If you’re coming here from my main photography site, welcome — and a small warning: this space is different.
TMI stands for Too Much Information, and that’s intentional.
My photography website is where the work lives. The images. The walks. The cities. The discipline of seeing. It’s curated, edited, and outward-facing — a place where the photographs speak for themselves.
This blog exists for everything that doesn’t fit neatly beside a finished image.
TMI is where I document the infrastructure of my life: health, cancer, recovery, fasting, blood pressure, scans, numbers, setbacks, and momentum. It’s the unfiltered record of what it takes to keep walking, keep photographing, and keep showing up when the body is under pressure.
There’s a reason these posts live separately.
Photography, at its best, is distilled.
Illness, recovery, and endurance are not.
Here, I write in real time. I track medical data. I interpret scans and bloodwork. I talk openly about living with metastatic cancer, navigating treatment, managing energy, and adapting routines so I can continue doing the work that matters to me. Nothing here is theoretical. It’s lived, measured, and updated as the story unfolds.
This blog isn’t meant to be inspirational in the glossy sense. It’s meant to be honest.
Some posts are technical. Some are reflective. Some are uncomfortable. All of them exist to answer one ongoing question: how do you keep moving forward when the conditions keep changing?
If you’re here for the photographs, you don’t need to read this blog.
If you’re curious about the person behind the walks, the discipline behind the output, or the reality behind the resilience — this is where that story lives.
There’s no required order. No starting point beyond today.
This is simply the record, written as clearly as I can, while I’m still in motion.