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Check Out Brandon Henshaw’s Story

Today we’d like to introduce you to Brandon Henshaw.

Brandon Henshaw

Hi Brandon, thanks for joining us today. We’d love for you to start by introducing yourself.
Honestly, I am not sure where to start. I moved to Texas in 2003 with my mom, dad and three sisters. My family moved to Texas for a better life. I am originally from New Bern, North Carolina and we lived a very hard life there. Growing up in poverty was very hard. And me being the oldest and my mom’s only son, I always felt it was it was harder because I needed to set the best example for my little sisters. There were times when we didn’t have lights, water and sometimes hardly food but my mom and dad always figured out a way. There were times holidays such as Christmas didn’t go as planned and waking up nothing under the tree etc. But even through all of that we stayed a strong family. My family was very big on family and I watched my family struggle while sticking together. My family was also very big on Church. My mother did the very best she could with the hand that life dealt her and I do and will always admire my mother for that. My father came into my life when I was around two years old. When he met my mother, she had 2 kids and he accepted us as his own and never looked back. I will always admire the man he is and what he has sacrificed for us and our family. No matter how different our blood is, he will always be my father. I feel like we’ve always made it through anything because of our Almighty god. I’ve never shared this in any interview but I feel it’s only right to be transparent and open about my life. After moving to Texas in 2003, we moved to Arlington. I attended Arlington High School my freshman year. I come from a basketball background so of course I played basketball for them. That year I also got my very first job because of my mom. She was a medical biller for a doctor office in Arlington and after school I would get off the bus at her job and I was allowed to file patient files in alphabetical order until my mom got off. In 2004 we moved to Mansfield where I then attended Mansfield Timberview High School. During that time I remember things getting hard and me and my family at some point having to move into a Budget Suites for a few weeks. That was a little rough but we made the best out of it as we did everything. With me and all of my sisters, it was never boring. My mom and dad use to smoke cigarettes and one day at basketball practice somebody mentioned my practice clothes smelling like smoke due to us living in the budget suites and it being so small. So after that I started to take me and my sister’s clothes and I would iron them then fold them and put them in the trunk of her car until the morning. Eventually things got better and we moved into a house in Mansfield. I played basketball for Timberview as well. Summer of 2005 my grandfather passed away so I moved back to North Carolina to live with my grandmother and help her. It was now my junior year in high school. I attended New Bern High School. Joining that high school I was introduced to the Debate Team. It was awesome and surprisingly I was decent at it and I liked it. I wasn’t sure if I liked to argue or if that was sign to for a new career path. That is the year I found music was my calling. Me and my friends I grew up with started rapping. That is when the name “Youngstar” happened. We didn’t have any money so we used the standard voice recording application on a dell desktop at that time. We also had that skinny microphone and you use to talk in. Nothing was professional about how we make songs. We would rap over known instrumentals and put them on myspace, as that year was the year I was introduced to myspace. Summer of 2006 I moved back to Texas with my mom and dad. I then attended Mansfield Summit High School, which is where I graduated from. Being already a year into music I started to look for other people who did music. I met a guy that went to my school that had a rap group called Dynasty and one of the rappers named Joey made their beats. As interested as I was I decided not to rap because they were very very advanced. One day I seen Joey creating beats and for some reason I watched. I honestly think it’s because I’ve always loved drums. It was always something about playing drums and hearing that snare being tapped on so crisp. I was so captivated by him creating actual sound that I wanted to try. He gave me the program on a disk and showed me the basics. I downloaded it on my mom’s computer the same night. Over time I would create and teach myself did things with the program. That program was Fruityloops also known as FL Studio, which is the very same now popular program I use today. I learned that program in and out. I learned it so well that even the guy Joey who initially thought me the program asks me for tips til this day. During this time I was working at a local Target. That was my second job. After sometime, I graduated high school with a 3.9 GPA. The summer after I graduated I started working at Walmart. During that time I was sending many many artist free beats hoping to gain success of my beats being rapped on. No one would rap on them. I guess they were that bad. Later I met B-Hamp. He was a known local rapper in Mansfield at the time. He have me a