Secrets Worth Sharing
How to approach childhood s*xual harm with serious joy 🌞
Founded by Sophia Luu
🎥 Intersectional Podcasts, Videos & Events 🏳️⚧️
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Our lovely founder Sophia was honoured to speak at the recent World Health Assembly in Geneva, for the launch of the Out of the Shadows Index, a database which tracks how 60 countries across 6 regions – home to 83% of the world’s children – are preventing and responding to sexual violence against children and adolescents. Sophia came to remind us about the human faces behind the data, and why ‘Serious Joy’ is so important for conversations around sexual abuse and violence. Here are a few of our absolutely favourite quotes from her incredible speech. 🤩
(Also, a huge thanks to @thome.designs for Sophia’s beautiful Vietnamese Áo dài ❤️)
#BeBrave #WHA79 #WHA2026 #WorldHealthAssembly
#OutOfTheShadows

Our lovely founder Sophia was honoured to speak at the recent World Health Assembly in Geneva, for the launch of the Out of the Shadows Index, a database which tracks how 60 countries across 6 regions – home to 83% of the world’s children – are preventing and responding to sexual violence against children and adolescents. Sophia came to remind us about the human faces behind the data, and why ‘Serious Joy’ is so important for conversations around sexual abuse and violence. Here are a few of our absolutely favourite quotes from her incredible speech. 🤩
(Also, a huge thanks to @thome.designs for Sophia’s beautiful Vietnamese Áo dài ❤️)
#BeBrave #WHA79 #WHA2026 #WorldHealthAssembly
#OutOfTheShadows

Our lovely founder Sophia was honoured to speak at the recent World Health Assembly in Geneva, for the launch of the Out of the Shadows Index, a database which tracks how 60 countries across 6 regions – home to 83% of the world’s children – are preventing and responding to sexual violence against children and adolescents. Sophia came to remind us about the human faces behind the data, and why ‘Serious Joy’ is so important for conversations around sexual abuse and violence. Here are a few of our absolutely favourite quotes from her incredible speech. 🤩
(Also, a huge thanks to @thome.designs for Sophia’s beautiful Vietnamese Áo dài ❤️)
#BeBrave #WHA79 #WHA2026 #WorldHealthAssembly
#OutOfTheShadows

Our lovely founder Sophia was honoured to speak at the recent World Health Assembly in Geneva, for the launch of the Out of the Shadows Index, a database which tracks how 60 countries across 6 regions – home to 83% of the world’s children – are preventing and responding to sexual violence against children and adolescents. Sophia came to remind us about the human faces behind the data, and why ‘Serious Joy’ is so important for conversations around sexual abuse and violence. Here are a few of our absolutely favourite quotes from her incredible speech. 🤩
(Also, a huge thanks to @thome.designs for Sophia’s beautiful Vietnamese Áo dài ❤️)
#BeBrave #WHA79 #WHA2026 #WorldHealthAssembly
#OutOfTheShadows

Our lovely founder Sophia was honoured to speak at the recent World Health Assembly in Geneva, for the launch of the Out of the Shadows Index, a database which tracks how 60 countries across 6 regions – home to 83% of the world’s children – are preventing and responding to sexual violence against children and adolescents. Sophia came to remind us about the human faces behind the data, and why ‘Serious Joy’ is so important for conversations around sexual abuse and violence. Here are a few of our absolutely favourite quotes from her incredible speech. 🤩
(Also, a huge thanks to @thome.designs for Sophia’s beautiful Vietnamese Áo dài ❤️)
#BeBrave #WHA79 #WHA2026 #WorldHealthAssembly
#OutOfTheShadows

Our lovely founder Sophia was honoured to speak at the recent World Health Assembly in Geneva, for the launch of the Out of the Shadows Index, a database which tracks how 60 countries across 6 regions – home to 83% of the world’s children – are preventing and responding to sexual violence against children and adolescents. Sophia came to remind us about the human faces behind the data, and why ‘Serious Joy’ is so important for conversations around sexual abuse and violence. Here are a few of our absolutely favourite quotes from her incredible speech. 🤩
(Also, a huge thanks to @thome.designs for Sophia’s beautiful Vietnamese Áo dài ❤️)
#BeBrave #WHA79 #WHA2026 #WorldHealthAssembly
#OutOfTheShadows

