The Meehan Mission Podcast

EP 64: Greg Wyatt on Faith, Autism, and Finding Purpose Through Pain

MeehanMD Season 1 Episode 64

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0:00 | 57:19

How can faith help us keep moving forward when tragedy changes the shape of our lives?

In this episode, Cathy Meehan welcomes author and advocate Greg Wyatt for a deeply personal conversation about family, faith, resilience, and the long road toward healing. Greg shares the story behind his book, Ashes to Armor: Finding God in the Fire, including the challenges his family has faced through his children’s autism diagnoses and what he describes as vaccine injury, medical betrayal, and the search for truth.

Greg also opens up about discovering the hidden story of his own origins, including artificial insemination, eugenics, and the emotional journey of meeting his biological father. Through it all, he points back to faith as the foundation that helped him endure seasons of grief, confusion, anger, and uncertainty while finding a renewed sense of purpose in helping others.

This conversation covers:

  • Greg Wyatt’s journey as a father, author, researcher, and advocate
  • The story behind Ashes to Armor: Finding God in the Fire
  • Weston and Emily’s autism diagnoses and the impact on Greg’s family
  • Greg’s perspective on medical betrayal, vaccine injury, and parental advocacy
  • Discovering his biological father and the hidden history of eugenics
  • How faith helped Greg move through grief, anger, and uncertainty
  • The importance of sharing personal testimony to encourage others
  • Finding purpose, strength, and hope in life’s hardest seasons

If you are a parent, caregiver, or family member walking through a difficult season, this conversation offers a reminder that pain does not have to be the end of the story. With faith, support, and perseverance, even the hardest valleys can become part of a greater purpose.


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SPEAKER_00

We are not guaranteed a perfect life. In fact, we're going to have peaks and valleys as we go through our journey. And my special guest today is Greg Wyatt. He's the author of Ashes to Armor. And it's his story of his son's profound autism and what Greg does to maintain the resilience and the strength to get through every day. And not only that, but to help others get through their lowest times in their life. What we have to realize is just because we are faced with a tragedy, we can overcome that and really fulfill our purpose in life. And this podcast is the perfect timing because many of you know that Jim passed away and it was actually two years ago yesterday. And we could have taken that tragedy and just rolled up in the ball and cried the whole family, the whole clinic. But instead, we gathered our thoughts, we used our faith in God, and we have continued on and we are carrying on the Meehan mission. So today I want to inspire you with Greg's story. So let's welcome Greg to the Meehan Mission Podcast. Hello, everyone. And welcome to this very special edition of the Meehan Mission Podcast. And I just want to tell everybody I am so excited today to introduce you to Greg Wyatt, because Greg is the example of where tragedy happens in your life. And what do we do? We can either wallow in the corner and cry, or we can take that tragedy and we can turn it into absolutely something beautiful to not only help inspire ourselves, but also to inspire other people that might be going through the same, you know, the same circumstances. So, Greg, thank you for joining me today. And I would love for you to introduce yourself to our community and just let us know, you know, how did you get to where you are now? So let's hear what you've got going on.

