Episode Transcript
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Aideen Ni Riada (00:03):
Welcome to the
Resonate podcast with Aideen.
I'm Aideen Ni Riada, and myguest today is Regyna Curtis.
Welcome, Regyna .
Regyna Curtis (00:10):
Hi, thank you.
I'm so excited to be here.
Aideen Ni Riada (00:13):
I'm excited to
have you.
You've got such an interestingway of working, a weight to the
listeners.
Get to find out how you canhelp them align their energies
with the natural cycles of theirlife.
But before we do that, let metell everyone a little bit more
about your background.
Wonderful Regyna Curtis is asole mentor for passionate
(00:35):
entrepreneurs.
An innovative leader in thecorporate world, academia and
entrepreneurship, Regyna is anexpert at interpreting patterns
and trends to help her clientsto overcome challenges and align
strategies with their naturalenergies.
In addition to being abest-selling author, she is a
sought-after speaker andworkshop facilitator on using
(00:59):
astrology to align with thewisdom of your personal seasons.
Tell me, eugenia, how did youfind confidence in your voice to
start working with people inthis way?
Regyna Curtis (01:12):
Yeah, thank you
so honestly.
It really has been a process ofreally just being a process,
like sitting with the process ofit.
So for me, it's reallyimportant for me to be able to
understand and embody somethingthrough experimentation in my
(01:33):
own world.
And once I understand something, then I share it, and I can
share it with confidence and Ican share it with joy.
So my journey with astrologyand learning about my personal
seasons and my personal energyhas been pretty much a lifelong
journey.
I started really workingintentionally with astrology as
(01:57):
a tool for myself in 2004.
And then in about 2017 is whenI started to bring that into my
work.
So it's been this process ofkind of like a slow
experimentation try it out,share it a little bit, bring it
back in, try it some more, andnow it's something that I spend
(02:19):
all day, every day, talkingabout and working with people,
and I love it every day talkingabout and working with people,
and I love it.
Aideen Ni Riada (02:30):
I really love
how, following that kind of
process which is completelyunique to you like you weren't
following anyone else'sblueprint or anybody's idea of
what you should have been doing,it was really an internally
guided process that has actuallyseemed to have created a very
unique business for you right?
Regyna Curtis (02:50):
Absolutely yes,
and it is one of my core values
that when I am working withsomeone, that the tools that I
share, the information that Ishare, the way we work together,
it really is a collaborationand it is honoring their ways of
you know, their natural ways ofknowing and being their energy
(03:11):
as well as my own.
And I think that is a littlebit different than I've
experienced in a lot of othertypes of partnerships or
mentorships where it's like Ihave this knowledge and I'm
going to share it with you.
Mentorships where it's like Ihave this knowledge and I'm
going to share it with you.
I do have knowledge that I'mgoing to share with you, and
(03:32):
then I'm going to listen andwe're going to apply it in a
very specific and unique way foryou.
Aideen Ni Riada (03:36):
I love that.
It's about empowering people toalso tune into that own natural
energy of their own, because,you know, when we are mindful,
we can certainly sense what itis will fit for us today, like,
do I have the energy to do thisor to do that?
(03:56):
And sometimes we have to pushourselves to do things we're
uncomfortable with.
I know that as well.
But sometimes we're beingcalled to rest.
Yes, and you, we have to learnto interpret that message from
our own bodies or from,sometimes, our environment will
(04:16):
help us know.
Like my husband might sayAideen, go and rest you know,
because I won't think of itmyself.
Yeah, so, yeah.
So you help people to tune intotheir own natural energies.
Regyna Curtis (04:28):
Absolutely yes,
and to cultivate a set of tools
that are going to help you whenyou have that recognition.
So everything that we do,there's a relationship between
internal and external energies,and so there are those external
indicators.
(04:49):
Like your partner, my partnerwill say I think you need some
yoga, and I know exactly whatthat means, and she's generally
right.
