The Path I Chose: The Hidden Truth About Passion and Success

It’s my 39th birthday, and Mother’s Day is the same weekend. I’m staring at my brand new horse Beau, wiping tears from my eyes, hardly able to comprehend how my life has become so incredibly blessed.
Beau is a beautiful, majestic bay fox trotter with the softest, kindest eyes you will ever see. His mane is thick and black and has grown all the way to his shoulder. His full black tail touches the ground. I decide the first thing I will do to initiate my own horse will be to give him a bath and brush all of the dreadlocks out of his mane and tail.
Beau has been passed from one owner to the next—unwanted, neglected, unseen. No one has recognized his value or potential. But I do. His previous owner was an older woman who fell off of Beau and died. Her husband left him alone in his anger and grief, and Beau nearly starved.
Finally, the husband called a vet to euthanize Beau. But when the vet saw this weak, hungry horse, he chose to find him a new owner rather than put him down. He was sent to my mother’s friend, who often rescued unwanted horses. That is how my mom got him.
My mom rode him for a few months and really enjoyed him. But then it happened…
They were on a trail ride with two other horses. The horse riding in front of my mom and Beau had some trail boots on and wasn't quite used to them. The horse tripped and fell to the ground, which scared Beau to his core. He ducked, spun the opposite direction, and took off, leaving my mom on the dusty, rocky trail, bruised and sore.
She never rode Beau again. He languished in his paddock again, forgotten and neglected. But at least he was fed.
An Unexpected Love Story
About a month before my 39th birthday, my mom had to go to Canada for a month to take care of my aunt, who had a health issue, and she asked me to take care of Beau for her. I was excited for the opportunity because I grew up with horses and missed being around them.
Within two days, I somehow magically fell in love with Beau. I can't explain it. But it felt like when you first fall in love and all you can do is think about the person nonstop. I took a million pictures of him and looked through them every day. I would stand outside his paddock and just stare at him. I couldn't wait to go to sleep so I could wake up in the morning and stare at him again. I was utterly smitten and wanted nothing more than to ride him.
When my mom got back from Canada, I told her that I fell in love with her horse and asked if she would ever ride him. That’s when she lit up and gave me Beau. She was thrilled to get rid of him so she could be free to buy a new horse.
I was shocked. I had been painting horses for years with John and selling them in our Scottsdale gallery, but now I actually had in the flesh what I had been painting.
Owning a horse again after all of these years brought me full circle back to who I am at the core. As a child, I lived for movies like Black Beauty and Black Stallion. I rode horses all throughout my childhood and could not imagine a life without them. But once I became a teenager and then grew up, got married, and had kids, that part of me went to sleep. Having a horse again awakened a sense of wild adventure in me. I felt like myself. I felt complete.
Beau's Transformation

This passion grew and grew and became a big part of my life. Endless trail rides with my girls became a way of life. We went horse camping and trailered out to Arizona canyons with lakes and streams to cross. We went swimming with our horses and rode along mountain trails with incredible views. Right across the street from our house was a sandy wash that never ended. We rode to get breakfast or lunch and tied up our horses at the picnic benches while we ate. It was a deep and powerful bonding time my three daughters I will never forget.
Beau taught me to be fearless. He was afraid of everything—white plastic bags, hats, tumbleweeds blowing toward him, Saguaro cactus, balloons tied to mailboxes, and even the spirit realm that taunted him in the wind. He spooked at least 10 times every time I rode him. He took off on me more times than I could count. He didn't buck or rear or bite, but bolting was his main expression of fear. I learned to quiet my thoughts, ride with confidence, and project golden fields of alfalfa to him to keep him calm.
After many years, he became confident too. By the end of his life, he was nearly a perfect horse in every way. I would even dare say he was “bomb proof.” In the 10 years I had Beau, I never once fell off of him. He prepared me for Solomon, the horse I own now.
Perspectives on Passion

Besides horses, I have many passions: writing, creating art, teaching, traveling, public speaking, and making anything with my hands. I am completely convinced that if I didn't follow my passion for art, I would not get to experience all of these other passions on a regular basis.
I was listening to a podcast on YouTube by Alex Hormozi recently titled, “Why ‘Following Your Dreams’ is Keeping You Poor.” I have learned a ton from Alex, so I wanted to hear his perspective.
