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October 16, 2025 β€’ 48 mins
πŸ’Ž Dr. Raul Cuero β€” international inventor, scientist, and author β€” joins Coach Dini to discuss his inspiring novel Polishing Diamonds. ✨ Through the story of three orphaned sisters who rise from tragedy to greatness, Dr. Cuero explores creativity, courage, and the resilience of women worldwide. 🌍 A NASA-recognized innovator with 29 patents, he shares how functional creativity can help anyone turn pressure into progress β€” in science, art, or everyday life. πŸ”¬πŸ’‘This conversation is a journey through adversity, purpose, and the brilliance that shines when we’re refined by life’s fire. πŸ”₯

https://www.raulcuero.com/
https://www.amazon.com/Polishing-Diamonds-Raul-Cuero-PhD/dp/B0FNN569BK

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Produced, edited, mixed, and written by Demetrius "Whodini Blak" Reynolds, Sr.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You are now listening to Vigilantes Radio, presented by the
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Reynolds calling to join the mix at seven oh one
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(00:24):
like us on Facebook at Vigilantes Radio. We welcome all
enjoy the show. Ladies and gentlemen, Please welcome your host
Demitrius who DMI Black Reynolds. Enjoy the show.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
All right, all right, welcome to the show. Sorry about
that we had a slight delay, but welcome to the show.
You're listening to VRL. That is Vigilantes Radio live right
here on iHeartRadio, and I am your host Bennie, who
have a very special guest for you guys. You definitely
want to stick around for that. And as a matter
of fact, text your buddies. Family members are even sharing

(01:06):
on social media rights now and let them know that
we are about to dive deep into another interview. Before
I bring my guests on, I do want to say
that you don't lose sight this is the frequency of
the fearless. Some people see the world for what it is,
and others see what it could be. And then there

(01:29):
are visionaries like doctor Ryulquero, men who refuse to stop
any imagination. They transform curiosity into creation and struggle into science.
Born from humble beginnings, He's proven that creativity privilege, it's
a power already within us. In his new book, Polishing Diamonds,

(01:52):
doctor Quero tells the story of three sisters who rise
from tragedy into triumph, each shaped by different worlds but
bound by one truth. Greatness is refined through pressure. He
calls it functional creativity, not just dreaming, but doing, turning

(02:15):
obstacles into inventions, break into healing, and potential into purpose.
So tonight we're not just talking about science or stories.
We're talking about transformation. You're not just here for a
talk show. And this isn't just radio. This is revival

(02:35):
for your mind, body, and spirit. This is Vigilantes Radio Live.
My name is Coach DEENI and change is possible. Are
you ready?

Speaker 3 (02:52):
Are you ready? Are you radio radio? Are you ready?

Speaker 2 (03:09):
Well?

Speaker 3 (03:10):
Let's go, let's go.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
All right, all right again, welcome to the show. You're
listening to VRL. That is Vigilantes Radio live right here
on iHeartRadio and I am your host, Deani. Our interviews
are designed to go beyond the music, news, books, art, acting, films, technology, education, entrepreneurship, entertainment, spirituality,

(03:33):
and sometimes even past that thing that we call the ego.
Our interviews are designed to go behind the scenes into
the minds of these brilliant people, you know, the ones
that are out there giving it their aw for me,
for you, and for the world. Well, ladies and gentlemen,
tonight's guest is a man who turned obstacles into inventions

(03:57):
and imagination into impact. A NASA recognized scientist with over
thirty inventions and twenty nine US patents, Doctor ryue Quero
has dedicated his life to unlocking creativity and others. His
latest novel, Polishing Diamonds, It's more than fiction. It's a

(04:19):
masterclass and resilience, purpose, and the extraordinary brilliance of women
who rise above adversity, from science labs to storytelling. His
message is clear, pressure makes potential shine. So please join
me in saying welcome friend to doctor rayoul Quero. Hello, Hello, Hello,

(04:41):
welcome to the show. Hey, how are you doing good?
How are you there?

Speaker 4 (04:51):
He was, Thank you, thank you so much for.

Speaker 2 (04:54):
My absolutely absolutely.

Speaker 4 (05:01):
A whole lection. Now you are giving to the work
great meaning in great great Thank you so much. I
wouldn't never forgave beauty to the sea.