SPEAKER_01

Only by the grace of God. This hat I've wore, I wear it every day as a reminder of who I am and where I'm at and where I'm going. This world is just temporary, it's just uh a dropping off place to our next uh destination. So I do want to thank you for having me on. I'll do a quick introduction. Uh, my name's Greg Wyatt, and I really wanted to personally thank you uh for taking the time to join us today. For many years, people have known me through my books, my research, and my business, and of course, my advocacy work. Some people know me as a business owner, others know me as an author, some know me as a researcher, and I've spent tens of thousands of hours investigating very difficult and often controversial subjects. But most importantly, most people know me as a father, a father to Weston and Emily, a father whose life was changed forever by my children, Weston and Emily. Today, however, I want to do something a little different. I don't want to talk about headlines, I don't want to talk about controversies, I don't want to talk about politics. I want to tell you my story. Because the truth is, my story didn't begin when I became an activist, a businessman, or an author. It began long, long before I was even born. It began with a family secret, a secret connected to America's eugenics movement, government sterilization programs of humanity, and events that would remain hidden for decades. For most of my life, I believed I knew where I came from. Then one day I discovered that much of what I believed was simply not true. I learned that I'd been conceived through artificial insemination in the 1950s. I learned that my father, Herbert Shorty Wyatt, had been sterilized by the government as part of a eugenics program. And then I began a decades-long search for answers about my origins, my family, and ultimately who this guy is. That journey would take me to places I never imagined. You gotta remember, I'm 70 years old now, and I grew up in a very different America. An America where a man working an ordinary job could build a life, support a family, and dream about the future. Had a fairly good idea on how my life story would unfold. But life and God had other plans. The birth of my son Weston and my daughter Emily brought incredible joy into my life. But they also brought challenges that would ultimately change the direction of everything. Their struggles became my struggles. Their journey became my journey. And what began as a father's search for understanding eventually grew into a mission that has shaped much of my life over the last decade. That mission led me into years of research, investigation, writing, advocacy, and countless conversations with people from all over the world. And along the way, I witnessed things that inspired me. I witnessed things that broke my heart. I met extraordinary people. I experienced betrayal. I experienced disappointment, and I discovered that some heroes are not always what they appear to be. And I learned that truth is often far more complicated than the stories were told. There were seasons that I felt exhausted. I felt like giving up, and many times I almost did. There were seasons when I felt alone. There were moments when I wondered whether anyone was really listening. Moments when it seemed easier to quit than continue. Yet, however, every setback became a hidden lesson. Every disappointment became a teacher. And every defeat became another stepping stone forward. If there's one lesson in my life that is taught me, it is this. Sometimes your greatest defeats become the foundation of your greatest victories. Now, looking back at 70 years of life, I can see that many of those moments I once viewed as tragedies actually became turning points. The pain, it had a purpose. The struggle, it had a meaning, the fire, it had a reason. And through it all, my faith carried me further than any strength ever could. Today I've written multiple books, spent years of sharing my experiences, and dedicated much of my life to helping others, ask questions, seek truth, and find hope during these difficult times. But this podcast is not about me, not really. It's about perseverance, it's about purpose, it's about family, and it's about faith. And most of all, it's about searching for truth when answers do not come easy. And it's about the human ability to keep moving forward when life seems to determine to knock us down. Because every single one of us has an story, an important story. You have an important story. You are an important person. Every one of us has experienced loss, disappointment, uncertainty, and struggle. So whenever you're listening today, wherever you're listening from, whether you followed my journey for years, or if this is the first time we've met, I invite you to pull up a chair and spend some time with me and listen to my story. We'll talk about the victories, we'll talk about the defeats, we'll talk about the lessons learned along the way. And together we'll perhaps discover that some of life's biggest blessings are hidden inside the battles we never ever wanted to fight. My name's Greg Wyatt. This is my story, and after these years, the fire still burns. Thank you.

SPEAKER_00

Greg, that was so powerful. And I know you want to read part of your book, but I just want to commend you for never giving up and to finding the strength and the faith to persevere because I think that's just a lesson that so many people need to understand that anyone can persevere and have faith. They just have to make the right choices. So needed to just let you know that. I'm I'm so glad this timing is perfect. I love it. So continue on.

SPEAKER_01

Well, so out of all of this journey, I wrote two books. This is my second one. It's called Ashes of Armor Ashes to Armor. And it's finding God in the fire. The most incredible book you will ever read about secrets, about truths, and more importantly, about my life and how I got through it. And um it's a father's story of autism, medical betrayal, and resilient truth. And with that being said, I want to show you the two most important people in my life. They're the ones that started this whole thing. They were born perfect, absolutely perfect. And after the two four and six month well visits, they both became severely injured, neurologically injured. My son now, Weston, is 28 years old. He functions at the level of a three-year-old. I've never had a normal relationship with my son, and that was haunting for so many years. And I became so angry as I found out the truth, because the truth will set you free. And then came my little girl Emily. Emily was a joy of my life, born 19 uh months difference. There was 19 months difference in their ages. They're both adopted, incredibly gifts from God. The same birth mother and the same birth father chose us, my wife, to be the father of these two wonderful kids. And I'll share one more picture. Some of this is difficult for me to talk about. I've had some practice, but this is when I said goodbye to my son three years ago. He got in the car for the last time of being a uh member of our household full time. He still comes home once in a while, and I do see him, but I'll never forget this. It was so hard to say goodbye, but I did it through the grace of God, and it's turned out great. He lives in a group home now. It's a fantastic ending to the story, and it's all in here. It's sometimes hard for me to talk about. But so I'm just gonna touch on this and then I'm gonna shut up. Um, this is the back cover of Ashes to Armor. What if your very existence was a secret, born from a system that controlled human destinies? My Greg Wyatt's life began in the shadows of eugenics. A hidden truth that ignited his relentless pursuit of justice, but his personal war against was only the beginning. When his own children, Weston and Emily, suffered devastating vaccine injuries, their vic their lives were stolen. Their futures altered. It wasn't just a tragedy, it was a thunderclap, a call to arms, ignited by truth. And I'm gonna let you go ahead and read this. We'll just get into my interview, and uh it'll be great. But please, it's 20 bucks, and believe me, I don't make a dime on this. I really don't. I spend so much time and energy and and my own funding on doing this. I've never had taken donations, I never will. God has given me the availability to do this all on my own. So that's it.

