Episode 26
Human Trafficking – Trauma and Survivorship With Amanda Blackwood
Episode Summary – Have you ever met someone who has been human trafficked? I said NO but I was wrong. In this VERY important Episode 26 of the Shining Brightly Podcast Show, my guest and human trafficking survivor is Amanda Blackwood. She shares her courageous story and helps us understand the TYPES of human trafficking – (Domestic Servitude, Forced (Child) Labor, Sex (Child) Trafficking, Debt Bondage, Non-Penalization, State-Sponsored). One of her main goals is to dispel a lot of the false narratives about what abuse and trafficking look like, who the victims are, and the links human trafficking has to other industries. She shows the world how too thrive after experiencing something this traumatic. Amanda is a speaker, expert podcaster, and best-selling author. A few of her titles - Custom Justice, New Hope, Growth from Darkness and The Unlikely. Please listen and share this episode. National Human Trafficking - ttps://humantraffickinghotline.org and Hotline 1-888-373-7888. You can reach the Hotline 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Mentioned Resources
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/AmandaBlackwoodSurvivor/
Podcast - https://anchor.fm/amandablackwood
About the guest – Amanda Blackwood is a survivor of human trafficking and Best-selling author. A portion of every book sale goes to help fight human trafficking and to help those still being trafficked. Amanda lives in Denver, Colorado with her rescue cats and supportive husband who keeps her sane. Check out Amanda Blackwood's podcast!
Season 3 (September 2022 to August 2023) will be a series of interviews with other trauma survivors who have written about their own experiences as part of their healing.
About the Host:
Howard Brown is a best-selling author, award-winning international speaker, Silicon Valley entrepreneur, interfaith peacemaker, and a two-time stage IV cancer survivor. He is also a sought-after speaker and consultant for corporate businesses, nonprofits, congregations, and community groups. Howard has co-founded two social networks that were the first to connect religious communities around the world. He is a nationally known patient advocate and “cancer whisperer” to many families. Howard, his wife Lisa, and daughter Emily currently reside in Michigan, and his happy place is on the basketball court.
Website
Http://www.shiningbrightly.com
Social Media
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/howard.brown.36
LinkedIn - https://wwwlinkedin.com/in/howardsbrown
Instagram - @howard.brown.36
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Transcript
Well hello, welcome to Shining Brightly.
Howard Brown:This is your Maestro with Mike Howard Brown. It's a shining
Howard Brown:brightly day because we have an amazing guest. I can't wait to
Howard Brown:get into it. Chop it up with Amanda Blackwood. Amanda, how
Howard Brown:are you today?
Amanda Blackwood:Fantastic. How are you doing, Howard?
Howard Brown:I'm great. We've got a fall day in Michigan. The
Howard Brown:leaves are falling and changing colours. It's It's going well.
Amanda Blackwood:It's dumping snow here.
Howard Brown:Okay, well, snow in the in the Rockies is always
Howard Brown:a thing that happens in the fall. So I hope you're loving
Howard Brown:it.
Amanda Blackwood:I know my husband is.
Howard Brown:Well, I have to tell you, we have an amazing
Howard Brown:story. Amazing, author, amazing artists with us today. Amanda,
Howard Brown:give us give us a short bio. Tell Tell tell the viewers about
Howard Brown:Yeah.
Amanda Blackwood:Okay, so on my business card, it says that I am
Amanda Blackwood:an author, an artist, a survivor and a speaker. I'm actually a
Amanda Blackwood:survivor of human trafficking. And a lot of what I've written
Amanda Blackwood:and a lot of what I have painted has all been part of the
Amanda Blackwood:therapeutic process for me to get through and beyond the past
Amanda Blackwood:and learn how to be a public speaker on my experiences. I
Amanda Blackwood:live here in Colorado with my husband, my foster kiddo and my
Amanda Blackwood:six cats. Only six, only six. When I met my husband, I had
Amanda Blackwood:four and he had two. So between the two of us we have a petting
Amanda Blackwood:zoo.