Our lovely founder Sophia was honoured to speak at the recent World Health Assembly in Geneva, for the launch of the Out of the Shadows Index, a database which tracks how 60 countries across 6 regions – home to 83% of the world’s children – are preventing and responding to sexual violence against children and adolescents. Sophia came to remind us about the human faces behind the data, and why ‘Serious Joy’ is so important for conversations around sexual abuse and violence. Here are a few of our absolutely favourite quotes from her incredible speech. 🤩
(Also, a huge thanks to @thome.designs for Sophia’s beautiful Vietnamese Áo dài ❤️)
#BeBrave #WHA79 #WHA2026 #WorldHealthAssembly
#OutOfTheShadows
Our lovely founder Sophia was honoured to speak at the recent World Health Assembly in Geneva, for the launch of the Out of the Shadows Index, a database which tracks how 60 countries across 6 regions – home to 83% of the world’s children – are preventing and responding to sexual violence against children and adolescents. Sophia came to remind us about the human faces behind the data, and why ‘Serious Joy’ is so important for conversations around sexual abuse and violence. Here are a few of our absolutely favourite quotes from her incredible speech. 🤩
(Also, a huge thanks to @thome.designs for Sophia’s beautiful Vietnamese Áo dài ❤️)
#BeBrave #WHA79 #WHA2026 #WorldHealthAssembly
#OutOfTheShadows

Our latest piece is by Sophia Luu - founder of @secretsworthsharing_ - on an alarming phenomenon she’s discovered in her anti childhood sexual abuse advocacy journey: that anti-drag sentiment - which quickly deteriorates into transphobia) is widely shared under the guise of “child protection.”
Sophia speaks with trans drag king and organiser @theprinceofp3rsia and Ebony, a drag queen and performance artist, to inform her piece. Prince is photographed by Luce le Brocq.
As Sophia writes, “It feels easier for us to point to ‘the other’ when we think about those who sexually abuse children. Often, trans people and drag performers are already othered in society, making it easy for them to become a target.
Many people forget that trans people are four times more likely than cisgender people to be victims of violent crimes, including sexual abuse.“
🎨 @fioandfio who says: “The image centres around a group of trans and drag individuals, with two children included in the composition. The presence of the children reflects a key message in the article. The illustration centres the idea that protecting children and supporting trans communities are not opposing aims, but deeply connected. The children sit within or alongside the wider community, not separate from it, suggesting care, solidarity, and shared safety. By including drag figures, the piece also challenges the harmful narrative that drag is inherently unsafe for children. Instead, it celebrates drag as a joyful, creative form of expression that many children can find delight, imagination, and acceptance.”
https://shado-mag.com/articles/opinion/anti-childhood-sexual-abuse-spaces-have-a-transphobia-problem/

Our latest piece is by Sophia Luu - founder of @secretsworthsharing_ - on an alarming phenomenon she’s discovered in her anti childhood sexual abuse advocacy journey: that anti-drag sentiment - which quickly deteriorates into transphobia) is widely shared under the guise of “child protection.”
Sophia speaks with trans drag king and organiser @theprinceofp3rsia and Ebony, a drag queen and performance artist, to inform her piece. Prince is photographed by Luce le Brocq.
As Sophia writes, “It feels easier for us to point to ‘the other’ when we think about those who sexually abuse children. Often, trans people and drag performers are already othered in society, making it easy for them to become a target.
Many people forget that trans people are four times more likely than cisgender people to be victims of violent crimes, including sexual abuse.“
🎨 @fioandfio who says: “The image centres around a group of trans and drag individuals, with two children included in the composition. The presence of the children reflects a key message in the article. The illustration centres the idea that protecting children and supporting trans communities are not opposing aims, but deeply connected. The children sit within or alongside the wider community, not separate from it, suggesting care, solidarity, and shared safety. By including drag figures, the piece also challenges the harmful narrative that drag is inherently unsafe for children. Instead, it celebrates drag as a joyful, creative form of expression that many children can find delight, imagination, and acceptance.”
https://shado-mag.com/articles/opinion/anti-childhood-sexual-abuse-spaces-have-a-transphobia-problem/

