Marnie,

Kind of a Zen of Photography thing?

I heard a McDonald's supervisor training his store manager once.  He suggested looking 
over the lobby and thru to the back wall... and 'sensing' if everything was right.

I thought that would take lots of experience as a store manager with the details of 
what could be bad, be wrong.  Point is, you can't be a 'Zen Photographer' unless you 
have lots of practice grasshopper.  Then, it becomes second nature.

Regards,  Bob S.

Eactivist writes:
> From me
> 7. Not thinking too much. One can over analyze a shot, dance back and forth for 
> position, and try and try. Over trying can negate good results (in any art form, 
> including, I would think sports). So as effortless as possible is best, because then 
> it comes from instinct of what looks good, from the gut, rather than the 
> over-rationalizing head. And in the end photography appeals to the senses and 
> emotions, ergo, it is not really that reasoned or logical. So not thinking too much 
> -- i.e. not over thinking it. I think that has been my experience, anyway 
> (sometimes), when I stop to think back and over 
> analyze it ;-). Sound right?
> 
> Marnie aka Doe 

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