Thursday, August 14, 2025

Beyond The Click

WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE between a professional photographer and a photojournalist?

At first, it’s easy to confuse them. Both carry cameras. Both take photos of people, events, and places. Both care deeply about light, angles, and timing. But beyond the lens lies a deeper divide—one defined not by skill, but by purpose.

That truth hit me hard when a veteran photojournalist—weathered by years of covering disasters, rallies, and injustice—told me, “Out of a hundred photography students, maybe one or two will actually become photojournalists. Maybe.”

Why so few?

Because while most photographers chase beauty, photojournalists chase the truth—even if that truth is painful, risky, or unpopular.

A professional photographer might spend their weekend capturing a sunset wedding. A photojournalist might be at that same resort—but pointing their lens at the displaced fishing community forced out to build it.

One captures memories. The other captures accountability.

It’s not that the rest lack talent. It’s that photojournalism isn’t a career—it’s a calling. You give up comfort for context, applause for awareness. You might work without pay, face police lines instead of party lights, and hear people ask, “Why are you showing this side of the story?”

And yet, you keep shooting. Because your camera isn’t just a tool—it’s a witness.

Being a photojournalist means carrying more than gear. It means carrying stories that stay with you long after the shutter clicks: the mother holding her child in floodwaters, the eerie silence after a blast, the dilemma of capturing a moment or stepping in to help.

This path demands heart. It demands courage. And sometimes, it demands your peace.
But the power of photojournalism is undeniable. One image can shake governments, move people to act, or reveal what others try to hide. It’s not about getting likes—it’s about giving light.

To the one or two who choose this road: you may not be the most followed or the best paid. But years from now, when someone asks, “What really happened?”—your photo might be the answer that tells the truth when no one else dared to.

You’re not just taking pictures. You’re holding up a mirror to the world.

And that’s why the path is hard.

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Cheryl Luis True
Cheryl Luis True
Cheryl Luis True is a mom, word weaver, and digital dynamo. As a writer, columnist, and social media specialist, she tells stories that spark change. Now championing good governance, she bridges government, business, and CSOs to build empowered communities from the ground up.