Day 21: Let’s Talk
Twenty one days in. Two thirds of the way through Project.30.
And today I want to pause.
Not to teach. Not to share another lesson. Not to dissect another technique or tell another story from the archive.
Today I want to hear from you.
I’ve Been Talking for 20 Days Straight
I’ve told you about equipment and professionalism. About self doubt and mentorship. About getting detained for pointing my camera the wrong way. About sitting in rooms that made me small. About chasing WiFi across Kampala in the rain.
I’ve shown you my process. My mistakes. My philosophy. My workflow. My opinions on AI and over editing and the difference between talent and structure.
But I haven’t asked you what you think.
So today, I’m flipping it.
What Do You Want to Know?
About me as a person? Ask.
About my creativity? Ask.
About the decisions I’ve made, the work I’ve avoided, the projects I’m still negotiating with myself about? Ask.
About lifestyle photography, about shooting the in between moment, about why I care so much about natural light and emotional honesty? Ask.
About the tension between commercial work and artistic integrity? About balancing a 9 to 5 with creative ambition? About managing diabetes while running between shoots and deadlines? Ask.
I’ve been vulnerable here. I’ve been honest. I’ve shown you the mess behind the images, the doubt behind the confidence, the discipline behind the consistency.
Now I want to know what questions you still have.
What confused you? What resonated? What made you stop scrolling? What made you think differently about your own creative work?
This Is Not a Monologue
For 21 days I’ve been speaking into a camera, editing alone, posting into the void, hoping something lands.
But this challenge was never just about me publishing. It was about connection. About conversation. About proving that consistency isn’t just output, it’s dialogue.
So let’s dialogue.
Comment below. DM me. Send a voice note if that’s easier. Ask me anything. Challenge something I said. Tell me what you agree with. Tell me what you think I’m missing.
I’m listening.
Because the best part of creating publicly isn’t the applause. It’s the exchange. The moment someone says “I felt that too” or “I disagree because” or “Can you explain what you meant when you said...”
That’s when the work becomes more than content. It becomes conversation.
Day 21: Your Turn
So here’s the prompt.
If you could ask me one question, about my work, my process, my life, my faith, my failures, my perspective on creativity in Uganda, what would it be?
Don’t overthink it. Just ask.
I’ll answer honestly.
That’s the deal.
Day 21: done. Now it’s your move.