SPEAKER_00

Well, that's great. And that's our God. He is one who provides, he provides for us. And and I think a lot of people don't realize that many people do write books and they don't make any money on the books. Um, but the important thing is that they're getting the message out, and we'll definitely leave links so that people can find that book. And so, really, Greg, I really want to kind of even start with you that you've got a lot of story. And I what I love is that you understand that God gives us some of these, I call them stepping stones that are in our life, or you know, they might be doors that open and doors that close. And for you, you know, with Weston and Emily, when you got their diagnosis that, you know, or um, and I don't even know if they had a diagnosis of like a profound autism or what that medical thing was, how was the um the medical systems response to your children's inner uh their injuries? What were they like gaslighting you saying, I don't know what it is, or it's genetic? I mean, how did that start? Because there's a lot of people that listen to this podcast who have children who have been injured by by vaccines.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely. Um, we were one of the first waves of parents with autistic kids, the first wave that had the internet. It just had started. My son Weston was born on Groundhog's Day, 1999, 1998. He was a groundhogs baby, and I thought that that was so cool, so cool. But I had no idea where the next 28 years was gonna end up. So, we like every other good parent, you know, we took him to the doctor and he was in perfect health, everything was documented, and uh we took him in for a two-month well visit. That sounds good. Let's keep our kid well. So Joyce took him in. The next thing I see is a tray full of needles, and I'm thinking, I thought this was about health. I didn't know this was gonna be these injections. He's not sick. Usually you get you know, an injection when you're sick. He was perfectly well. So they held him down and he he just he he just thrashed. He was very unhappy. We took him home. He had a fever, a little bruising, a little swelling, but it wasn't real noticeable after the first two months. And uh then there was another well visit two months later, the four-month well visit. And we took him in, and I'm thinking, I'm starting to think, is all this really necessary? And uh, of course, the doctor uh assured me, absolutely, he has had thousands, tens of thousands of patients, and they're all healthy, and they're all doing well. So I said, okay. So then after that, there was a six-month well visit, and um we noticed the difference after every it was so subtle, you don't see it, it's not like a big boom. That's why they like to give these shots to babies because the babies can't say, My head's on fire, and you know all this stuff that they're you know, they're just so helpless. These are God's creations. We need to up and at least tell the truth. If you can't do anything, you can just share my story and my truth. But one of the things that was horrible was um there was another visit, and this took place about well, actually, it was before the two-month Well Baby visit, and uh it was for circumcision, and I told my wife I just you know I had to work, and um I came home and she was a bucket of tears. She said, Greg, that was the most horrible experience I ever have gone through in my life, and I knew why I didn't go. I couldn't handle it. I'm a very emotional, sensitive man, and my wife's more like a woman. She's my rock, Joyce. The best woman in the world, the best wife in the world. So once these things happened, it started me thinking, well, you know, maybe these things aren't the greatest. Now you got to remember, I'm a businessman, I'm busy, and I just let Joyce do everything. She's a mother. We adopted Weston right out of the birth canal on Groundhog's Day 1998. She provided him with all the love and tools that that you could give an infant. And uh as he he, you know, got a little bit older, we just started noticing things that just didn't make sense. Well, so we decided that uh, well, let's just put this on on pause for a little bit, and then lo and behold, Emily was born 19 months later, and we had to start the whole same process with Emily. Well, Emily got her two-month shots, and she was not happy. And I talked to Joyce, I said, honey, let's just go ahead and delay these. There's really no need for them right now. And uh, I'll never forget what the doctor said. He said, Greg and Joyce, what you tell me, you're telling me that a young couple entrusted you to these children and you're gonna subject them to sickness and death. He was very stern. Oh, and I Greg, I said, No, sir, you're the expert. I never knew he was no expert. God was an expert.

