EP 48 - Renata Bresciani - A Multi-Passionate Opening Her Own Doors


Hi Amigos!

Welcome back to another episode of the journey of pursuit podcast!

What is it like being a multi-passionate person? Can you really do more than one thing? Can you pursue all the things you love and interest you? OF COURSE! And today's guest proves it!

Renata Bresciani is a film actress born and raised in Miami from Chilean/Italian parents. She is a multi-passionate entrepreneur born with the "Performance Gene". She started her career as a professional dancer performing on network television, award shows, and touring with award winning artist. Renata is a true creative, an actress, creative director, stylist, fashion content creator and published pin up model.

Let’s dive in!


TAKE AWAYS:

  1. Make a lane for yourself

  2. Don’t listen to what people say about you or your craft, If you believe in yourself that’s all that matters - keep going.

  3. Don’t limit yourself to one thing, try out all the things you love

  4. Rejection is redirection

  5. Open your own door next to the one that was closed

  6. Give people more grace

  7. Keep doing the things that light you on fire and get rid of the things that dont

  8. You can live off of your passions

  9. What’s for you will find you

LINKS:

Renata’s Website

Renata’s Instagram

 
 

EPISODE TRANSCRIPT:

[00:00:00] Drea: Welcome to the pod fellow. Amiga

[00:00:03] Renata 1: thank you so much. I'm so excited.

[00:00:05] Drea: I'm so excited to have you on. I actually realized as I was getting ready for our episode, that we share a lot of similar things like we're multi-passionate we're from Miami we're Latina and European.

[00:00:19] Renata 1: Yes. A lot of things.

I love that. I think, I mean, I've gotten to know you over the past few months and I've loved everything. You've shared all your content, your vibes, everything. I'm so excited for people to get to know you better.

[00:00:37] Renata 1: Thank you so much. It's been great. Getting to know you as well. You're doing so many great things.

[00:00:41] Renata 1: I'm excited.

Oh, thank you. Well, likewise. All right. Tell me a little bit about what you do, what sets you, what sets your soul on fire what's mean that really just makes you feel like you're doing the right thing. You're in your moment, in your side, salsa,

[00:00:58] Renata 1: honestly, just being able to create with no barriers.

[00:01:03] Renata 1: So I sang for a few years as well. And till I decided to fully just focus on dancing. And then when it was time to retire, I said, I can't give this. I can't give up art period. Doesn't matter, the medium, honestly, just living and breathing art. My salsa said, and if I didn't do that for the rest of my life and not worry about anything else, that would be honestly a dream come true.

I love that. I feel the same when you are doing what you love. It's like nothing else matters. You can continue doing that for the rest of you.

[00:01:36] Renata 1: Yes, absolutely. I mean, I've been creating art since I was a little girl in different forms, so, and I got myself through college, through art as well. And I just want to go through life that way, you know, be able to sustain a family that way, you know, and just retire that way.

Yeah. That's the dream. Can you talk a little bit about how your creativity has progressed?

Like you said, that you've kind of been doing this your whole life, so what's something that. Really has progressed in your career or your creativity since you've started when you were

[00:02:09] Renata 1: younger. Okay. So I, I come from a family of artists. My mother is a painter, so it was my grandmother and my great-grandfather was a poet.

[00:02:18] Renata 1: So there's, there's a lot of art. A lot of my cousins are makeup artists, painters, dancers. So I started my journey as an artist. As a little girl painting. So visual arts and I went to a magnet school for art and then photography as well. And then I found my passion for basically movement and I. Became a dancer.

[00:02:43] Renata 1: And I was a gymnast also for 10 years. So I was dancing and I was also a gymnast. Then I got injured in gymnastics and I completely changed my route and I went full-time to dancing and I danced professionally for 15 years. I've been dancing since I was. I want to say seven years old and fully full time.

[00:03:06] Renata 1: When I think I'd be, I would think I was 12 or 13. I went to, I quit gymnastics and then that, and I was a professional dancer basically up until. 28 when I retired, but in between my whole career, I always did musical theater. So I also trained musical theater, a lot of acting, obviously musical theater consists of acting as well.

[00:03:27] Renata 1: Singing. I also dab, I went to school for music as well. Let me, full-time immerse myself into acting because acting as a medium, that you doesn't matter what you look like.

[00:03:38] Renata 1: It doesn't matter how old you are and you can do it for the rest of your life. Dancing you can't, there's an age limit. There's, there's a lot of limits there eventually, you know, so yeah, that's what I do. I mean, I still do a lot of photography. I creative direct as well. I creative, direct a lot of shoots.