Speaker 2 (05:21):
Yes, sir, well, all honor is due. I had a
chance to really dive into some of your work, and
it's you have a very impressive career. Uh. So Uh
to the listeners out there, if you get a chance,
look him up. Uh. This guy is extraordinary. He's done
a lot for uh to move our world forward. And

(05:43):
uh you should get to you should get to know
some of his work. So uh, before we begin, doctor quarrel,
what's been on your heart and mind lately? H?

Speaker 4 (05:55):
What I start? I like to correct a little bit.
I have forty one in things scientific events, which twenty
nine are already patted in the United States. Science ranging
from ranging from bio medical field into embarronmental as well

(06:21):
as in production of nutritional protein. And this is my
experience all my life by doing research around the world.
But also these people say, sometimes you are a science
how do you write fix? Indeed, for you to create

(06:49):
you had to have a mind the navigate into the
unknowns and fiction mediam noh And in fact they My
ability to create molecules, an ensemble molecules or the functionality

(07:13):
is what has given me the capacity for writing novels
like this polishing diamond. And the question, the first question
comes always why do I call polishing diamonds to this? Not?

Speaker 5 (07:34):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (07:35):
Diamonds are other carbon based material that is the most
precious one which value becomes exposed after you have polishes. Likewise,

(07:59):
my time is the most fecious thing that we have
at the almost apience. Therefore, it needs to be hardenless,
and that is why I call it polishing diamond. And
what I use? Why do I use three girls right
than two or one? By the way, this story is

(08:23):
not only applicable for women but also boys. But I
use women because most books written about women never is
about their inner in the capacity of the women as

(08:45):
I'm trying to spread here. And I do this because
I have trained so many people, boys and girls, and
I have found that women, when it comes to invent,
to discovery to the unknown, they are the ones who

(09:09):
could get it before anybody else, provided that we give
them an insurance to a mentorship, functional mentorship, intellectual mentorship
and also very mentorship. We had to have those sweet
as compared to other indivisions. And I used a triplet

(09:35):
rather than duplex or a single there because in society
throughout history, especially in morning hists, there have been three
elements or reference points of parameters who have been resented

(09:56):
at the symbol for progress or a chief means. And
this is all these simplets repressing each or those parameters,
which are well education and say however, besides, I well

(10:25):
say better these figures representing each for them in a constable, amenable,
in harmonious way. Still they don't feel satisfied because the
purpose of life is not in alignment with the society

(10:48):
which present these three parameters. That's when they they The
story starts the girls looking for ways to certify the
purpose of flies, and not only the professional well, not
only the no my host, you're my hobby pump question,

(11:18):
otherwise I can't keep going for sure.

Speaker 2 (11:22):
But yeah, I think that that was important to say.
You know, you offered some great context. So polishing diamonds
begins with tragedy but blossoms into transformation. What inspired you
to tell this story?

Speaker 4 (11:39):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (11:42):
Of tragedy? I know you mentioned that you know you
chose females because our usual story with females don't really
dive on an inner work that's going on. But you
present the story this way. So yeah, what inspired you
to tell this story your polishing diamonds?

Speaker 3 (12:02):
One?

Speaker 4 (12:03):
As I already mentioned before, because I had trained so
many people become inventors, not just to become they were
actively speaking good professionals. But the good inventors don't mean
to discover their nons And I used women because when

(12:28):
it comes to the context of discovering their knowing, in
this case, making inventions, they never put women in the front.
Although from the beginning of my kind we go back
to one million years ago and the sixteing of the

(12:48):
almost almost Happily and they they they're almost happiness two
hundred thousand years ago. Women always been a partner, contributing
to they to the discoverer. That no, we forget that

(13:11):
the main at the beginning, we'll go back to about
eight hundred thousand years ago plus one million years ago
women and men were working together out in hunting, but
also later on during the present fertile about plus eleven

(13:33):
thousand years ago, women were the one who are domesticating
the plan that we had to eat that we eat today,
and we scientists, we came to the early work of
the women for domestications we were able to do today.
All this genetics formats for classifications of flanks. But one

(13:57):
of they I just started the novel Yeah, with the
tragedy in which the might of the three girls die
a time of birth. Why is that? Because we are

(14:17):
always we look at tragedy, we see it, and theory
has been stalin at so much, but we don't realize
the tragedy in fear alone hands on hands in which

