The Road Home to You

Real conversations about mental health and faith

Sexuality and Women’s Empowerment: An Interview with Brandi Voth

March 10, 2020
The Road Home to You

This year’s Super Bowl halftime show was nothing if not controversial! People from all walks of life, backgrounds in faith, genders and sexual identities fell on both sides of the fence when it came to answering the question: was this performance empowering or degrading to women?

Enter Brandi Voth, the woman behind The Power Project who is working to bring empowerment to women and men alike. She is a podcaster, author, and volunteer working with people in after-care who have been sexually exploited and trafficked.

Listen to the full episode here

In this episode, Brandi and I sit down and talk about what the commercial sex trade industry looks like, who is targeted for sex trafficking, how the church can better come alongside those who’ve been exploited, and what women’s empowerment looks like.

Brandi dropped some hard truths about what drives the sex industry and opened my eyes to the prevalence it has not only in our nation but even in our small towns.

Table of Contents:

:05  The Road Home to You website
2:55 Welcome Brandi Voth; The Power Project – empowering people to live purposeful lives
5:00 Awareness to sex trafficking industry in Melbourne, Australia
9:10 A21 “Walk for Freedom”
10:40 What sex trafficking really looks like and where it is
13:54 The grooming process happens in social media apps and chat rooms
15:15 bark.us app and Tik Tok
17:10 Be where your kids and their friends are spending time online
18:20 Predators in public places
20:00 Red flags that someone is endangered
23:59 The Church’s response to help the exploited
28:10 Testimony from after-care client
31:59 Seeing the hurting and being the hands and feet of Jesus
32:57 Super Bowl halftime show re-cap and conflict
36:07 Female empowerment and the messages sent to boys/men
37:40 Empowerment vs. Sexual Objectification
39:15 Strip club and pornography – exploitation and consumption
40:39 Super Bowl is the single largest event for sex trafficking
41:35 Take a stand against the demand
43:00 The message sent to girls/women
45:28 Early exposure to pornography and the cycle of addiction
48:00 Defining empowerment
48:43 Finding your voice and using it
52:05 Signs you’re not in a safe relationship
53:19 Resources and Hotlines
53:52 Bottom line – You’re worth it
54:37 Thank you, Brandy
55:15 Brandi’s information: The Power Project and Power Hat Co.


Brandi Voth:

http://www.the-powerproject.com/
Instagram


Resources and Hotlines:

National Trafficking Hotline

http://www.refugeforwomen.org/

A21

https://www.bark.us/


Additional Resources and Articles:

https://roadhometoyou.com/


Listen to More Episodes:

You can find The Road Home to You anywhere you can download podcasts, including Google Play, Stitcher, Apple Podcasts, etc.

You can also find previous shows here:

https://roadhometoyou.com/

http://theroadhometoyou.libsyn.com/


Connect with Brandy:

Facebook // Instagram // Email


The Road Home to You:

“Offering hope and faith in Jesus to those wounded by others, stuck in addiction or afflicted by the storms of life.”


Upcoming Episodes:

Join Brandy next week for a discussion with guest, Mischelle Saunders-Gottsch and the impact of growing up in a cult.

Future topics will also include infidelity, Biblical meditation, alcohol recovery, and so much more!


Special Thanks:

Thanks to the Jingle Punks for the use of their song, “Dusty Road” as our intro and outro.

This episode was recorded, edited and produced at 4G’s Studios in Sandy, Oregon. 2020. All rights reserved.

Recovery for the Broken

March 5, 2020
The Road Home to You


“The world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong at the broken places.”
– Ernest Hemingway


The simple fact is this: we’re all a little broken. 

It isn’t a pretty truth and certainly not one that most people like to cling to, but it is a fact, none-the-less. We’ve all been hurt by someone as a small child, whether with words or fists. We’ve all seen horrible things happen. We’ve all got some form of addiction – turning even a good thing into The Thing we need in order to numb out from the daily toll of life.