chance and was actually the first person to rap on my beats. Our very song we did together was an instant hit and I would have never imagined it would give me such a huge platform and open so many doors. That song would be “Do The Ricky Bobby.” It was like an overnight success. That is when I added the extra “r” and added beats then “Youngstarr Beatz” was born. I was currently walking to work at Walmart and in the back unloading trucks when this song would come on the radio. People would think I was lying when I would tell them I made that beat. It was all over the radio and even on 106 & park. Even Beyonce was doing the Ricky Bobby dance. After working for some time and nothing changing with my life I knew it was something wrong. Others around me started receiving deals and earning life changing money. A year later, come to find out I was being taken advantage of as that was my very first year so I knew nothing about music or the business. I also found out I was going to be a father that year. In 2010 my son was born. Even though at that time I hadn’t capitalized off of Ricky Bobby, it opened many doors for me to produce so many singles for local artist. 2008-2009 I was one of the many known producers creating and embracing the sound known as the “Dallas sound” for that dance era we were in. I actually received an award for Rising Star for best DFW music producer in 2015, in which I was being crowned for one of the many producers to create “Dallas Sound.” As for known local songs in 2008 and up, the list of songs I produced was very lengthly. Even though I had so many achievements I knew I had to do more to be able to take care of my son. Moving forward, in 2011, I was working night and day trying to land a huge placement with a major artist. One day I found out that 2 Chainz had was coming to Dallas for a show. I was told by a friend at the time that 2 Chains would be staying the Hilton Anatole. That night me and my longtime friend Roderick “Official” Watson sat in his car for many hours waiting for 2 Chainz to come off his tour bus in hopes of meeting him. After several hours he finally exited the bus and being so eager we ran up on him and his security went crazy. I let him know that we been waiting for hours and that I was a music producer and only wanted to give him a CD full of beats. USBs weren’t huge at that time so I burned a disc full of beats I felt he would like and I wrote my information on top of it. a few months later I received a call from 2 Chainz. I assumed it was fake and hung up on him. He called back and assured to me that it was him. He played me the beat I produced and asked was it available. I told him yes and he said he wanted it for his album. I went crazy. Another few months later he let me know he was coming to Dallas on Drake’s “Paradise Tour.” This time the meet up was different. The same bodyguards that were pushing me back were now welcoming me onto his tour bus. That night 2 Chainz played the song he did on my beat. I couldn’t believe it. And just when I thought it couldn’t get any better it did. His DJ “Dj Sudd” came from the front of the bus saying “did you tell him we got Nicki on it?” 2 Chainz replied ” I was gonna surprise him.” The cat was out the bag. I almost lost it. That was a life changing moment for me. I couldn’t believe constant going an d hard work I was putting in was finally paying off. As weeks go by 2 Chainz album “TRU Based On a Tru Story” dropped and that was the day I heard the official version of “I Luv Dem Strippers” by 2 Chainz ft Nicki Minaj produced by Youngstarr Beatz. A few later Def Jam flew me to Atlanta for the video shoot. That day I will always remember. I met Young Yeezy, TI, Tiny and many others. I was surrounded by superstars and treated as one as one that day.I was able to cameo in the video and solidify myself as a major music producer. On 9/1/2012 “I Luv Dem Strippers” debuted at 23 on Billboard Top 100 charts. Following that 2 Chainz album “Based On A Tru Story” was nominated for Best Rap Album at the 55th Grammy Awards. The album as named the 25th best Hip Hop album of 2012. In 2016, after 4 years of its release, the album had officially been certified Platinum by the RIAA. I was now a Grammy Nominated Music Producer that had received his first platinum plaque because of that record I produced. I hadn’t never been so motivated in my life. I felt I made it, although after the many accomplishments, I still hadn’t received that big financial breakthrough that you always hear about when someone makes it big. Later in 2013 that would bring another huge opportunity. I got in studio with a song writer from Roc Nation named J Angel. He was working on R. Kelly’s album at the time and we created a few records. Later R.Kelly did one of them and at the time R.Kelly was signed to Birdman Cash Money and somehow Birdman got a hold of it. That song later released on Birdman “Rich Gang” album featuring R.Kelly and Lil Wayne called “We Been On.” Universal flew me out to Miami for the video shoot where I finally got to meet all of them. It was incredible. Universal paid me $10,000 for that beat. Til this day that has been the most I’ve ever received for an advance for musical composition. Following that in late 2013, I received my first major movie placement from the movie “Ride Along” starring Kevin Hart and Ice Cube. There is a scene where Kevin Hart phone