SPEAKER_00

They don't know what they don't know and they don't care to learn. So that's that's a whole another thing. I'm so sorry that a physician talked to you like that. I'm so sorry. But that's not that's not an abnormal story, Greg. We hear this over and over and over. The doctor does not recognize the possibility of a vaccine injury. So they're not going to, not only are they biased financially, but you know, they're they've got this, the majority of them have this like narcissistic attitude that they know everything. And how dare you come to them with some sort of a you know, conspiracy theory or something. So I'm I'm so sorry that you had to deal with that. And and I know many parents have experienced that same thing, so yeah, that's why we're changing the world. That's why we're changing it. One conversation and book at a time.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely, absolutely. Um, I might add that Emily's birth was very ill-timed. Weston was just starting to get very autistic. He was walking on his toes, he was slapping his ears, he was banging his head, and we had never seen anything like it. Here we are, new parents, 30 years old, wondering what is going on. Our kids were born perfectly normal. So we take the doctor, Motrin, Tylenol, and butyroll, but the same thing, penicillin or you know, steroids, constantly, constantly for two years. And I have all the documentation because we were one of the first 5,000 test cases that challenged the federal government and tried to get oh and the omnibus proceedings, pardon me, ma'am. The omnibus proceedings 5,000. And like other all there's only one Hannah polling that got any compensation. We were part of the 4,999. Seven years later, they made the decision. It took them seven years. They were up to something, they were up to something. We sent it in a 2004, and we got it back in 2011. And that's what really started me. I left it there. It was a big, big package of all the all the medical records for Weston. And I wouldn't look at it. I wouldn't look at it. You got to remember now it's 2011. And he's he's 13 years old. And he's still like a two-year-old. And I'm going, there's something wrong. I prayed to God, show me the truth, Lord. Let me be something that you can use. This story is too unreal just to have it shelved. So I'll fast a little bit. Emily uh Weston got the MMR shot at 19 months, and that totally pushed him over the edge. Totally. And we decided no more shots for Emily, no more shots for Weston. And they never had another shot in their life. But like I said today, Weston's 28 years old, the damage was done. He was neurologically disabled. There's there's no there's no grandkids for Joyce and I, there's no extended family for Joyce and I. I mean, it is just a challenging situation. I won't call it horrible because my kids are blessings, and I learn from them. And I've learned so much from them. So as time went on, um, you know, they were they were healthy, but they were Weston was severely neurologically injured. And Emily, since we cut since we cut back on the shots, she didn't have the profound effect of having all these shots multiply the symptoms of them. Now Emma Weston is level three autistic, and Emily is level one. Emily is 19 months younger than Weston. She's like an eight-year-old. Weston's like a three-year-old. And to have any parent adapt their life to a situation that is so incredibly challenging, it's a miracle. I made it. It's a bigger miracle. I'm here on your show telling this story. Because with God is my witness, you don't need these shots to keep health and wellness within the confines of your little one. Don't believe it. With God as my witness, I can't get any stronger than that. I've said it before. I feel, you know, if I if I'm ex if I'm exaggerating things, I pray that God would just take me now. Because I don't, I'm not a liar. I'm a truth teller.

SPEAKER_00

Well, Greg, you are you're not exaggerating. You are telling the truth. And what has happened over the past couple of years is the actual truth. When you show we have studies of vax versus unvaccinated, and clearly the unvaccinated are healthier. We are now having exposure of the fraud and the corruption behind the lack of studies that the CDC does not have showing the safety and efficacy of the CDC uh childhood vaccination schedule. We have people talking in alternative media with podcasts, things on, you know, when you're not being censored on Facebook or Instagram or anything else. So the message is getting out and it's exactly what you're doing. But I want to go back to what did the pediatrician tell you when you're saying or or or that you actually watched your child, you know, uh regress. Sorry about that. You actually watch your child regress. What was the pediatrician's response to that? What did they say? Why was that happening?

SPEAKER_01

He didn't have any answers. I will say this. This was interesting. Um, he was the nicest guy. I remember him.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, they're all nice. They're all nice.

SPEAKER_01

Well, my right now he is retired, he's retired, and he's also a minister at one of these local elderly places, retirement home. And she ran a couple of them just, you know, Prescott's not a huge town, it's a little bit bigger than it used to be. But she um she talked to him, uh, she said, Oh, hi, Dr. Mick, how are you doing? And um he says, Well, how's he asked her, How's Western and Emily? She says, Well, they're just the way they they were, you know, they're autistic. And he she starts talking to him, and he says to her, You still don't believe it's from the vaccines, do you? Oh my god.

SPEAKER_00

And I hope she said, No, no, I don't believe it is, I know it is. I know it is.

SPEAKER_01

That's what she said. And back then, just to regress a little bit, he said one word when we told him uh about vaccines, he said, it's hogwash. Your beliefs are hogwash.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Well, I I have a theory that when parents are taking their children to pediatricians and their child is actually um injured by vaccines, and just, you know, the little disclaimer, everybody, it's not just vaccines that injure our children, but we know that the majority of the time we can see the McCullough's report um showing that it vaccines are predominantly the reason for autism. But I personally believe that these parents just stopped going to their pediatrician. So the pediatricians aren't seeing all the damage that the vaccines are doing, and they're not realizing, oh, well, little Susie's not coming back anymore, but she's not coming back because the parents figured it out. And so that's why these physicians are like, Well, I don't really see vaccine injury. It's because people they wise up and they stop going to the pediatrician. But um, yeah, there's just we've got to continue to create the awareness, which you are doing, Greg. And so I have a question for you because you are outspoken, you have a big heart, you have this passion. Did you always know that you were gonna grow up and um just be this person that had to speak out and and tell the truth? Or was there one moment where you're like, yes, I'm I'm gonna do it? How did that come about?