[00:03:55] Renata 1: I also style a lot of people. I had a clothing line and I was the designer for the clothing line for seven years. So there's a lot, a lot of things in there. Yes. So basically I just love art.

[00:04:10] Drea: I love what you said, everything that you said about everything that you do, because I think sometimes, and I've talked about this before on the podcast. I've talked about it on my socials and we've talked about it too, but being multi-passionate sometimes can be seen as someone being confused as to like, not knowing what they want to focus on, but I think lately people have realized that it's okay to love.

[00:04:35] Drea: More thing, you know, it's okay to love many things at once and to focus your attention on those things that you love to create. And I think it happens mostly to creative people who. Which I think everyone's creative, but people that really dedicate their lives to creating something. I think it just consumes them.

[00:04:54] Drea: Like they want to do it all the time. And so what would you say to someone or to yourself? Like what do you think about that term multi-passionate and having many things that you love to do and focus.

[00:05:07] Renata 1: I love the word multi-passionate. I, I, like you said, I've always struggled because I've always done so much.

[00:05:14] Renata 1: And I felt that in my life, I had to focus on maybe a few things and I would say that's why I transitioned to working as a professional dancer, then pursuing musical theater and singing because. I felt like the world and my, my trainers and my coaches and my teachers were like, you're never going to be fully good at something.

[00:05:38] Renata 1: If you don't a hundred percent put your all into it. So I kind of agree with that, but I don't, because I feel that if you are a, to not, I don't want to say to artists, but I feel like if you are multitalented okay. Art in different mediums comes easy to you, you know, and to be able to see. Which type of art fulfills you in different parts of your life or areas in your emotion or your mind and your soul.

[00:06:09] Renata 1: I think it's a great way to keep inspired and all the other mediums that you do want to focus on. I don't think you should do everything, but I, I do think that you should see what you're good at. See what you love and not put yourself in a box. I don't think that we're meant to be in a box.

[00:06:23] Renata 1: I started reading a book called Murray of the writers, Marie. She's a multi-passionate multi-passionate entrepreneur. I read her book and she's the one reading her book made me realize it was okay to be multi-passionate. Yeah, it really, because I always felt it was like a big deal that I I'm like, I'm a dancer, I'm a singer, I'm a model.

[00:06:45] Renata 1: I'm an actress. I'm all these things. But people are like, but what, what are you? Number one, you know? So she really helped me figure that out that it was okay. And. Also I think with, with growth and with age, I was able to really see and know that I love art and a hundred percent know that this is my passion and also really know what mediums I want to focus on as a career and lifetime.

[00:07:14] Renata 1: I sense in my life and which other mediums I want to do as a pastime, as a way to, to fill my cup up a way to get reinspired and not make it as this is also the way I make a living. You know,

[00:07:29] Drea: this is crazy because we really are the same person because I just finished reading her book. Everything is figureoutable and I felt the same way.

[00:07:40] Drea: I felt like, oh my gosh, this is the first entrepreneur that I see that is talking about being multi-passionate and like understands me because I felt this. Way people always told me, like, focus on one thing. You know, you're really good at this. So keep going. And that was always music for me. And until I fell in love with podcasting, I was like, wait, but I really love this too.

[00:08:03] Drea: Like, how do I. You know, can I do both? Can I dedicate my life to doing all the things that really light me up? And of course I realized, like you said with age, I think too, that really helps you just realize what makes you happy and you don't, you don't second guess that you don't put that aside. And I realized too that not doing the things that were really calling me actually made me more confused.

[00:08:26] Drea: Then as if I was actually just doing all the things I loved and was intrigued by, or was calling my attention by not doing those things and, you know, just following what people were telling me, I felt more confused rather than now where I'm doing so many of the things that I love and I'm not choosing one or the other, I'm just really pouring my heart into all of them.

[00:08:47] Drea: I feel like myself, I don't feel confused

[00:08:50] Renata 1: you start realizing what works for you or where your gravitational pull goes to more, you know, like, so for me, dance is my first love. It will always be my first love as, as an art. I appreciate it. I am. It is, it's something that's so much part of me, you know, but it was something that now in my life, it is.

[00:09:11] Renata 1: My first love and my past love, I will always appreciate. I was always, I will always see it with such honor, but it's something that I no longer feel that I need to use it through my. Through my instrument. Right. Music as well, music for me is everything it's, it may be is my first love as well.