rings and his ringtone is “I Luv Dem Strippers.” Universal Pictures paid me $8,000 for the song playing 8 seconds in that movie. These years were so amazing. Later on I expressed shopping publishing deals with my management at the time but it was always an excuse why we shouldn’t even though he knew I was struggling financially. Later I many managers and execs reaching out trying to propose situations with huge pub deals but every deal was excluding my management so I would always turn down. Later I found out that manager was trying to screw me over and take away half of my publishing for “I Luv Dem Strippers” but it never happened. I fired him and got legal representation and got that situation handled. A year later in 2014, I met Snootie Wild’s manager at the time named Rex in Houston. He was also Yo Gotti’s road manager. We clicked instantly and Rex became my manager. He was a great manager. He put me in so many rooms with major artist such as Yo Gotti, Boosie, Rich Homie Quan, Young Scooter, Fetty Wap, Migos, Lil Wayne, etc. Getting in directly with Yo Gotti opened many doors as well. Gotti took a liking to me and I started producing on all of his projects from The Return, CM8, CM9. I was also able to go on tour with him and the whole CMG label. During that time I was able to produce and witness him sign huge CMG artist “Moneybagg Yo” and Blac Youngsta.” I produced a pretty known song by Yo Gotti named “81” that was on his CM9 album. Later on Yo Gotti’s manager passed away and his road manager which was my manager became his manager as well. Of course Gotti was such a huge artist which took a lot of the focus off of me and I started to become stagnate. Me and Rex parted ways professionally but remain good friends. I then struck a pub deal in 2015 with a new management team. That was my big break I was waiting for. I could finally stop worrying about bills and taking care of my family. Things started seeming great for me and my family. My little sister who had been attending Baylor University, just graduated as and Accountant, my father just started his semi truck trucking business and I started doing studio sessions in LA with huge song writers and taking meetings with major labels. In 2016, I found out I was having a daughter. I knew then I couldn’t stop and I had to go harder. Little did I know it would become harder. Now having kids and a very serious relationship, I was no longer able to chase placements and be out late in studio sessions in other states. It was very hard for me to find a balance. My priorities started to shift with music taking a back seat to my family and fatherly duties. In 2018 my grandmother who I moved with back in 2005 had passed away and that really hurt me. She was so close to my heart. But after that I started getting closer to my family and working on more local projects and local artist but nothing huge as I became discouraged due to dealing with many many new artist and not knowing who they really were outside of studio sessions. I was living off of my pub deal advances for many years. As the elderly say “time flies by” because its like I looked up and it was 2020 and Covid hit. When Covid hit me and family wasn’t prepared as I sure many others weren’t as well. In 2021, I had lost my other grandmother, my moms mother due to Covid. Music really took a backseat then. It was point in time I hadn’t even produced a record in months. That is when I realized music was a hobby at this point. I started thinking more of my family and started making money being a creator on TikTok and Instagram. It took off and me and my long time girlfriend started making money from social media. We then started a online boutique and sold workout clothing called “Glo 214.” Afterwards, we started a cooking show on YouTube called “LeCordon Bae.” It was about us cooking together in the kitchen along with expressing our love while talking about different relationship and married subjects. Fast forward, we are still happily together with huge plans of marriage sharing our lives with our beautiful children. We started online gaming on Twitch called BadNewsGaming last year and as we say “a couple that games together stays together.” I also found a new passion that I love. I have been Volunteering and it has been amazing. I currently Volunteer for a nonprofit organization for various recreational activities created for children with special needs. I am buddies for each child and I assist them with activities in various programs such as arts, music/music therapy, theatre, various sports, boot camp and dance. I also Volunteer for another nonprofit organization helping bring positive attitude and concern for others to those facing end of life challenges. I help brighten their day with regular visits, listen to their stories, read to them, assist them with life review, play games, watch sports, and assist them with activities. I am not sure what my calling is but I am loving the space I am in. As a faithful Christian, I have always loved helping people in any way possible and it gives me a warm heart knowing how much I am able to give others. I don’t what is in store for me but I know God is steering me in the right direction because he has a plan for me.

Can you talk to us a bit about the challenges and lessons you’ve learned along the way. Looking back would you say it’s been easy or smooth in retrospect?
