A photograph, taken 40 years ago by a man watching his wife give birth to their second child, is going viral for the most powerful of reasons.
New York based photographer Cynthia Delconte took to Threads, posting as @cynthiadelconte, to share the photo that her husband Bill took of her that night in the hospital. It's a magical image, capturing Delconte looking down the lens, overjoyed but exhausted, tenderly holding Bill's outstretched left hand.
"My husband photographed the moment our son was born by photographing me looking at him," Delconte wrote alongside the striking black and white picture. "It is a remarkable image to have."
The photo struck a chord with those on the platform, earning 10,000 likes and a raft of comments from those in awe of how an image can say so much without a single word. "He captured you during one of the most beautiful moments of your life together. If this isn't true love, I don't know what it is," one user wrote. "The wonder and love in your eyes," another commented. "Art makes me cry."
The photo was taken some 40 years ago, but Delconte can still remember the sensation she felt as Bill took it. "Billy grabbed my hand and he snapped the picture just as a flood of feeling came over me," Delconte told Newsweek.
Delconte's photo is a reminder of the unique magic encoded in the photographs we take. When we look back at old photos, we don't just relive memories of a time and place but also the emotions experienced.
A 2025 survey of just over 2,000 U.S. adults conducted by Fujifilm highlighted the emotional impact a photo can have. Eighty-four percent of respondents said they smile or laugh when looking at old photos, 66 percent said they made them feel closer to loved ones and 58 percent experienced a reduction in anxiety when looking at old photos.
When Delconte looks back at that photo, she's transported to that night and the birth of her son. "The birth of my second child was amazing," she said. "He was overdue. I was getting very worried. The doctor did not make it into the room until the last second -- just in time to catch that sweet baby."
"I was saying 'thank you Billy' when he took the photo," Delconte said. "I felt overwhelmed."
Seeing the response the photo has received online has added an extra poignancy to the image and everything it conjures up in Delconte's mind. "My husband died about four years ago. That image means more now," she said. "Life was hard in later years. Billy died of Lewy Body dementia. He would be thrilled that the world would see his work."
While there are new, layered meanings and memories in the image for Delconte, she shared it in the hope it would make others smile in the way it always does her. "In these hard and dark days I thought something full of light, life, joy and relief would be good medicine," Delconte said.
"It makes me feel loved. I think the emotion is something folks relate to. We need to remember our love instead of the pain."