There is a common belief that some people are simply not photogenic, and most people accept that idea without ever questioning it. You hear it all the time before a session has even begun, almost as a warning. People say they never like photos of themselves, that they always look awkward, or that the camera just does not suit them. It sounds reasonable on the surface, especially if someone has a phone full of images they dislike, but the conclusion they have drawn is usually wrong.

What they are reacting to is not how they look, it is how they have been photographed.

Most photos people judge themselves on are taken quickly, with no thought behind them. The light is poor, the angle is unflattering, and there is no guidance at all. The person in the frame is left to figure it out on their own, which usually leads to overthinking. They try to hold a smile, they become aware of their face, and everything starts to feel slightly unnatural. The result is an image that feels off, and they take that as proof that they are not photogenic.

In reality, they have just never been shown how to relax in front of a camera.

A proper headshot is not about luck or catching someone in a good moment. It is about creating the right conditions so that the person in front of the camera can settle and behave normally. That starts with simple things like light and positioning, but more importantly it comes down to how they are guided through the process. When someone is spoken to properly, given clear direction, and not made to feel like they are being judged, the tension begins to drop. Their face softens, their expression becomes natural, and they start to look like themselves rather than someone trying to “do a photo.”

This is the part most people have never experienced, and it is why the myth holds so strongly. If every photo you have ever seen of yourself was taken in the wrong conditions, it is easy to believe the problem is you.

It isn’t.

When the process is handled correctly, people almost always react the same way when they see a good image of themselves. There is a moment of surprise, followed by recognition. Not because they look different, but because they finally look like themselves on a good day, relaxed, present, and easy to read.

That is what people respond to, and that is what a headshot is meant to capture.

So the idea of being “not photogenic” is not entirely a lie, but it is not the truth people think it is either. It is simply the result of poor experiences being repeated often enough that they start to feel like fact.

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