THE brother of embattled Alaskan Bush People's star Solomon "Bear" Brown has posted a motivational message amid his custody battle.
Gabe Brown, 30, took to Instagram to hell his fans to "never give up" in a heartfelt post.
He wrote: "Just in case no one ever told you. You can do anything you put your mind to, so dream big, and never give up.
"Remember God gives to those who ask. He also knows what things you have need of before you ask.
"Trust the voice of God/love That's inside of you, feel with your spirit, and follow your heart. God bless us all."
His message comes as the bitterness between Bear and his estranged ex Raiven Adams intensified.
Raiven, 23, gave birth to their son River in March even though Bear originally denied he was the father.
But he has since asked for a DNA test to prove he's the father and said he would like joint custody if he is.
Raiven had filed a restraining order against Bear before River's birth and later dropped it, but accused her ex of being abusive.
She admitted recently in an Instagram Q&A that she was "building herself back up" and "processing hurt" after the alleged abuse.
She gave birth to River, the Discovery Channel's Alaskan Bush People's baby in March and came out of the hospital earlier this month.
Raiven said: "Taking it day by day mentally I'm doing so much better now that I'm in a new situation and my baby is safe and healthy.
"Mostly trying to build myself back up. I always told myself I could grieve after he was born. When he couldn't feel my emotions."
The 23-year-old went on: "But just seeing my baby helps me so much. But I have been able to process my hurt and work on it."
She added that while River is "happy and sweet", he wakes up every two hours so she's "exhausted and adjusting".
Back in February, Raiven accused Bear of threatening her with a gun and claiming "gun laws don't apply" to him.
Bear started exhibiting "erratic" and "abusive" behavior soon after the couple began dating, she alleged in court papers obtained by The Sun.
Raiven wrote that the ABP star began "yelling, slamming things, preventing me from leaving rooms."
The mom-of-one claimed he began threatening to "kick her out" and started to "withhold food and money" when she expressed concerns about his alleged drug abuse.
In another disturbing claim, she said he would use a gun as "intimidation," and told her "gun laws didn't apply to him."
After the revelation Bear recently posted pretended to shoot a gun in a new YouTube video.
The Alaskan Bush People star posted a bizarre animation-style clip in which he aimed a video game gun at his television screen, yelling: "That's right, come get it! Head shot, head shot, head shot!"
The ABP star posted the clip – which he titled "Strangekid" – on his channel, writing: "This is a project I’ve been working on!"
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