Month: January 2020

Unlocking the Dreams and Skills of Trafficking Survivors

Girl smiling with tattoos

I am a survivor of human trafficking.

And this is my story.

Unlocking the Dreams and Skills of Trafficking SurvivorsI grew up as an average, all-American, middle-class girl in a small town in Oregon. My grandma was a praying woman and my parents were good people, but they were not living for Jesus. They divorced when I was nine, and it was an ugly divorce with a lot of anger, hurt and fighting. Their divorce impacted me more than I realized at the time.

My Mom remarried when I was 15 and things went relatively back to normal. I was an honor student, varsity athlete, selected for the prom court and engaged in lots of school activities. I graduated high school early and got accepted into Oregon State University.

My life took a dramatic turn.

My life took a dramatic turn when I found out I was pregnant that summer by my boyfriend. I had to make a really tough decision about whether I was going to keep my baby and un-enroll from University or have an abortion and keep it all a secret. I knew I wanted to keep my baby.

Rebecca Bender and daughterAfter I had my daughter, my friends had an extra room in their apartment at the University of Oregon, so we packed up and moved out of our small town excited for a new start with a fresh future. That’s when the feelings I had as a child during my parent’s divorce resurfaced. I felt alone, unwanted and unimportant. In a sea of college students, I was the girl with a kid.

It was during that season when I met the most amazing guy. He took an interest in both me and my daughter. We dated for six months, all the while expanding my boundaries little by little. As an only child with a busy working mom, I didn’t realize that even though I hadn’t been put in an “at risk” category, I grew up with no boundaries in life and went to parties on the weekends as a way to feel a part of something.

I felt enamored that someone was paying attention to me, agreeing to push my own boundaries as long as it meant keeping him around. He told me we could be a family. When his “job” was relocating him to Las Vegas, I packed up and willingly moved, hopeful about our future.

Then everything changed.

Rebecca Bender Mug Shot

Over the next six years I was traded between three traffickers, bought and sold nightly by men. I’d try to run and make it out for only short periods of time. I was branded twice, two men tattooing their names on my back like a piece of cattle. My face was broken in multiple places. I was hospitalized for dehydration and over exhaustion. I was arrested seven times for prostitution related charges. I attempted to escape on four different occasions and tried to commit suicide twice. I was hopeless.

I attempted to escape on four different occasions and tried to commit suicide twice.

In 2006, the Feds raided one of our trafficker’s homes and broke up the organized crime ring that controlled the trafficking operation. I saw an open window of opportunity, and in 2007, I attempted my last and final escape.

I gave God six years.

I returned home to try to get a fresh start. But I was living in a whole new world of normalcy that I knew nothing about. I found myself thinking “now what?” What would I do with the rest of my life? I had a huge gap in job history, a criminal record, and a ton of PTSD. Would I be shunned in my own town? Where would I work? After a brief trial of relying on old ways, I finally surrendered it all. I got on food stamps and government housing.

How you can sit in your comfy house with a warm cup of coffee when you know what it’s like…

It was during that season I cried out to God asking if this is what He saved me for. He replied, “If you give me the same amount of time as you have given the world, I will never be outdone.” I agreed and told God I’d give him six years.

In that time, I got a great job and married a wonderful man and we eventually started our own business. But then one morning, the Holy Spirit again asked, “How can you sit here and do nothing? How you can sit in your comfy house with a warm cup of coffee when you know what it’s like…”

In 2014, we sold our business and started the Rebecca Bender Initiative, an organization that equips community professionals to recognize and respond to domestic exploitation. To date, our team has trained nearly 90,000 first responders including law enforcement, FBI, Homeland Security, medical professionals, community service providers and faith-based groups.

Rebecca Bender Staff

Our neighborhoods are starting to recognize that many of the women who appear to be engaged in prostitution are not “prostitutes,” they are victims who are being exploited and oppressed.

Survivors and non-profits started reaching out asking if we offered mentoring services for survivors. I was finishing my master’s degree in Christian Thought from Bethel Seminary when again, the Holy Spirit dropped in my heart, “If you can get a masters online you can mentor online, and you are not the only survivor who lives in a community where services don’t exist.”

456 survivors have been empowered for life after trafficking and hardship

I immediately created Elevate, an online academy geared to mentor survivors for life after trafficking and empower them to live their dreams. We have empowered women for life after trafficking and hardship, figuring out their Now What in life.

