This episode features an interview with Artist Stan Piotroski, who shares how his meandering life path was no accident, but a step-by-step foundation to build the life of his dreams by following his intuition.
To access his breathtaking works and add them to your own collection, please visit the website of my guest today, artist Stan Piotroski, at www.stanpiotroski.com
Visit www.refractivecoaching.com or www.refractivepodcast.com for more resources on stepping into your most authentic life. Additional uplifting content can be found on the Refractive YouTube page: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6y-HQ1_9-xMnZyq7dhRl4A
For similarly-themed episodes, try these: Dr. Karen Barnard, The Courage to Change Careers or Surrender to Greatness
Transcript follows- please excuse any inaccuracies from the automatic transcription software.
***Please note: Transcripts are performed automatically by software; please pardon any inconsistencies.***
Speaker 1 00:00:40 Good afternoon, everybody. This is Johnny G with refractive. If you’re
familiar with refractive and its values, you know that right?
Speaker 3 00:00:48 One of my guiding principles and you hear it a lot in my content is aim
your light. I mentioned this phrase fairly often with clients as well, because it references the
immeasurable power of creation that I believe lies within each person. And that creative power is
available for use. Whenever we agree to live by our gut or live by our intuition. In fact, the reason
I chose the name refractive for my organization for my practice is the quality of each person
being like a prism to receive in energy and then transform bend an aim that energy, as we put it
back out to the world, I have a treat for you today. I’ll be introducing you to Stan PI Troskey. He is
an individual I’ve met some years ago here in DC. Stan has molded a life of love and joy for
himself by listening to that inner sense of knowing and by stepping in faith and courage that his
inner guidance was worth following he’s someone who indeed does aim his light.
Speaker 3 00:02:08 And he’s someone that I deeply respect from my perspective. Stan is
actively responsible for his place in the world, and he is responsible for the energy he puts out to
others. This is a big reason why I wanted to introduce him too. The refractive world here over
stand’s long professional life. He has risen entitled in responsibility, adding prestige through a
solid handful of sectors. He was an officer in the armed forces. He was a federal employee in
the executive branch. He was a psychotherapist with a private practice, and that’s just to name a
few phases of his career. But beneath this life story, a both officer and gentlemen, Stan says that
he always knew he would be a full time artist. And throughout his life, he carved out time space,
energy resources for that passion. So unlike many of us, and I really speak for myself who had
been drawn to a creative field, but have settled in the past for a more realistic or stable or classic
type of career.
Speaker 3 00:03:20 Stan told me that his earlier roles were not chosen at the expense of his
love of art. Rather, they were deliberately selected as a part of his life pat...