Greg Riley

The Purpose Of Life Is Experience Itself with Greg Riley | Ep. 33

On this week’s episode of The True North Show, I am joined by Greg Riley who, whilst sitting in a tarot card course, realised the psychic gifts he had.  At this time he had a very successful corporate career and this moment was life changing.  Greg started to delve into spirituality, neuroscience, human behaviour and devoured hundreds of books to learn more and more.  When Greg and I first met it was an instant past connection, we spoke for hours and our conversation on this episode was no different.  

Greg Riley is an ex-Banking Executive and Australia’s most gifted psychic.

Author of “The Architecture of Experience” Greg explores the notion that consciousness is not based on reality and the purpose of life is experience itself.

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Transcript:

Megan North (00:00)
Today, I am joined by a man who, as soon as we met, I felt like we had a past connection, possibly a past life together. You know that instant recognition you get when you meet someone for the first time, but feel like you’ve known them for ages. Greg Riley is an ex-banking executive and Australia’s most gifted psychic. Author of The Architecture of Experience, Greg explores the notion that consciousness is not based on reality and the purpose of life is experience itself.

Hello and welcome to The True North Show. I’m your host, Megan North. I am a purpose finder, mental health professional, and guide for those ready to return to who they truly are. Here, we explore what it means to live a life led by purpose, alignment, and deeper inner truth. Through real conversations, powerful reflections, and soul-led strategies, we’ll uncover the stories, tools, and insights that help you navigate life’s crossroads and find your own true north.

So whether you’re in the middle of a transformation, seeking clarity, or just curious about what’s next, you’re in the right place. Let’s dive in. Your path starts now.

I love that. Welcome to the show, Greg. I am so thrilled that you’re joining me today.

Greg Riley (01:29)
For your listeners, we had a pre-chat that went for two and a half hours. And it was all war stories from corporate life.

Megan North (01:38)
It was. And there was so much synergy between us as well, wasn’t there? Isn’t it funny, when you talked to me about the word authenticity, and how you said the word authenticity is really about honesty? And I’m like, “My God, that’s what I think.”

Greg Riley (01:48)
Yeah. We talked about the hijacking of vulnerability, right? So that’s been completely hijacked into some fad. It’s a cult now, that it’s not real, true vulnerability. It’s vulnerability to show that you’re vulnerable, but it’s not really vulnerability.

Megan North (02:12)
Yeah, interesting, isn’t it? Yes. I reckon I’m going to ask this first question, and then we’re just going to take off.

Greg Riley (02:22)
It normally happens that way.

Megan North (02:23)
Let’s go, let’s go. So, Greg, what was the defining moment that led you to pursue your true passion and purpose?

Greg Riley (02:30)
A complete breakdown. So I had what you would consider a very happy and successful life from the outside. Then you realise that no matter how much you get of that dopamine chase, once you get to a certain point and you achieve something, it gets hollow.

Externalising success and achievement, and needing to get somewhere to mean something, is exhausting. I ended up taking a bucketload of drugs to probably balance that, because in certain corporate crowds, that’s just what happens. Then relationships break down. There’s no depth to anything, and you’re really not living a life of any real purpose, apart from driving that corporate career.

You’ve got the corner office, the car, the house, the girlfriend, and no one knows that you’re falling apart inside because you can’t let anyone know that’s where you’re at. So you keep the façade up, but that can only last for so long before you actually have a complete breakdown. Breakdowns are often breakthroughs.

Through that, a marriage breakdown and stuff like that, you realise there’s a common denominator here. It’s me. Even though I’ve been on the spiritual journey for a long time, it’s very easy to get hooked into the world of achievement, status, and money. It’s very easy to fall into that world and get stuck in that loop of, “If I just earn more money, I’ll be happier.” And it works out that way… until it doesn’t.

Megan North (04:29)
Yeah, yeah. So how long ago was that tipping point for you?