By sharing my story, I pray we can address this major issue of the objectification of sex in the media and begin to pull back the reins on what’s been happening with trafficking in our society.

My full memoir, In Pursuit of Love, is currently being published by Zondervan and will hit the shelves January 2020.

The Summit has given me the tools and mentoring I needed to lead an organization.

A local friend and pastor had an extra ticket to The Global Leadership Summit, and he invited me to attend for the first time. As a survivor of human trafficking called by God to help others, I had an idea early on where I was headed, but lacked the team building and mentoring I’d need to navigate how to get there. The Summit showed me tools I had never been taught or shown, and now it’s helping me at this stage of my journey in leading my organization as well (not just during my rescue and recovery). Survivors need mentors at all phases of their journey, not just the “rescue.”

At the Summit I realized that I wanted to help survivors restore their dreams.

I was especially impacted by one of the speakers, Don Flow, who is the owner of a car dealership in North Carolina. With inspiration from his talk, I wrote a manifesto for how I wanted to lead the team that God was going to entrust me with.

One thing that got me was how he talked about getting to know the dreams of his staff. He really wanted to get to know them. He gave them paid hours to do what they love and give back to their community. It made them feel invested in, and then ultimately, they wanted to do more for the company. This resonated with me.

Don Flow quote

At the Summit I realized that I wanted to help survivors restore their dreams.  Survivors are more than just their story. We have talents and abilities that have been left dormant or unexplored for far too long.

Today, our staff consists of 45 percent survivors of human trafficking, and at one point over half. For me to build into them, get to know their dreams and invest in them is more than just good for the outcome of our work, it helps them know their value and to learn lessons along the way – like being faithful in the little and planting seeds. A couple of them have gone on to do incredible work they are passionate about, and we celebrate that because building into who they are and helping them follow their own dreams is the original manifesto that RBI promised God.

The Summit became a mentor.

The Summit has been one of the best conferences I’ve ever attended. I didn’t have a mentor when I first started my organization but being a part of the Summit has taught me valuable tools needed to run a business. Our trainings have now led us to speak at nearly 50 conferences a year. Being someone who attends conferences regularly, this is one of the best I’ve ever seen. It balances respect for where people are in their own journey with advice and skills that will radically change their company and their life.

The biggest thing God has shown me on this journey.

The hard part for any of us to wrap our heads around is the fact that evil exists, and that humanity has free will. When bad things happen to us, it doesn’t mean it’s from God. Not everyone is trying to live for God. But God can help you overcome that mountain. God doesn’t say there won’t be storms. He’ll always be with us, and we can draw near to Him.

God wants us to be more successful than we realize.

People ask me all the time, “How do I know what I’m called to do?” My answer: What is in your heart, is exactly what God desires for you when you continue to draw near to Him, because the desires of your heart start to match His. He wants you to be successful. He cares about the well being of your family. Even when doors shut, He has your best interest at heart and you can trust His timing, His leading and His direction.

Rebecca Bender and Survivors wth Jimmy Carter

Rebecca Bender and other survivors pose with Jimmy Carter

God wants us to be more successful than we realize. He’s better than the best dad who’s proud of you. He wants to connect you with His network of people who can pour into you. God is that kind of God.

 

My organization and our story can be viewed here. 

 

Is It Time for a Wellness Tune-Up?

There it was. The low-tire light illuminated my dashboard once again. Last time I checked, it wasn’t really a low-tire after all, but rather a false alarm. I stared at my dashboard. Do I ignore the light? Or investigate further?

There it was. The low-tire light illuminated my dashboard once again. Last time I checked, it wasn’t really a low-tire after all, but rather a false alarm. I stared at my dashboard. Do I ignore the light? Or investigate further?

How many of us have been there?

We see a warning sign that our own personal tire may be going flat, but we ignore it.

Perhaps it is a headache that has gone on too many days. Perhaps it is an extra few pounds on the scale. Or maybe a yearning of unmet need for social-connectedness.

What do you think of when you hear the words To Be Well?

Having a wellness tire that is properly inflated is a foundation of life, regardless of your career choice. Sure, we can all operate on a low tire for a while. But doing so over time can impact the frame, which in turn impacts the entire vehicle.

About five years ago, I found myself working another holiday retail season in a position that required immense energy and hours. Sure, I exercised almost every day and filled my body with enough spinach to make Popeye proud, but I could not ignore the tingling in my jaw that I knew correlated with stress. Like the low-tire light on the dashboard, I chose to ignore it, hoping it would go away.