I do need some yoga when shetells me that.
And so those are externalindicators or information.
We also have internalindicators and information, and
(05:11):
both have a role, both have apurpose, and when we can be
attuned to both of those andknow how to support ourselves
and what tools to bring in,regardless of the indicator
comes from the external or theinternal, then that is
sustainable right, that isnourished and supported.
Aideen Ni Riada (05:34):
And you
developed your system through
astrology.
Would you like to explain topeople how astrology can help us
on a day-to-day?
Regyna Curtis (05:42):
basis I can yes,
I did develop it through
astrology.
However, I use astrology in avery different way.
I definitely use it as a tooland it is a essentially it's a
calendar.
I like to say astrology at itsessence is a calendar that helps
you tap into and work with yourinternal cycle of development,
(06:07):
right, your energetic cycles.
And so astrology was developedmany, you know, a long, long
time ago, right, and the firstpeople who made a calendar, who
recorded a calendar that we knowof, were the ancient Egyptians,
and then the Babyloniansactually took that and added
more information to it, and thisis where the basis of the
(06:31):
astrology that we use today hascome from.
And so that's exactly what itis.
It's a calendar.
It is.
Over thousands of years.
People have noticed that thereis this rhythm, there's a
pattern that is present, andthen have observed that and
noted it and then taken it tothe next level.
Oh, when this pattern happens,this information happens, or
(06:56):
these themes are present, orthis type of energy, this type
of emotion or way of being seemsto be really prevalent here, of
emotion or way of being seemsto be really prevalent here, and
so what that is doing, it'sthose external indicators that I
was talking about.
Right, just like when yourhusband says, aideen, you need
(07:18):
to rest.
It may be the same, even thoughit's not a voice of somebody
that you know coming and sayingthat to you.
Energetically, those indicatorsare present and you may feel
them more in your internalenergy.
So you can use this calendar tohelp you recognize those
periods of time and those themesand those energies before you
get to that point where it'slike, oh, I need to rest.
(07:40):
Right, you can have someknowledge about it.
So I like to relate it to aweather report.
If you are going to go spend aday outside, you probably will
look at the weather report.
What do I need to wear?
What kind of tools do I need tobring with me?
Is it going to be windy?
Do I want to wear my hair up?
Do I need an umbrella?
(08:00):
All of those things, right.
And it doesn't say that if it'sraining or snowing or whatever,
it may be that you can't dothat activity, but it's giving
you information so that you canbe prepared for the environment
you're walking into, and that'swhat astrology can do for you
too that's yeah.
Aideen Ni Riada (08:19):
Yeah, that's
amazing because we can be so
unprepared at times, and I knowthat you work with the seasons
as well within that calendar,and I thought that was
fascinating because everybodyunderstands well, depending on
where they live in the world,their seasons may be different,
but we understand that winterhas a different energy to summer
(08:42):
.
So how do you relate seasons toan astrology chart?
Regyna Curtis (08:46):
Yeah, I love
talking about this.
So, especially after, you knowwe're recording this a little
before it's actually going tocome out, but right after the
new year, right Like when thenew year happens and it turns.
You know we're recording this alittle before it's actually
going to come out, but rightafter the new year, right Like
when the new year happens and itturns.
You know it just turned to 2024.
When that happens, there's allthis energy towards it's a new
year, new beginnings.
(09:08):
All this energy towards like weneed to start new things, but
energetically.
The seasons were actually inthe middle of winter and winter
is a slower energy.
It's not actually a time forstarting new things.
It's a time for dreaming intonew things.
Yes, not energetically.
The motivation, the energy isgenerally not there to actually
(09:30):
put them in place, because weneed to integrate all that we've
just processed and all thatwe've just experienced.
So spring, when spring rollsaround and I'm talking
specifically, more so to theNorthern Hemisphere at this
point, and I'll talk about whatthat looks like with Southern
Hemisphere in a moment, if wehave time so in the spring,
(09:53):
that's when things emerge.