Howard Brown:It's the petting zoo Brady Bunch, right? The
Howard Brown:Brady Bunch your cat. So you got six, wow, I was going to ask you
Howard Brown:to give me something unique and different that no one knows
Howard Brown:about you. But while you already have something else,
Amanda Blackwood:I actually have plenty of those little
Amanda Blackwood:unique things. So one of the things that very few people know
Amanda Blackwood:about me is that I've actually gone to school to be a dental
Amanda Blackwood:assistant. I am a Certified Dental Assistant here in the
Amanda Blackwood:state of Colorado and I've never done the job.
Howard Brown:You know what you take training and you learn from
Howard Brown:it. But you didn't put it to us. That's okay, you got to find out
Howard Brown:what makes you happy and and what you want to do. So that's
Howard Brown:interesting. You chose that path. And then you didn't end up
Howard Brown:doing it. That's okay. We all make choices. And like, I want
Howard Brown:to get a little more serious right now. Because when we first
Howard Brown:met, and you and I had a pre conversation about this, your
Howard Brown:story is one. Just remarkable to me. And I learned a lot. And
Howard Brown:we're going to teach our audience today a lot about
Howard Brown:trafficking. And I after we finished talking, I just got
Howard Brown:real emotional because you had said something to me that was
Howard Brown:truly stunning. And remarkable. Meaning that I said I had never
Howard Brown:met anyone that had human traffic. And do you remember
Howard Brown:your reply what you said to me?
Amanda Blackwood:You probably haven't you just don't know what
Howard Brown:made me sad. Because you helped educate me to
Howard Brown:the cause. And with your particular story. And I, I want
Howard Brown:to the audience and the viewers to know how serious this is, and
Howard Brown:hearing it from your story and how you picked yourself up off
Howard Brown:the ground because it's really amazing. So, so describe,
Howard Brown:describe your trauma, and let's start there.
Amanda Blackwood:So I started off with some early childhood
Amanda Blackwood:abuse, being molested at four. I was then molested again at 12.
Amanda Blackwood:Again 13 Again at 15 and raped at 17. But things got really
Amanda Blackwood:serious at 18. When I was trafficked the first time I was
Amanda Blackwood:trafficked three different times in my life once 18 Once it 19
Amanda Blackwood:and once at 31 years old. And people are usually shocked by
Amanda Blackwood:this because what the media portrays as being human
Amanda Blackwood:trafficking involves nothing but children and children. It's
Amanda Blackwood:horrible when it happens to children. But that's only one
Amanda Blackwood:quarter of all the victims worldwide under the age of 18.
Amanda Blackwood:Most are over the age of 18. And this is a huge problem that's
Amanda Blackwood:being largely ignored. Because it doesn't match up with what
Amanda Blackwood:the media says it should look like. I didn't even realise that
Amanda Blackwood:I was a survivor of human trafficking until I went to a
Amanda Blackwood:conference in 2018. And I started to learn more about it.
Amanda Blackwood:I was going to the conference because I wanted to fight back
Amanda Blackwood:against what was happening to the kids. I didn't have any clue
Amanda Blackwood:that this was something that had happened to me and I still
Amanda Blackwood:needed to learn how to fight back against that too.
Howard Brown:I know and you also enlightened me by telling
Howard Brown:me there are types of traffic and not just sexual trafficking.
