Trevoy Pointer knows that real transformation happens quietly — through consistency, clarity, and faith when no one is watching. As a former athlete, father, and author, he’s committed to becoming the highest version of himself while helping other men do the same. We caught up with Trevoy to talk about rebuilding every area of life, revisiting Walk Through the Fire with new wisdom, and why the same fire that tests us can ultimately shape our purpose.
Hi Trevoy, thank you so much for making time for us again! You’ve shared that you’re in a season of rebuilding — mind, body, spirit, and finances. What does that process look like for you day-to-day, and what has it taught you about becoming the man you’re meant to be?
Day-to-day for me has become very simple and very intentional. I’m in a season of rebuilding — mind, body, spirit, and finances — and that requires clarity, routine, and discipline. I work six days a week as a corporate life insurance sales rep, helping families understand and secure life insurance. I always say this: I love what I do. I get to protect families and put them in a position of stability for generations. That purpose means a lot to me.
Outside of work, I’m steady building. I work out, read, keep up with the news, and honestly… I stay out the way. Peace has become one of the most valuable assets in my life.
I’m also a father, and that role grounds everything I do. I take fatherhood seriously — I want my son to see a man who’s evolving, disciplined, consistent, and building something meaningful.
I’m also in the process of revisiting my book. Originally, I planned to write Walk Through The Fire 2, but as I grew, I realized the story needed deeper expansion — not a separate book. So instead, I’m creating a 2nd Edition of the original, adding the lessons and clarity I’ve gained since the first release. The original book was raw on purpose — I wanted readers to feel like we were sitting in a coffee shop having a real conversation, not reading a formal self-help manual. But now, I want to refine some parts, clean it up, and make sure the second edition reflects everything I’ve learned. When it’s out, I want it to feel complete — exactly how it needs to be.
Rebuilding has taught me something powerful: becoming the man you’re meant to be isn’t loud. It’s not glamorous. It’s slow, intentional work. It’s facing yourself, tightening up your life, and making decisions that reflect the future you want — not the past you came from. I’m grateful for this season. It’s shaping me into who I’m supposed to become.
Your next book, Walk Through the Fire (Part 2), sounds like it comes from a place of real transformation. What inspired this chapter of your story, and what do you hope readers take away from it?
For me, this next chapter of Walk Through the Fire is about showing people what real evolution actually looks like. Not a highlight reel. Not a social media snapshot that feels unattainable. Just the truth. We live in a world full of masks, and I’ve never cared for that. I want authentic. I want transparent. I want progress — the kind that’s lived, not performed.
This season of my life has given me a different kind of confidence in who I am, where I’m going, and what I stand for. And I learned recently that when you’re sure of yourself, it can make some people uncomfortable. But instead of taking offense, I took it as confirmation. Standing firm in your identity is part of the journey.
The 2nd Edition of the book is strengthening the blueprint I created in the original manuscript — tightening the lessons, expanding the wisdom, and making the framework even clearer for anyone walking their own path. It’s my way of giving people a practical, real-world guide to becoming the best version of themselves. Nothing abstract. Nothing sugar-coated. Just principles, clarity, and lived experience that people can actually apply.
And honestly, I don’t want people to look up to me. I want people to look up to themselves. It’s easy to get influenced by everyone else, but the real growth happens when you learn to influence your own life — take chances, take action, be open to failing, get feedback, grow, adjust, and keep moving. Those small, progressive steps every day eventually lead you exactly where you’re supposed to be.
My goal with this book is simple: hand people a blueprint they can use, watch them win big, and remind them that the fire they walk through can be the same fire that shapes them.
You talk about helping men — especially former athletes — find purpose beyond the game. What do you see as the biggest challenge for men in that transition, and how do you help them rediscover who they are?
The biggest challenge for men — especially former athletes — is sheer confusion. We’re taught from a young age that we’re supposed to have everything figured out, and the truth is… most of us have no idea what we’re doing in life. And that’s okay. The problem only starts when you stay in that confusion, when the lack of direction starts blocking your growth, and you refuse to address it. That becomes an internal issue.
