Lives Under the Himalayas is a documentary photography project on the everyday lives, living environments, and social structures of people in Nepal. Developed through sustained observation of domestic spaces, streets, fields, workplaces, and communal settings, the series examines how livelihood, family life, labor, architecture, landscape, and local tradition are held together within the fabric of daily existence. The photographs focus on the material and emotional conditions through which life is organized and continued, revealing the close relationship between human presence and the environments that shape it. In these images, Nepal emerges as a lived social world defined by intimacy, resilience, routine, and collective memory, where cultural identity remains embedded in gesture, space, and the ordinary practices of survival. The project aims to present a grounded and human-centered account of Nepalese life, with attention to dignity, continuity, and the enduring structure of everyday experience under specific geographic, economic, and cultural conditions.