Life begins to wake up and comeout of its shell and come, like
the buds start to open andthings start to emerge, and
that's when the energy toactually put things into place
happens.
So there is this natural cycleof the seasons.
Regardless if you're in thenorthern hemisphere, the
(10:14):
southern hemisphere it just maybe flipped of when those things
happen outside, in nature, rightInternally, we have the same
cycle, we go through the samefour seasons.
You just may not do it in thesame cadence or pace or timing
as what's happening outside inthe external world.
Yet those are energies thateveryone is familiar with from a
(10:38):
very young age.
So when I say, oh, you're inyour spring season, or you're in
your fall season or your winterseason, there's already a
general resonance with what thatenergy is.
There's something tangible totie it to.
But if I were to say, oh,you're in Libra season, or
(10:59):
Scorpio, or your moon is inSagittarius and squaring your
ascendant in Aries, which thosethings wouldn't happen, but
anyway that's just jargon and Iwould not understand it anyway.
Exactly right.
So those words and that's why Ijust threw a bunch of words out
there, because that's what theyare they're just words.
(11:19):
They don't have meaning untilyou can resonate with it, you
can apply it, you have somethingtangible to touch, and the
seasons are, so everybody has arelationship with that in some
way.
Aideen Ni Riada (11:30):
Yeah, and I
think it's interesting because
we have done a little bit ofwork on where my seasons sit and
I've also been meditating a loton a seed being.
You know, sown a seed, maybelearning to reach to the sky, to
bud, to open up the bud, toclose the blossom, to let go.
(11:52):
Like we're all in cycles ofstarting and finishing things
and every time we startsomething new, something has to
be let go of.
Like we just don't havecapacity to keep adding, adding,
adding, adding.
Those.
Those periods of time where welet go of things can be so, so
hard.
So when you explain to me thatI have different phases of my
(12:16):
year that are good for sowingseeds, that are good for
harvesting, that are good forletting go, that actually was a
really beautiful way for mymeditation on sowing seeds to
kind of evolve and to have morenuance.
So I'm very excited to applywhat you're suggesting and I
(12:36):
love how, yes, the use of theseasons as descriptors is so
accessible to people.
It's phenomenal what you'redoing.
This is like, so unique andyour voice is so in the right
place and so aligned.
But I know that hasn't alwaysbeen the case for you.
(12:56):
Was there a particular momentin your life where you realized,
hang on a second, my voiceneeds to change here?
I'm not quite expressing myselfthe way that it feels that I am
on the inside.
Regyna Curtis (13:12):
Yeah, so well.
First of all, thank you for you, for you know the beautiful
words you just said about mywork and, um, it is, it is very
much aligned.
It feels so clear and so, uh,correct, so aligned for me.
Um, and with that being said,that wasn't always the case.
Uh, not that the this workwasn't always the case, not that
(13:33):
this work wasn't aligned, butthat I didn't feel so clear or
so confident in sharing my voice.
And I can relate back to when Iwas in kindergarten is when I
would say that I actually reallyhad, I had an experience where
I felt like my voice was it'snot that it was taken from me,
(13:56):
but it was squashed and Ilearned to keep my voice quiet.
So I have always been anintuitive being.
I've seen the world in a verydifferent way than a lot of the
people around me.
I see things on a deeper level.
(14:17):
I can pick up on things thatI'm not supposed to see
necessarily.
Especially as a kid, I knewthings that I hadn't been told.
I could pick up on energies ofthings happening that were not
shared with me, up on energiesof things happening that were
(14:38):
not shared with me, and I didn'tknow the difference at that
point of how to determine whatwas what, and I also was a very
vibrant, vivacious learner.
I always have been.
I just consume information.
When I get excited aboutsomething, I'm interested in
something, I can, just I eat it,like I say sometimes, like I
(14:58):
just eat through books, or Ijust eat information until it's
like settled in me.
