• Home
    • Portraits + People
    • Travel + Leisure
    • Food + Celebrations
    • Homes + Architecture
    • Weddings + Events
    • Babies + Families
    • About
    • Privacy
  • Blog
Menu

libby williams : photographs

  • Home
  • Portfolio
    • Portraits + People
    • Travel + Leisure
    • Food + Celebrations
    • Homes + Architecture
    • Weddings + Events
    • Babies + Families
  • About Me
    • About
    • Privacy
  • Blog

Subscribe to the Newsletter

Join the behind the scenes fun!

We respect your privacy.

Thank you!

INSTAGRAM

Are you afraid to float in the salty waters? Or do you stand on the waters edge looking in, afraid of what lurk below the surface? Afraid of what you can’t see. Maybe it’s nothing. Maybe just dive in and see what happens.
Are you afraid to float in the salty waters? Or do you stand on the waters edge looking in, afraid of what lurk below the surface? Afraid of what you can’t see. Maybe it’s nothing. Maybe just dive in and see what happens.
I wrote a blog post today about my dad and seashells. I won’t go into it all here, because it was so complicated and simple all together that I couldn’t do it justice. Go give it a read if you’d like (link in profile.) if not, I&rsq
I wrote a blog post today about my dad and seashells. I won’t go into it all here, because it was so complicated and simple all together that I couldn’t do it justice. Go give it a read if you’d like (link in profile.) if not, I’ll leave you with this - be vulnerable enough that you can find beauty in the smallest of things. And be stubbornly, stupidly and unapologetically yourself.

FLICKR

Beach birthdays
IMG_6324 1.jpg

Heart Space.

June 07, 2020 in life, iphone, essays

There was heaviness in the air that morning. So many things felt unsettled. It was the morning after the riots following the tragic death of George Floyd. I couldn’t sit still. I felt uneasy. Sad. Worried. So many things were on my mind and heavy on my heart. Nothing felt right.

“I’m going outside…”

“Okay…let me know if you need anything,” he said, quietly and respectfully understanding my that my heart needed space.

I walked around the yard with my phone, looking at it, looking away. I cried every time I opened social media. I still cry…there is so much hate and I am not sure how to stop it all. So I don’t look as much. It seems so unbearable to me. So heavy.

But this is the problem, right? Looking away isn’t helping. My tears aren’t working. This isn’t about me right now…it’s about changing the world.

If I feel this way, I cannot imagine how my friends of color feel right now…or how they feel all the time. The injustices they experience. The micro aggressions. The blatant racism that they experience every day.

All I could think that day was “How could we do this? How can we STILL BE DOING THIS? How have we come this far to come back to this point?”

I used to think love was enough. I used to think love could wipe out anything…sadness, darkness, evil, pain. I know that love is part of it. But I see now that action - real involvement from everyone - is what it will take.

I am not sure how to start, but I will stand and support the cause however I can. I will start at home and with me, changing thoughts and patterns as I can. I will start with friends and family who say inappropriate things as disguised as jokes. I will continue to support my friends of color in their businesses and endeavors as best I can.

I never wanted to acknowledge the racism that STILL seeps through our country, our very bones that this land was built on, or the fact that being white gives me an immediate head start. It’s so unfair. Yet, it runs deep in our land, in our blood. It’s time to clean it up. It’s time to do the work.

I don’t know how to fix it all, but I am here…listening with heart, helping with hands. I might not get it right. Hell…I might now have gotten this post right. But I can promise, I will do what I can to help facilitate the change we need.

Tags: racism, george floyd, change
← CannonballThe Rhythm of Summer →
Back to Top

libby@libbywilliamsphotographs.com  |  864.325.7508