Our latest piece is by Sophia Luu - founder of @secretsworthsharing_ - on an alarming phenomenon she’s discovered in her anti childhood sexual abuse advocacy journey: that anti-drag sentiment - which quickly deteriorates into transphobia) is widely shared under the guise of “child protection.”
Sophia speaks with trans drag king and organiser @theprinceofp3rsia and Ebony, a drag queen and performance artist, to inform her piece. Prince is photographed by Luce le Brocq.
As Sophia writes, “It feels easier for us to point to ‘the other’ when we think about those who sexually abuse children. Often, trans people and drag performers are already othered in society, making it easy for them to become a target.
Many people forget that trans people are four times more likely than cisgender people to be victims of violent crimes, including sexual abuse.“
🎨 @fioandfio who says: “The image centres around a group of trans and drag individuals, with two children included in the composition. The presence of the children reflects a key message in the article. The illustration centres the idea that protecting children and supporting trans communities are not opposing aims, but deeply connected. The children sit within or alongside the wider community, not separate from it, suggesting care, solidarity, and shared safety. By including drag figures, the piece also challenges the harmful narrative that drag is inherently unsafe for children. Instead, it celebrates drag as a joyful, creative form of expression that many children can find delight, imagination, and acceptance.”
https://shado-mag.com/articles/opinion/anti-childhood-sexual-abuse-spaces-have-a-transphobia-problem/

Our latest piece is by Sophia Luu - founder of @secretsworthsharing_ - on an alarming phenomenon she’s discovered in her anti childhood sexual abuse advocacy journey: that anti-drag sentiment - which quickly deteriorates into transphobia) is widely shared under the guise of “child protection.”
Sophia speaks with trans drag king and organiser @theprinceofp3rsia and Ebony, a drag queen and performance artist, to inform her piece. Prince is photographed by Luce le Brocq.
As Sophia writes, “It feels easier for us to point to ‘the other’ when we think about those who sexually abuse children. Often, trans people and drag performers are already othered in society, making it easy for them to become a target.
Many people forget that trans people are four times more likely than cisgender people to be victims of violent crimes, including sexual abuse.“
🎨 @fioandfio who says: “The image centres around a group of trans and drag individuals, with two children included in the composition. The presence of the children reflects a key message in the article. The illustration centres the idea that protecting children and supporting trans communities are not opposing aims, but deeply connected. The children sit within or alongside the wider community, not separate from it, suggesting care, solidarity, and shared safety. By including drag figures, the piece also challenges the harmful narrative that drag is inherently unsafe for children. Instead, it celebrates drag as a joyful, creative form of expression that many children can find delight, imagination, and acceptance.”
https://shado-mag.com/articles/opinion/anti-childhood-sexual-abuse-spaces-have-a-transphobia-problem/

Our latest piece is by Sophia Luu - founder of @secretsworthsharing_ - on an alarming phenomenon she’s discovered in her anti childhood sexual abuse advocacy journey: that anti-drag sentiment - which quickly deteriorates into transphobia) is widely shared under the guise of “child protection.”
Sophia speaks with trans drag king and organiser @theprinceofp3rsia and Ebony, a drag queen and performance artist, to inform her piece. Prince is photographed by Luce le Brocq.
As Sophia writes, “It feels easier for us to point to ‘the other’ when we think about those who sexually abuse children. Often, trans people and drag performers are already othered in society, making it easy for them to become a target.
Many people forget that trans people are four times more likely than cisgender people to be victims of violent crimes, including sexual abuse.“
🎨 @fioandfio who says: “The image centres around a group of trans and drag individuals, with two children included in the composition. The presence of the children reflects a key message in the article. The illustration centres the idea that protecting children and supporting trans communities are not opposing aims, but deeply connected. The children sit within or alongside the wider community, not separate from it, suggesting care, solidarity, and shared safety. By including drag figures, the piece also challenges the harmful narrative that drag is inherently unsafe for children. Instead, it celebrates drag as a joyful, creative form of expression that many children can find delight, imagination, and acceptance.”
https://shado-mag.com/articles/opinion/anti-childhood-sexual-abuse-spaces-have-a-transphobia-problem/