When left unchecked, stress is the beginning of a multitude of issues.

Ignoring the warning light of stress, just like ignoring the low-tire light, will impact not only you but those you come in contact with. My journey over the next couple of years would eventually lead to a job change. And I realized there was a more important journey that needed to take place inside of me.

Self-care.

Self-care should not be saved for special occasions. It should be a part of our day-to-day living.

Although some may find self-care overrated, it actually may be a secret ingredient to living life well. Self-care should not be saved for special occasions. It should be a part of our day-to-day living.

Over the past several years, I’ve discovered sacred moments in taking time to enjoy the first sip of coffee in the morning, watching the sunrise in the quiet, journaling by the fireplace or laughing with a loved one until my belly hurts. These moments lay the foundation for me to show up well in life and leadership.

“To Be Well” is to be personally aware.

At times, your internal voice may be the fire that gets you up and moving. At other times, your internal voice may quietly whisper that it’s time for rest and renewal.

Take the time to do a check-up on your wellness tire.

How do you rank? Consider all areas such as physical, financial, mental, spiritual and social.

1) Identify areas in which your wellness tire is low. Congrats! That’s the first step.

2) Next, decide to do something about it. Don’t know where to start? Try finding someone who knows more than you do. You wouldn’t start tinkering on your car without seeking direction of sort, would you?

3) Last, find an accountability partner and take action. A partner will become your springboard to taking the action steps you need to achieve your goals.

 

“To Be Well” is to be personally aware.

As you progress along, keep in mind that setbacks will occur. Setbacks are not permission to stop and let our wellness tires deflate, but rather a time we may have paused to catch our breath and remind ourselves why we started.

Do This Every Day to Combat Drift

A parachute drifts to the earth.

I don’t know a single leader who made a conscious decision to get 30 pounds overweight.

I also don’t know a leader who got married with the intention of one day getting a divorce.

One of the greatest dangers to every leader is drifting.

I’ve also never met a leader who woke up and said, “Today, I’m going to compromise some of my core convictions.”

But over time, leaders get physically soft; they let their relationships become distant and they do things in private they once denounced in public. So, how do these things happen to leaders over and over again?

Leaders drift.

One of the greatest dangers to every leader is drifting.

Let me illustrate, if you are walking down the block from your home to a neighbor’s and you drift by one degree, you won’t even notice. But if you are traveling from San Francisco to Los Angeles and you drift by just one degree you will miss your destination by six miles! And if you are trying to get from San Francisco to Washington, D.C. and you drift off course by a single degree you will end up on the other side of Baltimore, 42.6 miles off course. When leaders drift relationally, physically, mentally or spiritually, it takes them to places they never intended to be.

To prevent drifting, I have developed a simple 5-minute exercise I call “Checking Your RPMS.” I’m sharing this with you to help you lead yourself and never drift. At the beginning of my day, at the top of my journal I write the following four letters: R P M S.

  • R is for relational.
  • P is for physical.
  • M is for mental.
  • S is for spiritual.

Underneath each of these four letters (R P M S) I rate myself by writing a number on a scale of 1 to 10. 1 is bad, 5 is average, 10 is great. It’s not scientific, but by reflecting every day on these four crucial components of a leader’s life, it keeps me from drifting.

 This tool is based on Luke 2:52 that says, “Jesus grew in wisdom (mental) and stature (physical), and in favor with God (spiritual) and men (relational).” I am absolutely convinced that using this tool on a daily basis may be one of the most powerful self-leadership tools around. I believe it will keep you from drifting too.

 

Let me give you a few R P M S questions to ask in your own daily self-evaluation

 RELATIONAL:

Our relational world typically includes the people with whom we interact on a regular basis: our immediate family, friends, neighbors, coworkers and small group members.

Here are some questions you can ask yourself as you evaluate:

  • How are my relationships at home?
  • What about my marriage, dating or family life is going well? What’s not going so well? What would I like to change?
  • Who do I consider my closest friend? How is God using that relationship to grow me?
  • What are my relationships like at work?
  • Which of my relationships give me energy and life? Which are the most challenging or draining?

 

PHYSICAL:  

Our physical well-being is often the most overlooked aspect of a leader’s life. Yet diet, exercise, sleep and rest are all vital to our ability to lead effectively. If we are serious about developing as a whole person, we have to take seriously our physical well-being.

