Unashamed with the Robertson Family - Ep 1258 | Phyllis Revisits Phil’s Past, His First Words to Her & the Healing They Found Together
Episode Date: January 29, 2026As the Robertsons begin wrapping up their first full duck season without Phil, they reflect on legacy, hard work, and the faith that shaped their family. Phyllis joins the conversation to look back on... Phil’s later years, the weight of the words “I never knew,” and the healing that followed Phil’s honesty instead of silence. The guys and Phyllis discuss trauma, forgiveness, and how truth spoken even late in life can still bring restoration. To hear Phyllis’s story from the beginning, watch her first Unashamed appearances in episodes 95 and 96 here: https://youtu.be/9n4Ab6mL9W0?si=YD9337YYIr5_AC6n https://youtu.be/kA4BCl5mhbY?si=MJgoQOfNB0EXjkwk And pre-order her book I Never Knew at https://ineverknewbook.com In this episode: Hebrews 12, verse 11; Romans 12, verse 2; 2 Corinthians 5, verse 17; Philippians 3, verse 13 “Unashamed” Episode 1258 is sponsored by: https://ruffgreens.com — Get a FREE Jumpstart Trial Bag for your dog today when you use promo code Unashamed! http://unashamedforhillsdale.com/ — Sign up now for free, and join the Unashamed hosts every Friday for Unashamed Academy Powered by Hillsdale College Check out At Home with Phil Robertson, nearly 800 episodes of Phil's unfiltered wisdom, humor, and biblical truth, available for free for the first time! Get it on Apple, Spotify, Amazon, and anywhere you listen to podcasts! https://open.spotify.com/show/3LY8eJ4ZBZHmsImGoDNK2l Listen to Not Yet Now with Zach Dasher on Apple, Spotify, iHeart, or anywhere you get podcasts. Chapters: 00:00 Opening the first duck season without Phil 03:42 Remembering Phil’s work ethic & love of the hunt 08:27 Living off the land & the values Phil passed down 13:41 Why hard work formed the Robertson family worldview 18:02 Phyllis is sharing her story with the world 23:55 How the letter, the photo, & faith connected the dots 29:48 “I never knew” — the moment Phil met his daughter 34:55 Trauma, forgiveness, & healing later in life 41:10 Telling the truth unlocks restoration 46:20 Phil gets the last word — Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I am unashamed. What about you?
Welcome back to Unashamed.
Jason, I got a question for you.
So by the time this episode drops, we'll be probably right at the very end of duck season this year.
And we've been talking, you know, a lot about hunts and, you know, ducks coming or not coming, as it were.
And this season started with kind of a call to arms, I guess we had after dad crossed over back in, right before Memorial Day last year in 25, that we were going to, the brothers were going to hunt together, which we did.
And it was great because it was kind of a, I guess, an homage to dad, you know, just to kind of say, you know, we're here on opening a day because you're not here.
So whatever his experiences are crossed over, we don't know.
know. But you killed a band of duck.
Yeah, my first duck, which has never happened. So that made me kind of chuckle.
Yeah, and it just kind of gives us that thing. So I got my question for you, because we got a guest coming on a little bit later.
So we're going to be talking quite a bit today about, about dad, about legacy, about a lot of things that he brought to us.
And obviously, our kind of family tagline was Faith Family Ducks, you know, especially when the show came
along in that order, you know, dad used to say.
And what, I just want to know from you.
So now we're ending the first complete season without dad being there.
What's that been like to you?
I mean, do you, do this, it does his, kind of like with this podcast, does the presence of
him come up often?
Do you think about him?
I would say, yeah, I've thought about him every day just because we had this weird phenomenon.
because we pump our water in in low water years from the Washtaw River.
But what happened was, and I've shared this before,
we had a series of unfortunate events come together.
We had an extremely dry year,
but they also dropped our river down from pool stage.
You know, they call it pool stage,
because that means this is as low as it goes.
until they decide the government to drop it down seven feet lower
because they need to work on some locks and dam
so barges can traffic the river.
And so when those things happen,
we could no longer pump from the river
because we pumped from an offshoot creek of the river.
Well, that just put it where it was unpumpable.
There's no water.
I mean, a little bit.
What little we did pump, we dried the creek up.
And so I thought every day, I mean, he would have never, he would have been so frustrated that it just won't rain and we can't get any water because my dad, he pretty well hunted every day of duck season every year for how many years?
60.
Yeah, 65 years.
The couple times, just think about it.
Ducks season is 60 days.
Now there was a period, it was 30 days a season.
But he pretty well hunted every day.
And so there was only a couple times I remember where he got so sick that he could not put one foot in front of the other.
But even then, he shuffled out there where he could hear whether we were shooting or not from his porch.
and one of those days
was famous because we hammering them
and he said
it's the first time in my life
that I
almost cried
you know
it was just hard for him
but I will say this year has
also
you know Willie from our first
hunt this year it kind of ignited a
resurgence in his duck hunting
practices he's gone more
this year than he has in the last 30 combined.
