Creativity · Practice · Vision

Share a Breath


Take time to hear someone’s voice from the inside.

Match your calm breathing

with the breathing of your partner,

and ‘share a breath’ in and out for a time of silence.



Not only does this calm emotions,

this action serves to ‘sync’ one’s heart with the other,

to humanize a connection,

and energize the space for a newer – or deeper – conversation.



It is my wish that you have enriching experiences

using this technique throughout moments in daily life.


Dorothy Perry is a Chicago portrait photographer

of family portraits and happiness. Contact her here.

Consciousness · Energy · Healing · Practice · Self-Development · Spirituality

Ping Pong


Hold palms close
until you can feel the

warm or pulsing feeling of energy,

then slowly widen the space
between your hands,

until you can feel the
‘ping pong’ between them.

This can be gently moved into your body

to make your heart – and your soul – happy.

Your energy is an amazing force of nature.

Keep it YOURS – and use it to power YOUR dreams.

Dorothy Perry makes good photographs to evoke fond memories. Contact her here.

Photography · Vision

Eye Contact

Some kids will be in need of others adult help to manage their lives all their lives. Some will need to have coaches, practicing, extra encouragement to try something in unfamiliar situations, using social skills others take for granted.

Love makes everything grow!

And in my life, it was 100% worth it. Seeing my guy Artist with his graduating class is abundance in presence, representing years of adapting to continual change and independence in my life and his with optimism, patience, and gratitude.

I speak for all good things for the tremendous special ed teachers we have encountered in critical times through the educational system, helping me ask the questions and meet other parents traversing their children’s futures.

I say Thank You to finding these stellar souls in his journey into adulthood.

Dorothy Perry photographs warm moments in family life. Contact her here.

Photography · Practice · Vision

Walk in Beauty



I find beauty all around me.

I would love to find it for you, too.  

Portraits and events that capture life’s freshness

in spirited images.


Dorothy Perry sees things beautifully. Contact, here.

Practice · Vision

Watch Without Words

Benefit: Helps develop a ‘wider gaze.’ย Useful as a daily practice. Helps to become more aware of photograph-able things happening in moving or crowded situations.

This is effective when coupled with deep,ย steady breathing to help stay creatively effective in highly emotional or moving situations.

Step backwards.

Step back, as if moving your body. ย Make the movements to step back, sensing everything: temperature, your pulse, your breathing, the fabric of your clothes, your muscles in your knees and feet.

Step back again. ย Keep stepping back until you feel a release of breath, a relaxing. ย Keep breathing, steadily, deeply.

Watch without naming colors, reading words, or signs.

Open eyes wider, open ears, open nostrils, relax jaw.

hold it briefly, lightly, gently.

Gradually have all senses open at the same time.

hold it briefly, lightly, gently.

Open your pores, feeling in all fingers and toes, all at the same time.

hold it briefly, lightly, gently.

Continue to hold in that middle. surrender. breathe. go deeper with whatever your body feels.ย hold it briefly, lightly, gently.

Take a deeper breath. Come back to your focus gently.

Please write if this exercise works for you: I would love to hear if this helps you imbue your creativity and photography with deeper emotional content.

Dorothy Perry is a Chicago photographer specializing in modern portraits. Contact her here.

Consciousness · Counterintuition · Creativity · Energy · Family Portrait · Parenthood · Practice · Relationship · Vision

Just The Two Of Us


Within the mindset that what we do for others, we are working on in ourselves, I see the actions I am taking to help someone grow

are the things that are my struggle to grow with as well.

My son and I have been a tight pair since he was born. He was not an easy boy to raise

after vaccinations caused developmental regression at an important stage of life.

School, Aspergers, socialization, therapy: we had our roles: I was his cheerleader and advocate, tried to anticipate issues, ease him into trying new things –

and dust myself off when well-meaning experiments sometimes went south (I actually wrote some pretty good poetry about this period of time.)

Over time, I came to realize that some of these well-meaning efforts โ€˜bubble-wrappedโ€™ him

against the work he needed to do to stand on his own feetโ€ฆ

Steps he needed to take himself.

I realize to be an advocate of his independence in this new stage of life, I needed to step back and let him

make his own decisions,

set new expectations,

disagree with me,

fix his own dinner,

handle his finances,

figure out his own schedules,

make his own mistakes.

Old habits die hard, and being a ‘helicopter mom’ was second nature for twenty years.

Itโ€™s still hard sometimes not to take the wheel for him when he is working things out.

But this is the work towards a measure of independence that we both have to do in our own lives.

It has taken longer in time than some young adults need, but that is what it took. It takes different types of strategies and preparations, and some hand-holding,

but that is what it takes as well.

And with extra time, reassurance and โ€˜figure it out yourselfโ€™,

I see that he is more assured, trying his wings, making short flights.

And succeeding.

One thing, though never changes.

I have a little ritual in the mornings, where I watch him walking to work in the crowds, as far as I can see him, until he is out of sight.

And then, saying โ€˜thank youโ€™ in tears of gratitude

for the marvel of a young man walking down the street to work –

a vision that looks so everyday and ordinary,

but is evidence of beautiful, positive growth that has happened in ours.

Update of sorts: the time at home over Covid and the preparation to return to work caused some anxiety we could not manage or assuage, and in time he left the firm.

I am creating our schedules with more attention

on doing the things he does here at home himself

to take responsibility, care for himself, and figure things out.

All as quietly as he usually does things.

No matter what it looks like from the outside,

I have dreams of this next step and germinating it

until it is strong enough to flower.


Dorothy Perry is a Chicago portrait photographer.

ย Contact her here.