The Shadow Sessions

The Judge Said It Was The Worst He'd Ever seen

1 h 16 min · 21. Mai 2026
Episode The Judge Said It Was The Worst He'd Ever seen Cover

Beschreibung

We’re taught adoption is a second chance—a safer home, a new beginning. But what happens when the place meant to protect becomes the source of harm? In this episode of The Shadow Sessions, Hiba Balfaqih speaks with Christopher, who was adopted along with his siblings into a home trusted by the system—where abuse, control, and neglect became a daily reality. This conversation goes beyond individual harm. It examines how systems designed to protect children can fail, how abuse can remain hidden in plain sight, and what it does to a child’s nervous system to live in constant fear without relief. Christopher shares his experience of survival, the psychological impact of prolonged trauma, and the long process of rebuilding identity after growing up in an environment where safety never existed. This episode is about systemic failure, resilience, and what it takes to heal after trust has been broken at every level.

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Alle Folgen

22 Folgen

Episode The Wheelchair Doesn't Stop Me Cover

The Wheelchair Doesn't Stop Me

Violence doesn’t always end a life. Sometimes it changes it completely. In this episode of The Shadow Sessions, Hiba Balfaqih speaks with Wesley, whose life split into before and after a single moment of violence left him paralyzed with a spinal cord injury. But this conversation goes beyond the physical impact. It explores the psychological aftermath—depression, identity loss, and what it means to live in a body that no longer feels familiar. Raised in an environment where toughness meant survival, Wesley learned to suppress pain. But after his injury, there was no escaping it—only facing it. This episode examines masculinity, resilience, and the internal battle that follows life‑altering trauma. It asks what it means to rebuild not just a body, but a sense of self when everything you once relied on has changed. This is a story about survival, identity, and choosing meaning after irreversible loss.

27. Mai 202652 min
Episode The Judge Said It Was The Worst He'd Ever seen Cover

The Judge Said It Was The Worst He'd Ever seen

We’re taught adoption is a second chance—a safer home, a new beginning. But what happens when the place meant to protect becomes the source of harm? In this episode of The Shadow Sessions, Hiba Balfaqih speaks with Christopher, who was adopted along with his siblings into a home trusted by the system—where abuse, control, and neglect became a daily reality. This conversation goes beyond individual harm. It examines how systems designed to protect children can fail, how abuse can remain hidden in plain sight, and what it does to a child’s nervous system to live in constant fear without relief. Christopher shares his experience of survival, the psychological impact of prolonged trauma, and the long process of rebuilding identity after growing up in an environment where safety never existed. This episode is about systemic failure, resilience, and what it takes to heal after trust has been broken at every level.

21. Mai 20261 h 16 min
Episode When The Monster was Family Cover

When The Monster was Family

Most people imagine abuse as something that happens in dark, distant places. But in reality, it often happens at home—by someone the child knows, someone the family trusts. In this episode of The Shadow Sessions, Hiba Balfaqih speaks with Tracey, whose life changed the moment her daughter spoke up. Faced with a reality many struggle to accept, Tracey made a choice that defines this story—she immediately believed her child. What followed was confrontation, action, and a fight to protect her children from further harm. But this conversation goes beyond that moment. It explores the psychological aftermath—the guilt, the questions, and the painful process of reexamining what was once trusted. This episode examines abuse not just as an act, but as a rupture inside families and relationships. It asks what it means to seek justice when healing is ongoing, and what it takes to face betrayal when it comes from within your own home. This is a story about protection, accountability, and the long-echoing trauma that leaves behind.

14. Mai 20261 h 1 min
Episode Sold At 4 For Drug Money by her Mother Cover

Sold At 4 For Drug Money by her Mother

We grow up with a core belief: a mother is safety, protection, and home. But what happens when that foundation breaks? In this episode of The Shadow Sessions, Hiba Balfaqih speaks with Jazmine, who survived profound abuse within her own home—where harm was not hidden, but normalized, and the person meant to protect her became the source of danger. This conversation goes beyond abuse itself. It explores attachment trauma, how early betrayal reshapes a child’s understanding of love and safety, and the lasting psychological impact of growing up without protection. Jazmine reflects on identity, trust, and what it means to rebuild a sense of self when your earliest blueprint for care was distorted. She also shares the difficult but powerful process of learning to create safety from within. This episode is about trauma, resilience, and what it takes to reclaim your life when the place that should have been safest was not.

7. Mai 20261 h 13 min
Episode Sentenced to Life at Just 13 Years Old Cover

Sentenced to Life at Just 13 Years Old

What kind of system gives a child a life sentence? In this episode of The Shadow Sessions, Hiba Balfaqih speaks with Ian, who at just thirteen years old was tried as an adult for a non‑homicide offense and sentenced to life in prison. This conversation goes beyond one case. It examines the structure of the justice system—where children, particularly Black and Brown youth, are disproportionately treated as adults, perceived as more dangerous, and denied the protections of childhood. Together, they explore what it means for a developing brain to be told its life is already over, how identity is shaped inside systems built on punishment, and why rehabilitation is often replaced with permanence. This episode is about justice, perception, and the deeper question of whom society chooses to protect and whom it is willing to give up on.

30. Apr. 20261 h 24 min