I’m a former athlete myself. Basketball was my whole identity for 22 years. I set records, played at Manhattanville College, made a name for myself in New York even though I’m from Dallas. I wanted to go pro — and it didn’t happen. And nobody hands you a manual for what comes next. Nobody explains how to transition into adulthood, into fatherhood, into being a husband, or most importantly, into becoming a functional man who improves everything he touches.
Most of that journey is trial and error. A lot of stumbling, a lot of figuring things out the hard way. That’s why I created my blueprint. It doesn’t replace the work — nothing can do that — but it gives structure, guidance, support, and clarity to a process men often walk through alone. And I feel confident in it because it has worked for me in real time.
The truth is, all the intensity, discipline, focus, and grind we poured into sports… when you channel that into your life the right way, you can build something incredible. You can create a life you’re proud of. That’s what I want to help men do — redirect that energy toward purpose.
I genuinely believe this is part of my assignment from the Most High. I’ve accepted it, I’m grateful for it, and I’m honored to assist men through that transition.
As a father, how has parenthood influenced your sense of legacy and the kind of foundation you want to build for your son?
Parenthood has had a massive influence on me. My son is incredible — he’s nine now, and honestly, he reminds me so much of myself at that age. He’s independent, observant, simple, calm, and mature in ways that surprise me every day. It’s a little scary in the best way possible to see so much of myself in him. I honor him, and I respect him deeply.
A moment that really shaped me happened recently when he got emotional over scoring a 68 on a math test. He was upset, and I just told him, “Dude, don’t worry about that at all. It happens. Let’s learn what we need to learn and keep going. Life will throw you a lot of things to deal with — this is just one of them.” A week later he texted me, “My grades have gotten better.” I was at work smiling ear to ear. That moment reminded me how important it is to be present, patient, and supportive.
I want his life to be easier than mine was. I want his foundation to be strong — spiritually, mentally, emotionally, financially. I want him to be confident in who he is from the beginning, not spend years trying to figure it out. That’s why I gave him the initials “MVP” — Matthew Vaughn Pointer. I wanted him to grow up knowing he is somebody, knowing he’s capable, knowing he was born with value. That’s my guy.
Fatherhood anchors my sense of legacy. Everything I’m building — the discipline, the structure, the mindset, the financial foundation — is to make sure he has a blueprint I didn’t have. I’m building something he can stand on, not just inherit.
You’ve walked through pain, growth, and renewal. For someone reading this who’s still in their own “fire,” what’s one truth or piece of guidance you’d want them to hold onto?
The biggest truth I would tell someone who’s still in their own fire is this: don’t give up. Some days will feel unbearably heavy. Some seasons will break you down to your knees. I’ve had moments where I genuinely didn’t know how I would make it through the week.
I remember starting a new job with $25 to my name while being responsible for five people. I didn’t get paid until Friday. I worked 9 to 5, then did Uber Eats from 5:30 to 9:00 at night just to make $35 after expenses. That moment could’ve broken me — and honestly, a lot of days in that season could’ve. But I didn’t fold. I stood on my faith, my principles, and my commitment to becoming a better man. That’s what carried me through.
And today, I’m in a completely different situation. The days literally just keep getting better. That’s not a “fake” statement or something I say for social media — I actually live what I talk about. I don’t front for the gram when I speak. My days get better daily. I have challenges, for sure, but the trend is upward, without question.
My advice is this: simplify your life and remove what’s not for you. That includes people, habits, environments, patterns, and systems that no longer align with the person you’re trying to become. Do a real audit of your life. Be brutally honest with yourself. Cut out anything that drains your spirit or keeps you stuck.
The truth is, a lot of us stay comfortable with outdated versions of our lives — outdated relationships, outdated habits, outdated ways of thinking. And that’s how people slowly die before they ever expire. You have to take heed. You have to make the necessary changes, even when it hurts, even when it’s lonely, even when it’s uncomfortable.
When you start being real with yourself — really real — and making the hard decisions, things begin to shift. The fire doesn’t consume you; it reshapes you. And on the other side of that, there’s clarity, strength, and a version of yourself you didn’t even know you could reach.
Don’t quit. Keep going – and walk through the fire


