Where do you live?
I live in Nicosia with my parents.

What did you have for breakfast?
Coffee, egg and a slice of bread with cheese.

Describe your perfect day.
To wake up healthy. To workout at the gym and then meetings to chat with people who maybe need this.

Best book ever read?
I don’t have a specific book. In general, I like self-improvement books, which have something to give.

Best childhood memory?
Family gatherings in the village.

What is always in your fridge?
Juice, tomatoes, fruit.

What music are you listening to in the car at the moment?
Electronic dance music (EDM).

What’s your spirit animal?
The dog – loyal.

What are you most proud of?
That I have managed to overcome a traumatic experience I had in 2010. It was a matter of life and death.

What movie scene has really stayed with you?
I usually watch true stories and I remember in a more general way how each hero handles the situations in his life.

If you could pick anyone at all (alive or dead) to go out for the evening with, who would it be?
My grandfather, who is no longer alive and had a soft spot for me. I have so many achievements to share with him.

If you could time travel when/where would you go?
Nowhere. I regret nothing. I live the present and try to take every opportunity to improve myself.

What is your greatest fear?
The death of a person dear to me.

What would you say to your 18-year-old self?
I am so proud of you. You had so much strength in you after all.

Name the one thing that would stop you dating someone.
If I saw defeatism and toxic behaviours.

If the world is ending in 24 hours, what would you do?
Take a walk in nature.

Renos, an architect by profession, spends his time in workouts, rehabilitation and promoting his book San Efialtis (Like a Nightmare), a true story about recovering from an accident that left him in a coma with slim chances of ever walking again – if he pulled through – and the path to rebuilding himself, thus defying the medical prognosis.