal life we need to appreciate what is at hand and use our tools to be the best we can be. I feel those that gripe and complain truly have not lived or loved in this world! Thank you for your eye opening words!
I went to Skip’s last year and I travel from the East coast..As soon as registration opened I signed up again!! It was such a rewarding experience for my business, and the friends and education I learned was priceless!
July 15th, 2010
Great Post by Scott, and very true. I remember when I started really photographing nature many years back. After reading books and watching videos by John Shaw, I was jealous that he lived and traveled to amazing places to shoot and I was stuck in Akron, Ohio. For several months I complained there was nothing great to shoot here. Then a much wiser photog, I met while shooting in the field one day, told me the ‘More I complained the less I would appreciate the beauty’ of nature around me. And he was 100% right! That same photog turned me on to E6 a few months later. Neither Gear nor location make the photographer, it is knowledge of craft, surrounding and subject, dedication, and practice. Thanks Scott & Skip!