Here are some good questions to ask:

  • Am I getting enough rest?
  • How is my current energy level?
  • What am I doing to maintain good health when it comes to exercise and eating habits?
  • Is there anything about my physical health that I’d like to change?

 

MENTAL:  

Another often-overlooked aspect is the development of our minds. In order for us to stay sharp and be lifelong learners, we need to be challenged.

The longer I am in leadership, the more I am convinced that the most important leadership we can offer is self-leadership.

Here are some questions we can ask to see if we are developing mentally:

  • What have I been learning lately?
  • How am I applying what I am learning?
  • What magazines, books do I need to read or what podcasts should I listen to?
  • What thoughts have been dominating my mind? Are they drawing me closer to God? Are they pulling me away from him?

 

SPIRITUAL:

It is imperative that we discover and act on whatever it is that helps us grow deeper in our relationship with God.

Here are some questions we can ask to see how we are developing spiritually:

  • How would I describe my relationship with God right now?
  • What does it look like when I am feeling closely connected to God?
  • Which spiritual disciplines seem to help me draw closer to God? Prayer? Journaling? Worship? Solitude?
  • Who is holding me accountable for practicing these disciplines?
  • What has God been saying to me lately through his Word? The Holy Spirit? Other Christ followers? Prayer?

 

The longer I am in leadership, the more I am convinced that the most important leadership we can offer is self-leadership. We have to be intentional about not drifting.

Use this tool every day and lead yourself!

Episode 065: Jo Saxton and Jason Jaggard on Wellness

The Global Leadership Summit Podcast

Get free, instant access to GLS Podcast Episode Show Notes. Leverage episode summaries, key takeaways, reflection questions, resources mentioned, related links and applicable downloads.

 

SUMMARY:

In her Global Leadership Summit 2019 talk, Jo Saxton advocated for leaders to pay attention to their wellness and well-being. Her memorable quote, “You have one body and your leadership lives in it,” resonated with our audience. In this episode of the GLS Podcast, she explores the wellness topic more deeply with podcast host Jason Jaggard. In her warm and accessible way, Jo tackles tough topics like the importance of rest, the work of therapy and the challenges of imposter syndrome.

 

KEY TAKEAWAYS:

  • When I think of wellness, I think of well-being: mental well-being, emotional well-being and intellectual well-being. Wellness is about who we are on the inside, being more integrated and at peace.
  • For much of my life, I felt that wellness was a luxury.
  • Rest is the fuel to our fires. When we rest, we are better thinkers, creatives and better leaders.
  • Make it a practice to become self-aware about the ways you rest and recharge.
  • We all have a story behind our stories. As a Nigerian female growing up in Britain in the 80s, I was told that I needed to be at least twice as good as everyone else. Ultimately, maintaining that level of exceptionalism became a burden. We are living out the wounds of our stories all the time.
  • You can uncover your gaps by asking questions like “Who were you before anyone told you who you were supposed to be?” or “Who were you before life happened to you?”
  • Reflect on whether you are regularly waking up more tired when you come to sleep or if you are incessantly irritable. Pay attention to where the responses are disproportionate.
  • The reason I advocate for therapy is that I’m always better on the other side.
  • Your dysfunctions and wounds are shaping your leadership, so why not do something about it?
  • Therapy is like going to the gym for your emotional well-being.
  • There are many faces of imposter syndrome: the perfectionist, the expert, the natural genius, the soloist and the super-human. Every one of those begs for you to prove yourself by being invincible.
  • You have one body and one life—and your leadership lives in it. Make the most of it. Look after it. You’re worth it.

 

 

REFLECTION QUESTIONS:

1. Jo Saxton covered several different aspects of well-being in this podcast. Think about your own life. Which of her insights seemed most relevant to you right now? Check all the boxes that apply.

 Acknowledging your need for rest
 Becoming self-aware of how you recharge
 Gaining awareness of how your team recharges
 Understanding the wounds that are driving you
 Combatting imposter syndrome
 Paying attention to dis-proportionate responses

2. Look at all the boxes you checked. If you could address only one challenge over the next year, select the one that would have the biggest impact on your wellness.

3. What could you do this week to take the first step?

 

RESOURCES MENTIONED:

Level-Up Your Leadership, Jo Saxton GLS Talk

British Nigerians

Postpartum Depression

The Secret Thoughts of Successful Women by Valerie Young

RELATED LINKS:

Jo Saxton

Jo Saxton’s Website

Lead Stories Podcast

Jason Jaggard

Novus Global

The Global Leadership Summit

God Called Me, Connecting Me to Worldwide Network Through the Summit

Looking at the globe

Before I attended The Global Leadership Summit, I spent two years looking for a ministry to get involved in. The more I prayed, the more friends recommended the Summit, but I didn’t want to have to attend a conference to get my new calling. It was also a very bad year for the mortgage business, and I was on a tight budget.