So I thought that was interesting.
And maybe it is just that kind of nostalgic passing down the legacy.
But yeah, I quote him often because I miss him.
And it's been weird without him.
And I've missed more days this year than I've ever missed just because we simply have no ducks
and traveled a lot.
Well, I thought about it because he couldn't really, he wouldn't have imagined.
Although he was good at adapting and reactive,
but he wouldn't imagine not being able to pump water out of the river
because the river was the one constant, right?
As long as you've been out there.
Now, he expected it to come out of its banks,
but not to go below pool.
And so that would have been a whole new experience for him.
But I was thinking about, you know,
the decision to move out on the river
was made with the idea that we would live off the river
and live off the land.
And I just thought about through all those years of us being out there
and growing up until we kind of left and made our own way in town, our own life,
that, you know, it was always things you didn't anticipate.
I like the whole crawfish enterprise that came up for what,
maybe about three years when people were starting,
crawfish craze really took off when North Louisiana,
man, they were looking for whatever they could get.
And we had access to flooded property.
And so then it was like, well, we can make some money off of crawfish.
So it's like there was always an adaptation to,
What nature, or we would know nature, of course, is God,
but what's being offered for us to take advantage of to make a living?
I mean, would you say that's a good description?
You know, I think it contributed in me being just grateful for what I have
and appreciating things and having a non-entitlement spirit.
I mean, working the land, it just teaches you certain ethics.
You know, those were hard years.
I mean, I remember being so nervous just as a kid running this machinery, making the duck calls.
And even if you're a commercial fisherman, you know, it's dangerous.
I mean, you're out there in the river.
You fall out of the boat or catch a rope on your leg, which happened many times, but, you know, thankfully never fatal.
Over just catching fish that you were making so little of money.
And I remember as a kid, I used to be thinking, how come this is not worth more?
I mean, we're out here risking our life.
and they're fantastic tasting fish.
This is the cream of the crop,
even the crawfish operation,
because we would eat them every day,
which we could have made, you know, more money,
but my dad was like,
I just can't in good conscience.
Take all the bags to the market.
They're too good.
Yeah.
I mean, because we were like wanting to reward ourselves
for just backbreaking work from day,
before daylight till after dark.
And I'm just so thankful for all those ethics that I learned doing that process.
But he also had a philosophy of what I would later learn through the Bible was what I would call his philosophy.
Now a first fruits philosophy that whatever we got from the land, from the water, from the river,
his family always got the first fruits.
Oh, he did it.
Yeah.
of that labor.
In other words, we got the best.
And I've told the story before, we would take our fish into the fish market,
and they ate the scraps because they were trying to make money off the best,
and then they ate the fins and the tails or whatever.
And so I just always thought, because when we were eating,
we were eating like belly meat of the opalusus.
You know, we're eating the best.
And so I just, but that's a first fruit philosophy.
That's the idea of God saying, you bring me the best first.
Don't bring me the last.
Don't bring me the scraps.
Don't bring me the leftovers.
And that's the way we grew up, wouldn't you say, Jay?
Well, yeah.
And, I mean, you look at our culture now since the phone epidemic and all,
and you just, you have kids growing up who don't want to work,
don't appreciate it, or, you know,
and can't do anything out in the wilderness or the wild.
I mean, I'm constantly taking people duck hunting that,
me and this other day, I was hunting with a guy who guides.
And we were swapping stories about the guide process when you take people.
And he was like, I mean, the other day, he said, I had, you know, they, they were five people from the corporate world in their early 30s.
And it had a big rain, and I couldn't haul everybody out there.
But I was like, they all had waiters on.
And he said, so I, I just thought, I'm going to take all their gear to the blind and just have them walk.
I mean, it's shallow water.
There's nothing can happen.
and he said, it's maybe 200 yards.
He goes, gets all the stuff,
and when he turns around and starts looking back,
he said it just looked like some creature had attacked them all.
He said, they were all on the ground.
And he thought, what is going on?
They literally were just falling out.
They couldn't walk in gumbo mud 200 yards
without remaining standing
and these were like young in shape people
and I was like you've got to be kidding
and he's like no
he's like it was traumatizing
they're just falling down all over the place
they're just walling around
in six inches of water in the mud
and they can't walk
200 yards
through the mud
and get in a blind
and he said it's the most scared
I've ever been while hunting
because I thought
if you can't walk 200 yards in the mud to go duck hunting,
how are you going to do with a firearm?
And I thought, man, are we really there in our culture
where people just from these big cities and these corporate America
can't go out in the wild, not just survive?
They can't walk 200 yards.
That's exactly.
Well, to be fair, you guys had, and I remember this just growing up,
One thing we had was the benefit of whatever the end product was.
You had that reward waiting on you.
And so when you've tasted that fried opalus of catfish, that belly, those op bellies,
and you know what's on the other side of that.
So it kind of is biblical.
The Bible says for the joy set before him, he endured the cross.
You can endure all the hard work for the joy set before you, but you've got to see and got
to get to that reward.
