In this closing episode of our disclosure series, we walk alongside caregivers, partners, and families navigating the days after a child’s revelation. We explore ways to respond with care, support loved ones facing guilt and fear, and create a space where healing can begin. Through real-life examples, practical insights, and compassionate guidance, this episode offers understanding and encouragement for anyone committed to restoring children after disclosure.
In this episode we explore what it really means when a child leaves their story with you. From the hidden burden mothers often carry, to the silence families wrestle with, to the difficult question of how to tell a partner, this conversation opens up the perspective of the listener and offers both reflection and practical guidance for parents, caregivers, and everyone desiring a safer world for children.
When a child tells someone they’ve been sexually abused, the world rushes towards making a police report, getting a medical examination, or establishing the legal case. But somewhere in that rush, the child, their shock, their fear, their need for safety, can quietly disappear from the center of the story.
In this episode, we strip away the headlines and legal jargon to focus on what a disclosure really is: a child handing over the most fragile truth they have. We talk about our first response and why it matters more than we think. How to avoid re-victimization, and what it means to truly see the child before the case.
Drawing from a memoir excerpt, Nigerian-specific contexts, and years of witnessing disclosures, we explore the human side of responding to abuse.
When a child discloses abuse, it rarely sounds like a clear confession. More often, it’s hidden in hints, changes in behavior, coded language, or even silence. In this deeply personal episode, we begin our series on disclosures by exploring the subtle, often-missed ways children reveal abuse, and why so many attempts to tell are ignored, dismissed, or misunderstood.
Drawing from a moving volunteer training excerpt and a real-life account from lawyer and listener Emmanuella Nyong, we unpack:
1. The stages children often go through before a full disclosureCommon ways adults miss critical cues
2. Why most disclosures are messy, delayed, incomplete, or recanted
3. How to be the kind of adult a child can safely speak to
This episode will challenge how you think about “telling” and equip you to listen beyond words, because many children are speaking, just not in the language we’ve been taught to hear.
What happens when child sexual abuse is not just a moment in time, but a wound that weaves itself into years of silence, shame, and survival?
In this raw and reflective episode of Intercept CSA: The Podcast, we explore how time often multiplies the ache of abuse when there’s no space to name it, no language to process it, and no safety to heal from it. Through the courageous voice of Ms. Oge, a survivor and mother, we witness the layered impact of CSA, across memory, motherhood, and meaning.
This episode is a reminder that CSA is not just what happened, it’s everything that followed. And that healing, though often delayed, is still possible.
What happens after the abuse ends?
In this deeply reflective episode, we move beyond the moment of child sexual abuse (CSA) and explore the silent, shape-shifting aftermath that survivors often carry for years, sometimes unknowingly. From anxiety, hypervigilance, and the need to control environments to struggles with parenting, boundaries, intimacy, physical health and voice, this episode traces the often-invisible imprint of trauma.
We draw from research, and survivor stories, including Brian Kennedy’s unforgettable essay “Tough Enough to Talk”, to paint a fuller picture of how CSA impacts not just childhood but life.
Brian Kennedy’s 2016 Essay on his experience with Child Sexual Abuse.
Tough Enough To Talk—https://medium.com/@briankennedy29/tough-enough-to-talk-dc11a9cb41e7
Dr Nadine Burke’s TED Talk—"How childhood trauma affects health across a lifetime"
https://youtu.be/95ovIJ3dsNk
Dr Nadine’s Talk on ACE’s and Toxic Stress
https://youtu.be/Ta5tbuFVkHY
In this intimate opening to The Impact Series, we explore how child sexual abuse leaves marks that aren’t always visible or spoken. Through personal reflection, a book excerpt, and quiet truth-telling, this episode looks at the kind of impact that hides in what’s missing, the words never said, and the silence that stretches for years. It invites us to recognize that absence, too, is a form of impact.
Content Warning: This episode includes discussions of child sexual abuse, which may be distressing for some listeners.
In this final episode of our “Gaps” series, we explore how modern shifts like digital parenting, economic pressure, toxic masculinity, and hypersexualised culture are affecting child safety. You’ll hear voices across generations answering one question:
“What current trends do you fear could harm children in the long run?”
It’s layered, honest, and a necessary pause to reflect on where we’re headed and who’s getting hurt in the process.
In this episode, Inimfon continues the conversation on gaps by unpacking how everyday people and communities, often unknowingly, create the very openings abusers exploit. From cultural mindsets to the struggles of survival, we explore how responsibility is outsourced and why that must change.
In this powerful episode, we explore a deeply uncomfortable truth: many times families unknowingly create the very environments where abuse can thrive. Drawing from over a decade of experience working with children and teens, Inimfon breaks down the subtle ways a lack of communication, presence, obedience without accountability and other factors can create gaps for abusers to act.
This episode is the first of the series on the gaps that make room for abuse and increase children’s vulnerability
Children may not always tell, but they are transparent. When people are paying attention and know what to look for, abuse is often found sooner rather than later.
In this episode, Inimfon takes us through a training for our eyes and our instincts, so we can see how abuse shows up, and the quiet ways children raise their voices without saying a word.
Join the InterceptCSA Listening Community on Telegram: https://bit.ly/interceptcsa-listening-community
In this episode, Inimfon Sampson explores the heartbreaking, complex reasons why children rarely speak about abuse, and why the people who are supposed to protect them don’t notice until it’s too late.
From nervous system shutdowns to cultural conditioning, from misdirected trust to emotional denial, this episode takes a hard look at the invisible forces that allow abuse to hide in plain sight.
This is not about blame. It is about capacity. And every time you listen, you are building the strength to see, respond, and protect.
The first step to ending child sexual abuse? Recognizing it, even when it hides in the ordinary. Inimfon shares a deeply personal encounter and explains why child sexual abuse must be treated not just as a legal or mental health issue, but as a human, communal one.
In this introduction, Inimfon Sampson, founder of Intercept Child Sexual Abuse, shares what to expect in Season 1 and invites you into a space where silence ends and action begins. If you care about protecting children, this season is for you.