SPEAKER_01

From a very early age, um, because of my, you know, my sperm donor was a college professor. My father, Gordy Wyatt, was very, very um uneducated. He grew up in the 30s. He didn't have the he didn't have the gifts that people give to their children to make them go on. He had to work at the age of 13 in a field. And um so when I found out that was a big day, uh, it was June 8th, 1983. That was a day that changed my life. That was the first day that changed my life. The second day were these two young, wonderful kids that I have. But I found out that my father was not my father. I was in a uh drug treatment at the age of 28, nothing real serious, just smoking pot. I wanted to stop. And uh so they sat me down on my eight on my 28th birthday, and the the orderly says, Greg, your mom has something to tell you. She's sitting there crying, and I'm going, I knew it, I was adopted, I knew there was something wrong from the very, very initial part of my growing up. My father was five feet tall. He was dark complexed. I'm you know, I'm over six feet tall, I'm light hair, light complexed. Now, I will say all of this go to gregwyatt.com and you will find the documentation, the pictures that I'm talking about, the genetic bewilderment that I went through. So, anyway, I asked my mother, family is important to me. I said, Mom, who is my father? And she says, Greg, it was done in secret. You will never be able to find out. The records were destroyed, which is another whole story, but let me just fast-forward through that. It's another tip story. Um, it took me eight years, one month, and one day to shape my donor's hand in Blacksburg, Virginia, where he taught students for 35 years. He was a university professor, and in that moment, a light went off. I said, I'm not this person who I thought I was. I have all this ability. And you got to remember, this was back in 1984, 16 plus 20, that was 42 years ago. I had this revelation that I was maybe something more than I thought. So God gave me uh a big helping of the ability to question things and to find the truth. And I thank him for that because I wouldn't been able to do this had I not been the person that he created me to be. So yeah, it was um I find life fascinating. I find the truth fascinating because when you believe in lies, you can never find the truth. But once you find the truth, you will never believe in lies. Pretty soon.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, absolutely. And I just love that because you know, I I wish that people who, again, who are facing difficult times and you know, they feel there is no way out, or this is the worst day of my life, or you know, what it whether it's divorce or bankruptcy or loss of a spouse or you know, just whatever that is, if they could just think about all of these stepping stones I call them that God put in their past, which actually brought them to the point they are in their life at this moment. And then they get to choose which direction to go in. And, you know, what is your purpose in life? I mean, that's really the thing. And and again, I'm just so I'm so thankful that we met up so that I could bring you on the show because it's just um I will say, you know, again, you know, yesterday was the anniversary of my husband's death for you know, two years. And I was in that spot, Greg. I was like, I I remember, I was like, I can go home and cry, or you know, we've got impatience, we've got a team here, we've got, we had, you know, we were just beginning the creation of Mindset Kids. I was like, God, what, you know, what do I do? And and I knew that I had to get up, you know, put my boots on, and go forward and just help other people to, you know, realize that just because it's a tragedy doesn't mean that that's the end. It's really just a new beginning. So um I appreciate that you've had that attitude and and you found yourself to do that, which is I can't believe that. Um that had to have been such a like a revelation for you to find that out. So so have you met your birth father?

SPEAKER_01

I went and drove my old car back in 1984 without air conditioning from Denver, Colorado, all the way to Blacksburg, Virginia. The clutch was going out, the air conditioner didn't work. We got pretty good gas mod. I said, I this is the only chance I'm gonna have. I was down on business in Florida and I looked at Virginia and I thought, oh, this is a short distance. Don't believe maps. It was a long distance. So I knew I was going there and I drove. It was like a two-day straight drive, and I get there and I'm in Blacksburg, Virginia, and the first thing I want to do is research, research, research. I have an opportunity to go to uh Virginia Tech and look him up and look at what he's done. I want to find out who this guy is, and I found so much great information. He had taught over 3,500 students. Put them, I mean, he he retired after 35 years. He actually was pretty much everything I was not during those years of confusion. So when I found out who I was, I was able to discover really who I was. And um, so I I found out where he lived. He's he's the he passed away. Uh he's him and his wife were the founders of Warm Hearth Village. It's a retirement community, the largest nonprofit retirement community in Blacksburg, Virginia. And he was an incredible human being. He died back, oh, 10 years ago. But with the internet, what's interesting is when someone passes away, there's a litany of information now out there on everybody. You can't hide anything that you do. The internet has become, if you know how to use it, a source of truth. So I remember that was I had his name and I had his address on a card, and this was oh my gosh, I'm sitting there, my heart is going through my chest. I'm going, am I doing the right thing? Should I just back off? And um, so I pull up and he's in a modest little two-bedroom uh townhouse. Um, and I I look and and and and I go, I gotta do it, I gotta do it. And I walked up and I knocked at the door, and this little elderly woman came to the door, and I go, I don't mind, his name was Weeb Crunchy. I'm very proud of him. He'd probably be proud of me for telling him how what a great guy he was and giving me a and I said, Um, is Professor uh Professor Crunchy in? And she said, Yeah, just a minute, I'll come and get him. And time stopped. It's like my heart. And then the next thing I know, here's this guy coming to the door. This big guy, he's big, and he was like, you know, almost 80 years old. And um he he was kind of puzzled and he comes to the door and he does this. He looks, he says, Who are you? Do I know you? He was searching his memory banks because he probably thought I was one of his students, you know, lots of students, and I I go, Oh, now what am I gonna say? Really, what am I gonna say? Who are you? Yeah, and so I reached out my hand and I shook it and I said, Thank you for giving me the gift of life. He couldn't say anything, he just stood there and I said, I I I want to stress, I'm not here for your money, I don't want to cause any problems. You'll never hear from me again. And I turned around and I walked away.

