Episode Details
Back to EpisodesRebuilding After Hurt: Healthy living through adversity pt 5
Description
What if we measured justice by how well it heals? We sit down with Juan to unpack a rare, unfiltered look at growth behind the wall—how being seen and heard can jumpstart dignity, how trauma-informed practices rewire the brain, and why labels fail to capture a living, changing human. Juan describes the painful split between the authentic self and the survival self, the years spent pushing down feelings to fit expectations, and the moment a safe room—and a simple handshake—made humanity feel possible again.
We trace the arc from retribution to restoration. Restorative justice brings survivors and offenders into a structured space where stories meet accountability. Survivors learn how disconnection breeds harm; offenders face the impact they caused and trace their own unhealed wounds. With insights from Compassion Prison Project and Empathy in Action, we talk amygdala and prefrontal cortex, toxic stress and ACEs, and why punishment often shuts down the very learning change requires. Juan offers a powerful reframe: if you hurt many, help many. That is accountability in motion.
This conversation is stacked with practical takeaways: how to create safety so vulnerability can bloom, why group attention heals shame, and how community becomes a repair shop for accumulated “car crashes” of childhood trauma. Juan refuses to let prison be a warehouse; he’s turned it into a university, teaching cohorts in English and Spanish and modeling daily service. The heartbeat here is simple and bracing: your past does not define you; your repairs do. If you’ve been waiting for a sign to start rebuilding, this is it.
If this resonated, share it with someone who needs hope, subscribe for the next chapter in our Healthy Living Through Adversity series, and leave a review with one repair you’ll start today. Your story might be the spark that helps someone else begin theirs.
Intro for podcast
information about subscriptions
Here is the link for Sunday's 4 pm Pacific time Zoom meeting