Our latest piece is by Sophia Luu - founder of @secretsworthsharing_ - on an alarming phenomenon she’s discovered in her anti childhood sexual abuse advocacy journey: that anti-drag sentiment - which quickly deteriorates into transphobia) is widely shared under the guise of “child protection.”
Sophia speaks with trans drag king and organiser @theprinceofp3rsia and Ebony, a drag queen and performance artist, to inform her piece. Prince is photographed by Luce le Brocq.
As Sophia writes, “It feels easier for us to point to ‘the other’ when we think about those who sexually abuse children. Often, trans people and drag performers are already othered in society, making it easy for them to become a target.
Many people forget that trans people are four times more likely than cisgender people to be victims of violent crimes, including sexual abuse.“
🎨 @fioandfio who says: “The image centres around a group of trans and drag individuals, with two children included in the composition. The presence of the children reflects a key message in the article. The illustration centres the idea that protecting children and supporting trans communities are not opposing aims, but deeply connected. The children sit within or alongside the wider community, not separate from it, suggesting care, solidarity, and shared safety. By including drag figures, the piece also challenges the harmful narrative that drag is inherently unsafe for children. Instead, it celebrates drag as a joyful, creative form of expression that many children can find delight, imagination, and acceptance.”
https://shado-mag.com/articles/opinion/anti-childhood-sexual-abuse-spaces-have-a-transphobia-problem/

Our latest piece is by Sophia Luu - founder of @secretsworthsharing_ - on an alarming phenomenon she’s discovered in her anti childhood sexual abuse advocacy journey: that anti-drag sentiment - which quickly deteriorates into transphobia) is widely shared under the guise of “child protection.”
Sophia speaks with trans drag king and organiser @theprinceofp3rsia and Ebony, a drag queen and performance artist, to inform her piece. Prince is photographed by Luce le Brocq.
As Sophia writes, “It feels easier for us to point to ‘the other’ when we think about those who sexually abuse children. Often, trans people and drag performers are already othered in society, making it easy for them to become a target.
Many people forget that trans people are four times more likely than cisgender people to be victims of violent crimes, including sexual abuse.“
🎨 @fioandfio who says: “The image centres around a group of trans and drag individuals, with two children included in the composition. The presence of the children reflects a key message in the article. The illustration centres the idea that protecting children and supporting trans communities are not opposing aims, but deeply connected. The children sit within or alongside the wider community, not separate from it, suggesting care, solidarity, and shared safety. By including drag figures, the piece also challenges the harmful narrative that drag is inherently unsafe for children. Instead, it celebrates drag as a joyful, creative form of expression that many children can find delight, imagination, and acceptance.”
https://shado-mag.com/articles/opinion/anti-childhood-sexual-abuse-spaces-have-a-transphobia-problem/

Our latest piece is by Sophia Luu - founder of @secretsworthsharing_ - on an alarming phenomenon she’s discovered in her anti childhood sexual abuse advocacy journey: that anti-drag sentiment - which quickly deteriorates into transphobia) is widely shared under the guise of “child protection.”
Sophia speaks with trans drag king and organiser @theprinceofp3rsia and Ebony, a drag queen and performance artist, to inform her piece. Prince is photographed by Luce le Brocq.
As Sophia writes, “It feels easier for us to point to ‘the other’ when we think about those who sexually abuse children. Often, trans people and drag performers are already othered in society, making it easy for them to become a target.
Many people forget that trans people are four times more likely than cisgender people to be victims of violent crimes, including sexual abuse.“
🎨 @fioandfio who says: “The image centres around a group of trans and drag individuals, with two children included in the composition. The presence of the children reflects a key message in the article. The illustration centres the idea that protecting children and supporting trans communities are not opposing aims, but deeply connected. The children sit within or alongside the wider community, not separate from it, suggesting care, solidarity, and shared safety. By including drag figures, the piece also challenges the harmful narrative that drag is inherently unsafe for children. Instead, it celebrates drag as a joyful, creative form of expression that many children can find delight, imagination, and acceptance.”
https://shado-mag.com/articles/opinion/anti-childhood-sexual-abuse-spaces-have-a-transphobia-problem/

