365-Day Project: Final photos and reflections
I’ve gotten to the end of my 365-Day project. Overall, I am very happy with what I accomplished this year, although I’m disappointed in December. The project almost completely fell apart for me the last month, mostly because I got my new job that occupied a lot of my time… Pretty much everything fell apart for me in December.
I learned a lot about my camera and a lot about taking photos. I also like that my entire year is documented. I have so many fond memories that I recall just from looking at the photos I’ve taken. That was a side effect I hadn’t anticipated.
I also have become the sort of memory keeper and default photographer for my friends. They know I’m the one with the camera who will be there documenting the visual events.
Of the group of people I started this project with, I’m the only one who got as far as I did. Most of the people gave up after just a few months. I managed to get a photo on Dec. 31.
This last year has been a very strange journey for me. I joke that I’m having a quarter-life crisis; in truth, it has been a time of great self-reflection for me. It started in January, when I made the resolution to give up drinking soda, a move that led me to start evaluating my eating habits. I glanced over photos from a get-together I was at over at my friend Andrew’s house, and I realized I was getting to a place weight-wise that I just didn’t want to be.
I had never really cared about my weight before, and I had certainly never paid attention to what I ate. In general, I ate home-cooked meals, but, truth be told, I didn’t really try to make sure all of the food groups were balanced. My mom had decided to start Weight Watchers, and, in February, I joined her. In June, I joined the gym through a deal I was offered at LVAC. The result was that by September, I had lost 30 pounds and have managed to hold steady at that weight.
I also spent a lot of time contemplating my career. I wasn’t entirely satisfied with where I was earlier this year. I felt like I had been stagnant for a while, and there wasn’t much opportunity to move beyond where I was, although I had reached the position of copy editor. However, situations changed, and in November, I was offered a spot as editor of the new Boulder City paper. It was just the sort of thing I had been looking for.
I’m also in a constant state of evaluation about myself personally. There’s many things about my life I just wasn’t quite satisfied with, and I’m finally looking at everything honestly and brutally. Sometimes because of it, I have bad days. Other times, I have good days, where I feel like I’m accomplishing things I want to accomplish. I’m grateful for all of my friends who have been there for a shoulder to cry on or have offered an ear to listen.
Right now more than ever, I’m growing and changing. One of my friends said most of the women she knows have gone through something like this in their mid-twenties. I hope I come out of this a stronger and more well-rounded person.
I don’t know where I’m going to be at the end of 2010. One thing I have learned is that you just can’t predict the way things go.
At any rate, here is the final entry in the 365-Day Photo Project. It was fun. After this, I guess I’m going to use this as a regular blog for my thoughts.

I interviewed this young woman who lives in Boulder City on Dec. 11. She had been in a car accident that left her paralyzed from the neck down, but she was so cheerful and happy.

This woman is one of our columnists. She poses for a photo on Dec. 14. I had to take a lot of photos of her because she wasn't satisfied with any of them. haha.
Posted in 365-day project, Anne, Boulder City, Job, Robert, family, friends, iPhone, life, memories, photos















January 5th, 2010 at 4:43 pm
It seems most young women I know seem to go through a weird breakdown/reevaluation at 25-ish. I don’t know why. Maybe to get it out of the way?
Please do stick with the blogging, even if it’s not a photo a day …
January 5th, 2010 at 5:03 pm
Pj, do you think maybe it’s like the equivalent of midlife crisis for men? Because it seems similar.
And I intend to keep blogging. Just not sure what I’m going to do yet, because I feel restricted by what I can really do because I work for a newspaper.