The Invisible Engine of Your Photography

When a new year starts we are obsessed with goals or resolutions. We want to publish a book. We want to hit ten thousand followers. We want to win a specific award. Goals are exciting because they are the finish line. They give us a destination.

But here is the problem with goals. They are outcomes you cannot entirely control. You can work your heart out and still not get the award. If your motivation is tied only to the goal you will burn out before you get there.

At The Monochrome Collective we focus on habits. If the goal is the destination the habit is the engine.

The Problem With Goals

A goal is a singular moment in the future. It lives in the "someday." When you focus solely on a goal you are essentially telling yourself that you are not successful until that specific thing happens. It creates a gap between where you are and where you want to be and that gap can feel exhausting.

Goals tell you what you want. Habits tell you who you are.

The Power of the Habit

A habit is what you do when no one is watching and when there is no trophy on the line. For a photographer a habit looks like this:

1. Carrying a camera every single day. Not just on "shoot days." Every day. This habit ensures you are always ready to see. It turns your eye into a permanent lens.

2. Editing for twenty minutes every morning. Instead of waiting for a massive pile of raw files to overwhelm you you make the act of refining your work a daily ritual.

3. Looking at one master photograph a day. Not scrolling through a feed. Really looking at one print. Studying the light. Understanding the composition.

Why Habits Win

Habits are within your control. You can’t control if an editor likes your work but you can control if you walked two miles through the city with your camera today.

When you fall in love with the habit the results take care of themselves. If you have the habit of shooting every day you will inevitably get better. You will eventually have enough work for that book. You will eventually find your voice.

The goal happens because of the habit.

Identity Over Outcomes

The goal is to "take a great photo." The habit is to "be a photographer."

When you shift your focus to the daily practice you stop worrying about the finish line. You start finding joy in the process of seeing. You realize that 2026 isn't about the one big shot you hope to get in December. It is about the hundreds of small observations you make every single morning.

Forget the big resolutions. Pick one small habit. Do it every day. The goals will find you.





IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO IMPROVE YOUR BLACK AND WHITE PHOTOGRAPHY TRY THE LESSONS BELOW.

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The Art of the "Second Look" Why Your Best Shots Are Never Your First Shots

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Why You Will Make Your Best Photographs in 2026