Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - How long have you been playing SLR?

How long have you been playing SLR?

So far, I have been playing SLR for ten years.

It has been ten years since I was a sophomore in high school.

Less than 20 years old, I think most people have experienced the sadness and grievances brought by economic independence.

10 years ago, the living expenses given by the family were only a few hundred yuan per month. In the boys' dormitory addicted to it, it is like toilet paper thrown in the toilet. After a few splashes, it disappeared.

With this little money, it is a problem to support yourself, let alone play SLR.

When I was in college, as an engineering student, I insisted on doing three things for many years: writing, photography and making short films.

Apart from writing like a proletarian, the other two things have brought me heavy economic pressure.

My first SLR, the fuselage +a 18- 105mm ptz, was almost 8000 yuan.

I still feel excited and sad when I think of this past.

The wonderful thing is that for so many years, I always remember how the teenager who had expectations because of love developed his future by relying on his own arms.

Sadly, every penny of this 8000 yuan is hard money.

At that time, my economic activities mainly focused on two things:

One is tutoring, and the other is assembling desktop computers.

When I first worked as a tutor, it was 15 yuan/hour, and after one class, it was 30 yuan.

It was not until a long time later that my price soared from 15 yuan/hour to 30 yuan/hour.

Sometimes in winter, I finish tutoring almost 10. In the cold of MINUS 20 degrees, I rode the 7-hand Kun car that I found in the second-hand market outside the road and went back to school shivering. My toes and cheeks are numb with cold, and the tears in my eyes are not because of sadness, but because the wind is too fucking strong.

Later, some parents contacted me to go to a weekend cram school to be a tutor, 200 yuan a day, which was the most extravagant income of my thin student days.