I'm like, okay, I've got thelevel that I needed and so I
learned to read far before thetime that I ever went to school.
I had an older sister.
She taught me how to read whenI was about three years old and
so when I went to kindergarten Icould read books and people
(15:22):
were just learning the alphabet.
And I remember very clearlygoing to my kindergarten.
There was like an interviewthat you would go to and they
would place you depending like Idon't know.
There was some kind of testthat you had to do so they could
tell where you were, and I wasso excited.
I'd been waiting for years togo to school.
I was ready.
It was like my favorite game toplay with my sister.
(15:44):
She would teach me things and Ithought school was going to be
like that.
I got to my kindergarteninterview and I was.
I remember this one point whereI had to toss a beanbag and
count as high as I could countand I was like 120, 121.
And the woman was like, howhigh can you count?
And she was just like boredwith it and I was so excited,
(16:08):
like I know all these numbers.
I know all these things.
So anyway, fast forward to acouple months into the school
year.
We're just learning thealphabet.
I'm bored to tears.
I'm like all we do is play andI can play at home.
I had three siblings.
I could play at home and I didnot want to go to school anymore
.
(16:29):
I hated it.
I remember one day my bodywould not move and the bus was
outside and I was being yelledat like get on the bus, why aren
?
The bus was outside and I wasbeing yelled at like get on the
bus, why aren't you going?
And I was just frozen and Icouldn't make my body move and I
finally just burst into tearsand I was like I can't go, I
hate it there, I don't want togo anymore.
And the result of that was myparents having a conference with
(16:51):
the teacher.
They told her that I was boredand I needed to be more
challenged.
They suggested skipping me tothe first grade, and my parents
thought that was a bad ideabecause I already was one of the
oldest kids in my class.
So the result was they gave mehomework, and my homework was to
write stories about things thatI was interested in.
(17:13):
So I did, and I got out myHarry Scary dictionary.
I don't know if any of you knowwhat that is, but it's this
really fun dictionary.
It has all these pictures andit has words with it.
And so I was like so excited Iwrote this whole story about
oranges.
For some reason I was excitedabout oranges, brought it to
school, handed it in so excitedI got accused cheating that they
(17:36):
said that my mom had writtenthe story for me because no
kindergartner had thatvocabulary Right.
So it immediately shut me down.
I went through a series allthrough elementary school in
being like too advanced forcertain things, or knowing too
much, or like it just keptcoming in waves of like there's
(17:59):
no way that you know thesethings, or you shouldn't know
these things, or you're goingtoo fast.
It's making other peopleuncomfortable.
And I learned to just stayquiet.
I learned to just stop sharingmy you know all of the things
that I was excited about and allof the things that I knew, and
to just go within and experimenton my own and eat those books
(18:22):
on my own in my own time.
And so I developed thispractice of self-development and
introspection and working withthese tools on my own, because
it wasn't safe for me to do itin public, and that's how I
learned all these things aboutastrology.
Aideen Ni Riada (18:44):
Yeah, and you
learned also that it wasn't safe
to be fully you and that musthave affected how you approached
your working life or like atwhat point did you start going?
Hey, I'm going to shareeverything now because up to I
mean marketing yourself, likewas that a big challenge at the
(19:05):
start?
Regyna Curtis (19:06):
Yes, it was a
very big challenge.
At what point?
So the point was when Icouldn't hold it in any longer.
It literally was spilling outof me.
So for all these years, I thinkit's really an interesting
(19:29):
analogy that I use, and I'm justkind of reflecting on this
right now.
But the fact that I use the wordconsume right, I consumed
information, I would just takeit in this right now.
But the fact that I use, like,the word consume right, I
consumed information, I wouldjust take it in, take it in,
take it in, but I didn't haveanywhere for it to go because I
didn't feel safe sharing it.
