Jennifer Bernardini Jennifer Bernardini

Rejection Five- Artifact Uprising

There’s a moment before you hit send.

The cursor blinks. Your brain lists all the reasons not to bother. That’s the moment I’m paying attention to this year.

I sent a partnership proposal to Artifact Uprising.

At the same time, I’m working on One Photo from Each Town in Connecticut. The goal is simple: one intentional photograph from every town in the state. Quiet images. Texture over spectacle. This project has always been made with print in mind, and it will eventually become a photo book you can hold, not scroll past.

The outcome of the email doesn’t really matter. Yes, no, or silence are all survivable.

What matters is the act of sending it. Of treating my work as something worthy of being seen and supported.

Rejection therapy isn’t about becoming fearless. It’s about letting fear sit in the room while I keep moving forward anyway.

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Jennifer Bernardini Jennifer Bernardini

Rejection Four- The Sponsorship

As part of my Rejection Therapy series, I’ve been deliberately putting myself in situations where the answer could be “no.” The goal isn’t to get rejected—it’s to get comfortable with it, to stop letting fear run the show, and to keep moving forward anyway.

Recently, I decided to take it to a big, intimidating level: I asked Nikon to sponsor me. Yes, the company behind the cameras I’ve been working with—the D7500 that’s become my creative companion. I drafted an email, carefully outlining my projects: my Photo-a-Day Challenge, where I create and share a photo every day, and my long-term project, One Image from Every Town in Connecticut. Both projects are deeply personal, rooted in mental health and arts access, and shared publicly to encourage others to create without fear of perfection.

Hitting “send” was surprisingly hard. It felt like stepping onto a stage without knowing if anyone would applaud. But that’s the point of Rejection Therapy: I don’t have to be perfect. I don’t even have to succeed. I just have to try.

Even if the answer is no, this exercise reminds me that fear doesn’t have to dictate my creativity. And who knows? Maybe one day I’ll see Nikon gear as part of my toolkit, helping me reach more people and continue using photography as a tool for mental well-being.

Rejection is uncomfortable. But it’s also a reminder that the things worth pursuing are often the things that scare us the most.

So, Nikon: if you’re listening… consider this my bold, messy, heart-on-the-sleeve ask.

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Jennifer Bernardini Jennifer Bernardini

Rejection Three- The Logo

I’ve just entered the Bridgeport Seawalk Logo Contest.

I’ve made logos for people before. There’s a link above to them.

This is for the Seawalk currently underway in Bridgeport CT. The prize is $5000.

I went for a vintage feel with this one, something that is reminiscent of old postcards. It’s got a rough, worn texture to it, which I’m not sure will work for me or against me.

Anyway. Here’s to another rejection.

Winner will be announced April 1st.

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Jennifer Bernardini Jennifer Bernardini

Rejection Two-Applying for a Job

This one kind of fell in my lap.

I’ve applied to a job.

I have a job, currently and I like that job. Do I love that job? Is it my dream job? No. I’m also not actively looking to change jobs. Not unless something perfect came along.

And it did.

This morning I’ve applied to a photo/video producer for Lockheed Martin.

Why do I think this will be a rejection? I’ve applied to there for years. Years and years, applied to various positions and have never gotten a call back. Mostly I get nothing, sometimes I get the stock “we’ve gone another way.”

Would I love this job? Yes. I would love to have a job where I can be creative, where I can use the skills I love, where I can be a part of something that actually feels like it feeds my creative soul.

I won’t hold my breath for a “yes” but normally I wouldn’t even apply if I thought there was a chance I would get rejected. But that’s what we’re doing here, right? We’re putting ourselves out there even if there’s a good chance it will be a huge, resounding NO. We’re getting over the fear of rejection, of not being good enough, of not being what they’re looking for. We’re just going for it.

Wish me luck.

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Jennifer Bernardini Jennifer Bernardini

Rejection One- The Submission

I’ve submitted a photo to the contest. This is an older photo I took while walking on my street after it rained.

Do I think it may get rejected? Yes. Why? Because this contest was intended to be an image from the three towns. While mine is an image from my own town, it’s not a recognizable landmark or something anyone would see and say “oh, I know where that is.” While the submission guidelines don’t say it has to be, there’s a part of me that says it should be.

I wanted to go with something I found beautiful, something I really loved. It’s true, I could have taken a drive around, could have gotten a photograph of the Town Hall or the Library or the Church. Even the park or some other place anyone would know was this town. I didn’t. I’m trying to be authentic to myself in this challenge and embrace the rejection, especially when I know it’s coming. You tell me… what do you think?

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Jennifer Bernardini Jennifer Bernardini

Rejection One

I've decided to submit a photograph to a very small, local photo contest. I haven’t yet decided which photograph I’ll use. I have a few more weeks until the deadline.

I’ve never submitted a photograph for anything. I’ve never sold a photo.

We’ll see how this goes.

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Jennifer Bernardini Jennifer Bernardini

Rejection is the goal of 2026

I’ve got two goals this year. One is to take a photo every day and post it. The other is to get myself rejected at least 100 times through out 2026.

Why? Because it forces me out of my comfort zone. Because it makes me try new things. I plan on starting small and I promise I’ll be gentle with myself. This isn’t going to be a form of self-punishment. I hope you join me on this journey.

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