1. To Remember
- Pictures freeze moments that would otherwise vanish—people, places, feelings.
- Memory is fragile; a photo is a tangible anchor to the past.
- Example: A child’s laugh, a fleeting glance, a city street at dusk—moments we can’t relive, but can revisit through images.

2. To See
- Photography forces us to look closer, notice patterns, details, light, and life we might miss.
- A picture is a lens on perception, a way to explore the world and our own vision.
- It can reveal beauty in ordinary or overlooked things.

3. To Express
- Pictures are a language of feeling. Sometimes words fail, and a photo speaks what we cannot say.
- Through composition, light, and subject, we express ideas, moods, or truths about ourselves or society.

4. To Communicate
- Images can share stories instantly across cultures and time.
- They can inspire empathy, provoke thought, or spark action.
- Think of iconic images that changed the world—they communicate far beyond what text can.

5. To Explore Meaning
- Making pictures is a way to ask questions about life, existence, and humanity.
- Each image can be a meditation: on love, loss, identity, or beauty.
- Photography lets us experiment with symbolism, narrative, and emotion, seeking understanding in visual form.

6. To Feel
- Taking a picture is often an act of joy, curiosity, or intimacy.
- We make pictures not just to show others, but to connect with ourselves—to process emotion, experience wonder, or make sense of chaos.

đź’ˇ In short: We make pictures to remember, feel, see, understand, and communicate.
They are mirrors of our inner world projected into the outer world.