Howard Brown:There's servitude or slavery, trafficking. And I saw the
Howard Brown:others right. I'm sure I'm missing. So
Amanda Blackwood:forced marriage. There's Oregon
Amanda Blackwood:trafficking. We don't have a whole lot of Oregon trafficking
Amanda Blackwood:here in the US but there was a case just recently, I believe in
Amanda Blackwood:San Diego where a man woke up in a hotel room with one missing
Amanda Blackwood:kidney. And we've been seeing a lot more of that here. I mean,
Amanda Blackwood:here in the US, it probably takes up less than 1% of all
Amanda Blackwood:trafficking cases, but it is starting to seep in. Sex
Amanda Blackwood:trafficking is huge here in the US and forced servitude labour
Amanda Blackwood:trafficking is definitely on the rise. But the the the most
Amanda Blackwood:popular form of trafficking worldwide outside of the US is
Amanda Blackwood:Labour trafficking, and child soldiers.
Howard Brown:Just trying to take it all in. Wow. It's a lot
Howard Brown:I know. It is. So tell us more of your story. Continue.
Amanda Blackwood:So, when I was 18, I was dating a man who was
Amanda Blackwood:more than twice my age. And this man decided that he wanted to
Amanda Blackwood:give me a free trip to Las Vegas with a buddy of his. So we
Amanda Blackwood:jumped on an aeroplane and I went with his friend to Las
Amanda Blackwood:Vegas for a birthday party, I didn't realise that I was the
Amanda Blackwood:birthday party, I was being given as a gift to exploit and
Amanda Blackwood:do as they pleased with. In their words, later on, it was
Amanda Blackwood:cheaper than hiring somebody once they were in Las Vegas. So
Amanda Blackwood:it was a $99 ticket to get there. That's all they had to
Amanda Blackwood:spend on me other than the food. Once we got there, I was told I
Amanda Blackwood:was not to leave the hotel room. I could get room service only
Amanda Blackwood:once a day and the hotel had strict instructions to leave the
Amanda Blackwood:food outside of the door. So there would be no questions. And
Amanda Blackwood:nobody thought that I was being trafficked. They nobody asked
Amanda Blackwood:any questions. They never asked if I was okay. I was stuck in
Amanda Blackwood:that hotel room for 52 hours. And after 52 hours, we flew back
Amanda Blackwood:to Vegas, and people have asked and I flew back to Arizona,
Amanda Blackwood:where I was living at the time. And people have asked me why
Amanda Blackwood:didn't you just leave the hotel and go to find police there in
Amanda Blackwood:Las Vegas. I didn't trust police. I had already been a
Amanda Blackwood:foster kid myself, I was moving in and out of my home. The
Amanda Blackwood:police kept on taking me back to the abusive situation because
Amanda Blackwood:those are the people who said that they had authority over my
Amanda Blackwood:life and I didn't trust the police anymore. If I had just
Amanda Blackwood:left the hotel room and had gone out on the streets of Las Vegas,
Amanda Blackwood:I would have ended it been in a worse situation than what I was
Amanda Blackwood:already in. By being there and being molested and raped. I
Amanda Blackwood:wasn't ready for that. So I waited until I got back to
Amanda Blackwood:Arizona and I grabbed my stuff and I left that place as quick
Amanda Blackwood:as I could. I bounced around for a while for a little while I was
Amanda Blackwood:homeless, ended up marrying a different abusive man who was
Amanda Blackwood:more than twice my age. And in my efforts to escape him, I left
Amanda Blackwood:and went to Florida to go stay with my grandmother. And when I
Amanda Blackwood:got to Florida, my grandmother left me at the Daytona Beach bus
Amanda Blackwood:station, and said that she wasn't going to take me in. And
Amanda Blackwood:it came out later on that it was because my parents had called
Amanda Blackwood:her and told her that if she took me and they would never
Amanda Blackwood:speak to her again. I was taken in by a young couple who told me
Amanda Blackwood:that they would allow me the time and energy to get on my
Amanda Blackwood:feet and they would give me free room and board while I did as
Amanda Blackwood:little is as they had they were willing to share it with me and
Amanda Blackwood:I was grateful. But when they said what, until I got on my
Amanda Blackwood:feet what they really meant was until I found the highest bidder
Amanda Blackwood:because they sold me to a guy named Esteban. I was locked up
Amanda Blackwood:in a small room for 23 and a half hours with no food, no
Amanda Blackwood:water, no bathroom facilities. And thankfully, I watched a lot
Amanda Blackwood:of MacGyver growing up. And Richard Dean Anderson saved my
Amanda Blackwood:hide, I was able to MacGyver my way out of that room and I ran
Amanda Blackwood:ran for my life. And again, I ended up homeless for a little
Amanda Blackwood:while, bounced around from one place to another and dependent
Amanda Blackwood:on the kindness of strangers in spite of what I'd already been
Amanda Blackwood:through. I ended up out in California, and I lived there
Amanda Blackwood:for a number of years. And I was constantly looking for
Amanda Blackwood:acceptance and love and appreciation in whatever way
Amanda Blackwood:that I could find it. I never had it as a kid growing up. And
Amanda Blackwood:this is part of why I kept on ending up in these horribly
Amanda Blackwood:abusive relationships, because that was the person who was
Amanda Blackwood:offering that kindness, as well as what I was familiar with from
Amanda Blackwood:my youth. When you grow up with abuse in your own household.
