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The moment you arrive here, you’ve already crossed half the distance—because awareness is the first victory.
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One night I started writing my book, and for days and nights I couldn’t think about anything else. I fell in love with putting my thoughts on paper while still working and taking care of my family. I found the time to write because I used every second available. Journaling became a revelation. I discovered my passion, and most importantly, I discovered how to find my specialty. Break The Ice is my forte. 

Today, I decided to share it and help people like you unleash your forte. When I broke my own ice and launched my business, I was scared. I realized that many people around me wanted to do the same but couldn’t for many reasons. Breaking the ice and going on my own was a real challenge. Being an entrepreneur means a lot of different things, but mainly you have two big areas to work on: the technical skills related to your job, and yourself.

At first, I bought books to increase my industry know-how. I decided to strengthen my expertise starting from the technicalities. I improved over time, and as I distributed more products, I learned something new every day. However, when the business got shaky, anxiety overcame my ability to think straight. All of a sudden, I lost two major accounts and my revenue dropped. My wife was pregnant, and we had just moved into a bigger house. My apprehension grew, and I started feeling short of breath. I never had enough time for myself. I was eating junk food just to keep going from one place to another.

The First Page of My Book Starts Like This...

Self Growth

Self Growth 2026. March 30th, Miami Self Growth The reason I started journaling was a strong desire for self growth—a need to break the ice within myself. When that need, greater than anything I had ever felt, first appeared, all I had in my house was a pen and a notebook. That was enough. I went from working as an employee to becoming self-employed. I initially launched my business from my son’s bedroom, and later

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The Difference Between Brave and a Fool

The Difference Between Brave and a Fool 2026. March 24th, Miami It is not easy to believe in yourself. How hard should you push toward your goal? Where is the line between being brave and being a fool? How much can you risk?  But what if I told you these are not the real questions you should be asking yourself? What if these questions are not truly yours—what if they were created, formulated, and imposed

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Execution

Execution Execution does not begin with opening your first LLC or creating Facebook and Instagram pages. True execution starts from within. Inside each of us exists an unknown world—one deeply connected to our environment, our mindset, and the way we bring a business plan to life. For this reason, execution is born internally before it ever becomes material. Through our words, our state of mind, and our emotions, we take the very first step toward bringing

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Two Years After...

I decided I would no longer live life the way I had been—saying “yes, sir” to a system that had convinced me a $100K salary was success. It takes courage to question that narrative. It takes will to walk away from it. And it takes a deep, undeniable desire to replace it with something of your own. Let me explain what happened one day. I remember sitting in my bedroom next to my son, crying under the weight of a heavy realization: I was not fulfilling my dream, and I was afraid—afraid that I was letting my son down. Not long after that moment, everything began to change. I remember the day I rehearsed quitting my job and practiced my resignation letter. I stepped onto my own path, feeling like I was finally driving my own boat—one I did not yet fully know how to navigate.

The first year I went solo, as captain of my own life, was hard. It felt like no wind was filling my sails. My anxiety took hold, my breathing became shallow, and I turned to junk food. I was not doing well, and the stress threw me completely out of balance. Then, after a bad jump, I ended up in the ER at Mercy Hospital in Coconut Grove, Miami, where I learned I had three fractures in my foot and ankle. I remember my loving wife—pregnant with our daughter—coming to pick me up, visibly upset. She thought I became weaker in a time in life where we need each other to raise a family, instead I just became stronger. 

As I sat on my couch with a walking boot, I realized something: my desire was greater than my fear. It felt as if the system had run out of cards to play. It was as though everything I had learned—the rules, the expectations—had tried to stop me, to pull me back in. But something had shifted. Today, I know what it is, that my family—my son, my daughter, my wife—and the future I see for us is stronger than any belief that had ever been imposed on me: fixed salaries, fixed hours, “free” weekends, and two weeks of vacation per year. 

Nothing could stop me anymore—not my past experience, not my background, not any employer. Everything was now on my shoulders. This new life is unknown, and it is up to me to pave the way—to shape it the way I want it to be. Journaling is a big part of it, and I started doing it not as a hobby—it was a necessity. I began documenting my daily business life as if every word were a brick, building a bridge toward a peaceful future. Page after page, the habit became part of who I am. Today is March 16th, 2026. I now have two years of journals. As I continue toward my goal—and the one and only chapter of my book—I am sharing this journey to help others do the same: to break their own ice and follow their dreams.

Business has its downturns—this is how it feels, as captured in the draft of the book - not published yet.

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