Honestly, I am not sure where to start. I moved to Texas in 2003 with my mom, dad and three sisters. My family moved to Texas for a better life. I am originally from New Bern, North Carolina and we lived a very hard life there. Growing up in poverty was very hard. And me being the oldest and my mom’s only son, I always felt it was it was harder because I needed to set the best example for my little sisters. There were times when we didn’t have lights, water and sometimes hardly food but my mom and dad always figured out a way. There were times holidays such as Christmas didn’t go as planned and waking up nothing under the tree etc. But even through all of that we stayed a strong family. My family was very big on family and I watched my family struggle while sticking together. My family was also very big on Church. My mother did the very best she could with the hand that life dealt her and I do and will always admire my mother for that. My father came into my life when I was around two years old. When he met my mother, she had 2 kids and he accepted us as his own and never looked back. I will always admire the man he is and what he has sacrificed for us and our family. No matter how different our blood is, he will always be my father. I feel like we’ve always made it through anything because of our Almighty god. I’ve never shared this in any interview but I feel it’s only right to be transparent and open about my life. After moving to Texas in 2003, we moved to Arlington. I attended Arlington High School my freshman year. I come from a basketball background so of course I played basketball for them. That year I also got my very first job because of my mom. She was a medical biller for a doctor office in Arlington and after school I would get off the bus at her job and I was allowed to file patient files in alphabetical order until my mom got off. In 2004 we moved to Mansfield where I then attended Mansfield Timberview High School. During that time I remember things getting hard and me and my family at some point having to move into a Budget Suites for a few weeks. That was a little rough but we made the best out of it as we did everything. With me and all of my sisters, it was never boring. My mom and dad use to smoke cigarettes and one day at basketball practice somebody mentioned my practice clothes smelling like smoke due to us living in the budget suites and it being so small. So after that I started to take me and my sister’s clothes and I would iron them then fold them and put them in the trunk of her car until the morning. Eventually things got better and we moved into a house in Mansfield. I played basketball for Timberview as well. Summer of 2005 my grandfather passed away so I moved back to North Carolina to live with my grandmother and help her. It was now my junior year in high school. I attended New Bern High School. Joining that high school I was introduced to the Debate Team. It was awesome and surprisingly I was decent at it and I liked it. I wasn’t sure if I liked to argue or if that was sign to for a new career path. That is the year I found music was my calling. Me and my friends I grew up with started rapping. That is when the name “Youngstar” happened. We didn’t have any money so we used the standard voice recording application on a dell desktop at that time. We also had that skinny microphone and you use to talk in. Nothing was professional about how we make songs. We would rap over known instrumentals and put them on myspace, as that year was the year I was introduced to myspace. Summer of 2006 I moved back to Texas with my mom and dad. I then attended Mansfield Summit High School, which is where I graduated from. Being already a year into music I started to look for other people who did music. I met a guy that went to my school that had a rap group called Dynasty and one of the rappers named Joey made their beats. As interested as I was I decided not to rap because they were very very advanced. One day I seen Joey creating beats and for some reason I watched. I honestly think it’s because I’ve always loved drums. It was always something about playing drums and hearing that snare being tapped on so crisp. I was so captivated by him creating actual sound that I wanted to try. He gave me the program on a disk and showed me the basics. I downloaded it on my mom’s computer the same night. Over time I would create and teach myself did things with the program. That program was Fruityloops also known as FL Studio, which is the very same now popular program I use today. I learned that program in and out. I learned it so well that even the guy Joey who initially thought me the program asks me for tips til this day. During this time I was working at a local Target. That was my second job. After sometime, I graduated high school with a 3.9 GPA. The summer after I graduated I started working at Walmart. During that time I was sending many many artist free beats hoping to gain success of my beats being rapped on. No one would rap on them. I guess they were that bad. Later I met B-Hamp. He was a known local rapper in Mansfield at the time. He have me a chance and was actually the first person to rap on my beats. Our very song we did together was an instant hit and I would have never imagined it would give me such a huge platform and open so many doors. That song would be “Do The Ricky Bobby.” It was like an overnight success. That is when I added the extra “r” and added beats then “Youngstarr Beatz” was born. I was currently walking to work at Walmart and in the back unloading trucks when this song would come on the radio. People would think I was lying when I would tell them I made that beat. It was all over the radio and even on 106 & park. Even Beyonce was doing the Ricky Bobby dance. After working for some time and nothing changing with my life I knew it was something wrong. Others around me started receiving deals and earning life changing money. A year later, come to find out I was being taken advantage of as that was my very first year so I knew nothing about music or the business. I also found out I was going to be a father that year. In 2010 my son was born. Even though at that time I hadn’t capitalized off of Ricky Bobby, it opened many doors for me to produce so many singles for local artist. 