(14:38):
there are no at the threads or pathological problems, but
there are signals for us to take action, and they
when you have tragedy, you start on the baseline of life,
which is survival, right and tired, We all society always

(15:02):
start in odd the purpose of trials, another purpose of survival,
which is the original conditions of which we live for.
So when you get tried, when you survive, When you survive,

(15:25):
you are able to better recognize your powers. You either
power your inner stuff when you get the triant have
been created by society or all the elements create the
criteria for survival or of tryon, you don't add that

(15:47):
intensive and you have to try again. Therefore, you fear continuous.
Anytime you have a talian, you have a fear to
lose it, continuous finess. So when you have survivals, you
have ears to lose. Survival go become out of your

(16:08):
inner self. I remember even myself my early years as
a person who come from a homeboard background, I just
start with the survival from the beginning, and I never
developed fear until I start practicing competitive.

Speaker 6 (16:33):
Sports such a basket And when I started doing that,
I was even that I was an I ownful person,
the chump.

Speaker 4 (16:46):
I always wasn't ear to lose that first position. Likewise,
as a students, I was always at the first class,
but I also have feared to lose that position. So
I start with the trity. For the girls at say
as the women's now having underrepresented and societs, you had

(17:12):
to build up courage, and the courage build up to
a process. For recently, we're processing or conscious, we're process
or action rather down just using my rather than just

(17:34):
sign to reach a position, but to develop yourself. That
is so why I just start in the under this
condition to out the story which continues the longest period
of time as that we continue discussing with you.

Speaker 2 (17:55):
All right, So, uh, you often use the term functional creativity.
How do these sisters represent that idea in action?

Speaker 4 (18:07):
The wonderful question. Thank you, Soma. You are a guy
like very tough. The work. Creativity is very after for
most people. And the fact for people in the creativity
is art thanks of news, but they don't realize that

(18:32):
creativity is also and its relationship with people our friendship. Yeah,
in every situation. So functionality means that whatever you create
have to have an effect for individuals or for society.

(18:53):
For instance, I never forget in one of my books
that have been published, and I was writing that that
the greet despite being people with great creativity, they were
not pragmatic. That means functional. That's what I said, because

(19:18):
the country today doesn't live up to the functionality of
other nations in Europe or during the United States. But
I like what the editors says. The editor says to me, Raul,
you mean that the person write a poem, he is

(19:43):
no pragmatic. That means functional. Doesn't your functional creativity? Oh?
I didn't have to reply. I got immedial. I love
because he got me very well. Of course you produce
a problem in science, people utility, but also I write

(20:06):
a poem to make people happy, allow people to to pollage.
That's a functional And we always say, for instance, my children,
and my child is very very creative because he speak

(20:28):
a language, or because he can't count numbers, but of
a thing that I already knows. So and then ask
what hire your child or your children don't for him
to self of thinking himself or to help their family.
That's a functional creative. And that's what these piers do

(20:48):
that I'm going to explain, yeah later on, that's what
they do well, this story of the book. That's a
functional creativity, something that goes in effect, something that goes
and e sat through actions, not within the steady point
of view. That's a very important because when we get education,

(21:13):
we can have education for the status or for esthetics
that is intellectually good. Well, in terms of functional, it
could be functional because we can perhaps inspire students, young
people or the people. That's a function. But if you
don't inspire with and wur knowledge anybody, that's no functional.

(21:39):
Like your introduction to me was very functions because it
was not just introducing this person, but I was also
explaining the fundaments or creativity with your own presentation.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
Mm hm that's the.

Speaker 4 (21:56):
Function and the am I clear?

Speaker 2 (21:59):
And that yes, sir? Yes, sir h. How just to
take it a step further, how can our listeners cultivate
that daily?

Speaker 4 (22:09):
Again? Please? I got up?

Speaker 2 (22:11):
Yes? How can our listeners cultivate that daily?

Speaker 4 (22:15):
Oh? Wonderful? That is no, that is simple. How do
I watch myself?

