There are certain childhood moments that feel small in the moment but end up carrying a lot of weight. For my son, it was a slide at Butler’s Orchardersorchard.com/ this weekend.
It was one of those fast “potato sack” slides. At first, he was terrified and would only go down with me. the “I don’t want to do this” is pretty clear!
But then—he did it. He went down that slide. And the next photos tell an entirely different story. Pure joy, relief, and pride. That little smile said it all: I did it.
What I love most is what happened next. He wanted to do it again. and again.
Then, by himself. Within minutes, the slide went from scary to thrilling. That quick shift from fear to bravery is something I see so often not just with my kids, but in the families I photograph.
When I’m behind the camera, these are the moments I look for—the expressions that change in a heartbeat, the tiny victories, the “before and after” of a child discovering their own courage. Family photography isn’t about perfectly posed smiles. It’s about capturing the full story: the nerves, the laughter, and the triumphs.
Your photos should remind you not just what your kids looked like, but who they were becoming in those fleeting stages. Because courage, in all its forms, is worth remembering.