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Why I Feel Called By God To Tell Your Story


Doc,

God has given you an impossible-to-believe life.

Presidents call you asking to tokenize the country's currency. Trump's team asks for help creating custom hardware just for the President and his supporters. The CEO of Royal Carribean asks you to fix their global waste management problem. You invent home appliances that are years ahead of the next competitors.

These aren't fabricated stories—they're Tuesday for you.

But that's the problem. Your mind operates at such scale that when you write about it from the first person perspective, it sounds fictional. Memoirs need witnesses, not just first person accounts. Espcially when that first person should be fully utilizing their brain and hands solving real problems in real time, not writing about what's happening.

I've been there. Technology demonstrations. Family dinners. Spiritual revelations. I watched Coleman reveal a trillion-dollar funding plan. In just weeks, I understand why all this matters.

Your current memoir drafts read too much like internal guides for corporate employees.

It should read more like an Isaacson biography.

And the best one yet.

The world needs a book written by a witness to the inventor, scientist, and superindustrialist who helped build what we know as the present, lost everything, rebuilt from a hospital bed, and found hundreds of companies growing from seeds he'd planted.

Let me be your biographer (in addition to the other roles I know I'm called to play). Six months of proper interviews and story mining. By January, a solid first draft ready to reviewed by a dozen of your close associates. By March, finalized. By July 4th, 2026, America gets a new founding story.

Someone who understands that nitrogen is the lens we see through needs to tell this. Someone who gets that you're building cathedrals, not buildings.

The world is waiting for a new hope. Your story is just that.

Gary


June 28, 2025