Take Up Space by Project Agape
This episode includes mentions of sexual violence, childhood trauma, intimate partner violence, victim blaming, and safety concerns related to an abuser. Please take care while listening. Welcome back to Take Up Space. This season, we are passing the mic with intention and holding space for Black survivors to share their stories in their own words. In this episode, we hear from Esther Fagbola: a Nigerian chef, community-builder, and the founder of Project Agape. Esther shares how her healing journey began early, shaped by the weight of growing up fast, holding responsibility as the oldest sibling, and surviving the moment her family as she knew it fell apart. With honesty and clarity, Esther reflects on what it has meant to build a life rooted in peace, boundaries, and protection, especially while doing frontline community work. She speaks about the complicated grief of “losing” a parent who is still alive, the harm that can live inside love, and how that kind of rupture rewires the body, the spirit, and a child’s sense of safety. Esther also shares how stepping into public storytelling through Project Agape changed her relationship with herself, pushing her to heal more intentionally, not because it was easy, but because community needed it. She names the exhaustion and heartbreak of being dismissed in systems that claim equity while still overlooking Black survivors, and she reminds us that this work is both heavy and sacred. Above all, Esther returns to one truth: do it anyway, but do it with community. If you are listening and carrying something similar, this episode is a reminder that you are not meant to hold it alone, and that softness, rest, faith, and chosen family can be part of how you survive and rebuild. Thank you for being here, and for holding Esther’s story with care, respect, and tenderness.
35 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Take Up Space by Project Agape!