We’ve all heard the old adage, “Hurt people hurt people.” We’ve likely even seen this played out in our lives, when someone who’s having a horrible, no good, rotten kind of day turns around and berates us for the smallest thing. They didn’t mean to lash out, but their words hurt all the same.

So what do we do with all that? How do we move forward in life recognizing that sure, maybe we’re not quite as well put together as we’d like to believe and that, yeah, we can even recognize how we’ve hurt people we care about without even meaning to?

It seems to me like we have a couple of different options.

Option 1: Fake It Til You Make It

This is the approach that a whole lot of people take. They white-knuckle their way through life, striving to be disciplined enough, strong enough, smart enough, attractive enough, good enough. These people likely have the “pull yourself up by the bootstraps” mentality. They’ve probably heard this message and others like it throughout their lives, messages including, men don’t cry. 

But…what if…after all the faking it, you still don’t quite make it? What if you strive and strain and reach and just…don’t…get…there…?

Honestly, a lot of people are able to go through life with this approach and even do alright. They work hard, have all the right things, look put together enough on the outside, they even seem happy. And maybe some of them are. But maybe not quite as happy as they know they could be.

Option 2: Deny, Deny, Deny

Listen, I am well gifted in this approach. I have been known to quite literally bury myself in a pile of blankets and hide because the checkbook needed to be balanced and I knew it was going to be a big ugly mess caused by me.

Denial seems like such a simple way to make the problems go away. We like to fool ourselves into believing that if time heals all wounds, then surely it will cure the mess that is my life. But that is a lie and every one of us who has lived on our own and seen the credit card bills come in can attest to that. Denial will get you nowhere but further behind your problem. Whether it’s overdue bills, an eating disorder, an undiagnosed lump on our breast, addiction, anxiety, or a wounded relationship it will not correct itself. Our problems only seem to grow as we try desperately to shove them into the closet.

Option 3: Name Your Monster and Face It

This is probably the least popular approach to dealing with the messier side to life, but it is hands-down, my favorite.

I’m assuming that everyone reading this has probably watched a movie or tv show where there are good guys and bad guys. Let’s, for example, look at Harry Potter. Harry, along with his friends, has faced many monsters in his time at Hogwarts. They’ve dealt with Death Eaters, a three-headed dog, a spider the size of Chicago, Bertie Bot’s Every Flavor Beans…you get the point. They’ve fought some very scary foes. 

What did they use to fight these adversaries? Well, it’s easy to say they used magic. True. Most of the time, that’s what they used. But more specifically, they used certain types of magic. In fighting Dementors, they used a Patronus. When Harry needed to do reconnaissance work, he wore a cloak that turned him invisible. To disarm another wizard, the spell, expelliarmus was used. The point is: there were different tools used to fight against different opponents.

The same is true for us as we face the issues that are causing us to live in a cyclical pattern of bad choices. Unless we know what “monster” it is we’re fighting, we don’t know how to fight against it.

I can tell you everything you ever wanted to know about alcohol addiction, but if what you’re fighting is grief because your spouse died and you don’t know how to move forward in life without that person, the knowledge you may acquire about addiction isn’t going to do you an ounce of good. It’s important for us to be able to name our monster because then we can be better equipped to overcome it.

This is why recovery matters not just for the “obvious” people – the strung-out junkie or the inebriated raging alcoholic. Recovery is for everyone. Recovery literally means to “return to a normal state of health, mind, or strength” (Oxford Dictionary). 

God didn’t create you broken. He made you a masterpiece (Eph. 2:10) and then placed you into a broken world where you experienced hurt and abuse and the ugliness of sin. He wants to return you to the state you belong: whole and complete in Him.

We won’t get there 100% this side of Heaven but we can experience joy more fully, we can find healing and forgiveness for ourselves and others, and we can understand our purpose and the purpose for our pain when we allow God into the broken places of our hearts and begin the transformative work of recovery.

To learn more be sure to check out our website to find links to other episodes. 

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