Kim Ogan
@Mindspansion · 4:58
Adverse Childhood Experiences: The Journey Home
And it seemed that the next time the abuse happened, I didn't dissociate, I didn't leave my body and I didn't say no. And I didn't stop them. I never said a thing. I complained, did what I was told or asked or shown. And that behavior, that inability to speak up, to stand my ground, to protect myself, to advocate for myself, that haunted me. And it still does until this day
Deborah Pardes
@DBPardes · 1:56
Specifically, like, a lot of people here are in this beautiful human space of sort of healing through witnessing and healing through speaking. It's that loop, and I dare say it kind of normalizes the conversation, even though no one should feel like it's acceptable to have a life that causes such trauma. But what becomes normalized in a good way is the expression of it and the sharing of it. So thank you for being one of those strong voices and one of those leaders. Really appreciate it
Kim Ogan
@Mindspansion · 2:41
Because the more that I share as a human being and I am lucky to be sharing and dialogue with people the way that I am, So you have a wonderful week ahead and thank you so much for your time
J.L. Beasley
@Her_Sisu · 0:51
Hey, it's J-L-I appreciate your openness and vulnerability, transparency, even, in sharing your reflection, your life experience openly, publicly, for us to hear and spark reflection, healing, atonement, even for and when I say atonement some degree of reconciliation for what was and what wasn't and where we are now as souls traveling this earth. So I appreciate it. Thank you