[00:09:30] Renata 1: You know, I'll make, cause you just, music is everything. So for me, a part of music, it's not something now that I feel like I need to be part of that industry or want to sing or anything like that. No, it's something that I just need in my everyday life that I use when I'm sad that I use when I'm happy that I use when I want to be distracted that I use when I want to dance.

[00:09:49] Renata 1: It's something that I can never I'll be gone from styling fashion. Fashion is the way that I express myself. It's the way that I've always expressed myself. It's the way that I will keep expressing myself. I dress according to how I feel, how my mood is. So one day you will see me as the most glamorous.

[00:10:07] Renata 1: Pin up in the world with all this vintage stuff. And then the next thing you're going to see me like a homeless person. Cause that's how I feel, you know? And it's okay. Some days you're gonna see me super street, super thugged out. And then another day I'm going to look like a cute girl going to brunch, you know, but styling was something that I dabbled in cause I'm good at it naturally.

[00:10:27] Renata 1: And I had a lot of clients, but I realized I don't really want to exchange. That as a service, I want to just do it as an expression of self only, but that top, that took me some time I was working. I was working two years as a stylist, love creating clothing. I did it for seven years. I realized I love creating concepts.

[00:10:51] Renata 1: I love shooting the marketing, the campaign. I love creating the designs, but I don't want to be competing with new styles. Every. I don't want to be on top of this fashion world. That's terrible and destroying our world, but I still appreciate art, but I don't want to be in that monster trying to create new things every month to compete with other people that kills my expression of art in me through fashion.

[00:11:19] Renata 1: So fashion is just something I will dress myself, but it's not something I want as a career, correct. And then acting, acting is something that is therapeutic for me, it takes me, it is a great way to see other people have empathy for other people's stories channel myself through other people's lives and, and really show empathy to other humans.

[00:11:43] Renata 1: And it's a way to. To share stories to the world that needs to be told. And I think for me, it's the way that my instrument feels so much more alive right now. In a moment in time, you are somebody's therapy, you are somebody's therapy and every, and every way, if you make them laugh, if you share them a story that they needed to hear, because maybe they went through the same thing that they're watching and seeing a different perspective, you know, or just a form of entertainment at the moment, you know?

[00:12:17] Renata 1: So for me, it's. It's something I can never get rid of, but it's something that I know that I can do for a living that I can fully be happy with it and not feel that I'm pushing something that's not natural for me. You know? So that's what on interior design, let's talk about interior design for me.

[00:12:35] Renata 1: That's huge. I'm good at it. I love it. And it's honestly therapeutic for me. I love seeing beautiful things. It makes me happy. So creating beautiful things at home, where I live, where I feel most tranquil is a form of expression, but it's also a form of self love for me. So that's my other way of expressing, but I wouldn't want to have 20,000 clients doing.

[00:13:00] Renata 1: Right because it's, it's the way I see beauty. It's the way I see love for myself. And I can't, I wouldn't be able to live in anywhere in the world where I can't aesthetically create the environment that I want for my peace and my happiness. love everything

[00:13:19] Drea: you said, because you touched upon something that we talk about a lot on the podcast, which is this idea of failing.

[00:13:25] Drea: Right. And I'm doing quotes because there really is no such thing as failure, but what you said, like , you're doing so many of the things that. And you would have never known how those things fit into your life. If you didn't try them, right? Like how are you going to know that you didn't want 20 clients doing interior designing?

[00:13:44] Drea: If you didn't start doing interior, designing and being like, you know what? I like this for me, but I don't really know if I like this to be doing it all the time for other people. And I think that that's something that we to talk about because it's like with, with the podcast or with, you know, with anything like you have to do.

[00:14:01] Drea: Realize like what it is that you love to do and how that fits in your life, but also not be afraid of trying new things and knowing that if it doesn't work out the way that you thought that it's not a failure, it's actually just redirecting you. It's rejection is just redirection.

[00:14:20] Renata 1: And I love that. Yeah.

[00:14:22] Drea: Yeah. You said that and it's so true because you can, you should try all these different things and especially. You know, I don't think there's an age gap for that. I think you should try as many things as you want your whole life. Like you have a whole life to try so many different things and figure out what fits and what doesn't fit and what you like and what you don't like and how it can become a career for you or not a career for you.

