A camera doesn’t just record what we look like. It records what we valued, who we were with, and the tiny details we forget until a photo brings them back. I’m joined by Meaghan Bickel, owner of Joy Photography in Ellensburg, to talk about what she’s learned from photographing weddings, family sessions, business headshots, and some of the most tender moments a family can face.

We get into the thing almost nobody admits out loud: most of us judge our own photos way more harshly than anyone else does. Megan shares what she sees when people step in front of the lens, why headshots can feel so brutal (and why men often worry about looking old), and how the most joyful images usually come from connection, not perfection. We also talk about grief, hospice photos, and why families later become “desperate for anything” after someone passes, even a blurry outtake in the corner.

Then we pull back the curtain on the real workload of professional photography and creative entrepreneurship: inquiries, planning, timelines, coordinating with vendors, the physical grind of a wedding day, and the marathon of culling and editing thousands of images afterward. Megan explains why AI tools can help but still miss the human parts, and why she puts so much emphasis on printed photos and professional albums that you can hold in your hands.

If you care about family memories, wedding planning, small business life, or simply feeling better about being photographed, you’ll take something practical from this conversation. Subscribe, share this with a friend who keeps putting off family photos, and leave a review with the one photo you never want to lose.

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