And I think that was like a motivation when you think that.
think about growing up like that. I mean, because I always thought it's funny, y'all grew up poor,
but I always thought y'all were rich. You know, when we were coming town, I knew the food was
going to be better than what we were getting. Y'all were going to have all the, all you can eat
crawfish. You're going to have all, I mean, so we always thought we come in town. It was like,
oh, they, they've hit the big times, you know. That's how we proceeded. Well, Zach, your family
was in full-time ministry, so you were the only people poorer than us, which is pretty bad.
So about 10 years ago, just to shift this, because I want to bring her guest in.
So as the show was winding down, Zach, dad approached you and you guys started talking about some opportunities post Duck Dynasty to do some things that dad's up really wanted to do with the platform that God had given him now.
And that was more to get the gospel to everybody.
And that started with a movie that wound up being then this podcast and another show we'd,
did for Blaze. And so all those were opportunities. And then about, you know, six years ago,
something very life-changing happened. And so that's what we want to talk about the rest of this
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So welcome back to Unashamed.
We have our esteemed guest, our baby sister, Jace, Phyllis, is joining us from St. Louis, Missouri.
Welcome, Phyllis.
Back to Unashame.
Hello, hello.
Good to see y'all.
Good to see.
So it's been a minute.
We kind of opened this talking about our faith family ducks legacy with dad.
We're talking a little bit about our childhood.
it. And I kind of tease you're coming on. And you got a new book that we're going to be talking about a little bit later just to let our audience know what we're going to be talking about today. But obviously, you know, all of us, Miss Dad, this was his podcast to begin with. And Zach and I weren't really even going to be a part of it. And Jace wasn't a part of it at all in the early days. And it has wound up being what it was with the four of us. And obviously, not only us, but the,
Unashamed audience, Mrs. Dad, as we all do.
But I did think it was interesting, Phyllis, that you, so you came into our lives in 2020.
We found out about you right there at the beginning, right just before COVID.
And actually, I was meditating about this this morning, about you being on today.
And I realized that the unashamed audience had the front row seat.
the first ears to hear your story as it now has connected to our story in you finding us and
everything that happened. And so I looked it up because, you know, Jay, I'm a note taker.
And May 18th, 2020, way back. The title of it, the podcast, those two podcasts were our new family.
And so, you know, early on, Unashamed. So if you've been around a while, if you've been with us on the
beginning on Unashamed, you were a moment.
remember this. And you were the, you were the pathway to the rest of the world. We told our story
and Phyllis's story to the whole world through the Unashamed podcast. And it was really great,
Zach. You remember we were, you know, wondering how this was going to kind of come out in terms of
how the story went. And it turns out our discussion on the podcast, first with the brothers and dad,
and then with Phyllis and mom and me, Jason, dad. And we told the story. And so the only quotes that
were out there, because it was a new cycle, you know, for a day.
or two was what we had talked about on the podcast, which we didn't really necessarily, you know,
know what was going to happen, but it turned out to be a great way to tell the world, don't you
think? Do you remember that, Zay? I do. I remember sitting up here in a restaurant, and you
were telling me the story of fellas you dropping off a envelope to somebody in the family. I can't
remember who. And I was like, I think there may be some legs to that story. We might want to look
getting to that because they were kind of, yeah, another, you know, somebody kind of reached out,
whatever. I was like, I think that sounds legit. And so the initial contact, I think I was the first,
was that the first one? You were the first one. You were the first one. I was bummed because you
didn't stay the main one because when we ended up visiting later, I was like, are you going to be
there? You know, you're like my little, like lifeline and you're like, no, no, you know, I'm like,
okay, okay. I've been accused of that before. Get the ball rolling in there. We're
What's that?
He's gone.
He gone.
So what made y'all think, like, out of other maybe people that had contacted you, because
I think that had happened before, like, hey, I'm your long-lost cousin or whatever.
What made y'all think, hey, this one has legs to it?
Well, I remember, that was me, by the way, Zach.
So you got the initial thing.
I got, yeah, I met, I met Phyllis for the first time when Phil and I did the, what would
we call that?
It was kind of the Christmas season service.
Well, it was the last Sunday of the year.
Yeah.
And everybody that normally would be doing things at our church were gone.
And so for some reason, thought it was a good idea for Jason Dad to do a takeover.
Al, let me explain that story.
I'll tell you.
This is a very good lesson in life.
I griped to your right-hand man, Mike Kellett.
I said, hey, of course, here I am a member.
I have no authority.
I'm not in leadership.
I'm a member that shows up half the time because half the year, I'm gone somewhere.
And I said, they were going to do a kind of state of the church, the local church.
And I just, he was walking by and I said, hey, I got a question.
Why would you do a state of the church when none of the church are going to be here?
It's the Christmas season.
I was like, that's a terrible idea.
He said, well, why don't you do it then?
And I said, gulp.
Okay.
And so I got Phil.
I was like, hey, because there's a lot of visitors.
People are bringing their family in.