Right, so I would, or I would,only share it in very small safe
(19:49):
circles, very small, likeintimate relationships, but it
just there was so much that Ihad consumed and had processed
and like integrated, but there'salways like I couldn't share it
, I didn't feel like I couldshare it.
And then in my like in mycorporate career and in my, you
know, in some of the spaces,like I could share certain
(20:11):
pieces, but not all of it, right, like, just like when I was
little, and I would be told like, oh, that's too much
information, you shouldn't knowthat information, don't share
that right, or that's not reallythings that we tell people.
Like I knew when people haddied.
I knew when people had gottenmarried.
I knew when, you know, like asa young kid and I hadn't been
(20:33):
told these things, right?
I remember my mom coming to saylike, oh, I have some news for
you.
And I was like, oh, so-and-sogot married.
And she's like how do you knowthese things, right?
Um… and so I found, throughthat reaction, the same reaction
when I was in my corporatecareer, where people would
celebrate me for beinginnovative and being able to
(20:56):
come up with new ideas.
But then there was a line that Icouldn't cross in how creative
I could actually.
Be right, don't show up inpurple hair.
Don't show up in purple hair.
Don't be a bleeding heart inmeetings, in a corporate
boardroom where you're trying totalk about people's emotions.
(21:16):
Don't share the things that youintuitively know, even though
you know something's not goingto be a success, but you don't
have any facts to back it upother than your gut feeling,
which is, by the way, like allthe time correct and that's okay
.
Just don't share that right,don't tell people that.
And so there was this processof like I could share a bit of
(21:39):
me here, but not all of me, andso what would happen is I would
share that piece and then Iwould be like, okay, I don't fit
here because I didn't fit there, all of me didn't fit there.
So then I would go somewhereelse, right?
So if you look at my resume,it's diverse, and it wasn't
because I couldn't keep a job orthat I was scattered.
(22:01):
It was because I was constantlytrying to find the place where
I could be all of me, and it wasnone of those places.
Be all of me and it was none ofthose places.
In 2017, I started learningReiki and I just I got this
(22:21):
intuitive, had an experiencewhere it was like very clear to
me that I needed to go figureout how to use these parts of my
being and allow them to be apart of me and not try to hide
them or squash them.
And through that process, Ilearned the confidence that I
needed, because I was withpeople who understood me and I
really did feel like I could beall of me in that space.
And from there, things justexpanded and skyrocketed and it
(22:45):
was like this outpouring where,if you look at the timeline of
my life.
It looks like, wow.
That was a very short period oftime that you went from, you
know, being in the corporateworld to suddenly being an
entrepreneur and now you haveall these things that you've
accomplished.
It's because it had beensimmering under the surface for
a very long time and it was justthe confidence that I needed to
(23:07):
start sharing it, and as soonas I did, it really resonated
with people.
It's clear.
It's confident thing that Ilove about you know very
intelligent people is.
Aideen Ni Riada (23:22):
They may know
so much, but they know also how
to simplify something and givepeople a tool to use that looks
(23:43):
like anybody could use it, butyou know everything behind why
you're choosing to call it this.
You're giving people access tosomething that they wouldn't
ordinarily be able to access ifthey went to a regular
astrologer.
Right, I think that's onebeautiful thing.
It's something that I'm I havea great.
(24:04):
That's one of my biggest valuesis fast tracking people and
giving them access to theirvoice without needing to train
their voice, like for eightyears.
Or you know people and givingthem access to their voice
without needing to train theirvoice, like for eight years, or
you know to give them access totheir intuition faster than you
know.
I may have grown my intuitionand my mom actually is a guitar
teacher and she simplified herway of teaching the guitar and
(24:26):
made it easy for people to,within the first two weeks, play
30 or 40 songs.
Wow.
Regyna Curtis (24:32):
That's great.
Aideen Ni Riada (24:33):
Yeah.
So I have huge respect for you,Regyna , because I see you.