Greg Riley (04:39)
It sort of happened in my early twenties. It was a relationship break-up where it was not good. I did the wrong thing. I was not in the right place. But then I thought, “Well, I’ll start doing martial arts,” which was great. That opened up one door. Then I thought, “Well, I’ll give meditation a crack.”

I love human psychology. It’s something I’ve always loved, to understand how people work. Even before that, in my early teens, I was studying hypnotherapy when I was 19 or 20, to understand how we work as human beings.

So I fell into this place of doing meditation in this space in Lingaran in Melbourne with a group of females. It’s me as a dude and all these meditations. The meditation centre was attached to a place with a lot of spiritual stuff. There was mediumship, tarot readings, visualised journeys, and stuff like that.

So I was doing that and literally just rocking up in my suit, coming straight from work, telling everyone at work I was going to do an IT course when I was really going to do meditation. You couldn’t say that. I played footy at the time as well. So I’m rocking up, and they sort of loved it. It was great having a male in amongst all the females there, and somebody from corporate exploring this aspect of himself because he wanted to make himself better.

Then I went, “Okay, well, I’ll try the tarot cards.”

Megan North (06:45)
Ha ha ha!

Greg Riley (07:01)
People were practising with everybody. So there’s me and another dude in amongst all the women again. The first lesson we went to, you’re basically doing three cards at a time.

Then we did something called psychometry. I got the guy’s ring and I said, “Okay, well, you need to read it.” There was really no instruction, just “Give what you get.” And literally, I was reading it, saying what was coming to me, and the guy across from me is like, “How are you getting this stuff?” I had no idea who he was. It was his dad’s ring, and I’m saying, “You live in a pub, down the Sale way, and you need to travel around a fair bit.” He was a publican. He’s like, “Who the hell are you?”

The girls there are going, “Holy crap. How did you learn to do this?” I’m like, “This is my first time. I don’t know what I’m doing.”

From that place, I devoured books. I went to the library. One of the first books I read was Bringing Through to Channel by Sonea Roman. Then I started to dabble in the spiritual side of things, human psychology, hypnotism, counselling. I tried to combine a lot of different things.

Then you get into the Sydney Banks stuff, the Three Principles stuff, you get into Byron Katie, you get into Peter Crone. You start to see different people who have a version of how to help people become, or try and find, what they’re searching for.

And the more I went down this path, the more I realised that your inner world reflects everything externally. But everyone was trying to be healed. Everyone was broken. Everyone was coming with their trauma. Everyone was holding onto, “This is who I am because this happened to me.” And it’s like, this doesn’t work.

So over time, with everything I’ve learned, I’ve come up with my own methodology and my own way of how I see clients. It’s a very different approach to most people because I believe, and the way my clients have profound change, is that life’s purpose is experience. That’s it.

We’re not here to save the world. We’re not here to have four million followers. We’re not here to have a massive corporate. We’re not here to save all these men’s groups. People are trying to gain know their purpose by this external thing, when I turn it around and say, maybe the experience you’re having now is exactly what you need for your evolution.

What is this experience giving you the opportunity to learn about who you are, or to develop, or to explore who you really are? Everyone’s trying to ascend. Everyone’s trying to leave the matrix. Everyone’s talking about, “I’ve got to become more spiritually aware.” And you and I are like, no. You’re coming here to live in the physical body. You’re here for the 3D stuff. Don’t try and leave because that in itself is an illusion. If you leave the game, the game stops.

You chose a human body for a reason: to have these experiences. Some experiences are horrible. Some will challenge you. Some you don’t want. Some are the greatest you’ll ever have. Some are despair, grief, love, the highest of highs. That is the human experience. That’s why you’re here.

And then you get to give meaning to that experience based on who you are. People try to get rid of the ego or identity. I believe the opposite: a very strong, healthy ego and identity is part of the game. I have a different take on things.