Amanda Blackwood:People become conditioned to believe that the abuse goes hand
Amanda Blackwood:in hand with love when one does not exist without the other. So
Amanda Blackwood:these abusive relationships were what I was familiar with. It was
Amanda Blackwood:the way I had been raised. This was normal. This was comforting.
Amanda Blackwood:This was comfortable. And I was afraid to leave that. But I had
Amanda Blackwood:known one particular man the whole time I was in California.
Amanda Blackwood:I've known him for seven years. He was a police Officer in
Amanda Blackwood:Scotland. And I had known a couple of police officers who
Amanda Blackwood:had kind of changed the way that I saw the police. I was getting
Amanda Blackwood:to where I was trusting them finally, and this man, I was
Amanda Blackwood:watching his daughter grow up in photos. And we've just always
Amanda Blackwood:stayed in contact. And he lived too far away, we were never
Amanda Blackwood:going to have an actual relationship. And we had
Amanda Blackwood:resigned ourselves to that. But after seven years, he finally
Amanda Blackwood:came over to see me, I went over there to go and see him. And we
Amanda Blackwood:decided that we were in love. And that was all we needed. And
Amanda Blackwood:we were going to spend the rest of our lives together. So I got
Amanda Blackwood:a fiancee visa. And in January of 2011, I moved over to Kobe
Amanda Blackwood:with him. And it took him seven years to get me there. And it
Amanda Blackwood:took him seven days to start trafficking me once I got there.
Amanda Blackwood:Almost instantly, he had my passport, my driver's licence,
Amanda Blackwood:all that stuff, everything. And it took me 152 days to be able
Amanda Blackwood:to get my way out of there. I spent what little money I had
Amanda Blackwood:left on an emergency flight home after less than a month of being
Amanda Blackwood:there. And I ended up so sick with a severe kidney infection
Amanda Blackwood:because of the abuse that I was having to endure that I ended up
Amanda Blackwood:missing the flight. And the ticket was non refundable. And
Amanda Blackwood:it was every penny that I had. It was an upside down time, I
Amanda Blackwood:ended up convincing him that I had Stockholm syndrome. And I
Amanda Blackwood:told him, at the end of my visa, if we're not married, you can
Amanda Blackwood:get in trouble or lose your job as a police officer. And we
Amanda Blackwood:don't want that. I was pretty convincing, far more so than I
Amanda Blackwood:just was. I convinced him that he needed to either send me back
Amanda Blackwood:to California for six months, and I could return or he needed
Amanda Blackwood:to marry me. And I was praying that he didn't choose the option
Amanda Blackwood:of marrying me to keep me there. And he went for it, he was
Amanda Blackwood:convinced by my act that I had Stockholm syndrome and that I
Amanda Blackwood:was in love with him and I would return to Him and to the abuse
Amanda Blackwood:after six months. So after multiple attempts of convincing
Amanda Blackwood:him, he finally bought a round trip flight for me to leave
Amanda Blackwood:Scotland, and to go back to California for six months. And
Amanda Blackwood:if I could use the round trip flight, I would have landed back
Amanda Blackwood:in Scotland six months to the day after I left just in time
Amanda Blackwood:for Christmas. And I'm proud to say that I still have that
Amanda Blackwood:ticket and it's hanging in the shadow box filled with things
Amanda Blackwood:that I did and did not do my year back. That kept me alive.