[00:14:47] Drea: How it's a hobby for you, how, what it brings into your life. And I think people are just afraid of trying because either they studied something and they just have this mindset. I need to do this, which happened to me. I started, I started music and I was like, I need to do music. And then when I started doing the podcast, I'm like, I didn't study this though.

[00:15:06] Drea: Like, you know, should I, should I do this? Like, and if I would've let that stop me, we wouldn't be sitting here right now. But I think more people, you know, are starting to realize that you can do many things at once and you can find how those things. In your everyday life, just like you.

[00:15:25] Renata 1: Exactly. And also, like let's say about the podcast, you didn't study it.

[00:15:30] Renata 1: No. But something that you're passionate about and if you're passionate, passionate about it and you have good, let's say work ethic, your first podcast compared to your 30th podcasts is going to be. A complete different podcast because you've learned so much because you're passionate about it, that your expertise eventually is going to outweigh somebody who maybe went to school for.

[00:15:57] Renata 1: Yeah.

[00:15:57] Drea: And not to mention that you can always include the things that you love with each other, like you were saying, you know, like your fashion sense, like how you love to dress up. Like, I have the same thing. I love dressing up. I love like putting on outfits. I love that's my thing, but that's a part of my artistry when I do it.

[00:16:17] Drea: Same thing with you when you have to do an audition or when you have to go to onset, like that's just a part of you. And I realize that too, with the podcast, my intro and my outro song is my song that's instrumental. And so it's kind of like, you can incorporate all the things that you love together and make it work for you, you know, like make it be a part of what you do and who you are and what you love.

[00:16:44] Renata 1: Yeah. So I didn't mention, but I'm a published Pin up model and I I've been modeling since I was little. I, I dabbled into, I've always wanted to model, but I was tolerant when I was little. So they thought I was going to be tall and I was signed to an agent and everything, but then I stopped growing.

[00:17:01] Renata 1: I stayed the little length, the little length that I am right now. And. I remember my manager back then told me, told my mom, cause I was still young. Was I, do you understand that? If, renata. That was taller she'd be a supermodel. So that, yeah, that broke my heart because I'm like, wow, my height is what ruins like a dream of mine.

[00:17:25] Renata 1: Right. And I found that the only way that I can do what I want. Model, which is another medium that I am obsessed with was to become a pinup model because that was all editorial. That was all magazines. It did not matter your height. It mattered your talent. So I've been, I'm publishing over 30 magazines.

[00:17:48] Renata 1: It's incredible now with, with, I've been able to live my dream in that way. Right. But now with social media, you're able to do so much more. Your height or your weight? So I do a lot of content creation. I creative, direct all my shoots and the photography and everything. And that's another form of.

[00:18:08] Renata 1: All right. Did I love, because I creative, directed from conception from the idea, the lighting, the, the, what I'm wearing, how my hair is, how my makeup is just the mood in general. And it's another way that I am able to create something that the industry wasn't allowing me to do. Now I'm able to do it because of social media, but it's something that I, made a lane for myself early on when my twenties.

[00:18:37] Renata 1: Because the industry wasn't giving me that lane, but the pinup world was so you just have to find your lane, see what you like, see what you didn't. And if I would've taken what my, manager told me at face value, then I wouldn't be published ever. And I wouldn't be in all these magazines, working with all these brands because.

[00:18:59] Renata 1: Would have told myself I'm short. I will never make it. I mean, I would love to make it even bigger. You know, let's hope the industry is a little bit more inclusive on the runway, you know, a little bit more, but, you know, I was able to make my lane

[00:19:12] Drea: and that's so important because being able to see kind of the distance, you know, like see something in the far distance of what you have in mind, I think is also really important.

[00:19:24] Drea: Like someone might tell you no, but if you know, That you love it. You're passionate about it. You have to keep that image in mind. Like you got to keep that vision and not give up and find, like you said, that other lane that maybe no one's talking about, but it's there. And I forget the author. I have to include him in the show notes, but there's an author.

[00:19:46] Drea: I think his name's Alex. And I think his book is called the third door. I have to, I have to look it up and include it here, but. There's this book and he talks about the third door and he's basically like when you're in line to get into a club or, you know, some kind of like elite place, you know, there's their main door where there's people that are like VIP.

[00:20:09] Drea: And there's the second door, which are the more celeb people. It's kind of the side door where no one has to wait and they kind of just are, you know, go in immediately. But then there's the third door, but no one talks about or knows about, but it's always. You know, either, someone that works there or maybe, you know, like you've worked there before, so you know that there's a back entrance, you know, like there's always another door waiting for you that not everyone's talking about, but it's present and you just have to think about it and realize that there's always a way there, there's always a way to that door.