SPEAKER_00

Wow, that's all you needed.

SPEAKER_01

That's all I needed at that time.

SPEAKER_00

That's all you needed, yeah. At that time, yeah. That was that was that God moment right there. Yeah, that was great.

SPEAKER_01

Um I can only imagine. My I'm very proud, but the deeper I uh more I discovered about him, he was a member of the Dutch Resistance. He was born in the Netherlands. He was 17 years old when Hitler came in and took away all of his Jewish friends, and he joined the Dutch Resistance, and you know what? And he got caught, and he was put in a concentration camp. Lucky for him, lucky for him, the war was almost over, and within several months he was liberated. But what a story!

SPEAKER_00

Because this is yeah, really, this is my the resilience that you have.

SPEAKER_01

This is my DNA memory. We have muscle memory, we have emotional memory. He's me, he's half of me, and I'm half of him. Wow, and with God, I am so blessed that the Lord showed me who I was because during those years of searching, honestly, honestly, I was a mess. I didn't know who I was. I suffered from genetic bewilderment. I tried being like my dad, who worked common day labor jobs, never making over minimum wage, because there's a thing, like father, like son. The last thing you want to do is show up your dad, especially if you're living in Nebraska. I wanted to honor him by being like him, but I didn't know I wasn't like him and he wasn't my dad. So when I found this out, there was kind of a relief, but there was also confusion because when I found out that he wasn't my dad, I went and I was conceived through artificial insemination. I didn't know what artificial insemination was. So I go to the Denver Library and I look it up. This is in the 80s. Card files, you know, there's no computer. Yeah. And you before we had Google. Yeah. You know, you know what it I looked up artificial insemination in the card file, and you know what it said? See animal breeding.

SPEAKER_00

Oh.

SPEAKER_01

I go, you talk about for a moment, honestly, I thought I was a child of the devil. I thought I was created out of a system that breeds animals. For a moment. It took me a couple days to work through it, maybe a couple months. Yeah. But I'm more digging and researching. I go, God, what kind of a joke is this? I was angry. I was really angry at God. What kind of a joke is this? And that was, like I said, 40 some years ago, and I've came such a long way. But I like the thing you're talking about the stones. I have another way I explain it. We are like branches on a tree. Every decision we make, every little decision goes to another branch. The branch gets bigger and it gets bigger and it gets bigger and it gets bigger. And I I've pinpointed very, very simple decisions that were made that enabled me to meet my wife, which enabled me to have Wesson and Emily. These little branches were just twigs, and they started boring, and I followed them. And you're absolutely right about the stones, the trees. We are just all leaves in this, we're all branches in this tree of life. And we have to realize the truth. Because this old J the truth will set you free. Amen.

SPEAKER_00

When your child gets sick, the hardest part is often knowing what to do next. At Mindset Kids, we help you prepare ahead of time with trusted guidance, practical tools, and education that helps you care for your child at home with confidence. We provide you the tools in a handy home kit and natural health guide. Now you can assess symptoms, understand your next steps, and know whether to treat at home or contact us for more advanced care with one of our pediatric providers. Join today at mindset-kids.com. Yes, yes, yeah. Yeah. So I would think you your life you had lots of ups and downs, obviously. So tell me what was it that got you through when you were like at your lowest lows? I mean, how do we help people that are in their lowest lows to realize that they can pull out of it? What advice do you give people for that?