Our latest piece is by Sophia Luu - founder of @secretsworthsharing_ - on an alarming phenomenon she’s discovered in her anti childhood sexual abuse advocacy journey: that anti-drag sentiment - which quickly deteriorates into transphobia) is widely shared under the guise of “child protection.”
Sophia speaks with trans drag king and organiser @theprinceofp3rsia and Ebony, a drag queen and performance artist, to inform her piece. Prince is photographed by Luce le Brocq.
As Sophia writes, “It feels easier for us to point to ‘the other’ when we think about those who sexually abuse children. Often, trans people and drag performers are already othered in society, making it easy for them to become a target.
Many people forget that trans people are four times more likely than cisgender people to be victims of violent crimes, including sexual abuse.“
🎨 @fioandfio who says: “The image centres around a group of trans and drag individuals, with two children included in the composition. The presence of the children reflects a key message in the article. The illustration centres the idea that protecting children and supporting trans communities are not opposing aims, but deeply connected. The children sit within or alongside the wider community, not separate from it, suggesting care, solidarity, and shared safety. By including drag figures, the piece also challenges the harmful narrative that drag is inherently unsafe for children. Instead, it celebrates drag as a joyful, creative form of expression that many children can find delight, imagination, and acceptance.”
https://shado-mag.com/articles/opinion/anti-childhood-sexual-abuse-spaces-have-a-transphobia-problem/