Being in the spiritual community, you see a lot of spiritual bypassing, and a lot of people trying to avoid the negative, avoid the darkness, or get away from feeling negative emotions. But the negative is the path to your exact evolution.

So we embrace it. We embrace the feelings. I help people feel again. I help them feel despair, grief, insignificance, shame, guilt. And we literally transcend it. We use it. We give it the meaning it’s there for. Not, “I’m feeling this because I’m a piece of crap,” and then using that as an excuse for behaviour.

Then it becomes victimisation: “My life is like this because everyone’s against me.” The question is, how did I get into this? Everything I’ve learned has been about me first. I haven’t gone into this to try and save the world. I haven’t gotten into this to become famous. I haven’t come into this to have some kind of following or guru-ish stuff. Everything I’ve learned, I tried and tested first, and failed at a bucketload of stuff.

And I found that, for me, and the way my clients work, this is probably the easiest way to get meaning back in life.

Megan North (13:34)
Yeah, yeah. And I’ve had a bit of an aha moment sitting here listening to you talk about that, because I went and found a new kinesiologist to do a little bit of work with. When I got to her treatment room, she got me to lay on the bed, and not once did she muscle test me.

So at the end of the session, I said, “Are you not going to muscle test me?” And she said, “No, I do it by proxy because I do so much online. It’s all right because I was asking the questions in my head, and I’ve cleared it all.”

And for me, I really had an issue with that. I was like, “Well, what did you work on? What came up?” It’s not that I need to know the story or hold onto the story, but I need to logically go, “Aha.” That’s interesting. Yes, that was a belief that my dad had, or whatever. Then I go, “Oh, great. I’ve cleared it now. Now I can move on.”

I really struggled because I need to logically understand what’s going on so that I can process it.

Greg Riley (14:53)
You would have felt it somatically first.

Megan North (14:56)
Definitely. Yeah, I did. I felt things shift. But for me, I like to talk things through and get a logical sense of it.

Greg Riley (15:10)
One of my six-step processes, step five is mind and heart coherence. Having those two in coherence is very vital because you can’t get there without either one of those. Imbalance in one becomes too emotional. Imbalance in your thoughts becomes too intellectual.

Megan North (15:34)
Yeah, good one. Because without knowing what work she did on me, I kind of feel like… I’m not worried she did anything bad, because I don’t attract those sorts of people. But it was just an interesting process to go through.

Whereas when I told my husband, he’s like, “That sounds great,” because he says, “I’m happy to lay there while you do all the healing work. I don’t need to talk about it.”

Greg Riley (15:59)
Yeah. Even that word healing, it’s like, why even ask that question? Why do we need healing? Go deeper into that. What are we trying to heal?

Because ideally, and this isn’t my thing, this comes back from philosophies from 2,000 or 3,000 years ago. Sydney Banks made it popular, the nature of thought. Byron Katie says, “You were never broken in the first place.” A lot of these people out there say that if you’re really connected with who you are, you’re spiritual, you can’t be hurt. You’re an infinite being.

Yes, there are parts of the human experience that aren’t what you want. But without that experience, you wouldn’t be half the person you are.

Megan North (16:48)
Totally, absolutely.

Greg Riley (16:50)
So it’s perspective. That’s what we’ll get into the tangent because back in 2011, I won a TV show called The One. It was Australia’s most gifted psychic. It was on Channel Seven and all that stuff.

That didn’t last very long for me because coming from my background, more in the coaching, therapy space, hypnotherapy, psychology, jumping into the… I still do readings, but I do them very differently. It’s more about, “This is where you are, this is where you’re heading, this is why you’ve got the block.”

The reason your future ends up here is because humans are patterns of the past. Humans are easy to predict. I’m probably letting a secret out here: from a psychic perspective, if a psychic is half decent, 80% of it is psychology. We’re a pattern of our past. We’re a pattern of our identity.

