Description
What happens when you fall out of love with photography—and don’t know how to come back? In this photo therapy episode of Bad Photographers , Griff explores the quiet side of creativity: love, loss, burnout, and the moments that reshape our relationship with the camera. Through personal reflection and lived experience, this episode looks at photography not as output or achievement, but as presence—what it means to see, feel, and stay human even when the spark fades. This conversation sits at the intersection of photography and mental health , examining creative numbness, identity beyond the camera, and why falling out of love with your work doesn’t mean you’re done. It often means the relationship is changing. When assignments feel heavy, edits feel mechanical, and motivation disappears, photography can become less about making images and more about finding your way back to yourself. This episode is for photographers and creatives navigating burnout, loss, or creative doubt. A reminder that photography is a long relationship—one we return to again and again through stillness, reflection, and the unremarkable moments that quietly restore meaning. Refined Takeaways Falling out of love with photography doesn’t mean failure Photography can be a tool for emotional processing and healing Creative burnout is a signal, not an ending Letting go of validation can restore intimacy with the work Photo therapy begins with presence, not perfection 00:00 Love, Loss, and the Images We Carry 05:42 Creative Burnout and Losing the Spark 11:30 Photo Therapy and Finding Your Way Back