I believe it is a mistake for a photographer to take photos with the aim of achieving a good photograph, focusing on the result. I would like to link the importance that the process of photography holds for me, including the capturing and editing of photographs, in relation to the failure that accompanies every good photographer. If our goal is the result, we will seldom be satisfied and if we are truly satisfied with our photographs, we will become disappointed, I would say, in current language, we would get disillusioned and lose our interest and motivation. Our goal should primarily be to enjoy the process of photography itself, to be happy regardless of the result, and ultimately, every result should be a small step in a process of managing mystery and failure. We photograph because we do not understand how the real world transforms into a photographed world; this piques our curiosity, and when we produce a good photograph, we essentially treat it as a higher level of failure that leads us to the next one, which we want to be more significant, better, more interesting. If we settle for our so-called successful, good photographs, we kill the curiosity of mystery and the interest in the next step. Therefore, our focus must be on the process, on the joy of the process, and the results, which we obviously hope will be increasingly better, should be small steps, minor periods in the process of exploring a mystery and a failure that increasingly approaches a success that we will probably never achieve. Giacometti, the great sculptor, said that he continues to make statues simply because he does not understand. This effort to understand the medium, to understand art, to understand what we are doing, is our motivation. If we extinguish it with a successful result, we will need to change our goal.