On January 21st, 2017, I was supposed to meet up with my then-boss, Sen. Chris Van Hollen, and his family to take pictures at the Women's March on Washington. The March was so packed, however, that we could not get to each other.
Alone with my camera in the sea of people, I took as many pictures as I could. And in the year-and-a-half that followed, I worked to turn them into a photography book.
After many rounds of editing and re-arranging, a poem emerged. Each line, paired with a picture of a person holding a sign, was my attempt to distill that signs' message into a more fundamental truth that anyone, regardless of political affiliation, could understand.
Looking back, I think I largely achieved this, but there were some messages I would have worded differently. Even though I tried to get to a bedrock beneath any political ideology, and did fairly well in most cases, I can sense a few places that I didn't quite get there.
This taught me an important lesson: if you're not careful, it's possible to think your getting to something foundational, but really, you are being influenced by a prevailing ideology and don't even realize it. It's a lesson for every time and arena of life.
Nonetheless, this is a snapshot of where I was at the moment, when applying all the creative care I could muster.
You can download a PDF scan of the full book below.