Speaker 2 (22:23):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (22:25):
And and my book? I had reading a couple of
books and there are two more, I mean and of
a polishing diamonds? Yes, how you can cultivate the montal creativity?
We're so much needed, do they? Especially in the era
AI that I allowed you to win a couple of seconds,
and that by taking action action, taken action. That's how

(22:50):
you cultivate montional creativity. Don't matter what it is. Anytime
you take an action that actually we leave you. We
leave you by shoe hundred percent to further actions. And
the song of action is who have begun express into creativity.

(23:14):
It's like a perfectionism, There is no perfectionist. Perfectionism is
their own for all human conscience, those inco conscious, So
the same thing in this yeah, they can action doesn't
mattery what kind of act? Anytime you take action, you

(23:34):
will see you will see me riads with the dimensional
box staff with the dimensional possibility, and those possibility are
conford into probability within the process of actions. No information,
not in a study way, not in the idealistic they

(23:58):
can ask for reason my stuff. When I was a
kid due to my knees, for my conditions, I had
worked at the mechanical shops at the age of five
six seven years old, and unconsciously I was exposed to
change of tired schente of radiated arburator, change of battery

(24:20):
cleaning battery, and I have been exposed unconsciously chemistry into electricity.
Many years later, thathing become the core for me to
develop in things because I was exposed to actually and
what's going on today is for written a case of women.

(24:46):
Women have been from the beginning the panel's main leading
in creating, as I explained before, But after eighteenth century,
women become a supporting cast. So why we need to
make sure that he's in the position through initiate in

(25:09):
the position to you to follow, but do anything that
means well you anything you think actually, But when you follow,
you are not actually thinking, actually you're doing it.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
That byead, sir, yes, sir, all right. Uh so each
sister becomes powerful in her own right. Uh, there's an artist,
a doctor, inventor, and a president. What message were you
sending about the range of women's potential in today's world?

Speaker 4 (25:50):
Oh you have the good you know. I wish I
come a girl like you are the time you wonderful,
you like it. I get the ancient and there are
christ If all those wise people say you're intelligence by

(26:10):
the way you post nobody the way you aren't, you haven't.

Speaker 2 (26:15):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (26:16):
Ah.

Speaker 4 (26:17):
The reason what I remember that these three women, they
were adopted early age by three different hypos families. One
was a wealthy intelligence family, h very civilized when I

(26:38):
said civilized with gray things of universality. The other one
was adopted that one was calling. It's called iliad. The
other one was adopted by a mirror class with great
emphasis in education. That's called if that was the one, Okay,

(27:00):
the first one that I mentioned, he becomes into fashion scimes.
And the other one adopted by the middle class educated
mirror class emphathing education. He was a medical doctor to
become a scientist inventoriz myself, which you know, training a

(27:26):
lot of girls like that. That was my inspiration for
this girl. Okay, and this is real what we do.
And then the third one is called my he is
was adopted by the law income family of faith or
great faith law income. So you have the distribution of

(27:48):
the three main parameter repost what we're supposed to say. Okay,
the symbol of science. Ah. This these girls being comfortable
with their family, with the culture of the family, the

(28:10):
culture of the family, they they had it. They were
very uncomfortable at the same time by not reaching the
purpose of life.

Speaker 2 (28:26):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (28:27):
The one in adopted by the wealthy family who was
a passive designers. See up from the beginning, he was
the number one in the world in fact time. But
he noticed that he he was not satisfied because that

(28:48):
was the more glamour than once he expects because he
is like the other one committed who self reliance, yeah,
as an individual and also who aould call equity and
societ and she no getted to that. Therefore he joined

(29:13):
the sciences in DNS who was also committed to self reliance,
who create a new knowledge and to protect the health
of the people in the term one maya. She was
more interested of what it called equality in so science

(29:39):
it's self relious as well, and that is there. And
she was a lawyer, and that's what she wants to
become a prettident of a particular country right call in
the books Gaya which means the earth. And she indeed
become president. But but unfortunately she got to resign and

(30:04):
the and the reason is in the book that people
have to read it very interested and when she resigned,
he was as a person who said returned to the
church and established the foundation for training the on single
marks with a functional creativity. Nevertheless, what she was.

Speaker 5 (30:29):
Doing does and enjoying that new role, she was called
back to be a president because her program was working
well in the country.