I see that you've donesomething actually genius with
your work, but I know that noteverybody will get how genius it
is because it looks so simpleoh, I really appreciate that and
(24:53):
um, yeah, that is actuallyreally what my goal is.
Regyna Curtis (24:58):
And you know, I
think that that time that I
spent kind of dipping aroundthrough different careers and,
um, different things, likethere's a it's it's vast right,
like it's not that I did a lotof many jobs, but that I went
through very different careers.
Right, I was an elementary artschool teacher and then I was
(25:19):
taught teacher's professionaldevelopment and then I was doing
consulting in different waysand very business focused, so
very different areas ofexpertise.
But one of the things that Ithink I gleaned from that, that
I gained from that, is that Ican speak to a variety of
(25:39):
different people and there is asimplicity, like when I was
speaking to a kindergartenclassroom.
There was a simplicity neededthere and I learned how to do
that in a way, and I would.
I would actually have parentscome in and say they were like
you speak to my, my kids, in away that is like they're adults,
you know, like the projectsthat you give them are very
(26:01):
advanced and they are excitedand they're capable and you know
all of these things because itreally is just finding.
You know, you find the pattern,you find the trend, you find
that thread of what is actuallyneeded and then you pull that
out and it's simple, it's clean,anybody can use it, from a
(26:22):
kindergartner to, you know, aPhD, whatever.
Whatever the information is thesame and it doesn't need to be
complicated.
So, even though I see all thelayers being able to simplify it
, that I really just appreciateyou saying that, because it is
my goal right To make ittangible, to make it usable, to
(26:44):
make it simple so that anybodycan access it.
And then, if you want to godeep, I will go deep.
Right, I will go through allthe layers and all the things,
because I have explored it alland I love having those
conversations, but we don't haveto start there.
Aideen Ni Riada (27:01):
Yeah, and I'm
just wondering about this idea
of helping people find theiruniqueness.
You know like it sounds likewhen you were working with the
kindergarten kids, you could seesomething in them.
You could see what it was.
They were curious about whatthey'd be passionate about, what
they would be willing to investtheir time in, and sometimes,
(27:21):
as adults, we need that kind ofguidance as well.
Do you help your clients a lotwith that type of guidance too?
Regyna Curtis (27:28):
Absolutely yes.
So in my community that I havethe kind of like top tier level
that we have is called VisionActivator, and I love that title
because it is really what Ihelp people do.
I help them activate theirvision of what they are wanting
to create, and one of the thingsthat working with your personal
(27:51):
seasons helps you do is to getin touch with both that external
seasons, this externalinformation, and the internal
information.
And when you can learn to readthat internal information, which
is not always visible,sometimes it's felt sense
actually use the word times.
(28:13):
So we receive information fromwhat I call your soul, wisdom,
right?
Your internal, your innerknowing, your intuition.
You receive it through fivedifferent channels T-I-M-E-S.
So there's the thinking channel.
Sometimes it speaks to methrough emotions, so emotions
(28:54):
are not something to try to setaside.
I mean, there are differentways that are socially
appropriate to experienceemotions, but emotions are
important.
They're information coming fromour body to help you understand
what is happening, right?
So anyway, that's a littletidbit for you so you can use
(29:15):
that.
So, T-I-M-E-S thinking, images,movement, emotions and sensory.
Aideen Ni Riada (29:21):
Absolutely,
because it's about tuning, it's
about noticing stuff you knowand not just barreling through
and I know plenty of us are goodat the you know and not just
barreling through, and I knowplenty of us are good at the
just getting on with things.
Regyna Curtis (29:36):
Well, we've been
very conditioned to do that in
our society.
But yeah, it is.
Yeah, there's a differencebetween moving through something
with intention and pushingthrough something that is really
not the most supportive thingfor your body.
Aideen Ni Riada (29:49):
That is really
not the most supportive thing
for your body.
