I felt panic when I got the photo assignment. I was an 18-year-old part-time reporter and photographer with only a couple of months experience. Sports editor Mike Kilgore handed me a piece of paper with an assignment for later that night — and I had no idea how to do what he wanted.
The assignment was simple. I was to shoot pictures of a basketball game at Cordova High School, a small school about 10 or 15 miles outside of town. But I had never covered a basketball game. I had no idea what to shoot — and I told Mike that.
“Oh, you’ll be fine,” he told me. “Just get in a position to one side or the other behind the basket and shoot what feels right.”
The game was a blur to me. Since I didn’t know what I was doing, I shot several rolls of film, hoping for one usable photo. I felt as though I was in way over my head. The gym was badly lit. I didn’t know a soul there. I couldn’t move the camera fast enough to catch the action.
I walked out feeling like a failure. I was scared to turn my film in.

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Love & Hope — Episode 5:
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Despite advantages to digital books, there’s still nothing like ‘real’ books
Storms can end without warning, bringing hope of blue skies ahead
Family seemed perfectly typical, but I felt envious of their lives
Best time to raise dragon-slayers is when dragons are everywhere
I am angry that life doesn’t work the way I once learned it should