Our latest piece is by Sophia Luu - founder of @secretsworthsharing_ - on an alarming phenomenon she’s discovered in her anti childhood sexual abuse advocacy journey: that anti-drag sentiment - which quickly deteriorates into transphobia) is widely shared under the guise of “child protection.”
Sophia speaks with trans drag king and organiser @theprinceofp3rsia and Ebony, a drag queen and performance artist, to inform her piece. Prince is photographed by Luce le Brocq.
As Sophia writes, “It feels easier for us to point to ‘the other’ when we think about those who sexually abuse children. Often, trans people and drag performers are already othered in society, making it easy for them to become a target.
Many people forget that trans people are four times more likely than cisgender people to be victims of violent crimes, including sexual abuse.“
🎨 @fioandfio who says: “The image centres around a group of trans and drag individuals, with two children included in the composition. The presence of the children reflects a key message in the article. The illustration centres the idea that protecting children and supporting trans communities are not opposing aims, but deeply connected. The children sit within or alongside the wider community, not separate from it, suggesting care, solidarity, and shared safety. By including drag figures, the piece also challenges the harmful narrative that drag is inherently unsafe for children. Instead, it celebrates drag as a joyful, creative form of expression that many children can find delight, imagination, and acceptance.”
https://shado-mag.com/articles/opinion/anti-childhood-sexual-abuse-spaces-have-a-transphobia-problem/
Today, you will see cute lil me featured as the trailblazing activist in @graziauk ’s September issue (!!?? ✨🍑❤️💅💃🏻💃🏻)
I am lucky that I can use my looks to platform my activism.
I am lucky that I can be public as a survivor: only an estimated 25% of survivors ever talk about their abuse to anyone*
I am lucky that someone believed me: 31% of survivors are not believed on their first disclosure.*
I am lucky that I got a conviction: only 11% of reported cases do.**
But I am unlucky to be a survivor and to exist in a world where protecting the actions of abusers is easier than starting a conversation on childhood sexual abuse. I am unlucky that this work is very rarely funded and platformed: the clothes I wore in this feature cost more than what I have earned in the past 4 months.
I did this feature and put myself out there in the hope that we can show that it’s okay for CSA to be mainstream, for conversations about survivors to be normal and not steeped in explicit detail or doom and gloom. I did this feature in the hope that someone who needs validation, who is curious about whether they experienced CSA, or who wants to learn how to support someone in their life will find our loving, intersectional and ‘seriously joyful’ community of survivors. ❤️❤️
PS. Thank you @longchamp for dressing me like the icon I know I am ;)
*Sources: Independent Inquiry into Childhood Sexual Abuse, 2019; NSPCC FOI Requests (2022)
Today, you will see cute lil me featured as the trailblazing activist in @graziauk ’s September issue (!!?? ✨🍑❤️💅💃🏻💃🏻)
I am lucky that I can use my looks to platform my activism.
I am lucky that I can be public as a survivor: only an estimated 25% of survivors ever talk about their abuse to anyone*
I am lucky that someone believed me: 31% of survivors are not believed on their first disclosure.*
I am lucky that I got a conviction: only 11% of reported cases do.**
But I am unlucky to be a survivor and to exist in a world where protecting the actions of abusers is easier than starting a conversation on childhood sexual abuse. I am unlucky that this work is very rarely funded and platformed: the clothes I wore in this feature cost more than what I have earned in the past 4 months.
I did this feature and put myself out there in the hope that we can show that it’s okay for CSA to be mainstream, for conversations about survivors to be normal and not steeped in explicit detail or doom and gloom. I did this feature in the hope that someone who needs validation, who is curious about whether they experienced CSA, or who wants to learn how to support someone in their life will find our loving, intersectional and ‘seriously joyful’ community of survivors. ❤️❤️
PS. Thank you @longchamp for dressing me like the icon I know I am ;)
*Sources: Independent Inquiry into Childhood Sexual Abuse, 2019; NSPCC FOI Requests (2022)
Today, you will see cute lil me featured as the trailblazing activist in @graziauk ’s September issue (!!?? ✨🍑❤️💅💃🏻💃🏻)
I am lucky that I can use my looks to platform my activism.
I am lucky that I can be public as a survivor: only an estimated 25% of survivors ever talk about their abuse to anyone*
I am lucky that someone believed me: 31% of survivors are not believed on their first disclosure.*
I am lucky that I got a conviction: only 11% of reported cases do.**
But I am unlucky to be a survivor and to exist in a world where protecting the actions of abusers is easier than starting a conversation on childhood sexual abuse. I am unlucky that this work is very rarely funded and platformed: the clothes I wore in this feature cost more than what I have earned in the past 4 months.
I did this feature and put myself out there in the hope that we can show that it’s okay for CSA to be mainstream, for conversations about survivors to be normal and not steeped in explicit detail or doom and gloom. I did this feature in the hope that someone who needs validation, who is curious about whether they experienced CSA, or who wants to learn how to support someone in their life will find our loving, intersectional and ‘seriously joyful’ community of survivors. ❤️❤️
PS. Thank you @longchamp for dressing me like the icon I know I am ;)
*Sources: Independent Inquiry into Childhood Sexual Abuse, 2019; NSPCC FOI Requests (2022)
Today, you will see cute lil me featured as the trailblazing activist in @graziauk ’s September issue (!!?? ✨🍑❤️💅💃🏻💃🏻)
I am lucky that I can use my looks to platform my activism.
I am lucky that I can be public as a survivor: only an estimated 25% of survivors ever talk about their abuse to anyone*
I am lucky that someone believed me: 31% of survivors are not believed on their first disclosure.*
I am lucky that I got a conviction: only 11% of reported cases do.**
But I am unlucky to be a survivor and to exist in a world where protecting the actions of abusers is easier than starting a conversation on childhood sexual abuse. I am unlucky that this work is very rarely funded and platformed: the clothes I wore in this feature cost more than what I have earned in the past 4 months.
I did this feature and put myself out there in the hope that we can show that it’s okay for CSA to be mainstream, for conversations about survivors to be normal and not steeped in explicit detail or doom and gloom. I did this feature in the hope that someone who needs validation, who is curious about whether they experienced CSA, or who wants to learn how to support someone in their life will find our loving, intersectional and ‘seriously joyful’ community of survivors. ❤️❤️
PS. Thank you @longchamp for dressing me like the icon I know I am ;)
*Sources: Independent Inquiry into Childhood Sexual Abuse, 2019; NSPCC FOI Requests (2022)

