@taleemulquran8:

Hafiz Nasir Awan✒️📚🇬🇧🇺🇸
Hafiz Nasir Awan✒️📚🇬🇧🇺🇸
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Wednesday 06 May 2026 11:47:42 GMT
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nazakat_kashmiri7
Hafiz nazakat 🇦🇺 :
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2026-05-19 05:56:35
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One of my teachers in art school told me that I would never make money with my creativity, and laughed. I studied graphic design and became a creative director at 25, but I soon realized my work wasn’t creative anymore. Something had to change. At 27, I took a leap of faith—quit my job, left my boyfriend, moved overseas, and fully committed to lettering. I invested all my savings in a lettering master’s program. That was a tipping point in my career and life. At 28, I moved from South America to Berlin with $3,000, no connections, and no idea how to speak the language. I was determined and terrified. The first year wasn’t easy—my studio was robbed, they took my hardware and my work files, but I kept going. I built a thriving creative business as a female immigrant. By 35, I wrote my first book, gave a TED Talk to 10,000 people, and gave birth to my first son. At 36, I launched The Lettering Seminar—the program I wish I had when I started out. It had 7 students in the first edition. Today, it’s the #1 lettering program in the world with hundreds of students enrolling each year. At 38, I was asked or the first time to mentor female illustrators in an industry where we’re often the minority. At 41, I survived a life-threatening car accident—a moment that reminded me how fragile life is and how important it is to pursue what makes you happy. Today, at 43, I know every experience—good and bad—gave me the ability to guide creatives with understanding and empathy. Success is not about getting the right cards. It’s about doing the best with the cards you have. If you ever felt you don’t have what it takes, believe me—you do.
One of my teachers in art school told me that I would never make money with my creativity, and laughed. I studied graphic design and became a creative director at 25, but I soon realized my work wasn’t creative anymore. Something had to change. At 27, I took a leap of faith—quit my job, left my boyfriend, moved overseas, and fully committed to lettering. I invested all my savings in a lettering master’s program. That was a tipping point in my career and life. At 28, I moved from South America to Berlin with $3,000, no connections, and no idea how to speak the language. I was determined and terrified. The first year wasn’t easy—my studio was robbed, they took my hardware and my work files, but I kept going. I built a thriving creative business as a female immigrant. By 35, I wrote my first book, gave a TED Talk to 10,000 people, and gave birth to my first son. At 36, I launched The Lettering Seminar—the program I wish I had when I started out. It had 7 students in the first edition. Today, it’s the #1 lettering program in the world with hundreds of students enrolling each year. At 38, I was asked or the first time to mentor female illustrators in an industry where we’re often the minority. At 41, I survived a life-threatening car accident—a moment that reminded me how fragile life is and how important it is to pursue what makes you happy. Today, at 43, I know every experience—good and bad—gave me the ability to guide creatives with understanding and empathy. Success is not about getting the right cards. It’s about doing the best with the cards you have. If you ever felt you don’t have what it takes, believe me—you do.

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