Half the normal members are going visiting family.
And I was like, let's just do it about Jesus.
And so that's how that happened now.
But the problem was there were so many visitors that Phyllis and Tony were just in a line of other visitors.
And I was in meet-and-greet mode.
and you handed me an envelope,
but I was just, and when you're in that mode,
you understand that now, but I'm in that mode all the time.
People are constantly coming up,
they're taking pictures,
and they're handing you stuff,
and you're looking,
and most of the stuff is like,
oh, wow, I don't even know what this is, you know,
is this a lot, you're shaking the envelope,
seeing if there's anything alive in it.
But so, and then, of course,
I forgot all about it,
put it in my truck somewhere,
and never even,
looked at it. But then
we had podcasts a couple days
later, and you had also dropped an
envelope at Duck Commander.
And one at the church that I
got. And so then, in a weird
thing, this has never happened before,
and I do see God working in this in some
way, but
I was stopped in at Duck Commander
to get the mail, and they handed me
that, and I was on the way to the podcast.
And I didn't realize that this
looks exactly like the one you handed me.
It never registered. So we do
the podcast and I was fixed to leave. Back then we did the podcast down on the river. And I handed it
to Al because it was addressed to Phil. And so we opened Phil's mail because that's just what you do
as a family that's famous. And Al was going through it and he looked. I was out, here we go. We got
another family member. Because when you said that, Phyllis, we got hundreds of those via email.
I mean, the list is long about our family.
Not necessarily like your story, but like we're related.
Oh, yeah.
I literally can say I've had hundreds of people send me an email or an envelope
saying that we're family and they need $17,000 or $28,000 for something.
But anyway, so Al started.
So our attitude, I'm trying to tell this story, realizing that we're,
We got a lot of junk at that time, so we were obviously apprehensive about this.
But when I saw the picture of you for some reason, I think we kind of stopped down and said,
huh, even though the math didn't line up at the time because we didn't realize when Phil came to the Lord that was late in the year.
so this actually would have been pre-Jesus
where this relationship happened.
But the picture, for some reason,
I could see a little bit of my grandma.
You know, I just, that's what hit me.
I was like, she actually looks like somebody
that would be in my family.
And so that started the rabbit hole.
Well, we said in the picture, Phyllis,
you're sort of a compilation of Roberts and Women
a little bit like Aunt Jan,
a little bit like Judy,
maybe a couple of cousins.
And so there's these characteristics.
And then Zach told me when he called me after he talked to you,
because we were all highly anticipating what was going to happen from that conversation.
And Zach said, dude, it was like talking to my mom.
And so, which was, we took as a high compliment,
but also my Aunt Jan was a little bit crazy too, a little neurotic.
But now that I know you,
feel us that fits perfectly. I was going to, I was going to say this. All counts. Honestly, all
counts. All counts. I was going to say this because so your new book is called I Never
Knew Finding Healing and Renewal After Trauma. And Maddie's going to show a picture of that.
And so you can see it. And I'm super excited. I haven't read it yet. I've just read some excerpts
and I've also read the summer you sent me. But I did read last night. Dad did the Ford.
for the book because you had started working on this while he was still before we got sick
because you've been working on this a while and initially even you and dad were going to write
something together right so it kind of ebbed and flow but but something he said so I wanted to
say this in his own words because I thought this was powerful and this is dear and dad's
forward for the book it says two things happened in 1975 that set in motion an almost miraculous ending
to our story. And I thought that was very powerful because I thought about it. It was the beginning
of a story. And yet because it's been such a short time, it was also the end of a story just within a
small framework. But he said two things happened. I surrendered control of my life to Jesus. And that's
what Jace was mentioning. And that happened at some point, I would say around fall of 75, somewhere
late summer. I don't exactly remember. But I do remember him showing up. And Jace probably does too at our
house, our apartment, I mean. And it says the second thing was, Phyllis, my daughter was born only a few
months later. So I tell people I was reborn and my daughter was born all in the same year.
Which is something very powerful. I love it. It's a tagline. And I know you use that when you speak.
And so I just want to ask you before we get into some of the tenants of the book, because now you're
back in Missouri because that's where your grandkids are. You got a new career. You're doing some things.
So I want to catch up with our audience for where you are.
But I just want to say, what was it like?
I mean, you wind up moving to Louisiana later that year in 2020.
I think you guys came like that September or something, August.
August.
Yeah.
And then you live there up until just this past September.
And so what was your experience like in Dad's last years?
Was it what you expected?
I mean, what do you take from that, you know,
five years you got you guys had together and of course with us too but especially with mom and dad it's
hard to think about having really an expectation i don't think i knew what to expect really um but it was
it just became like a natural ebb and flow of living with family because we were right next door
we could walk down there in minutes uh and you know their house is always open or you can just come in
any time just kind of knock on your way in and dad would say hey you know every time we walked in
So it just became this kind of just this natural flow of family living next door, which brought such deep connection that you really couldn't get.