If I think I’m unworthy and unlovable, guess what I’m going to attract in relationships? That has nothing to do with psychic. There’s no intuition there. It’s pure psychology.

So people like you and I who can combine deep psychology, influence and behaviour, on top of intuition, we’re very rare. Like hen’s teeth.

Because most psychics… and this is what I didn’t like. It’s dangerous because we’ve got people’s lives in our hands and people take what we say literally. I know people have broken up relationships because a psychic has said so.

But the problem is these people don’t know how human behaviour works.

Megan North (18:38)
Yeah.

Greg Riley (18:38)
And that’s where I didn’t last long, because I was having stand-up arguments with customers about, “This is where you’re at.” And they go, “No, no. A psychic told me I’m going to meet Dave in October. I’m going to meet my soulmate in October. It hasn’t happened. Where is he?”

And I was like, “Hang on. You’ve just come out of three relationships in three years. All were abusive. Your father left when you were a teenager. Your mother raised you and she berated him the whole time. You need to deal with this.”

But they weren’t wanting that. They were wanting the reading of, “Everything is going to be okay. You’re going to meet Dave in October. He’ll sweep you off your feet. Life will be perfect. Two kids, boy and a girl, blonde hair, blue eyes. You’ll live here. You’ll be financially okay.”

People want to hear that. But where I was coming from was, “No, no, no. You’re going nowhere. You’re going to keep repeating this pattern. Dave’s not coming. Roger’s coming, and he’s going to do exactly the same thing as the previous three times.” I had people walk out.

So I stopped doing that kind of reading because it didn’t service me, and it didn’t help the client either. It wasn’t what they were looking for. I’m not knocking it. If people want that kind of reading, go for it. Just take it with a grain of salt.

But seeing someone like me and you, there’s depth. You’re going to hear stuff you don’t want to hear. You’re going to hear your patterns. You’re going to have to take accountability and responsibility for your life exactly where it is right now. And the only way you get there is by taking responsibility for you. Nobody is coming to save you.

Megan North (20:50)
Yeah, yeah. It’s real. I did quite a few readings over the Christmas New Year break, because I do forecast readings for people. Majority of them were like, “It’s really interesting because it’s confirming everything that I’m thinking at the moment.” And I’m like, “Great.”

I actually love that because I feel like it allows my clients to surrender and to trust their own intuition. This is what you’re thinking and this is what’s coming up. So go and trust that. I love that response. It’s confirming what you already know.

Sometimes people do need that extra confirmation from a card or whatever.

Greg Riley (21:40)
Yes.

Megan North (21:46)
But it’s interesting. I love those responses of, “Yep, okay. This is just confirming everything that I already knew.” I’m like, “Great.”

Greg Riley (21:55)
Yeah. I can count on one hand when people came in and said, “Greg, I want you to read about where I’m blocked right now, where I am spiritually, what I’m here to encounter, what I’m trying to overcome, what life is showing me to explore.” Nobody said that.

Most people come for three things: love, work, money. That’s 90% of it. Most of it is love, especially when your clientele is mostly female.

So, again, giving away trade secrets here…

Megan North (23:01)
And then if you take back what you said before about we’re here for the exact moment, being a 3D human, then actually you’re just giving them that exact experience because the experience is this.

Greg Riley (23:14)
Yeah, correct. It’s experience. People get into nihilism. If life is just an experience, does it mean anything? And they go, “If it means nothing, I can do whatever I like.”

No. I’m saying it means everything. The experience is everything. Feeling love, despair, grief, joy, happiness, brokenness, depression, anxiety. It’s all part of the human experience. That’s to be embraced, and enjoyed.

Then people go, “If it’s just a simulation, a game, it means nothing.” No. It’s still a simulation, a holographic universe based on a foundation of mathematics. But it means so much because it’s the meaning of emotion we get. Emotion is everything.

If you’re just trying to ascend spiritually to the 12th ray of the 12th dimension of some Canadian kind of bullshit… sorry, I’m swearing. That in itself is you not breaking free from anything.