He says, “My dad told me that if I follow my passion, then I would spend all of my time in a bar on a ski slope.”
He used this example in his podcast: “If you want to paint, great! Put your passion on a shelf and build a business, and you will have all the time you want for painting.”
He contends that our passions are overrated and we should forget them, but that if we learn how to get really good at something and monetize it, then we will become passionate about that thing.
The Choice That Changed Everything

Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love and Big Magic, says that in the pursuit of success, curiosity beats passion every time. She thinks passion is overrated as well and believes that curiosity is what drives creativity into a place of excellence and, ultimately, success.
I completely disagree with both of these very successful entrepreneurs. I know—that’s crazy! Alex Hormozi is far more financially successful than I am. How could I possible disagree? If he says following your passion will make you broke, he’s probably right…
Except that he is not! He’s not right. He might be right about everything else. But on this topic, he is completely wrong. Following your passion will give you the most fulfilling and rewarding life, and you most definitely will not be poor. You will be rich in every way imaginable.
Where Alex and Elizabeth miss the point is on what defines passion. Hanging out in a bar on a ski slope is not passion. Passion is where desire and purpose meet. Purpose is everything. Desire without purpose is just desire. I desire eating pizza and drinking a beautifully crafted Hefeweizen, but it is not my purpose.
My purpose is to help people know their value and worth. My purpose is to help people find their purpose and destiny. Art, horses, travel, speaking, teaching, and making things are all my passions wrapped around my purpose. If we walk in our destiny, then all things that pertain to our destiny come to us. My Beau found me because I pursued my passion and was walking in my destiny.
My life became filled with my passions because I defied what others were telling me—”You can't be an artist, you will be broke. Get a real career, like teaching or graphic design. You have to be responsible and be able to pay your bills.”
If I didn’t defy the notion of “following my passions will make me poor,” if I listened to my dad and just married a doctor or a lawyer to take care of me, I never would have pursued my passion for art, found my destiny, lived out my purpose, and had all of the things I am passionate about coalesce into one big, beautiful life I am blessed to live out.
Passion and Purpose
When we follow our passions, we find our purpose. Our passions are signposts and indicators for our purpose. When we follow our passions, we have the guts and perseverance to remain curious. When we follow our passions, we have the steam and stamina to get really good at something, which puts us in a position to monetize it.
The feeling of passion is unexplainable. It feels like falling in love. It is all-consuming. It dominates everything we think about and how we make our decisions. Passion makes us obsessive. If you are pursuing your passion, people around you will tell you that you are wasting your time, or that you don't have work-life balance, or that you are probably going to burn out. They criticize because they haven't pursued their passion and are wrapped up in a life that is missing purpose—and a life without purpose is the true cause of burnout.
Honestly, I’m not even sure Elizabeth and Alex are actually speaking from their own experience. As far as I can tell, Alex pursued his passion. He was passionate about working out and building muscle, which led to owning a gym. Then, wanting other gym owners to be successful, he created Gym Launch, and the rest is history. He didn't even follow his own advice. Because Alex pursued his passion, he came to understand his purpose, which opened up new passions for business and helping people. Now he still works out, builds muscle, and builds up other people who are building businesses.
Following your passion will not make you poor, but will make you rich in every way you can imagine—rich in your relationships, rich in purpose and fulfillment, rich in adventure, and and rich in trusting God for all that you need.
Following your passion is the key to a life worth living.
How do you think passion, purpose, and success relate to each other?
What a lovely story Ellie! ( and photo’s)
I think God give us a passion and if we find a purpose and work hard we will have success!
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Elli Milan Art replied:
Yes. Totally.
so very interesting reading once again one of your so many stories, your life is such a journey and filled with great excitement’s, I`ve been following Milan art for quite a while now till 5 months ago I decided now or never I`m starting the art course and have been enjoying the challenge so much.
my life feels like it has purpose, because after just attending to others all the time I`ve decided at 57 yrs old I’m going to follow my dreams.
I’m still far off, but are learning so much and are exited for what’s still lying ahead.
bless you all
Sheila
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Elli Milan Art replied:
That’s awesome Sheila! So proud of you to take that courageous step!!!