If we had lived in town and even had, even down there, if we lived in town and had to drive out that 30 minutes to come out and see them with work, people get busy, you know this, all you are in town.
It just wouldn't have been so easy.
So it made it, it made them accessible physically, which made them more accessible.
emotionally for that connection to happen.
Which I think it was wise of you to deduce that my dad, he basically lived a line off of
Jeremiah Johnson when he's like, I've been to a town.
I don't want to go back.
He just doesn't, you know, he just didn't.
That's where he was at.
He was going to stay there no matter what.
Well, he only went once a week and that was to meet with the brothers, as he would say,
or to, you know, share the gospel and do what he did.
and the rest time he did it out there.
You titled the book I Never Knew.
And Phyllis, I want you to tell the story of where that came from
because that's a very powerful part of the narrative in when dad said those words.
So tell that story where I never knew came from.
How that happened?
Y'all had arranged for us to come down to visit and meet everybody.
So this was in February of 2020, I guess.
Yeah, it was 20.
And so we got there and you and Lisa,
picked us up from the airport and we jumped in the truck with you and just kind of visited on the way.
And as we pulled up into y'all's driveway, I saw dad and Ms. Kay standing there side by side.
And it was, you know, I was nervous.
I didn't know.
I had no expectation.
What does a person expect in that moment?
But I wonder, like, is he going to, you know, is he going to reject me?
Is he going to accept me?
And y'all had said he's not nurturing.
You'd said he's not touchy feeling.
And so I walk up there not knowing what to expect.
And when I did, he reached out his hands and he put his hands on either side of my face and just looked into my eyes.
And he said, I never knew. And I mean, it was just that moment where, you know, if he had said anything else, I can't imagine if he had said anything else.
It was the first thing he said and the first thing he needed to say that had he known about me all my life, it would have been different.
So it helped me to understand that it's not like he knew about me all my life and just failed to reach out.
Yeah, and I want to read these words. These are from the foreword. So these are dad's words. I feel like since dad, you know, is obviously not physically with us. It is great that he left this behind. This is powerful to go with what you just said. He said, I'm going to be honest with you. I was nervous about meeting her. I wouldn't have blamed her if she had spit in my face and told me to take a hike. I was also fearful that I had passed on to her my predisposition to debatery and addiction to sin. Is she promiscuous like I was?
Is she a drunk or a drug user like I once was?
Is she mean and hateful to the people who love her the most like I was?
When it came time to meet her face to face, I had a speech prepared for her, a lengthy one.
And then the day finally came and I stood outside with Ms. K.
My long-lost daughter walked up to me, and I'm not going to lie.
I was afraid.
And that got me that one thing because I've never known Dad to be afraid of anything.
And so for him to say that and be honest,
about his feelings. It was very powerful to me. And then he said dreadfully so. At this point,
my prepared speech had evaporated into thin air. So with tears streaming down both my face and hers,
I took her face in my hands. I looked her straight in the eyes. And I said, the only words that I could,
I never knew. I never knew. And I mean, it's just, it's such a powerful moment to such a powerful man,
you know, from our perspective, but it also showed the humility. And I noticed, Phyllis, the first probably
I don't know how many hundred words of dad's forward was him talking about what a bad person he was.
And then he pivoted when he got to that point about coming to know Christ.
And so I think part of this whole thing late in life and Zach,
I don't know that you and I could have ever, and none of us could have ever foreseen this,
but I almost saw dad grappling with the old man versus the new man he had become,
even in this final years of realizing how powerful forgiveness is.
and the love of Christ is and the Holy Spirit.
And I don't know, it just brought some things to light and dad.
I don't think he ever thought he would grapple with again
because kind of when you bury an old man,
you never expect to live anything from that past life.
And so Phyllis, it was interesting because he had this new perspective
and a chance to look back.
And you really brought that to it.
And I think it turned out to be a great gift
because there was a tenderness about him that he showed with you
that I think neither Jason or I really ever saw that.
much of, to be honest, as young men and growing up, maybe Jep a little more because he only knew him
as a Christian man. But for us, it was a different dad, I think, sort of in his waning years.
I mean, that's my observation. Is that what y'all thought, Jace, or Zach? Yeah, I thought
the same thing. I mean, you know, I look back on just my synopsis of the situation.
I thought it was incredibly difficult for you, Phyllis, to come into a famous family because you
realize all our lives are just blurs. I mean, we're going, ripping, tearing, and there's so much
false information out there and all this kind of thing. And I thought, man, what a challenge for you
to come into that. But then on the other side, personally, when my dad, I thought, you have no idea.
Because I remember the first conversation I had with you. I don't know if I was the first person
who taught. You were the last, you were the last brother. That's actually in the book.
Even though the book's not a memoir, I do share stories just to give everything context.
But you're the last brother to call.
Okay.
Well, I called him.
We talked a long time.
And I was trying to like prepare you for.
Yeah.
Because even though, you know, we all loved Dad and, you know, he's a mighty warrior for Jesus,
I was like, man, he was pretty rough, you know, just as a dad, like what Al said mildly.