Megan North (26:22)
Yeah. And then that’s very egotistical as well.

Greg Riley (26:44)
That’s another podcast: spiritual ego.

Megan North (26:48)
Yeah, all right. One of the decks of cards behind me, Rebecca Campbell, her Work Your Light cards, which I love. One of the cards says, “This isn’t happening to you. It’s happening for you.”

Greg Riley (27:10)
Even more, it’s like you’ve created it.

Megan North (27:12)
Yeah. I love that card. It can be confronting for people because it takes you out of “I’m the victim.” It’s not happening to me. It’s happening for me. And then that last piece is, I’ve actually attracted it to me.

Greg Riley (27:33)
Yeah. And this is where it gets cool. You start combining that with human psychology. You understand how identity is created.

Greg here, Greg is a construct of society. The way I see myself is based on how I’ve been brought up: society, my parents, school, peers, social media. And I think I’ve made it up, but I haven’t. It’s been created.

I’ll give you an example. By asking one question, I can make you join a cult. The question would be, “What coffee do you like?”

Let’s say you pick a coffee that aligns with sustainability, farmers, collective good. I can profile you. I’ll infer you’re more social democratic, more left-leaning than right. Then I create yes statements. “People like us do this. People like us do that.” And you go, “Yes, yes, yes.”

Then I create a villain: “We’re not like these other people, the capitalists who rape and pillage the farmers and the environment.” And you go, “Yes.” Now I’ve got you emotionally engaged.

Then I say, “I’ve got a group. It’s about social justice, belonging, heart-centred values, sustainability.” And you say, “Sign me up.”

All because I asked you what coffee you drink. That’s how easy it is to influence human behaviour. It’s understanding identity, psychology, and how we’re being played. You think you’ve got free will, choice, that it’s about politics. It’s not. The illusion of choice gives you two options, but both lead to the same place.

Most humans think they’re making decisions. 99.9% of us react to life. We’re puppets. Part of the awakening is to realise, “Oh shit, I’ve been played my whole life.” But people don’t like to be wrong about themselves. They double down.

The moment you’re okay with being wrong is the moment you set yourself free. Then you can see what’s happening behind the scenes. If you keep everyone in fear, you can control them.

Megan North (32:46)
Yeah. And you see that in spirituality as well, right? People are spiritual, but then they think there are all these rules. I can’t do this, I can’t do that. Well, if you’re spiritual and you want to drink alcohol, fine. Just be a good person.

Greg Riley (33:14)
How about we just be a nice person?

Megan North (34:18)
Yes. How about we just be a nice person?

Greg Riley (34:27)
But “nice” requires an honest conversation with your heart. For our listeners, Megan and I come from high corporate backgrounds. We have war stories. Part of that is helping people develop intuition and awareness, because you can’t hide from that.

Radical honesty and radical authenticity is not nice. It’s a dark place because you have to own stuff you don’t like about yourself.

Megan North (35:43)
Yeah. But that’s where the breakthroughs happen.

Greg Riley (35:46)
Welcome to the human experience. I wouldn’t be half the man I am today without all the stuff I screwed up, and I continue to screw up.

Megan North (35:56)
Yep, and I agree. I’m the same.

All my past experiences, even just from this week, I’m sure there are lessons and wisdom I’ve gained because I thought I needed to do something and didn’t, or I thought that was the right thing to say and maybe it wasn’t. But then it’s about choosing: where do I put that energy? Have I really done something wrong and hurt someone? Okay, then I might need to address it. Or is it past, it’s gone, and that’s okay? Don’t put energy into it.

Greg Riley (36:30)
What a funny word.

Megan North (36:32)
Yeah. Thanks for picking.

Greg Riley (36:35)
You don’t know. We’re very quick to label wrong and bad, but it’s perspective. There is no one reality. It’s the reality you perceive, and that perspective is based on how you view yourself.

