Today I want to talk to you about the path — and not just mine.
I’ve been on the road for a while now (since I left my job in mediation to devote myself to creation), and what I love most are the collaborations, the connections, the journeys that blossom each on their own thread.
This week, some beautiful things happened…
One of the most popular Argentinian singers right now, 2 million followers (yeah, it means nothing but it still kind of does), shared in her story a video of my soul cousin doing the visual projections for her concert. They’re touring in Latin America, theatres with 3,000 people and more.
And that gave me such a boost.
Not because “a story” on an Insta account matters, but because a few months ago, my cousin wasn’t part of that work team.
And I had the privilege of being there, on the other end of the phone, watching his journey from day one. I saw how much it cost him to say yes. And to keep saying “yes” day after day.
Because honestly, giving up, resigning, letting go — that’s never even starting. That’s easy.
Saying “yes,” and jumping in — that’s where life begins.
And he did it. (He’s been doing it for a few decades, but this was an important step).
And it gave me so much joy to see that little sign of public recognition. Not because the story matters — everyone’s already forgotten it — but because I know what it cost him to be where he is.
And that inspires me.
There are a lot of people who dream — of a slimmer body, of better relationships, of being on stage or behind the scenes being part of creation, of having a job where they can better use their skills, etc. — but they’re not ready to give what it takes: transformation.
Facundo, like all of us, has parts of him, voices that say: “you’re small, you’re too young or too old, you’re not in the field” (he’s originally a sound engineer, not a live video manager), and those voices — they eat us up. To live what we want to live, we have to delete them.
And he did.
And deleting those voices inside yourself means accepting to burn a little (a lot), and to lose parts you thought were you.
That’s it.
That’s why so many artists and people recognised in their field are said to be kind, respectful, non-judgmental.
Because when you’ve been through the fire, you know. And you can see that wherever the other person is, in their own way, at their own temperature, they’re burning a little too.
There’s no competition, no fire to put out either — there’s just being.
PS: Glory is still available.
My vlog where I talk about the behind-the-scenes of our concerts last year (you get a glimpse of my pajamas — very important!) is also online.
And: the other day I offered a discovery session to someone curious about my coaching, and she just signed on for 10 sessions.
I have space for one more soul trek if anyone’s up for it.