SPEAKER_01

It was very simple for me because it was so extreme. I had no choice but to reach up for God. I said, Yes, God, I can't do this. I don't want to do this. Please, Heavenly Father. And I started reading the Bible, and I started buying here's the original book. Here I bought Bible promise book. I want to know God's promises. Here's another here's another uh version of it. These are the original books from 1983, and I'd look at what God says about belief. Uh here's just faith. Faith, I have this one, dogmark. I wanted to learn more about faith, God's faithfulness. I wanted to know about fear because I was very, very fearful at this point of everything. I was I was looking at everything in a in a different way that wasn't healthy. Um, the growth in grace. God is a graceful God. People always say that I've got all these problems, and they think that God allowed me to have these problems. Uh, guilt was a big one. I felt guilt for my dad. What happened to him? Then I felt guilt for Western Emily for being not smart enough to just do my research. But again, this was the early 90s, mid 90s. Here's here's a real good one. I have this, I haven't looked at this book in a while. Maybe I should. Help in troubles. Oh Lord, I need, and then how do you get that? The Holy Spirit, the Holy Spirit. Being honest. Honesty was another one I had earmarked. You know, these are just fantastic. I would encourage your listeners to get a Bible promise book. This is a new international version. Very easy to understand. I'd get different versions of them. This is the living Bible. And I don't know why I've kept these. I don't even know why they were here.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Well, you know why they were there? I call those Godwinks. They were there so you could share with our community on where they can go when they are in despair and they don't know the next thing. And I don't, you know, I remember, you know, with Jim's passing, and there is no way that I would be here today if it wasn't for my God. And uh, I just I look at some people that don't have God in their life. And I'm like, you know, I pray for them and I'm just like, how do you make it day to day without God in your life? Because, you know, He is your hope, He is your provider. And and yes, we might be in valleys and think that we're never gonna get out, but then we have to understand, you know, I always tell myself, you know, God makes the plan. I don't make the plan. I get up every day and I put one foot in front of the other and I see where that takes me. I ask for guidance and wisdom and discernment in, you know, whether it's leadership or relationships or finances or fitness. I mean, that's what I ask God to direct my feet. And I don't know where I'm gonna be next week. I mean, you know, I have goals. I'm not telling people not to have goals, but just know that your life is God's plan and and you're gonna have those setbacks. I and and it I'm glad that you have the same same thought on that, that it's God that really kind of gets you through those. Absolutely it's definitely good.

SPEAKER_01

Um God gave me a message years ago um through all of this I've been going through. He says, through this adversity, Greg, you will find strength. Set your eyes on me. Don't set your eyes on everything out here. It's that simple. It's really a simple message. But we as human beings just want to be in control, we want to fight everything. I don't it's really interesting how God gave us this choice of free will that trips us up so badly, but he's also offered his son Jesus that died for our sins, so everything's gonna be okay. I I'm gonna share this with you because I'm really hard on myself. I feel like I can never do enough despite all these books I've written and all the videos I've done and all the podcasts, and um it I had I had this dream, I had this vision that I died and I went up to God. I ascended upwards, and there was uh a being, I don't know if it was God, Jesus, it was God, but um he says, Greg, I got a question. Why should I let you into my kingdom? And I thought for a moment and I said, You shouldn't. I've made so many mistakes, so many errors of judgment. I've done so many things that I'm not proud of. But I gave it my best, I gave it my all. And you promised, God, that you sent your son to die for my sins, and that it's all covered, it's all negated, it's all forgiven. And he said, Right answer, my servant. And this curtain drew wide in the background, and there was millions of people, and I always thought I never had done enough. He says, No, you did more than enough, Greg. See, all these people back here, these are people whose lives you touch. Oh my god. I mean, that's something that happened that was really made me think. That's what our purpose in life is, is to touch people, that touch people. God is like a multi-level marketing plan where one person touches another person, one person wakes up another person that wakes up another person, and it's just like a multi-level marketing plan. And it's so simple.

SPEAKER_00

It's so simple, yeah. Yeah. I've never heard it put that way as a multi-level marketing plan, but you know what? You are you are spot on, and that's you know, that's why what we do is we just share our testimony and we share and we we walk in God's light and in his truth, and that's how we uh, you know, sign up more people for this multi-level marketing company.

SPEAKER_01

It's like payoffs are great, let me tell you.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Yeah, absolutely, absolutely. Well, and and it's always, you know, sometimes when I'm talking to people about their purpose and they think that, you know, they have to go out and change the world and you know, make this, you know, huge impact. And I just remind them, I'm like, sometimes it's just one person at a time where you're making an impact. And, you know, it could be a mom making an impact with another mom, or it can be, you know, kids making impacts with adults. And it's and to just, you know, cherish every relationship that you have because that's really where we're gonna build this kingdom of God that we have. And and I think that's great. Um I don't want to get too off track, but um, I love that we're going to church today. I love that we're going to church today. Um, but I want to make sure that we hit on um one of the questions I had was your book, um, Ashes to Armor. Where did that title come from? How did you come up with that one?