[00:20:45] Drea: And so I love what you said because it's true. Like you need. You need to keep your head up and you need to look for the lane that's available that you need, that you can make for yourself.

[00:20:54] Renata 1: Yeah. I feel like in this industry, because I've dabbled with so much and I've professionally done so many different mediums I feel like, well, I've, I've this industry is an industry of rejection, right?

[00:21:06] Renata 1: That's the industry we are in, unfortunately. And fortunately, right, because once there isn't rejection, we live our dreams. But on the way to get to your dreams or on the way to get to your, your goal until you have the other goal, there's a lot of rejection in it. And. If I would have taken all the rejection that I've had in my life, as far as modeling, as far as dancing, as far as acting and fashion clothing line, because it's a male saturated industry.

[00:21:37] Renata 1: That's very difficult for streetwear. I wouldn't have been able to do everything that I've done, you know? I've made a lane for myself. I've opened doors, I've opened doors, right? Without people opening doors. For me, there's a lot of people that have helped me. Absolutely. There's a lot of people that did open doors for me, but there was a lot of closed doors until I was like, no, no, no, no, no.

[00:21:58] Renata 1: This door is going to open. And if you don't open it, I'm making a door right next to you and I'm going to open it. Right. So it can do with a lot of things, you know, for anybody, maybe you need more training. You need more experience in life. Maybe you just need to make a new concept. There's a lot of different things on why you can get rejection, but if you don't take that as face value as you're getting rejected, because you're not good enough, that's not true.

[00:22:28] Renata 1: Right. You just gotta keep working on your craft and really making opportunities for yourself until opportunities start coming to you.

[00:22:37] Drea: Yeah. And we also always talk about on the show, how there is no such thing as getting somewhere without failing. There's no such thing. There's no such thing as someone just making it like something like something happened.

[00:22:52] Drea: Like either someone said no, or, you know, there was hardships or. There's always something it's never a linear story. It's always squiggled, always, always, always, always. Which brings me to another point where you say that you believe there's an urgency to speak truth into our lives and to speak faith in the midst of fear.

[00:23:14] Drea: Can you talk a little bit.

[00:23:15] Renata 1: I just think in general, we're such a weird industry as a weird world. I think that we need to speak truth and life into people because the industry is so ugly. Well, the world in general, right? I mean, especially with like cancel culture and all that. I think that's just a terrible atmosphere that we're living in.

[00:23:34] Renata 1: And I just think that we need to constantly speak . Hope loving to people, build them up, not break them down, and then also give people empathy. You know, people have bad days. People have ugly days. We all do. People have beautiful days. And, and I think that if you are so quick to judge people in that way the world just gets uglier.

[00:23:57] Renata 1: You know, the and we're all human. So I think you have to speak truth in the beauty of life and in the ugly part of life and let people be ugly sometimes and give them grace, give them empathy. And then also when you see your fellow human broken down because something that has happened or people have treated them another way, you need to help them and see, help them see life differently and bring them up.

[00:24:26] Renata 1: Honestly, at the end of the day, that's all that matters. Love is the only thing that matters. Right. So if we all keep that in our conscious mind We'll be a little bit more beautiful. So we need to speak truth and everything. And the music that we listened to in the music that we hear make and the art that we make or listen.

[00:24:45] Renata 1: See, and the movie is that everything about movies that we see, we need to just keep speaking truth and be a little bit more human. In this world. So that's why I think it's an urgency for all people to do that. And as creators, we hold so much power in this world without realizing it that we are the people that set the culture.

[00:25:05] Renata 1: So if we are more conscious about the things that we put out into this world, we will be the leaders of this world because we basically are, and we can change.

[00:25:16] Drea: It kind of goes hand in hand with this idea of, you know, be careful who you're following be careful what you're seeing every day and who you're, you know, really looking at all the time, because it could really set your mind to be, to be thinking differently.

[00:25:32] Drea: And you know, if you're following someone, it doesn't really vibe with what you believe in or what you're really working towards. And you don't have to follow them, you know, just unfollow and live your life, you know, but spreading the hate.

[00:25:47] Drea: Doesn't get you anywhere. And I'm a, I'm a true believer in what you said. I think that people have to have more grace. I think people have to be a little more. Less judgemental. Like people are people. And like you said, they'll have bad days and they'll have great days. And maybe you just got them on a really bad day.