Yeah, yeah, because realsuccess is when your health is
respected as well, yourrelationships are respected as
well, and all of that takespresence, I would say, is the
word when you're present toeverything that's going on.
So I mean I could keep whenyou're present to everything
(30:10):
that's going on.
So I mean I could keep talkingto you all day and all night.
But we are getting towards theend of our allotted time for our
session today.
How would you suggest peopleget in touch with you or find
out more about the kind of workyou're doing?
Regyna Curtis (30:25):
Absolutely so.
I teach a workshop every monthon the 28th of the month and it
rotates what time it is so thatit works for all time zones.
It's called Charting yourCourse and it is listed on my
website.
My website is at maytreecom, soat, maytree is the name of my
company, and it is two Sanskritwords put together that really
(30:47):
mean a journey of kindnesstowards yourself.
So that's what that word means.
If you're curious, and so atmatricom, which I'm sure you'll
put in the show notes, theworkshop is called Charting your
Course.
And then, if you're justcurious, you're like, I really
don't know if this is for me,but I really want to learn more.
On my website there's a pagecalled connect and you can just
(31:11):
set up a call with me and we can, we can chat about it.
I would love to do that.
Aideen Ni Riada (31:16):
It's so worth
doing.
I have, I have my chart of myseasons here beside me.
I've printed it off as per myteacher's instructions.
So I'm, I'm really, you know, Ithink I think this applies to
so many people that we are morethan what meets the eye, and
(31:38):
when it comes to my relationshipwith you, that's exactly what I
noticed.
It was okay, Regyna , I likeher, and then, the more I, you
made me very curious, becauseyou speak about things that
other people don't speak about.
So my curiosity was piqued, andthe more I get to know you, the
deeper I'm starting tounderstand your, your
(31:59):
contribution to the world andits healing and its alignment
with, with, basically, light andand truth, which I think is
really to be true to ourselves.
If your voice can express yourtruth, everything will fall into
(32:19):
alignment.
So thank you so much.
Is there anything that you'dlike to say to the listeners
before we sign off?
Regyna Curtis (32:25):
Yes, so my best
advice, especially when it comes
to something like intuition,astrology, some of these terms
some people are reallycomfortable in those realms and
are excited to explore Wonderful.
If this is new to you and youare curious, if your curiosity
(32:47):
is peaked, like you just said,aideen, then get curious right,
stay curious.
Just take one little step rightand perhaps that is just kind
of reaching out and saying youknow, maybe it's just opening up
my website and reading a littlebit, maybe it is reaching out
(33:08):
and having a connection, maybeit is coming to the workshop,
right.
Maybe it's just kind of goingand exploring astrology on your
own.
So allow yourself to justfollow those nudges, those
nudges of your intuition, to say, okay, this is something that
I'm curious about, follow that,and then take the next one right
, then the next step, then thenext step.
(33:29):
Just follow those breadcrumbsand don't try to consume the
whole thing all at once.
Aideen Ni Riada (33:36):
Beautiful
advice and remember as well that
we are here for you.
If you would like my help, orif you'd like Regyna help, or
you'd want to ask a question, wewould really welcome that.
You can definitely get in touchwith us.
Thank you so much.
Regyna Curtis, I don't know ifI can say your business name,
Atmetri.
Regyna Curtis (33:55):
Atmetri.
Yeah, perfect Atmetri.
Aideen Ni Riada (33:57):
Yeah, it'll all
be spelled out in the show
notes, everyone.
So we look forward to findingout more about you, and I'm just
so excited that my listenershave gotten to meet you today.
Regyna Curtis (34:09):
Thank you, this
has been an absolute joy.
Thank you for having me on theshow and thank you all for being
here and listening.
Aideen Ni Riada (34:15):
Yeah, Thank you
to everybody listening and we
look forward to having youlisten to another episode of the
Resonate podcast very soon, Ihope.
Thank you so much, Bye-bye.