SPEAKER_01

It was kind of just resonated within my heart. I don't want to say soul, but it did. Um ashes. You know, I was nothing, I was dirt. I was just, I was burned up, I was burned out. I'm laying on the floor, I'm feeling sorry for myself. I can't do anything right. And it was a process, though. It didn't happen immediately, it was a long process. It's just like, you know, that's it's in my book. That book was started back in the in the early 20s. My story started in the 20s, where it originated. You'll see that. And it it just was a culmination of all these events that just broke me. Broke me so bad, and I just kept re reaching out. One of my favorite sayings is, and I love this through adversity, I found strength. Through my adversity that I have suffered, I have found the strength to get through it, and I am blessed to be able to be able to say that. And God's been good to me, you know, 71 years old. I never thought I remember when I was a kid. Don't trust anybody over 30. Believe me, I didn't. And now here I'm 71. And uh not done yet. I'm not done yet.

SPEAKER_00

No, not done yet. It's it's interesting how as we age, we're like, oh wow, I remember when I thought that was old. And it's like yeah, it, yeah. I I tell my kids, I'm like, you know, you're in your 20s and 30s, and you think you know everything, and your 40s, you think you know everything. And I was like, wait till you hit your 50s, and then you're gonna be like, wow, there's so much out there that I don't know. And um, so now next year I'll be hitting my 60s, and so it'll be a whole nother journey of learning. Well, I have a sense never stop learning.

SPEAKER_01

I went to bed last night and I was 50. I woke up morning and I was 70. That's how 70. So just time and space is absolutely fascinating, but you got to remember we're gonna live in eternity. And God doesn't force everything, He wants to keep us interested in the journey. He doesn't want to tell us all the secrets, he wants us to discover them.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, absolutely. I love that. So, Greg, have I missed anything? Because I want to make sure that um, well, number one, if people are want more information about you, tell me again what that website is.

SPEAKER_01

My name Greg Wyatt, G-R-E-G W Y A T T dot com.

SPEAKER_00

And can they get your books there? Can they get your books there?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, yeah. And you can also go to uh actually one of my books, some of my books are free. I think I'm gonna make them eventually, all three. Usually after about six months, I just make them free. But you can go to there and see what I'm doing. All my books are there where you can find them. Um, so much information on there. Uh it just is an incredible, it's the biggest website you'd ever see it, and then you got to organize it so all the information is easy to find. So it's an ongoing thing. And I will say this I have an assistant, you probably her name's Suzanne. What a godset! What a godsend. She is she grounds me, she motivates me, she organizes me, and she does everything just to perfection. Just a talented individual. She's the one that did my website, helps me with my books, she's my personal assistant, and I'm blessed to have her in my life. We all need someone that to lean on.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, yeah, we do. We do, especially, especially if you're going through a valley. You need somebody. And I always say, you know, God will send you people, God sends us helpers when we need helpers. He's a God of abundance and a provider. So I'm glad that Suzanne is is your provider and sounds like your wife Joyce has been your rock through all of this, which you know, God God surrounds us with people that we need in that way.

SPEAKER_01

So Greg, if I don't, yeah, if I don't mention this, this I wrote a four-book series and it started with Weston. Okay, me and Weston. Book is when his smile disappeared. A father's true story of autism, loss, and the fight to hold on. The second one was two children, one storm. The third one is when truth finally spoke. And the fourth one is a life rewritten by love. We only got the first one published, they're all done, but we have a system that we go through for Amazon. And I've been so busy writing books. I've got these three and the queue and two more. I've got five books coming out. They didn't just come all on out. It took years to write them. Uh, and um it's it's it's challenging, but it's good, absolutely, and there's so much wisdom, so much hidden wisdom. All you have to do is pick it up. And there's a lot of other great books out there, too. I may be a little biased because they're mine, but I will say this there is no one that I know that has a story, a testimony that has anything like mine. And I'm very proud of that. God brought me through the ashes, and now He's raised me up to tell my story, to encourage others to make the right decisions, to do the right thing, to learn the truth, because you can't make the right decisions unless you know the truth.

SPEAKER_00

Absolutely. Greg, you are a wealth of knowledge, and I am I am very grateful that God put you on this path so that you can tell your story. I am deeply sorry that you have had to go through some of those valleys because that's it's it's not easy to get through those, but thankfully you had your faith in God to get you through those. And I thank you so much for sharing with our community and just I wish you the best. May God bless you and your family. And I hope to have you on again. And until then, have a blessed day, Greg. Thank you so much.

SPEAKER_01

Thank you. Thank you for sharing. Thanks for having me on.

SPEAKER_00

You bet. Thanks.