Rena, the accidental field engineer

Flashback: Imagine being in the middle of the Wild West, nothing for miles except for tumble weed, barren land, and endless possibilities of black gold.

Wild West

My life used to be out in the oil fields as a drilling engineer. Think Mark Wahlberg in Deep Water Horizon and that was me, albeit one of the few females out in the field. Very different experience for what I signed up for when I was in college. Here, I thought I’d be one of the boring, conventional engineers in office, drinking coffee from my Dad’s vintage “Engineers know all the angles” mug, wearing a cute outfit.

Dad’s mug from his first engineering job in                the 70s that I shamelessly stole

Instead, what I got was a wild ride, an experience to be fearless. To live and do. Something I didn’t know I’d yearn for. I spent years living on glorified trailers in the middle of nowhere California, drifting on offshore platforms, and coming home to chemicals galore in the refinery. Gone was cute clothing, swapped for unappealing safety coveralls and steel toe boots. Granted, I did try to accessorize with a rope belt.

Styling in my jumpsuit

For those years, I learned to listen, and listen well. And speak and be heard. I can’t say it was smooth sailing being one of the few females in a male dominated field (literally) but it grew my confidence. I emerged from my shy shell to be a problem solving, doer, thinker, and most importantly dreamer. I’m forever grateful to my first love, engineering.

Hello world!

Hello — Welcome to HelloRena!

I’m Rena, a millennial engineer turned consultant, navigating life energy one step at a time.

I’m a petroleum engineer originally from Houston who lives and breathes energy. Not just fossil fuel energy, but renewable energy, kinetic energy, magnetic energy, and most importantly, positive energy.

I like to live myself thinking about the energies around. I’ve been fascinated by this concept since I’ve been a kid. When you move, you use kinetic energy. When you stand still, you use potential energy. As a kid, it all seemed so simple at first. As an adult, it’s mind-blowing now.

Now I equate energies a little bit differently. Though still science governed, I’m exploring energies with a more creative approach. Things that I wonder: when I stand still, using potential energy, am I living my full potential?

I’ve been toying with the idea of living to my full potential. Some days feel like 100% while others are a lowly 5%. How can I hold myself accountable to be who/where/how I want to be? This blog will be a step for me to get to my 100%. Follow me try, fail, and try again.

With warmth,
Rena