I mean, to say there was no emotional connection or no bit of softness.
And, you know, I'm familiar with the female race of our planet.
I'm like, trust me, this could be difficult for you.
Yeah, he's just a hard man.
And see, he was tenderhearted toward me.
He just was.
I was so fascinated on seeing this side of my dad come out, which he really, you would see that
more as he, even when he got sick and just with the grandkids and all. I mean, it's like you,
once you kind of peel back that layer of toughness, it was something beautiful to watch.
And it was needed. I really think it, he came full circle in some of the fruits of the spirit
that have been lacking. And so that's kind of my view of how that happened.
You asked a question earlier, Phyllis. You were asking about how do we, uh,
What was it about your story that kind of was like, well, maybe we should look into this.
For me, and I think this is a Holy Spirit thing, but we had, I'd just written the story for the blind.
And a lot of the story that was based on interviews that I have with Phil, with Jace, with Al, all you guys are super helpful.
I mean, there's, in fact, that one scene in the movie where Jace and Al come out to visit Phil in that trailer,
when he's living in the woods.
That was a story that Jace told me directly.
We changed it a little bit in the movie
because in real life that was Jace going out with my uncle Tommy,
but it was like this moment.
So I had all this like history of the interviews
and I'd written the story for it.
I'm not sure if we had done the script yet.
I think we may have just finished the script too.
And there's a moment where Phil is in the original script
where he's in the woods.
He had gone off the deep end,
and he was having all these affairs,
and there was a particular woman,
and in the script, she had red hair,
which is so weird.
We just kind of just came up with that.
And so when I was reading your letter,
like I had already done all these interviews
and had all this collective knowledge of the family
that was kind of like I'd piecemeal together
and done the kind of investigative work.
And I was like,
Guys, I was thinking, this, this fits in line with the story.
And then when we met and I remember you telling me about your, your mom, I was like, oh, that's weird.
That's weird.
That's weird.
Yeah, yeah, it's like strawberry blonde hair or blonde hair.
Yeah, yeah, red hair.
So it was kind of weird how that and overlap with the story that we already told.
And so I don't know why we picked that out.
So I thought the Holy Spirit was kind of aligning that.
And then we had, you guys did like DNA test.
And we did all that.
And then it was like, okay, this is, you know, we kind of, I mean, I knew one first time we met, you know.
And, but that was like, what's the, but what is the, because the book's not a memoir.
We've talked a little bit about this because you were in town recently.
I'd love for the audience to hear from your perspective, what kind of what, what are you hoping to accomplish with the, what is the book?
Because it has some of your stories in it, but it's little, it's more than that.
This is a book coming from your background as a nurse and a lot of mental health stuff in here.
Maybe walk us through that.
Yeah.
It's a book about healing.
And part of the idea of I Never knew is, first of all, that's what Dad said to me first.
But also looking back in my life, I realized how I never knew, even as a believer, what healing there was available to me as a person.
The way that the Bible talks about being restored and renewed and beauty from ashes.
So the stories that I tell in my book are stories, you know, current day and meeting y'all.
it's also going back all the way to my early childhood though and I share stories to give context to how we all respond to adversity and trauma and by trauma I'm talking about big T trauma relational trauma so when we're injured by those who are really supposed to protect us and care for us and nurture us so when that fails and you can see like like you said as a nurse and as I progressed through the years and God you know opens doors and I see more clearly.
what my calling is and now I'm a counselor for children. The idea was like, wow, I've learned a lot.
And a lot of healing happened in those five years when I was living beside Dad and Miss Kay and around you all.
So when I look back and I see how God has healed me and where he has taken me and how knowledge is power and how we're transformed by renewing our minds,
that's not just something you can read once in the Bible and be like, oh, got it. That's a process of renewal.
And it does take some teaching.
And I think some of that teaching and there's some mental health stigma still in the church
or even in our country, probably in the world, I address all of that in this book.
And I'm like, this is what trauma looks like for children.
And these are the responses to trauma.
And this is what that looks like even into adulthood.
And we bring all of these things into our marriages, into our parenting, into our lives.
And it is devastating some of those effects of trauma.
but it's amazing the healing that can come
when you really know what the Bible says
about who you are and what God can do.
Yeah, in your case, even the trauma was interesting.
So I don't know, I haven't read the book yet.
But I know you had some trauma
that wasn't even really identified
because you didn't know your family origin story.
You had an assumption,
but I'm sure that that was like this weird trauma
that wasn't even identified in your life,
but it was like impacting you
and you didn't realize it until later.
And then you have this aha moment
What was the test you took?
Was it 23 and me or?
Ancestry DNA.
Yeah, you did the ancestry thing and did the DNA test.
And then you're like, this gets back and you're like, oh my gosh.
And you probably, I don't know.
I'm assuming where you like, this makes a lot of sense now.
Oh, 100%.
I remember asking my mom once as an adult.
I was in my 30s, I think.
Staying in her kitchen, she's cooking at the stove.