One Sunday, a week away from the Summit, I walked in to get ready for the service to begin when I felt God telling me once again to sign up to attend. I said, out loud to God, why should I pay to go to a seminar when I am ready to serve you right now?! If you want me to go you are going to have to pay for it!

Just as I was lowering myself into my seat, a man on stage ran to the microphone and stopped the band to say, it has been brought to one of our member’s attention that there is a person here right now that would appreciate financial aid to attend the Summit this week. Would that person please go to guest central now?

I like to think I am helping change the world one sentence and one blanket at a time.

Humbled and embarrassed that I had demanded God to pay my way, I rushed to guest central in tears. I was given my ticket, lunch included!

I found my place

During one of the breaks at my first Summit, I ran into the ESL booth where they were recruiting volunteer teachers. I also saw a booth for Loving Covers where they were recruiting quilters to sew blankets for those in need. I was immediately sure this was what God wanted me to do, even though I couldn’t sew and had never taught English! I have come to expect God to give me these kinds of assignments because I love how He equips and guides me when I follow His prompting. Now I’m a full-time volunteer teaching English and sewing quilts–I like to think I am helping change the world one sentence and one blanket at a time.

No matter what one does, what one learns at the Summit empowers even the simplest of people to speak to the issues of life with a greater candor.

I have gone to every Summit event since!

The Summit is a source of hope for me. It comforts me to know that there are good leaders doing good things in the world and that I can invest in them as they invest in others. The Summit opens my heart to be a bigger person. It gives me ideas and purposes I can share with others. It broadens my ability to give good counsel. It shows me what God is doing in the lives of others to make our world a better place, especially when leadership and diplomacy are in such high demand. I am an influencer, sharing—per God’s whisper—everything I can. No matter what one does, what one learns at the Summit empowers even the simplest of people to speak to the issues of life with a greater candor. It elevates everyone’s general education and sometimes even illuminates a profound truth that one never knew before.

The Summit connected me to a global network of people that have touched my life eternally.

I met a pastor named Ravi from India. This started an email friendship between us. Pastor Ravi’s stories about his daily life are of triumph over adversity, of God working His perfect will despite great difficulties. It is nice to put our heads together, pray for each other and see God answer.

 

Ravis Church

Pastor Ravi’s Church

 

Over the last two years I was able to give a small donation to help Ravi, first with last year’s Christmas program to the poor in his church and this year with a donation to his building fund. When he asked me if there was a Summit event near him, I connected him to the Global Leadership Network, and they were able to sponsor his ticket!

 

Ravis new church building

Pastor Ravi’s new church being built

 

To receive his joyful response to what happened at the Summit, and what happened the following weekend—four new people in Christ getting baptized—was just amazing! It makes me happy to help him. I only wish I had more than prayers to give, but God has been faithful and done so much already! Ravi and his wife Swarma were blown away and inspired so much by the Summit. They are practicing what they learned even as I write this. The fact that I was even a small part of all this has just showed me how small the world is and how close we all are despite the thousands of miles between us.

The fact that I was even a small part of all this has just showed me how small the world is and how close we all are despite the thousands of miles between us.

I can come to the GLN when something beyond my reach comes up. The GLN has created a universal network of Christians who want to help other Christians and non-Christians who are less fortunate than themselves, even if prayer is all they can afford. Because we have relationships all over the world, if I come across a Pastor Ravi or someone in need of advice, I am not limited to my own resources and knowledge. I can ask others if they know anyone who can help.

The Summit has taught me anyone can ask. And if you ask not, you have not. So, I ask. The reality is, I am networking my resources with others who are committed to Christ. Zig Zigler said, if you help enough people get what they need, you will never need for anything!

 

Baptism after the GLS

Four people get baptized after GLS 2019 in India

 

I am just one of zillions of devoted followers of Christ that want to feel His presence, walk in his ways and love others the way He loves us. To me, the Summit is God’s news showing us His army of workers all over the world, wiping away cynicism and resignation—the two biggest destroyers of dreams. Everyone should go to the Summit to expand their knowledge in leadership and communication. The Summit creates a spark for Christ within us.