Howard Brown:Let's give you a break for a second because I
Howard Brown:know you tell your story and you relive it here but it's you
Howard Brown:shared with me the details of of basically, servitude, slave
Howard Brown:labour cleaning that house taking care of a child, you
Howard Brown:know, servicing him sexually. And it's just a lot. Yeah, for
Howard Brown:for people to take in so and you know, but God, how do you how do
Howard Brown:you even move past this? I just you know, I'm a cancer survivor.
Howard Brown:I'm helping other cancer survivors try to rebuild their
Howard Brown:lives and put their survivorship plan in place. And how do you
Howard Brown:how do you do this? And how do you help others to do this, it's
Howard Brown:just please share.
Amanda Blackwood:I didn't know how for a long time. So I
Amanda Blackwood:mentioned my shadow box, I've got a huge shadow box hanging on
Amanda Blackwood:the wall just outside of my bedroom door. And this shadow
Amanda Blackwood:box has tickets and pictures and mementos. And fridge magnets and
Amanda Blackwood:all kinds of stuff hanging in it are all the stuff that I did to
Amanda Blackwood:keep me busy that first year out. suicide rates among new
Amanda Blackwood:survivors is just incredibly high. You don't want to survive
Amanda Blackwood:after something like that. You feel broken. You feel like
Amanda Blackwood:you're less than human. And it's a horrible place to be. It
Amanda Blackwood:wasn't until after I had been out for a while and he started
Amanda Blackwood:putting up photos and videos of me being raped during the
Amanda Blackwood:molestation that he started putting all these up on
Amanda Blackwood:different pornography websites and making a bunch of money off
Amanda Blackwood:of it. When he was doing this, he was putting links to my
Amanda Blackwood:social media. People were able to find me and they knew who I
Amanda Blackwood:was. And they were sending me pictures, screenshots of these
Amanda Blackwood:videos. And it was it was awful. So I had to go into therapy to
Amanda Blackwood:try and figure out how I was going to get through this. And
Amanda Blackwood:eventually I learned that if he's gonna make me famous,
Amanda Blackwood:people might as well know the truth. And that's when I started
Amanda Blackwood:standing up and fighting back and I wrote my book and I
Amanda Blackwood:started getting on stage. And just this became a part of who I
Amanda Blackwood:was, rather than just something I was running from rather than
Amanda Blackwood:just the past. This became a part of my mission and I knew
Amanda Blackwood:that if this was happening to me, it was happening to other
Amanda Blackwood:people too. And they needed to find their voices, they needed
Amanda Blackwood:to figure out how to fight back. It's not an easy thing to do.
Amanda Blackwood:And not everybody can write their book, not everybody can
Amanda Blackwood:stand on stage and talk about their own traumas. But they can
Amanda Blackwood:process it, they can move through it and beyond it and
Amanda Blackwood:have productive, meaningful lives, even after massive
Amanda Blackwood:amounts of trauma. It's still possible.
Howard Brown:It is and I mean, there's a lot of exposure to
Howard Brown:this now with the Jeffrey Epstein case. Yeah. And it's
Howard Brown:just Layne Maxwell case now of of trafficking young women. And
Howard Brown:I love that you said no the truth. People need to know the
Howard Brown:truth. Because we live in this digital society where half the
Howard Brown:stuff that's put in front of you, you have no idea if it's
Howard Brown:fake news, or real news or anything as well. So thank you
Howard Brown:for sharing that. So your your recovery process is started. And
Howard Brown:it's probably continues forever. And now you also help others.