Speaker 4 (30:40):
But this time he said, no, I don't want to
be there anymore because I know who I am. I
just want to be accepted before, but now I want
my concept to be accepted to improving the society, not
just me. So he continues, ah, what's that in this

(31:06):
thing of your mother? But he got to differently, and
then she joined the other two systems who was developing
entrepreneurial actions but using a anti central climate, textile dress

(31:26):
address that does things that is not danished by solar radiation.
That being ultra valolates, he doesn't develop wrinkles. And his
sermoly stable. He could use it in any temperature, any glands.
And they become the number one in the world in Maya.
What the one providing the technical people and the other

(31:49):
one was training these people in the other one was
doing marketing and become extreemly suspectable in the world, number
one in the world. This is real because yet in
this this example of girls, I have planner, I have
mentor bents and they are today indeed they are inventors

(32:10):
in scientists around the world.

Speaker 2 (32:15):
Wow, all right, h this is our mic drop moment.
If every listener could take one sentence or one thought
or one inspiration from polishing diamonds and live by that,
what would it? What would that be?

Speaker 4 (32:36):
Oh? Yeah, one is that number one? The one that
women talking that the important funny life is who look
at fears at the signal we're taking actions work there

(33:02):
and within the same context you look at survival as
the main object is of flies and don't get confused
with cyon. And the other part is that they what

(33:24):
makes us and then satisfies, which makes harmony. That's why
I put the cover of the books. You know that
a cha a feeling. The harmonious picture. By the way
I defined that is who aligned timely. The new purpose

(33:54):
flies with the professional purpose because you can't satisfy your
professional purpose and other purpose of life and the purpose
of life purpose a purpose is short to the purpose life.
That is very important. And the other thing is keep

(34:16):
in mind that just because you belong to the same
gender or the same ethnicity of whatever you want to
call it, it doesn't mean that we have to dwell
and in breeding our thoughts. That we relate to each

(34:44):
others not just because we are blood blood, king lads,
related people, but it's because we have a common universality
or progress of the individuals and the societs. This girl,

(35:08):
for instance, the figures they knew that they come from
the same manner who died, and in fact, when they
were at the level of college, they were in three
that the spy coming from the same mother and also
looking alike in some accects, the behavior was different and

(35:36):
the relationship between them because they never knew their mother
was basic on the common purpose of such reliance as
individuals as well as or contributing to the progress of society.
That's what made the plot right than you have the sisterhood,

(36:02):
genetic sisterhoods, so they That's one of the things that
people had to look at careful in this book, and
also making sure the creativity is indeed our men as

(36:22):
our means support for making progress in creativity doesn't mean
that you have to create molecules. No, no, not necessarily.
The activity is who always trying to look at the unknown?
I'm the unknown to any Are there any skills that

(36:43):
you you can perceive where relationship, whether in art where
I work, whether today life and of four as I
do mysell in science. And when you are creating, you
are general. My generosity to me is the main. It's

(37:08):
the main. Did you the man? But you cannel be
general unless you are created like this here the finally
that's the enterprise or helping the other gears and helping
the world because when you are there eighty you are
automatically generals because you know that what you could give

(37:30):
you can't create it any time you are setting any return.

Speaker 7 (37:36):
Absolutely all right, all right, doctor Ryo, Where can our
listeners pick up a copy of the book and check
out more information about the studies.

Speaker 2 (37:48):
I know you've written over ninety publications, so where can
they get all that information from the book.

Speaker 4 (37:56):
You can't get this book, namazone. Yes, it's already out.
I think they're gonna s candle. Yeah, that's all. And
and it's a level a good pride. And uh, what

(38:17):
I hope is because this story not only describes they
all the the process or the obstacles that the girl
had to overcome, but it's a very enjoyable full of
humor as I do up myself as a humorous person.

(38:42):
And also you could see that my creativity and functions
like for instance, I had to create ah a lyric
because the girls they like music. Myself had to write
write music which is there and I thought.

Speaker 2 (39:03):
That you like it.

Speaker 4 (39:05):
But also I create in a very interesting way for
Maya become a president, a very universal program. Perhaps any
candidate might like to have it very nice for everybody. Yeah,
and uh, my pleasure, my pleasure and writing these books

(39:35):
is that I'm able to access on my creativity because
I had to create the characters. When I go over it,
I say, for instance, how am I going to make
ah Iliad a good designer, I had to come out

(39:58):
with some real this how I'm going to make a
good candidate. I think about I wake up in the
middle and I after me was an exist So if
anybody wants to see this story, we is very much

(40:18):
up today. Especially there we had a way I I
don't called technology is not a technology. Yeah, I's a
new in portion of or understanding something that we already know.