2008-2009 I was one of the many known producers creating and embracing the sound known as the “Dallas sound” for that dance era we were in. I actually received an award for Rising Star for best DFW music producer in 2015, in which I was being crowned for one of the many producers to create “Dallas Sound.” As for known local songs in 2008 and up, the list of songs I produced was very lengthly. Even though I had so many achievements I knew I had to do more to be able to take care of my son. Moving forward, in 2011, I was working night and day trying to land a huge placement with a major artist. One day I found out that 2 Chainz had was coming to Dallas for a show. I was told by a friend at the time that 2 Chains would be staying the Hilton Anatole. That night me and my longtime friend Roderick “Official” Watson sat in his car for many hours waiting for 2 Chainz to come off his tour bus in hopes of meeting him. After several hours he finally exited the bus and being so eager we ran up on him and his security went crazy. I let him know that we been waiting for hours and that I was a music producer and only wanted to give him a CD full of beats. USBs weren’t huge at that time so I burned a disc full of beats I felt he would like and I wrote my information on top of it. a few months later I received a call from 2 Chainz. I assumed it was fake and hung up on him. He called back and assured to me that it was him. He played me the beat I produced and asked was it available. I told him yes and he said he wanted it for his album. I went crazy. Another few months later he let me know he was coming to Dallas on Drake’s “Paradise Tour.” This time the meet up was different. The same bodyguards that were pushing me back were now welcoming me onto his tour bus. That night 2 Chainz played the song he did on my beat. I couldn’t believe it. And just when I thought it couldn’t get any better it did. His DJ “Dj Sudd” came from the front of the bus saying “did you tell him we got Nicki on it?” 2 Chainz replied ” I was gonna surprise him.” The cat was out the bag. I almost lost it. That was a life changing moment for me. I couldn’t believe constant going an d hard work I was putting in was finally paying off. As weeks go by 2 Chainz album “TRU Based On a Tru Story” dropped and that was the day I heard the official version of “I Luv Dem Strippers” by 2 Chainz ft Nicki Minaj produced by Youngstarr Beatz. A few later Def Jam flew me to Atlanta for the video shoot. That day I will always remember. I met Young Yeezy, TI, Tiny and many others. I was surrounded by superstars and treated as one as one that day.I was able to cameo in the video and solidify myself as a major music producer. On 9/1/2012 “I Luv Dem Strippers” debuted at 23 on Billboard Top 100 charts. Following that 2 Chainz album “Based On A Tru Story” was nominated for Best Rap Album at the 55th Grammy Awards. The album as named the 25th best Hip Hop album of 2012. In 2016, after 4 years of its release, the album had officially been certified Platinum by the RIAA. I was now a Grammy Nominated Music Producer that had received his first platinum plaque because of that record I produced. I hadn’t never been so motivated in my life. I felt I made it, although after the many accomplishments, I still hadn’t received that big financial breakthrough that you always hear about when someone makes it big. Later in 2013 that would bring another huge opportunity. I got in studio with a song writer from Roc Nation named J Angel. He was working on R. Kelly’s album at the time and we created a few records. Later R.Kelly did one of them and at the time R.Kelly was signed to Birdman Cash Money and somehow Birdman got a hold of it. That song later released on Birdman “Rich Gang” album featuring R.Kelly and Lil Wayne called “We Been On.” Universal flew me out to Miami for the video shoot where I finally got to meet all of them. It was incredible. Universal paid me $10,000 for that beat. Til this day that has been the most I’ve ever received for an advance for musical composition. Following that in late 2013, I received my first major movie placement from the movie “Ride Along” starring Kevin Hart and Ice Cube. There is a scene where Kevin Hart phone rings and his ringtone is “I Luv Dem Strippers.” Universal Pictures paid me $8,000 for the song playing 8 seconds in that movie. These years were so amazing. Later on I expressed shopping publishing deals with my management at the time but it was always an excuse why we shouldn’t even though he knew I was struggling financially. Later I many managers and execs reaching out trying to propose situations with huge pub deals but every deal was excluding my management so I would always turn down. Later I found out that manager was trying to screw me over and take away half of my publishing for “I Luv Dem Strippers” but it never happened. I fired him and got legal