The SAVEDpreneur™ Spotlight: Brittnee Wilder, Founder of Wild About Healing

When you reach a place where you have no one else to depend on but God, your faith begins to deepen in a way that is difficult to explain. In that quiet and challenging season, God met me in ways I had never experienced before.

The SAVEDpreneur™ Spotlight: Brittnee Wilder, Founder of Wild About Healing

Brittnee Wilder is a woman redeemed, restored, and repurposed by God — and she will be the first to tell you that the most painful chapter of her life became the foundation of her calling. After experiencing the devastation of divorce, she found herself in a season of deep healing, reflection, and rebuilding. What emerged from that valley was not just survival, but a God-given assignment: to help divorced women reclaim their identity and rise again in peace, confidence, and divine authority.

Let's lean in.


Tell us who you are and what is your God-driven purpose?

I am Brittnee Wilder — a woman redeemed, restored, and repurposed by God.

My God-given purpose is to help divorced women reclaim their identity and rise again in peace, confidence, and their divine authority. After experiencing the devastation of divorce myself, God met me in my lowest place and began a deep healing and transformation in my life. What once felt like the end became the very place where God revealed my calling.

Today, I use my testimony, faith, and transformational tools to guide women through emotional healing, spiritual renewal, and personal restoration. I believe God does not waste our pain. He uses it to prepare us to serve others.

My mission is simple: to help women remember who they are in God and rise again stronger, wiser, and more aligned with the purpose He placed on their lives.

Who first introduced you to God and what was your salvation experience?

I was first introduced to God through my family. My grandparents were deeply devoted to their faith and answered a powerful calling when they packed up their lives in Texas and moved to Vancouver, Washington to build a church from the ground up. Their obedience to God created a spiritual foundation for our entire family. Growing up in the church, faith was always present in my life. My mother also served faithfully as the Minister of Music, so I was surrounded by worship, ministry, and the presence of God from a young age.

But while I was raised in church, I didn’t truly encounter God for myself until about thirteen years ago when I moved to Atlanta.

I had moved there to pursue my career working with commercially sexually exploited children. It was the most challenging job I had ever experienced, and it was also one of the hardest seasons of my life. I had moved away from my family, my support system, and everything familiar. I found myself in a new city, carrying the emotional weight of the work I was doing and navigating life on my own.

It was during that season of isolation that I truly began to know God personally.

When you reach a place where you have no one else to depend on but God, your faith begins to deepen in a way that is difficult to explain. In that quiet and challenging season, God met me in ways I had never experienced before. I realized that sometimes God isolates us in order to elevate us. What felt like loneliness at the time was actually God drawing me closer to Him and preparing my heart for a deeper calling.

At first, I thought my move to Atlanta was simply about building my career and possibly finding love. But over time, God revealed that He had brought me there for something even greater — to develop a real, personal relationship with Him without the distractions of familiarity, family, or comfort.

That season transformed my faith. I went from knowing about God to truly knowing Him for myself. And when your faith is built in a place where God is all you have, it becomes unshakable.

That experience became the foundation of my spiritual journey and ultimately the path that led me into ministry and helping other women rediscover their identity, healing, and purpose through God.

Success doesn’t happen overnight. What has been your process to see success in your life?

Success has never been an overnight experience for me. It has been a process of faith, obedience, healing, and perseverance.

My journey to success has required me to walk through seasons that stretched me spiritually and emotionally. There were moments when I had to rebuild my life, my confidence, and even my identity. Through those seasons, I learned that true success is not just about achievements or recognition — it’s about becoming the person God created you to be.

A big part of my process has been doing the inner work. I’ve had to confront pain, release past disappointments, and allow God to heal areas of my heart that were wounded. That healing journey strengthened my faith and helped me grow into the woman I am today.

Another part of my success has been learning to trust God’s timing. Many times we want things to happen quickly, but God often uses the waiting season to prepare us. Every challenge, setback, and delay has actually been a part of the preparation process for my purpose.

For me, success looks like walking in alignment with what God has called me to do — helping women heal, rediscover their identity, and rise again with confidence and faith. My journey has shown me that when you stay committed, remain faithful, and allow God to shape you through every season, the success that follows is not only meaningful but deeply purposeful.

When God gave you a vision for your life/work, what did it look like? Are you working to fulfill it? How?

When God first began revealing the vision for my life, it didn’t come during a moment of celebration — it came through one of the most painful seasons I had ever experienced: my divorce.

For a long time, I didn’t want to believe that something so heartbreaking could be connected to my purpose. Like many women, I had always valued marriage deeply, and when it ended, I had to face a level of pain, disappointment, and identity loss that completely reshaped my life. But through that season, God began to reveal something powerful to me: sometimes our deepest wounds become the very place where our calling is born.

As a natural healer and empath, I have always attracted people who are hurting or going through difficult seasons. After my divorce, I began to realize that many of the women God was placing in my path were also navigating heartbreak, loss, and the challenge of rebuilding their lives. What I once saw as a personal failure, God began showing me was actually preparation for my assignment.

That realization helped me understand that my purpose is to help women who are walking through the same valley I once experienced — women who feel broken, lost, or unsure of who they are after divorce. My calling is to help them rediscover their identity, rebuild their confidence, and rise again in peace, faith, and divine power.

