There’s a moment that happens for almost every photographer before they book a retreat.
It usually doesn’t start with logic. It starts with a feeling.
You see the images and the places, the light, the people and something in you quietly leans in.
I want that. And then, almost just as quickly, the questions show up. Not loud, not dramatic. Just enough to make you pause.
What if I’m not good enough?
What if I don’t fit in?
What if it’s not worth it?
We’ve had this conversation more times than we can count. And it always sounds a little different, but underneath it… it’s the same. A pull toward something more and the fear of stepping into it.

The most common thing we hear is this quiet question people don’t always want to say out loud:
What if I’m not as far along as everyone else?
It’s easy to assume you’ll show up and feel behind. That everyone else will have it more figured out, more polished, more confident. But what actually happens is almost the opposite.
People arrive carrying that same uncertainty… and within a few hours, you can feel it start to soften. Not because anything magical is said, but because you realize you’re surrounded by people who get it.
No one’s there to prove anything. No one’s keeping score. Just photographers who love what they do and are trying to find their way back to it in a deeper way.
And somewhere in that, the question shifts.
From “am I good enough?” to “maybe I’ve had this in me all along.”



Another fear that comes up more than people expect is the question of belonging. Not just will I make friends, but will I feel like myself here? It’s a vulnerable thing, putting yourself in a new place with people you don’t know yet.
But there’s something about being surrounded by people who all said yes to the same kind of pull… it changes the atmosphere quickly.
Conversations go deeper, faster.
The surface-level stuff fades.
And connection happens in a way that doesn’t feel forced.

We’ve watched people walk in unsure and leave with friendships that continue long after the trip ends. The kind where you’re still texting months later, cheering each other on, sharing life, planning the next thing.
That whole “come find your people” idea… this is where it actually starts to feel real.
There’s also the very real question of whether it’s worth it. Because it’s not a small decision. You’re investing your time, your energy, your resources and that deserves to be taken seriously.
Most photographers come thinking the value will be in the photos. The locations. The content they’ll walk away with. And those things matter. They’re part of it.
But what they talk about afterward isn’t just what they captured, it’s what shifted.
Clarity in what they want to create.
Confidence in how they show up.
Direction that didn’t feel as clear before.
Things that don’t stay on a memory card… but carry into everything that comes next.
And then there’s the feeling a lot of people don’t quite know how to name until they’re in it. The need to slow down. To step out of constant output, expectations, timelines, and pressure and just create again.
Not for a client.
Not for an algorithm.
Not for anything other than the feeling of it.
There’s something powerful about being in a place that pulls you out of your routine. Where you have space to think, to breathe, to notice what’s been missing.
And in that space, things tend to come back. Not forced. Not rushed. Just… returned.
We’ve had photographers say it felt like getting a piece of themselves back. And honestly, that’s something we don’t take lightly.


The truth is, the nerves don’t usually disappear before you say yes. They come with you. But they don’t stay the same.
Because on the other side of showing up is something steadier. Something clearer. Something that feels a little more like yourself again.
Almost every photographer we’ve walked alongside has had hesitation before coming. And almost every one of them has said, at some point after, “I wish I would’ve done this sooner.”
If you’ve been feeling that pull…
that quiet, persistent maybe… it’s okay to listen to it.
Not because you need to become something more.
But because maybe there’s something here waiting for you. If your heart’s been whispering that it’s time, we’re here and we’d love to meet you there.
Come find your people,
Dan + Kena
Ivy & Co. Retreats
Retreat Host: @ivyandco.styles
Florist: @viori.eu
Hmu: @theivorystandard
Couple: @mikeandmissyfischcer
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@ivyandco.styles
Ivy & Co, and Kena Iversen Photography offers soulful family photography, couples photography, and creative retreats in Montrose, Telluride, Ouray, Ridgway, and worldwide destinations.