the book
Discover your own full potential—
and help your loved ones reach theirs

Honor yourself and those around you by exploring and practicing the power of encouragement. True encouragement is authentic, vulnerable, and when guided by our willingness to let God in, transformative.

Welcome to the Journey

There are moments in life when we struggle with tough circumstances or even lose hope. There also are moments when we are taking new steps, being vulnerable and brave. We need encouragement to give us hope to get through them. Encouragement allows you to move from “I can’t” to “I can” and even “I will.” 

Finding the Gold

This shifts us to see that there is gold inside of us, which is a strength that we can get through and live an even fuller life than we ever thought. Hearing encouragement allows us to believe that we are worthy, valuable, and capable of so much more. When we operate from this place of self-worth, this helps us to encourage others. 

Why the BRAVE ENCOURAGER

Heidi’s book will show you the untapped potential God has inside each of us. It will teach you how to pull the gold out of others. Heidi has taken her years of experience in counseling and connection to God to help you reach true transformation through encouragement. 

You will hear authentic and real stories of encouragement, and you will learn how to unlock the brave encourager inside of yourself as you explore experiences that have caused you to put up walls with others. You will learn how to encourage even in tough situations and how to keep yourself encouraged when exhaustion wants to set in.

Most importantly, you will encourage yourself as you enter into the brave world of unconditional, courageous, and brave love onto yourself and others.

Concepts the Book Covers

  • the desire we all share for love
  • greatness vs limitations
  • worth vs unworthiness
  • the impact of true encouragement
  • power and influence through encouragement
  • types of encouragement

Skills You Will Gain

  • the mistakes people can make when trying to encourage and how to do it correctly
  • how to see opportunities to encourage
  • how we all have the power to influence
  • how to set and have boundaries
  • how to continue encouraging even when you don’t feel like it
  • how to say yes, just as you are

You Will Also Learn:

  • to measure the encouragement you are receiving and giving
  • how to see the gold in others
  • new habits worth creating
  • new strategies for staying encouraged yourself
  • how to be brave

About Heidi

Heidi Mortenson is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (LMFT) and a Certified Daring Way™ Facilitator (CDWF). She is the host of the Strong Tower Mental Health Podcast. Heidi and her husband work together at their mental health practice, Bridging Hope Counseling. She lives with her husband and three children in Minnesota. One of her favorite pastimes is talking with other people and pulling the gold where they don’t see it.

FAQ with Heidi

My most passionate definition of a brave encourager is pulling the gold from ourselves and others. The gold means strengths, gifts, talents, characteristics, ideas, future, destinies. The reason why I say “pull the gold” is because sometimes it’s deep and we can’t “see” it. Like the roots of a tree. When you see unhealthy and unkind behavior in front of your eyes, it is hard to see the gold in that person. There might be a small little budding leaf that has life on it. You seeing this is precisely what they need. When you go really deep, you are even pulling from people’s destinies and future. That is powerful.

A few years ago I realized a few things about encouragement. One, that I was doing it naturally and it actually is a gift and a “thing”. Two, that so often our mouths speak frustrations and difficulties of others. I was “seeing” it more with others. When we are frustrated with other people, these circumstances cloud our view of them. We are so clouded that we can’t see what God sees about the other person. This literally impacts our moods, our lives, our futures and our legacies. I started to write down the idea and then an outline and a chapter came out of me. I didn’t decide to write it until a few people told me they saw me as an author. I needed some encouraging words to make the idea happen!

Absolutely. Part of my journey is struggling with my faith as well. I get it. There are a lot of mysteries and things we can’t tangibly “see” with faith. But then it wouldn’t be faith, would it? Allow yourself to be curious and wonder, enter into being yourself completely with God. Talk to Him like a friend or a buddy. He’s okay with doubt and questions – bring it! He’s a wonderful counselor. 