Amanda Blackwood:I do I have a podcast where I interview other
Amanda Blackwood:survivors of trauma to give them a platform to be able to talk on
Amanda Blackwood:most of the people that I interview with the exception of
Amanda Blackwood:maybe two have not written about their experience. So typically,
Amanda Blackwood:it's authors who have these experiences, and they want to
Amanda Blackwood:also help other people through. So they're trauma informed
Amanda Blackwood:therapists, and they're people like yourself, they're published
Amanda Blackwood:authors who know what they've been through is not an anomaly.
Amanda Blackwood:I mean, you're you are an absolute miracle. And people
Amanda Blackwood:need to know that this kind of miracle is possible, and that
Amanda Blackwood:there is healing and there is recovery. And that's, that's
Amanda Blackwood:kind of my goal in life is to make sure that people recognise
Amanda Blackwood:this. And they realise that if they need help, there's help
Amanda Blackwood:available, they can reach out to me directly if they're being
Amanda Blackwood:trafficked, or they're a survivor of trafficking, and
Amanda Blackwood:they need that help to be able to move beyond that, and find
Amanda Blackwood:organisations to be able to help them. I didn't know that that
Amanda Blackwood:kind of help was available to me, until I got involved with an
Amanda Blackwood:anti trafficking group out here. And if it hadn't been for them,
Amanda Blackwood:I wouldn't have had that therapy, I wouldn't be where I
Amanda Blackwood:am now.
Howard Brown:Well, I appreciate that. I do feel very blessed,
Howard Brown:very grateful and very lucky. And I know you do too, but you
Howard Brown:are courageous. You are the definition of courage. So I
Howard Brown:guess, you told me before how you how you gotta celebrate the
Howard Brown:wins, because you've had plenty of losses or devastation going
Howard Brown:on. So how do you celebrate the wins?
Amanda Blackwood:Sometimes I make myself a cookie. I love to
Amanda Blackwood:cook. Sometimes I will go and purchase a nice big juicy steak.
Amanda Blackwood:And I'll cook it for my husband because I'm not supposed to have
Amanda Blackwood:very much red meat. I have Crohn's disease. And I know that
Amanda Blackwood:if I cook him a big juicy steak, I'm going to get a bite or two.
Howard Brown:Yeah, but also, I saw the most beautiful picture
Howard Brown:on LinkedIn today of you painting in nature. Thank you,
Howard Brown:that brings you joy, too.
Amanda Blackwood:I absolutely love it. So that was part of my
Amanda Blackwood:therapy. Also, I just started painting in January of last
Amanda Blackwood:year. And I'm now painting my own book covers, including a
Amanda Blackwood:historical fiction series. And I'm highlighting that on my
Amanda Blackwood:social media right now, just because it's been a fun series
Amanda Blackwood:for me to paint. I've got four in the series completed, there's
Amanda Blackwood:going to be a total of 10.
Howard Brown:Well, that's awesome. I love that you're
Howard Brown:putting your energy into that. So where do you derive your
Howard Brown:inspiration now?