I said, mom, are you sure that Wayne is really my dad?
And she was, yeah.
And I'm like, didn't sound convincing.
And I already knew I was different.
I have a lot of things in common with my, I call them my Missouri siblings there,
but we were all born down there in Louisiana, but we've migrated to Missouri.
But there are so many differences, personality difference, physical difference.
So I always in the back of my head felt like something didn't quite click.
There's a certain level of not belonging in this family.
And when a child grows up in a family feeling like they don't quite belong,
and then there's also abuse and neglect.
It's kind of a
perfect storm in a sense.
And I have to say, Phyllis, that was one of the things
that one of the excerpts that Dad said in the Ford,
he said the thought that I had left a little girl alone
to fend for herself and fight her battles all by herself
was too much.
And he was talking about the idea he was skeptical at first.
And part of the reason why I think he was hoping it wasn't true,
only because then he would have to face that.
because that's a heavy thing.
And I'll admit, the first time, so you and Tony and Lisa and I spoke together in an event last year, last summer.
And so I had never really heard you tell your story.
I mean, you and I have had a lot of conversations, but there were still pieces of it, you know, like with anybody, you don't know everything.
And so you shared some things in that session we did about your life.
And I just, I sat there and wept because I had the exact same feeling dad had.
Like, I mean, you're my little sister.
and so I felt in that moment when you were sharing that trauma from your childhood that I wish I could have been there to do something.
I wish I could have been there to protect you.
I wish I could have been there to try to help my sister because you're my sibling.
And I would feel that way about any sibling.
And so I think in those moments that shows some of our, when people go through things, when you look back later, you're thinking, man, why couldn't I have been there to protect?
And so there's a lot of guilt and conscience things that go with that.
And now you're a counselor.
This is kind of your new career.
And so how do you use some of the things that you put in the book as well as just your life experiences is you're now trying to help a lot of children, a lot of families that are in tough situations?
I mean, how does that relate over sort of the ministry job you're doing now?
Well, it's powerful because I'm very empathetic.
Like I can literally put myself in their shoes.
And not everybody experiences the same thing.
but the fallout from it is typically very similar.
And so I'm able to see the heart of a child.
And I think, like, what would I go back and tell myself when I was three or seven or 12?
What wisdom and what encouragement would I speak into a child, into my life?
And then I take that.
And I'm like, I can speak that into a child's life now.
And that's my heart.
Yeah.
And you never really thought you'd be doing this, right?
You were a nurse when you came into it.
So really the whole life change for you in your experiences and meeting us and becoming, you know, a regular part of the Robertson family, really sort of reshaped how you wanted to go forward.
Did those things link together, you think?
Was it the experience that led you to want to do this and do this kind of different pathway for a second?
Definitely.
And surprisingly, y'all may not know this, but dad was a huge cheerleader of mine.
He would see my work schedule as a nurse and let's a drag.
I'm like, ooh, you know, that's us.
I don't know how you're keeping a schedule like that, you know.
So we would talk about that.
And then he would, you know, I would sometimes complain about work, you know, like I'm going
into work, you know, just came in, say hello, or I just got home from work, something like that.
And he would pray, he would bring, you know, he'd get his Bible out and encourage me with some
verses.
And he just talked to me about how much I was showing mercy to others and like how important the
work I, you know, that I was doing.
And just as we talk through that, and again, as I'm reflecting and seeing that healing and the book does this too, just a deep dive into forgiveness.
Talk about needing to walk through some forgiveness.
My dad wasn't there to protect me because I'm pretty sure if people had known my dad, I think there would have been a lot less happen to me if they had thought Phil Robertson might show up being the kind of person he was.
So, yeah, there's definitely all our forgiveness, even forgiving him, forgiving my mom for, you know, for what she allowed to happen and what happens.
And so there is a deep dive into forgiveness.
And I had to walk that out those five years.
One of the big things that I think you've got to do too
in overcoming trauma is you have to speak out what's happened.
And so, I mean, it's so funny because even like what happened with, you know, your story
and Phil finding out about years later, it's actually very common now
because the way that people are tracking DNA and the way that people are subscribing
Because Phil never submitted his DNA.
I think this is important.
I mean, he never submitted his DNA.
You submitted your DNA, and they're building this tree of information that they were
able to isolate your genetic code to my grandparents, our grandparents.
And so since you were related to both my granny and Paul, although they were, I think, cousins, to be honest.
Something went in a loop in the family tree.
I could see it.
I can point it out on the family tree.
They were third cousins, that to be very.
We're airing our dirty laundry now, aren't we?
That's what I wanted to ask is I'm kind of backing up,
but I don't know if I ever found this out.
So you look up on this tree, however this works.
And then what did you do when you saw the names?
Did you do an internet search?
Because what I'm getting at is, I mean, most people, I think,
who are listening to us would think,
how did you get past the first picture you see of your,
actual biological family.
Well,
I picture.
I actually,
yeah,
it was the grandparents.
So these are old.
There was a
U.N.
maybe Robertson or something like that.