[00:26:06] Drea: And instead of saying like, oh my God, this person is the worst person ever from a one-time. You saw them being upset. And not really even knowing that. Oh, my God. Just re just remember that they might just have a bad day and maybe you need to give them a second chance, you know, meet them in a different way.

[00:26:22] Drea: See them another time. Yeah.

[00:26:24] Renata 1: We're living in a scary world though, because it's everything is, is filmed with cell phones. So if you have one ugly day, The ugly experience that that person is handling at the moment is a buildup of a whole bunch of other tiny experiences that maybe happened that day or happened that week.

[00:26:43] Renata 1: Right. People don't just explode to explode things happened to get them to that, to that point. So yeah, I think we're living in a very scary world because I mean, you can have one ugly day and they get filmed and it goes viral and you're canceled and that's terrible.

[00:27:02] Renata 1: If we gave a little bit more grace we would be able to change this world a little bit more. I think people are so quick to, to judge them and honestly bullied them on the internet because everything was viral. And those things should change.

[00:27:16] Renata 1: I think

[00:27:18] Drea: I agree. I second that I quadruple that to finish off here. Can you talk a little bit about what you're doing now and what you're focusing on now, what's lighting your fire. What's your side of sun now, things that are happening for you and that you're focusing on. I know that you are. I'm actively pursuing a lot of different things, which is so beautiful.

[00:27:38] Drea: And I know you talk to me about pursuing your career in film and television. What's that been like as of late

[00:27:45] Renata 1: acting has been amazing? Well I fully. I fully committed to acting four years ago. What I'm working on right now, I just filmed two lifetime movies. I have I filmed a few months ago, a feature film and a comer.

[00:27:59] Renata 1: Like a lot of, a lot of things are in the, in the works, but I just got signed by a new manager in LA. And I just switched over representation here in the Southeast region. So I'm very excited. I'm so grateful for my team and this year, and the focus for this year is to be able to, to basically get into rooms that I have not been able to get into because of my new representation and really just make a name for myself in the film industry, outside of the Southeast region.

[00:28:27] Renata 1: And to hopefully. Well, no, I'm not going to say hopefully to hopefully take that away. That's limiting not to fully live off of my acting career. That's the goal this year. Other than that, it would just be on social media. Really? Just. Build like a great community together where I can just be, everyone could just be vulnerable with each other.

[00:28:57] Renata 1: And I could just share the things that inspire me. But honestly, my, my goal is to create the stories, be part of stories that need to be told and to fully live off of my.

[00:29:08] Drea: I see it so clearly for you. It's going to happen. I

[00:29:11] Renata 1: already know. I believe that

[00:29:15] Drea: I do. I really truly believe it because just sitting here with you for the past hour has just been so inspiring to hear how someone is not limiting themselves to doing all the things that they love.

[00:29:27] Drea: And they're doing it from a place. From Hart, you know, like you can really, you can really tell that you do it with all your heart, like anything that you do. I'm so excited to, to continue. Supporting your journey. What's one last thing you would say to someone that is kind of wanting to pursue what you're doing.

[00:29:44] Drea: W whichever part, you know, either interior designing or fashion or film, or any of the things that you mentioned, if there are multi-passionate, what would you say to someone that's listening to this right now?

[00:29:56] Renata 1: If you're, multi-passionate honestly just keep doing the things that light you on fire and get rid of the things that do not get rid of the things that you feel that are a burden to you.

[00:30:07] Renata 1: I believe that you can live off of your passions. I fully fully believe that. And I think. I think not believing that is just limiting yourself. I also believe that you have to have it ingrained in your being that, that rejection is redirection and what's for you. We'll find you what's for, you will find you that's something I have to tell myself almost every single day, as long as you're what you're putting the.

[00:30:37] Renata 1: Into this world of what you are trying to achieve. It's a numbers game. It's going to come back to you. The energy is going to come back to you, your fully giving it like full cold heartedly. Great, amazing, beautiful, loving energy. It's going to come back to you. It's just a matter of time.

[00:30:52] Drea: Yes. I agree with that.

[00:30:53] Drea: And just like we had said before we started recording things. We'll knock on your door. Yeah. Instead of you having to knock on so many when things are for you, they're there for you. So I love what you said. Thank you so much. I know that for being here, I'm so excited.

[00:31:07] Drea: This

[00:31:08] Renata 1: thank you so much. I'm super excited. It's been an honor.

[00:31:11] Drea: Thank you.