Amanda Blackwood:Oh, my gosh, my husband is probably one of my
Amanda Blackwood:my biggest inspirations. All my life. Like I said, I was
Amanda Blackwood:searching for somewhere that I could be accepted and loved. And
Amanda Blackwood:I always saw it as coming hand in hand with abuse. He's been
Amanda Blackwood:through some kind of crazy stuff in his past also. And because of
Amanda Blackwood:that he did go into counselling. He learned enough about himself
Amanda Blackwood:and about the way men react to things versus the way women
Amanda Blackwood:react to things. And I've never known anybody more patient in my
Amanda Blackwood:life. He is patient and resilient and kind and gentle
Amanda Blackwood:and understanding. And did I mention patient, he's very
Amanda Blackwood:patient. He's all the things that God knew that I was going
Amanda Blackwood:to need in my life long before I ever did. And he has been such
Amanda Blackwood:an inspiration to me. He gave me the ability to now pursue this
Amanda Blackwood:full time rather than going into dentistry or continuing on
Amanda Blackwood:working for corporations as some little peon in the bottom of the
Amanda Blackwood:totem pole when struggling. I'm a high school dropout with
Amanda Blackwood:really very little education otherwise, I wasn't going to
Amanda Blackwood:make ends meet very well. And because he's been able to
Amanda Blackwood:support me in this way and just tell me go do it. Go pursue your
Amanda Blackwood:dreams. Because of that either. actually been able to make huge
Amanda Blackwood:strides just this year in my writing career in my art career.
Amanda Blackwood:And it's, it's been amazing.
Howard Brown:You might not have formal education, but you've
Howard Brown:developed street smarts, toughness, resilience, and you
Howard Brown:found your knight in shining armour who is patient and loving
Howard Brown:and unconditionally, and, and so deserved. It really, really is.
Howard Brown:So there's going to be people asking for resources. And what
Howard Brown:do you tell someone that's going through this? And do you have
Howard Brown:resources for them?
Amanda Blackwood:Yes, probably the biggest resource that I know
Amanda Blackwood:of right now here in the state of Colorado is a group called
Amanda Blackwood:covered Colorado, covered Colorado was the group that I
Amanda Blackwood:partnered with, they were the ones to find the therapy and the
Amanda Blackwood:counselling for me when I needed it most. They offer other
Amanda Blackwood:services to survivors as well, such as housing, food, day,
Amanda Blackwood:daily essentials, cooking classes, they do life skills
Amanda Blackwood:classes, I mean, just all the stuff that that a lot of kids
Amanda Blackwood:learn growing up in normally functioning households, but that
Amanda Blackwood:survivors of abuse and trauma and human trafficking, never got
Amanda Blackwood:a chance to learn growing up. And they were hugely beneficial,
Amanda Blackwood:very helpful. The National Human Trafficking Hotline is a big
Amanda Blackwood:one. They're willing and able to help people get out of those
Amanda Blackwood:situations and find safe places for them. And the other one here
Amanda Blackwood:in Colorado is shift shift is who was putting on the the
Amanda Blackwood:conference in 2018, where I learned enough about human
Amanda Blackwood:trafficking to learn that I was actually a survivor. I've since
Amanda Blackwood:partnered with them, I'm on their board of advisors, as
Amanda Blackwood:having my lived experience. I'm a subject matter expert, I go
Amanda Blackwood:around and speak with them at local schools talking about the
Amanda Blackwood:safeties and dangers of social media for change children and
Amanda Blackwood:teenagers. And they just they're doing amazing things, the
Amanda Blackwood:founder of shift, his his shift, his his mindset has kind of
Amanda Blackwood:shifted in recent years, he's no longer doing the big
Amanda Blackwood:conferences. Instead, he's building an algorithm
Amanda Blackwood:intelligent software to help teach people and train people
Amanda Blackwood:across the nation on what signs to watch for when it comes to
Amanda Blackwood:human trafficking, how to prevent it, what to do, if you
Amanda Blackwood:spot it, who you can contact and it's just, it's amazing. I love
Amanda Blackwood:being involved with this kind of stuff. But John Do Young is his
Amanda Blackwood:name. And he's just his mind blowing with the ideas that just
Amanda Blackwood:pop out of his head on random occasions, on ways to be able to
Amanda Blackwood:fight back.
Howard Brown:Now we're gonna put the 800 number and the
Howard Brown:website links. It'll scroll across on the on the podcast.
Howard Brown:which book do you want to feature today? A few. So which
Howard Brown:book would you like to tell us about?