No. This book is not a replacement for therapy. Some people are very resistant to therapy and I would encourage you to re-consider. Just make sure you like your therapist. Often times we don’t want to go to therapy because we don’t find the right fit. This is a book, a guide, a tool and a one-way conversation. You aren’t able to share with me and receive feedback from me as you read it. It is not a replacement for therapy. 

There are many people with ministries, books, and businesses who talk about encouragement and empowerment. Here are a few that I recommend.

Websites:

Books: 

  • The Circle Maker by Mark Batterson
  • The Culture of Empowerment by Steve Backlund
  • Anything by Brene Brown – although her topic isn’t specifically encouragement, it is embedded within the topics of connection and vulnerability.

Yes, although it is not a replacement for the Bible. There are opinions in this book that I encourage you to bring to the Lord. The book references the Bible in many instances and some not. However, I brought my knowledge and experience from being a therapist and student of the Lord. I am will always be a learner. 

Yes and I even thought about creating a study guide along with it. I thought about.

I hope the book is easy to read for all backgrounds. As I have grown in my faith I have learned to honor all religions and spheres of faith. I grew up in a Lutheran home but now attend a church with a more Baptist background and now attend a school of ministry with the title “supernatural” in it. I have learned there are charismatics, Word of Faith people, Catholics, Methodists, Lutherans, and many more. I have attended many different churches and conferences and I find God is in all of them. I hope that I write from a perspective that allows you to feel appreciated wherever you are in your background, faith, culture, color or ethnicity. 

No. Nothing can “fix” anyone else. We are not God, we are not the Holy Spirit. Danny Silk says “in all relationships we are either pursing the goals of connection (love) or the goal of distance and control (fear)”. Unfortunately, we cannot make people be who we want them to be. However, we can love them unconditionally and pull the gold out of them. This increases you and them to become more of Jesus. When we let go of control and trust that God hears our prayers, and molds our heart and words to match him when we speak, miracles happen. Sometimes this happens right away, sometimes it takes more time. We need to trust in God’s timing and allow God to be God. We can struggle to do that because we want things right now!

Yes. The focus on the book is to pull the gold out of others and yourself. The book teaches how to recognize gold and communicate it to others more effectively. When we do this, people become a better version of themselves. We can move through difficult conversations and situations because we are focusing on what God sees and not the bad behavior or characteristics. Thus, relationships improve over time with the focus on encouragement.

Yes. This book is designed to help all relationships. It’s a tool to help shift you to see the gold in other people, instead of the dirt of difficult behavior. When you see other people through the eyes of God, it changes you. Thus, making you a better person in all your roles. 




People who have a desire and passion within themselves to improve the world around them. All they need is a seed of hope for others and for themselves. Both men and women, parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, teens, employers, employees, CEOs, pastors, coaches, teachers, doctors, nurses, construction workers, analysts, researchers, hair stylists, nannies, cashiers, janitors, and more can all read this book if they have a desire to.

That’s absolutely okay. If you do read it, or if someone gave it to you, take what you need from it at the time you read it. There are many Bible verses and books I have re-read at different times in my life. Each time I read them I gain something different because I have grown and become more renewed. Every day I am dying more and more and becoming more of Jesus (Gal 2:20, Rom 12:2). So when I read something again, new revelations comes my way. I don’t want to miss what God has for me. If you think this book isn’t relevant to you, give it a shot and see what is relevant in it at that time. You might surprise yourself. 




Yes! In fact, some of my inspiration came from men who are extremely talented at encouragement. When you google “encouragement” you will find many men who as natural at pulling the gold and inspiring you to become a better you. Also, men can tend to focus on being critical than having compassion for others. They can tend to have a “get ‘er done” type of mentality and have little patience for people who don’t get it right away. This book is a great guide to help shift their lens of being patient with themselves so they can learn to pull the gold from others. 

No. Everyone can benefit from learning how to encourage. We all have relationships with other people and each relationship can benefit from us learning how to pull the gold and encourage others. 

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