
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us a text
The moment a woman begins sharing the specific details of her abuse or trauma—not just abstract feelings, but vivid sensory memories, exact phrases her abuser used, or the particular scriptures weaponized against her—something powerful happens. For every woman listening who's experienced similar trauma, these details become the first crack in the trance that has kept her captive.
Drawing from neuroscience research, pastoral counseling experience, and scriptural insights, this episode explores why healing comes through the specificity of our stories. When trauma lodges in our bodies and distorts our perception, it's not enough to understand abuse intellectually—we need to identify with others who've walked similar paths and found freedom.
Trauma doesn't just destroy safety; it convinces victims that wrong is right, that abuse is love, that silence is holiness, and—most destructively—that they themselves are the problem. This distortion becomes particularly dangerous in religious contexts where scripture becomes twisted into a tool of control. Many survivors had an initial sense that something was wrong but were systematically trained to ignore their own discernment.
The pathway toward healing includes three foundational steps: journaling your story with complete honesty and detail, naming the specific lies taught in God's name, and finding safe community where your truth can be witnessed and validated. Through these practices, survivors can reclaim not just their voices but their relationship with God and themselves.
Your detailed testimony isn't just therapy—it's a flashlight illuminating someone else's darkness. Every vivid memory you bring to light becomes an invitation for another woman to realize she's not crazy and she's not alone. Your healing journey isn't just personal restoration; it's an act of sacred resistance against systems of oppression that thrive when pain is spiritualized and silence is moralized.
By Harold McGhee Jr.Send us a text
The moment a woman begins sharing the specific details of her abuse or trauma—not just abstract feelings, but vivid sensory memories, exact phrases her abuser used, or the particular scriptures weaponized against her—something powerful happens. For every woman listening who's experienced similar trauma, these details become the first crack in the trance that has kept her captive.
Drawing from neuroscience research, pastoral counseling experience, and scriptural insights, this episode explores why healing comes through the specificity of our stories. When trauma lodges in our bodies and distorts our perception, it's not enough to understand abuse intellectually—we need to identify with others who've walked similar paths and found freedom.
Trauma doesn't just destroy safety; it convinces victims that wrong is right, that abuse is love, that silence is holiness, and—most destructively—that they themselves are the problem. This distortion becomes particularly dangerous in religious contexts where scripture becomes twisted into a tool of control. Many survivors had an initial sense that something was wrong but were systematically trained to ignore their own discernment.
The pathway toward healing includes three foundational steps: journaling your story with complete honesty and detail, naming the specific lies taught in God's name, and finding safe community where your truth can be witnessed and validated. Through these practices, survivors can reclaim not just their voices but their relationship with God and themselves.
Your detailed testimony isn't just therapy—it's a flashlight illuminating someone else's darkness. Every vivid memory you bring to light becomes an invitation for another woman to realize she's not crazy and she's not alone. Your healing journey isn't just personal restoration; it's an act of sacred resistance against systems of oppression that thrive when pain is spiritualized and silence is moralized.