(40:42):
What happen is history has shown that is point of intatience.
What is when of shift stem or the history of
That's when anybody under represents they had the opportunities, Like

(41:03):
I said, only a time or genesis of knowledge, that's
when anybody can be empowered because that's when we have
all the paint steel level. At that point you have
or everybody knows everybody everybody had to change or nobody
knows anything. So in THEI this is a good time

(41:27):
for women to become empowered again like the key was
in the past. Why is that? And in the eighteenth
century at the end of the eighteenth century when the
mechanical press was invented by Josy Braham and the man

(41:50):
power was under mine because they was a automatic mechanical
apparatus moving or there was no need to use many men.
That's when they women incursionate into society by the first
time that was a day in nineteenth center that right
after right at the because the industry revolution. And there

(42:11):
was another time incursion of course before the present there
and learned anti years. But today with AI, with the
functional creativity, this is the best time when women are
able to encourtunate creativity. Why is that because I always

(42:35):
require a templace, require some kind of a reference. You're
going to create a power, but you have to create
the party. You have to create the spot of the party,
the temper for the party. I doesn't create the tempera
So this if we're women can create. That is so

(42:56):
why in the Nobles the three women create something that
never had a sixty before and perhaps can be used
for AI some things. When they create anti change of
climate excile exile that doesn't wrinkle. I cannot create what

(43:20):
a human being, regardless what it's the menus with. So
people can't read this book and they can go into
my uh my website robo dot com, w w R
outburro dot and they can get this book and there
are all the books which also praying force. Many things

(43:44):
that I'm writing this book like a Fear and Collage,
areing for that. And also my new my Reacent book
is going to come out sometime in the next few
months for the scientific invention what it takes invents that's
also applicable. And again.

Speaker 2 (44:03):
All right, all right, listeners, Just in case you need
those links, I will have them in the description of
this episode and in the show notes, So all you
guys have to do is just click those links. Tonight,
doctor Raoul reminded us that creativity isn't magic, it's actually motion.
It's faith meeting function. Like the sisters in Polishing Diamonds,

(44:27):
we're all shaped by pressure but refined by purpose. He
taught us that adversity doesn't shrink our light, it actually
polishes that courage, that discipline and imagination can turn the
roughest light into brilliance. So Doctor Rial Raoul, thank you
for sharing your journey and reminding us that our minds

(44:49):
are the greatest laboratories we own. To everyone listening, get
your copy of Polishing Diamonds. Follow Doctor Raoul at roue
quero dot com. Let us words spark your own functional
creativity and as a reminder, subscribe to Vigilantes Radio Live,
rate the show and support our movement. You're not just

(45:10):
here for a story, You're witnessing science and soul at work.
Thank you so much, Thank you so much.

Speaker 4 (45:19):
I appreciate it.

Speaker 2 (45:21):
Thank you, thank you. Yes you will all right again, Yes, sir,
all right. It was a pleasure talking with you, doctor.
Thank you so much. Take care, peace to all.

Speaker 3 (45:41):
My name is Deanie and I am the host of
Vigilantes Radio Live. I think that we are beyond just
asking cool questions and getting cool responses. I think that
we are here as creatives to provide an example that

(46:02):
you can do things different outside of expectations, because some
of us simply were not born into the club. But
there is perhaps a door window or backgate that we
can leave a clue for you to get into. Life
is short, but there are plenty of moments to try

(46:25):
and get it right. Pursuing your dreams and learning from
mistakes may be tough, but regret it's tougher to book
your interview. Email US at V Radio at only onemediagroup
dot com. That's a V as in victorious or visit
only onemediagroup dot com. I'm counting on you, Heaven. We

(46:51):
all are counting on you to step into your purpose
and your passion. You are listening to Vigilantes Radio live
on iHeartRadio, providing you with an opportunity to dive deeper.

Speaker 1 (47:30):
You and now listening to vigil Lancy's Radio, the people's
choice for quality interviews, art, music and heart topics, hosted
by Demetrius Houdini Black Reynolds. All episodes of this podcast
are available for free download at www dot only one
Media group dot com
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