If you’ve got self-worth issues, you’ll view the world as fear. You’ll be hypervigilant. You’ll see threat.

Speaker 2 (37:33)
You’ll be hypervigilant the whole time. And what you’re going to do is go and see a doctor. They’ll put you on antidepressants and medications because you’ve got generalised anxiety. By the way, we’re not health experts. We don’t teach health.

But if you treat the core, how you view yourself intellectually and somatically, and you question why you think that way… yes, something happened to you and you felt bad about yourself, but that’s the portal in.

That’s the invitation to ask, what is that experience teaching me? I get to feel horrible. I get to feel despair. I get to feel grief. I get to feel betrayal. But it’s not me. It’s an event. I make up the story about it.

Megan North (38:32)
Yeah, yeah. I love that, because it’s just an event, just that moment in time. Then it’s the story and the perspective we put onto it.

It’s interesting, the technique I use as a healer is Theta Healing. I take someone into the theta brainwave and we work on belief systems. When we’re trying to find the bottom belief, it’s called a digging technique. I keep digging. Usually, intuitively, I already know the bottom belief, but if I told them, there’s no benefit.

So the digging technique is great because I continually ask, “What’s the worst thing about that?” And we dig, dig, dig. They have to move through the emotions to get to the bottom, so then we can rewire and change those belief systems. If I just told them, it’s like me going to that kinesiologist and not really understanding what work they did.

Greg Riley (40:49)
And that’s where the mastery comes in. When someone gets the insight, it doesn’t necessarily mean they’ll change, because people are often using that trauma to get something, usually pity. It lets them blame something else for their behaviour or their life.

The art is guiding someone from victim to accountability, awareness, and creation. That’s rare. Hen’s teeth.

Megan North (41:35)
Yeah.

Greg Riley (41:54)
That’s why I love teaching spirituality, psychology, influence and persuasion together.

When someone comes as a client to me, I have one ask. Unless you do this, you don’t come as a client. You have to pay it forward. You have to teach somebody else this. This isn’t fixing you. It’s not therapy, coaching, or counselling. This is an experience. I get to teach you something, and you have to impart it to someone else.

Megan North (42:31)
Wow, I love that.

Greg Riley (42:34)
Yeah, because teaching identity, psychology, how you’re made up, and spiritual experience together shifts people from reaction to creation.

They start to create. They start to explore life. That’s the freedom people are looking for.

Because if you live in the model of “I need to achieve something to mean something,” you’ll never be happy, never content. You’ll never have enough money, sex, partners, alcohol. Dopamine wears off. We’re addicted to dopamine as human beings.

So you teach people: every decision you make is made from a feeling driven by a hormone. Understand that. If I want trust, I need oxytocin. So what do I need to say, how do I need to show up? Over 90% of connection is non-verbal. People have summed you up before you’ve said a word.

If I bring presence and awareness, and I understand what hormones are being released in the other person, it changes everything. If you’re in corporate and listening, take that to work tomorrow. Nobody else is doing it.

Megan North (45:59)
Yeah.

Greg Riley (46:00)
And you know that, right? If I have the awareness as a leader to go, “By saying this, I want a certain outcome,” then I can create trust and connection. If I want communication breakdown, I’ll trigger adrenaline and cortisol, and then we’ll argue about who’s right.

Megan North (46:31)
Yeah, fight or flight. Exactly. Now talking about that, what about mental health and wellbeing for you? How do you balance and prioritise that? Is it different now to what it used to be in corporate? What do you do now that really works for you?

Greg Riley (46:52)
People are stressed 23 hours a day and think a yoga class will fix it. Or meditation. Or an ice bath. Or a supplement. The magic pill.

That’s the industry. They sell one thing that will fix it. And it’s just another “something outside of me will fix my problems.”

What do I do now? Slow down. Awareness. Breathe into your heart. No technique. No one cares if you breathe through your mouth or your nose. We’re obsessed with techniques. The best technique is no technique.