representation and got that situation handled. A year later in 2014, I met Snootie Wild’s manager at the time named Rex in Houston. He was also Yo Gotti’s road manager. We clicked instantly and Rex became my manager. He was a great manager. He put me in so many rooms with major artist such as Yo Gotti, Boosie, Rich Homie Quan, Young Scooter, Fetty Wap, Migos, Lil Wayne, etc. Getting in directly with Yo Gotti opened many doors as well. Gotti took a liking to me and I started producing on all of his projects from The Return, CM8, CM9. I was also able to go on tour with him and the whole CMG label. During that time I was able to produce and witness him sign huge CMG artist “Moneybagg Yo” and Blac Youngsta.” I produced a pretty known song by Yo Gotti named “81” that was on his CM9 album. Later on Yo Gotti’s manager passed away and his road manager which was my manager became his manager as well. Of course Gotti was such a huge artist which took a lot of the focus off of me and I started to become stagnate. Me and Rex parted ways professionally but remain good friends. I then struck a pub deal in 2015 with a new management team. That was my big break I was waiting for. I could finally stop worrying about bills and taking care of my family. Things started seeming great for me and my family. My little sister who had been attending Baylor University, just graduated as and Accountant, my father just started his semi truck trucking business and I started doing studio sessions in LA with huge song writers and taking meetings with major labels. In 2016, I found out I was having a daughter. I knew then I couldn’t stop and I had to go harder. Little did I know it would become harder. Now having kids and a very serious relationship, I was no longer able to chase placements and be out late in studio sessions in other states. It was very hard for me to find a balance. My priorities started to shift with music taking a back seat to my family and fatherly duties. In 2018 my grandmother who I moved with back in 2005 had passed away and that really hurt me. She was so close to my heart. But after that I started getting closer to my family and working on more local projects and local artist but nothing huge as I became discouraged due to dealing with many many new artist and not knowing who they really were outside of studio sessions. I was living off of my pub deal advances for many years. As the elderly say “time flies by” because its like I looked up and it was 2020 and Covid hit. When Covid hit me and family wasn’t prepared as I sure many others weren’t as well. In 2021, I had lost my other grandmother, my moms mother due to Covid. Music really took a backseat then. It was point in time I hadn’t even produced a record in months. That is when I realized music was a hobby at this point. I started thinking more of my family and started making money being a creator on TikTok and Instagram. It took off and me and my long time girlfriend started making money from social media. We then started a online boutique and sold workout clothing called “Glo 214.” Afterwards, we started a cooking show on YouTube called “LeCordon Bae.” It was about us cooking together in the kitchen along with expressing our love while talking about different relationship and married subjects. Fast forward, we are still happily together with huge plans of marriage sharing our lives with our beautiful children. We started online gaming on Twitch called BadNewsGaming last year and as we say “a couple that games together stays together.” I also found a new passion that I love. I have been Volunteering and it has been amazing. I currently Volunteer for a nonprofit organization for various recreational activities created for children with special needs. I am buddies for each child and I assist them with activities in various programs such as arts, music/music therapy, theatre, various sports, boot camp and dance. I also Volunteer for another nonprofit organization helping bring positive attitude and concern for others to those facing end of life challenges. I help brighten their day with regular visits, listen to their stories, read to them, assist them with life review, play games, watch sports, and assist them with activities. I am not sure what my calling is but I am loving the space I am in. As a faithful Christian, I have always loved helping people in any way possible and it gives me a warm heart knowing how much I am able to give others. I don’t what is in store for me but I know God is steering me in the right direction because he has a plan for me.

Can you tell our readers more about what you do and what you think sets you apart from others?
Honestly I am most proud of the way that I give back to others. The amount of warmth you receive and the amount of love you receive is amazing. I wake up everyday filled with gratitude. I love the way how giving back teaches my children the importance of helping others. What sets me apart from others is I am not afraid to follow Gods plan. I walk in his steps even if I don’t where it leads. I trust in him to guide me correctly. I say that to say I may not always know what I am going to do next but I’m willing to try new things even if that means putting something that I love for something much more meaningful.

If you had to, what characteristic of yours would you give the most credit to?
Being a person that stands firmly on core values such as being humble, caring for others and embracing growth, those I feel are most important, not just in success but in life period.

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