For the past two years, I have been walking this vision out as a full-time entrepreneur. It has not been an easy path. Entrepreneurship requires faith, resilience, and the willingness to trust God even when the road feels uncertain. But despite the challenges, I know without a doubt that this is where God wants me to be.

Every day I continue to walk in obedience to the vision He placed on my heart — serving women, sharing my testimony, and helping others find healing and restoration. I truly believe that when God gives you a vision, He also gives you the strength and the path to fulfill it. My responsibility is simply to keep walking it with faith.

What does being a SAVEDpreneur™ mean to you? What is your kingdom assignment and how are you carrying out your assignment now?

To me, being a SAVEDpreneur™ means building a business that is fully surrendered to God and allowing Him to lead every step of the journey. It means understanding that entrepreneurship is not just about income or influence — it is about impact and obedience. A SAVEDpreneur™ is someone who recognizes that their gifts, talents, and vision were given by God and uses them to serve others while advancing the Kingdom.

For me, my Kingdom assignment is to help women — especially divorced women — heal, reclaim their identity, and rise again in peace, confidence, and their divine power. I believe God has called me to walk alongside women who are navigating heartbreak, loss, and life transitions and remind them that their story is not over. Through faith, healing, and personal transformation, I help them rediscover who they are in Christ and step boldly into the next chapter of their lives.

Right now, I am carrying out this assignment through my work as a full-time entrepreneur, coach, author, and speaker. Through my coaching programs, workshops, speaking engagements, and healing experiences, I create spaces where women can process their pain, strengthen their faith, and rebuild their lives with purpose. I use the tools God has placed in my hands — faith, testimony, and transformational practices — to help women experience both emotional healing and spiritual renewal.

Being a SAVEDpreneur™ means trusting that God is the true CEO of my life and my business. My role is to remain obedient, stay aligned with His vision, and continue serving the women He sends my way.

What did God call you to build, and how did you know? What steps did you take to be obedient? How quickly did it take you to answer the call?

God called me to build a space where women — especially those who have experienced divorce — can heal, rediscover their identity, and rise again in the peace and power God intended for their lives.

I didn’t recognize the call immediately. In fact, it was revealed through one of the most painful experiences of my life. After my divorce, I found myself walking through a deep season of healing, reflection, and rebuilding. During that time, I began to notice that many of the women coming into my life were also carrying broken hearts, shame, and the weight of starting over. As an empath and natural healer, I have always attracted people who are hurting, but this time it felt different — it felt intentional.

Through prayer, reflection, and the confirmation of others, God began showing me that my pain had a purpose.

The very process I was walking through — healing, rebuilding my confidence, strengthening my faith, and rediscovering my identity — was the same path that many other women desperately needed guidance through.

Being obedient to that call meant taking bold steps of faith. I invested in my growth, deepened my spiritual practice, and began developing programs, workshops, and experiences designed to help women heal emotionally and spiritually. Eventually, I stepped fully into entrepreneurship so I could dedicate my time and energy to serving women who were ready to rebuild their lives.

Answering the call was not instant. Like many people, I wrestled with doubt and uncertainty at first. But once I truly understood that God was asking me to use my story to help others, I could no longer ignore it. Step by step, I began saying yes.

Today, I continue to walk in obedience by creating spaces for healing, speaking openly about my testimony, and helping women rise again with faith, confidence, and purpose. What once felt like the end of my story became the very foundation of the work God called me to build.

Where did obedience cost you something—money, time, identity, approval? And how did you handle the tension?

Obedience to God has definitely cost me something — time, financial security, comfort, and at times even the approval of others.

One of the biggest sacrifices came when I stepped fully into entrepreneurship. For the past two years, I have been a full-time entrepreneur, which meant walking away from the safety and predictability of traditional employment. That decision required a tremendous amount of faith because building something God has called you to create does not always come with immediate financial stability or guaranteed results.

There were moments when I had to trust God in ways that stretched me deeply — investing my time, energy, and resources into the vision He placed on my heart while believing that He would provide along the way. It also required me to release parts of my identity that were tied to what felt familiar or socially acceptable. Choosing obedience sometimes meant walking a path that not everyone understood.

There were seasons where the tension between faith and fear was very real. I had moments where I questioned whether I was doing the right thing or if the path would truly work out. But in those moments, I had to remind myself that obedience to God is rarely comfortable, but it is always purposeful.

What helped me navigate that tension was leaning deeper into my relationship with God — through prayer, reflection, and trusting the confirmations He continued to send along the journey. I also reminded myself that the assignment God placed on my life was bigger than temporary discomfort.

Today, I see that every sacrifice has been part of the process of becoming the woman God needed me to be to carry this calling. Obedience may cost something, but the purpose, impact, and lives that are transformed along the way make it worth every step of faith.

What upcoming projects are you working on that you want our readers to know about?

I am contributing to a collaborative book called Overcoming, alongside Ash Cash, Brian Johnson, and Taurea Vision Avant. It is a book discussing some of life’s toughest challenges and the process of getting through them.

I am also finishing up my own book, which tells my divorce story and the healing process I walked through to arrive at the place of peace I am in today.

What is the best way for our readers to keep up with you?

Instagram: @brittneewilder

Facebook: @coachbrittneewilder

LinkedIn: @brittneewilder

YouTube: @brittneewilder

TikTok: @coachbrittneewilder

Website: www.wildabouthealing.com