He’s tackling this: how do you respond to injustice and betrayal without becoming the very thing that hurt you? Orlando’s answer is to turn trauma into service through forgiveness, community, and courageous leadership.
In today’s conversation Orlando Bowen explores how a promising CFL career, a life of community service, and a single night of police brutality collided — and how he chose forgiveness instead of bitterness. He walks Dr. Wells through the assault, the false charges, and the six-year legal battle, and then the turn: seeing that the real purpose was to stand in the gap for the people who wouldn’t have had a voice. Orlando explains how that experience birthed his youth-leadership work and his “get off the sidelines” message for corporations. The result is a raw, hopeful conversation about justice, healing, and showing up for others.
You will learn how to keep moving when the system is against you; how to build a tight circle that talks possibility, not pity; how forgiveness is a performance skill — it frees energy for the work ahead; how he turned his story into One Voice One Team, the youth-leadership charity that now empowers thousands of young people every year; and how leaders can create workplaces where every person’s contribution is honoured.
You will discover that pain isn’t the end of the story — it can be the assignment. When you decide “this happened, so now I help,” you stop being a victim and start being a catalyst.
Most people get stuck in resentment after a wrong, and resentment burns the energy you need to lead, parent, or build. Orlando shows a path to process the hurt, forgive, and return to service so you don’t lose years to bitterness.