I am so excited to read this because the Lord is giving me a leap of faith moment, I’ve kind of been following you guys (and I’m on the app the Milan art app) for a while now. But I had a lot of passions that I was pursuing with the Lord that were in ministry. And I was feeling the too many rocks in my jar thing. So now at the end of this year, I’m leaving the food pantry that I’ve been working out for 12 years to take those days that I was there and change them into studio time. It’s a total leap of faith. But then I will only have two days I’m working somewhere else and then I will have to pick up some delivery jobs to make meat, but I think that this will really propel my art to the place it needs to be. I’ve been in transition without the time to fully explore the transition and so I feel like I’ve been stuck in transition for the past year and a half and I will be going into actually activating that transition and seeing it to completion this next year, because I’m shifting from just doing acrylic pours to actually painting. Picking up tips and tricks from you guys and I just wanna thank you for how much you’ve inspired me and encouraged me to continue. I’ve loved all your podcasts and your workshops that I can partake in and now the ones that you guys do on Wednesdays around three I’ll be able to actually jump on a live next year so I’m so excited for that. Eventually, I want to get enough money to do the mastery program and maybe I’ll do the beginners course before that we’ll see how it all works out, but I’m believing it will and I’m believing that my art will make a difference in people’s lives and transforming their homes into a place full of the testimonies of God in their life. Thanks for being you and doing what you do.
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Elli Milan Art replied:
That all sounds very exciting!! 😊
Dear Ellie, that story about Beau truly moved me, I actually had tears in my eyes. It touched something deep inside me, the way you spoke about passion and connection. I could almost see Beau’s movements and feel the joy he brought. But it also broke my heart to think of such a beautiful creature once being so helpless, neglected, and unwanted. People often forget what real commitment means.
I’ve been wanting a dog for so long, but because I travel and commute sometimes, I can’t bring myself to get one yet. The thought of leaving a soul alone in the house just feels wrong to me so I deeply understood what you said about care, love, and responsibility.
I’ve been listening to you a lot lately! I do love the structure and lessons in your courses, but honestly, it’s you that keeps me coming back. Your voice has this calming, grounding effect like you’re holding my hand and quietly saying, “It’s okay.”
I don’t know if this sounds mystical, but if there’s such a thing as being an old soul, I truly believe you are one. There’s a depth and wisdom in you that feels timeless.
And one of the things that has stayed with me most was when you spoke about generosity in art in one of the podcasts.. You don’t just talk about generosity you live it. Even in your free content, you give so much of yourself. It’s all so genuine and full of heart that I honestly feel people could learn a great deal just from your YouTube and podcasts alone.
Thank you for being you, Ellie. For sharing your heart so openly, and for reminding me that passion, kindness, and generosity can truly change lives.
With love,
Sara
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Elli Milan Art replied:
Wow! Thank you sara!! So warm and generous and kind of you. I feel so honored. Thank you!! You are doing the right thing about a dog. So selfless. Very soon you will be able to get one and won’t have to travel for work so much. I’m sure you will have an incredible connection. Stay awesome!!!
And what if life deals out such blows that you lose your hope and passion? How do you get it back? For you, a horse showed up, at just the right time. I would say that’s God at work, a gift from Him. I worship the same God; His name is Jesus. Yet no such gift has shown up, instead: more resistance and loss. Even though I tell Him “I give up. I am done trying”, the next day I start looking for a way to still make my dream happen despite being so tired and not knowing the way through to find a solution to the problem. It’s complicated. It’s not easy to hold on to what you call passion when you need ‘a horse’ but none are forthcoming. I hang on to this: Isiah 40:31 Yet those that wait for the Lord will gain new strength; They will mount up with wings like eagles, they will run and not get tired, they will walk and not become weary. Sometimes that’s all a person can do. Or should.
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Elli Milan Art replied:
I get it. A lot of discouragement. Hope deferred makes a heart sick. Maybe the answer is to not expect or wait for a “horse”. When Beau came to me I was already deep into what I was passionate about. I painted constantly and created all the time. I made things with my hands. I made all the gifts that I gave people. I poured myself into what I had passion for. Lean into your passions. Create, paint, build, enjoy what you have and find anything, a beautiful sunrise, good weather, a nice friend to be grateful for it. More will come. Hang in there!
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