Documenting Real Life: Permission Slips and the Beauty in the Everyday with Kelly Haymes
Release Date: 06/25/2019
DANGEROUSLY GOOD STORIES
Under 24 hours after publishing the last episode, one listener (& episode 79 guest + friend of mine), Caryn DeFreez sent me an audio message.
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Welcome to Dangerously Good Stories, fka Intentional Documentary!
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Caryn DeFreez is a wife, homeschooling mom, and has a big love for documenting stories.
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Aubrey Vejvoda is a former marketing student turned HypnoCoach. She quit her photography business and today she’s on the frontlines trying to help make hypnosis mainstream.
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Photographer Jessica Hachey and I talk about:
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This episode is totally a 2 for 1, because we go into two very different topics all in one episode.
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This Story of the Month comes from photographer Ashley Manley who contributed this story on Fearless and Framed back in 2015. It was published almost 5 years ago and her words hold so much value still today!
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Our stories—the stories of our past and of the present—are more than just memories to enjoy inside of passing moments on our way to the next big thing. Let’s cultivate your 2020 stories… consider this a mini planning workshop that’s NOT all about the business, creativity, weight loss, lifestyle or home improvement goals.
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Ever wonder about navigating big life changes while running a business?
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This bonus episode teaches my 5-part Practice to get off survival mode and to feel AWAKE again.
info_outline⚠️ Note: This legacy episode celebrates the quiet beauty of everyday life and the creative self-trust that comes from documenting without performance. It’s a grounding listen for parents, artists, and anyone resisting perfection pressure.
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Photographer Kelly Haymes shares how documenting real life became her antidote to perfectionism and a lasting permission slip for her kids.
We talk about creative consistency, photographing the messy middle, and why staying in your lane might just be the most freeing move you make.
Topics:
- Why Kelly walked away from posed photography in favor of real life
- What the “witching hour” photo project revealed about motherhood and meaning
- How documenting mess, tantrums, and ordinary moments can shape family memory
- The connection between visibility, pressure, and creative identity
- Letting go of the need to be “award-winning”
- Using Chatbooks, street photography, and small rituals to stay creatively grounded
Connect with Kelly + access the archived episode resources here:
→ dangerouslygoodstories.com/intentional-documentary-archive