Amanda Blackwood:So my autobiography custom justice.
Amanda Blackwood:This is currently in talks of being either a film or limited
Amanda Blackwood:series within the next year or so I'm very excited, but also
Amanda Blackwood:terrified. Because this means that everybody's going to know
Amanda Blackwood:my life story. This book starts and we're
Howard Brown:gonna know the truth about your life story. I
Howard Brown:want to go back to that.
Amanda Blackwood:Yes, that's, that's very true. It starts off
Amanda Blackwood:when I was four, and it talks about some of that early abuse
Amanda Blackwood:without going into graphic details, but it does show how I
Amanda Blackwood:was predisposed to being more susceptible to being trafficked
Amanda Blackwood:later on. Most victims of trafficking did grow up in
Amanda Blackwood:abusive households and they just like me, were looking for that
Amanda Blackwood:love and acceptance wherever they could find it. This book I
Amanda Blackwood:started writing in December of 2020. I finished it in December
Amanda Blackwood:of 2020. It's 300 pages and the very last page ends with my own
Amanda Blackwood:baptism. So it's my
Howard Brown:Where Did someone get the book?
Amanda Blackwood:This is available on Amazon or Barnes
Amanda Blackwood:and Noble they can also get it from my Etsy shop if they want a
Amanda Blackwood:signed copy directly from me that I will send to them
Amanda Blackwood:personally with a little note on say where else I said I think I
Amanda Blackwood:think there's a couple of copies on ebay but I would say don't
Amanda Blackwood:get those because that means that somebody else has read
Amanda Blackwood:them.
Howard Brown:No, no, no, we'll get the book links and we'll get
Howard Brown:the st link as well. How do you want people to get in touch with
Howard Brown:you?
Amanda Blackwood:They can always reach out to me through
Amanda Blackwood:my website detailed pieces.com they can email me directly
Amanda Blackwood:author Amanda blackwood@gmail.com. I'm on
Amanda Blackwood:Facebook very active facebook.com/author.com facebook.com/amanda
Amanda Blackwood:Blackwood survivor. I'm on Instagram and Tik Tok and
Amanda Blackwood:Twitter under at detailed pieces.
Howard Brown:You can be found,
Amanda Blackwood:I can be found and I am willing to be found
Howard Brown:so Let last word, as we come to a close
Amanda Blackwood:up, if you're interested in human trafficking
Amanda Blackwood:get educated. It's not what it looks like in the media. less
Amanda Blackwood:than 2% of all victims actually survive. The fact that I'm still
Amanda Blackwood:standing here and still able to breathe is a miracle in itself,
Amanda Blackwood:of those 2% even less are willing to talk about it. So as
Amanda Blackwood:we said, towards the beginning, you probably have met a survivor
Amanda Blackwood:of human trafficking and you just don't know. And in some
Amanda Blackwood:cases, they might not know it either.
Howard Brown:Incredible, incredible. Thank you for
Howard Brown:spending time. My book shining brightly is doing really well.
Howard Brown:speaking gigs are happening, and publicity and it's, we're both
Howard Brown:helping people get back up after they got knocked down. And you
Howard Brown:can reach me at my website, shining brightly.com. And I just
Howard Brown:want us to put on some glasses today together, Amanda, because
Howard Brown:you are shining brightly in the shining, brightly spotlight.
Howard Brown:Thank you for sharing on a very tough subject, but unnecessary
Howard Brown:education, just the fraction of education that we're able to
Howard Brown:give the audience today. And I am grateful for you. And thank
Howard Brown:you, and I just wish you strength with your knight in
Howard Brown:shining armour. And what a great information and your story and I
Howard Brown:do hope it gets to be made a movie, people need to know the
Howard Brown:truth.
Amanda Blackwood:Thank you. Thank you, Howard. This was
Amanda Blackwood:awesome.
Howard Brown:Thank you. Thank you