Megan North (47:39)
Yep. Just make sure you breathe.

Greg Riley (47:59)
Breathe. Get barefoot on grass or sand. Ground yourself. And if you’re overthinking, you’re overthinking. Everyone tries to fight it, stop it, fix it. But that’s willpower and technique. You’re in your head, not in your heart.

Go for a run. Go for a swim and stare at the black line. Go camping. Have a shower. Sit on the toilet and read a book. It’s slowing down and being present.

One of the greatest assets you can put in place right now is listening. Listen to yourself. Listen to your partner. Really listen. Don’t listen to respond. Listen to listen.

Sit outside barefoot, thoughts going crazy, and it’s okay. Nothing to fix. Eventually it will stop.

Megan North (50:09)
Yeah. I love that. Did you know the same letters used to spell “listener” are the same letters used to spell “silent”?

Greg Riley (50:20)
There you go. We love complicating stuff. We think we need something outside of us to connect with something inside of us. It’s crazy. Something out there is going to connect something that’s already intrinsic within us.

The Kingdom of God is within. You don’t need to go anywhere.

And for people like you and I, especially from the backgrounds we’ve had, I love this because we know how bad corporate Australia can be. Depression, anxiety, marriage breakdowns, alcohol abuse, drug abuse, diet abuse. We know.

I was asked last night, “Who do you want to speak to?” I don’t want to speak to the spiritual people. They can do that stuff. They know my work. I want to speak to the guy in the corner office, going home to his wife and kids who don’t speak to him, chasing purpose, stressed, thinking, “Let me go to the gym more. Let me take more peptides. If my body looked better, if I got more money, bigger car, bigger house, it will fix it.” It doesn’t.

And I love that our background speaks to these people because we can say, yes, we’re weird as hell. We’re tinfoil hatters. We’re psychically gifted, highly intuitive, we believe in spiritualism. But you know what? We held the corner office with you.

Megan North (52:28)
Yeah, we can relate. Exactly.

Okay, we really only have a couple of minutes left, but I didn’t get to ask you two questions. That’s alright. I am going to ask you the same question I ask all of my guests before we finish our conversation.

So Greg, what is one lesson or truth that you wish you’d learned earlier on your journey?

Greg Riley (52:54)
That’s a very difficult one, because… and this is a cop-out answer, I don’t necessarily regret anything.

Megan North (53:03)
I knew you were going to say that. I knew it.

Greg Riley (53:06)
If I changed it, I’d change where I am today. If I could impart something on people, it would be: open up your heart. It’s the most powerful asset you’ll ever have. We’re trying to protect it. It is your superpower. And the person that’s aligned from the heart, their mind, their presence and their essence, is unstoppable.

Megan North (53:10)
Yep. Absolutely. That’s really beautiful. Beautiful way.

I knew when I was asking, I was like, he’s going to say nothing. You’re the second guest who has said that, and it’s been a similar response. She was exactly the same. She said, “Because I wouldn’t be where I am now.”

Greg Riley (53:37)
You’re welcome. And I’ve done a lot of stuff. I’ve done a lot. There are years in my teens and mid-twenties I’ve got no idea what happened.

Megan North (54:05)
I get it. Thank you so much. I’m really grateful that we’ve had this time together. I just knew that the conversation would be amazing, so thank you for giving me and the audience that.

Thank you for joining me on this episode of The True North Show. I hope today’s conversation brought you closer to your own sense of purpose and reminded you of the power you hold within. If this resonated with you, I’d love for you to subscribe, leave a review, or share it with someone who’s also walking the path of becoming.

To continue the journey, head over to megannorth.com. You’ll find resources, support, and ways to work with me one-on-one. Until next time, keep trusting yourself, following your intuition, and taking one aligned step at a time. Your True North is never lost. It’s just waiting for you to come home.

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