Yeah,
that was Paul's dad
was you in.
Okay.
So those were like
100% my great
grandparents.
So then,
because you can track,
you know,
it trickles down to cousins.
And so there were cousins
that had completed it.
And so all of that happened.
And I figured out
where I kind of
was on that tree.
And then I confronted my mom.
So I didn't have pictures of y'all going like, oh, okay.
Yeah, that didn't come until after.
And then when you saw this, you thought, because it's great that you don't have a beard,
I guess.
What I'm getting at is you're like, wait, what?
Give her time.
Give her time.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Slow down.
She can grow up.
That's right.
That's right.
No, I think, you know, everything that I saw when I did look him up or look y'all up,
It was just, you know, this is this Christian family.
And my siblings, my brother and sister had watched the show.
And so there was this idea of y'all being a strong Christian family.
So I kind of leaned into that.
And remember I came down in that December just to kind of scope it out.
Like I think this is who my dad is.
It's not proven.
And he's up there boldly proclaiming the gospel.
Yeah.
So I felt pretty good.
The beard didn't matter to me.
I mean, you could have been a descendant.
Well, you had isolated it to who we call Granny and Paul.
So you were the daughter of one of the five boys in that family.
So genetically it could have been any one of those five is what you had isolated it to.
And then when you talk to your mom, she told you it's the guy with the duck whistle.
Yep.
And that's one of your chapters, right?
I think that's chapter one.
The man who makes the duck whistles, that's what she called it.
Which is funny because when we found out, Willie was like, there's your movie title,
the man who makes a tugwitz.
Which makes me think that it wasn't an accident that I said that and organized that service
the day you were there.
I mean, which is just kind of weird to me.
No, I think God organized that, orchestrates that.
But you find this out.
And so I have actually several people when y'all's story came out.
I had several people like the same thing happened to me.
and one of my friends who this happened to, his wife could not handle this.
And sadly, they end up getting a divorce over it.
But I think about when you talk about healing and going through these things,
like Al, you've said this so many times as a minister and a counselor and even your own story.
And it has stuck with me.
I mean, this has been one of the wisest things that you've taught me is Al said this.
you got to detonate your own time bomb.
And what he means about that is we got to get this stuff out and just like speak it out.
But so many people with like trauma, like your mom had trauma.
Your mom had this shame of this encounter with Phil that resulted in the birth of you.
And she's got this secret.
She's just holding back all those years.
You think, man, it's so unnecessary.
Like just get it out.
Just get the truth out.
It will be painful sometimes.
but just get it out, pull the covers off so that healing can begin.
I think that's a key part of the story.
So awesome.
And look, I'm going to have to read something based on what you just said, the bomb and then getting it out.
This is an excerpt from the book.
Trauma doesn't just shape our behavior.
It quietly becomes our identity.
The ways we learn to survive begin to feel like who we are, not just what we do.
Letting them go can feel terrifying as though healing requires us to erase ourselves rather than be restored.
But healing is not the loss of self.
It is the slow unveiling of who we were designed to be all along.
It is the movement from being defined by survival to being truly known by God and by ourselves.
And while that kind of change feels impossible at first, it is not annihilation.
It is recognition that we are putting the past behind us and moving forward to what lies ahead.
Philippians 313.
That's good.
So good.
Look, so it's I Never Knew finding healing and renewal after trauma.
And you can go to I Nevernewbook.com.
and there's a picture up on the screen.
I feel like Dad needs the final word here, Phyllis.
And so I'm going to read the last excerpt from the forward.
He says, one thing I know is that time is short.
The resurrection looms closer and closer for me.
As I'm writing this, it's becoming clear to me that I'm not what I used to be.
My body's breaking down.
I find it harder and harder to remember things, way harder.
The old doc told me recently they have the same condition many of my siblings had dementia.
That's bad news for most people,
but you won't find me groaning and moaning about it, not at all.
I'm ready to meet my best friend Jesus in person.
My hope is that when you get to this book's end,
and he's talking about Phyllis's book,
you will only utter one simple question,
is God good or what?
And so I can't think of a better endorsement, Phyllis,
than dear old dad, even from across the pale,
telling folks to get this book.
So Unashamed Nation, I just want to challenge you guys.
Phyllis is doing pre-sales now.
Look, you guys can help make this success.
We told her story first to you.
And so if you want to dive deeper into that and where Phyllis is going now with her ministry
and helping other people, check it out and get this book.
Phyllis, you're always welcome.
It's always good.
I'm glad you're in Missouri.
I wanted to talk more about your grandkids and what you're doing, but maybe we'll do that
next time we come on.
Yeah, yeah, we'll do that.
And maybe even get Gordon on here.
You know, he's helping.
Oh, yeah.
By the way, Gordon, Zach's dad, who co-wrote,
Dad's last two books also Ghost wrote with Phyllis on this project as well.
So it's a family.
It's a family affair.
We love you, Phyllis.
And thank you for writing this.
It's going to help a lot of folks.
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