<description>&lt;p&gt;I'm joined by photographer, writer and philosophical YouTuber Sean Tucker for a conversation about writing as a creative act; a way of noticing, a way of understanding yourself, and perhaps even a way of staying awake to life. What began as a listener letter about creative block and photography has become a much bigger conversation about expression itself and how sometimes words can unlock parts of our creativity that pictures alone cannot reach. Sean talks beautifully about the role writing now plays in his daily life and creative practice, how it sharpens observation, and why putting thoughts onto a page can become far more than simply "content creation." Along the way, we wander into philosophy, memory, creativity, identity, grief, and the strange human need to make sense of our experiences by shaping them into stories. The conversation also touches gently and honestly on personal loss and suicide, particularly toward the latter part of the episode.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;And because writing has increasingly become part of my own creative life too, I also share a deeply personal audio essay from the series Halfway to Maybe about gratitude, existence, loss, and the sheer improbability of being alive at all. This is a thoughtful edition, most certainly, a reflective one, and a conversation about creativity.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;In the mailbag, Tomas Nilsson is thanking Holga for his newfound vigour for photography, appreciating that sounds a little like an interesting cheese and wine party from the 70s, Kelvin Brown has essential viewing homework for a weekend film, and Adam Flack solves the strange barking in the woods that unnerved me in an earlier episode.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Read more about our photographic adventures on our photography travel website, &lt;a href="https://www.thejourneybeyond.uk/" target= "_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;The Journey Beyond&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Links to all guests and features will be on the &lt;a href= "https://photowalk.show/episodes/sean-tucker-writing" target= "_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;show page&lt;/a&gt;, my sincere thanks to our &lt;a href="https://www.photowalk.show/patreon" target= "_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;Extra Milers,&lt;/a&gt; without whom we wouldn't be walking each week and &lt;a href= "https://www.arthelper.ai/"&gt;Arthelper.ai&lt;/a&gt;, giving photographers smart tools to plan, promote, and manage your creative projects more easily.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;WHY: A Sketchbook of Life is available &lt;a href= "https://photowalk.show/why-a-sketchbook-of-life-book" target= "_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;here&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;</description>

The Photowalk

Neale James

#530 Sean Tucker on writing: What pictures cannot say

MAY 8, 2026103 MIN
The Photowalk

#530 Sean Tucker on writing: What pictures cannot say

MAY 8, 2026103 MIN

Description

I'm joined by photographer, writer and philosophical YouTuber Sean Tucker for a conversation about writing as a creative act; a way of noticing, a way of understanding yourself, and perhaps even a way of staying awake to life. What began as a listener letter about creative block and photography has become a much bigger conversation about expression itself and how sometimes words can unlock parts of our creativity that pictures alone cannot reach. Sean talks beautifully about the role writing now plays in his daily life and creative practice, how it sharpens observation, and why putting thoughts onto a page can become far more than simply "content creation." Along the way, we wander into philosophy, memory, creativity, identity, grief, and the strange human need to make sense of our experiences by shaping them into stories. The conversation also touches gently and honestly on personal loss and suicide, particularly toward the latter part of the episode. And because writing has increasingly become part of my own creative life too, I also share a deeply personal audio essay from the series Halfway to Maybe about gratitude, existence, loss, and the sheer improbability of being alive at all. This is a thoughtful edition, most certainly, a reflective one, and a conversation about creativity. In the mailbag, Tomas Nilsson is thanking Holga for his newfound vigour for photography, appreciating that sounds a little like an interesting cheese and wine party from the 70s, Kelvin Brown has essential viewing homework for a weekend film, and Adam Flack solves the strange barking in the woods that unnerved me in an earlier episode. Read more about our photographic adventures on our photography travel website, The Journey Beyond. Links to all guests and features will be on the show page, my sincere thanks to our Extra Milers, without whom we wouldn't be walking each week and Arthelper.ai, giving photographers smart tools to plan, promote, and manage your creative projects more easily. WHY: A Sketchbook of Life is available here.