If you are working in or with the CSA sector, then these Dos & Don’ts are for you!
These snippets of advice are pulled from our most recent episode where we chatted to Sean Coughlan, director of @tozeroorg. Working in the sector can feel like being lost in the ocean sometimes, so we hope these words of wisdom provide a little guidance!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Sean, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#sexualviolence #charity #thirdsector #csa #safeguarding

If you are working in or with the CSA sector, then these Dos & Don’ts are for you!
These snippets of advice are pulled from our most recent episode where we chatted to Sean Coughlan, director of @tozeroorg. Working in the sector can feel like being lost in the ocean sometimes, so we hope these words of wisdom provide a little guidance!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Sean, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#sexualviolence #charity #thirdsector #csa #safeguarding

If you are working in or with the CSA sector, then these Dos & Don’ts are for you!
These snippets of advice are pulled from our most recent episode where we chatted to Sean Coughlan, director of @tozeroorg. Working in the sector can feel like being lost in the ocean sometimes, so we hope these words of wisdom provide a little guidance!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Sean, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#sexualviolence #charity #thirdsector #csa #safeguarding

If you are working in or with the CSA sector, then these Dos & Don’ts are for you!
These snippets of advice are pulled from our most recent episode where we chatted to Sean Coughlan, director of @tozeroorg. Working in the sector can feel like being lost in the ocean sometimes, so we hope these words of wisdom provide a little guidance!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Sean, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#sexualviolence #charity #thirdsector #csa #safeguarding

If you are working in or with the CSA sector, then these Dos & Don’ts are for you!
These snippets of advice are pulled from our most recent episode where we chatted to Sean Coughlan, director of @tozeroorg. Working in the sector can feel like being lost in the ocean sometimes, so we hope these words of wisdom provide a little guidance!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Sean, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#sexualviolence #charity #thirdsector #csa #safeguarding

If you are working in or with the CSA sector, then these Dos & Don’ts are for you!
These snippets of advice are pulled from our most recent episode where we chatted to Sean Coughlan, director of @tozeroorg. Working in the sector can feel like being lost in the ocean sometimes, so we hope these words of wisdom provide a little guidance!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Sean, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#sexualviolence #charity #thirdsector #csa #safeguarding

If you are working in or with the CSA sector, then these Dos & Don’ts are for you!
These snippets of advice are pulled from our most recent episode where we chatted to Sean Coughlan, director of @tozeroorg. Working in the sector can feel like being lost in the ocean sometimes, so we hope these words of wisdom provide a little guidance!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Sean, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#sexualviolence #charity #thirdsector #csa #safeguarding

If you are working in or with the CSA sector, then these Dos & Don’ts are for you!
These snippets of advice are pulled from our most recent episode where we chatted to Sean Coughlan, director of @tozeroorg. Working in the sector can feel like being lost in the ocean sometimes, so we hope these words of wisdom provide a little guidance!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Sean, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#sexualviolence #charity #thirdsector #csa #safeguarding

If you are working in or with the CSA sector, then these Dos & Don’ts are for you!
These snippets of advice are pulled from our most recent episode where we chatted to Sean Coughlan, director of @tozeroorg. Working in the sector can feel like being lost in the ocean sometimes, so we hope these words of wisdom provide a little guidance!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Sean, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#sexualviolence #charity #thirdsector #csa #safeguarding
“Basically shame on the institutions that uphold abuse, innit?” — Sophia, improv dress rehearsal for the WHA, 2026
From battling acid reflux to getting trapped a train door — join our founder Sophia on her journey to speak at the World Health Assembly in Geneva 🇨🇭🤫
#BeBrave #WHA79 #WHA2026 #WorldHealthAssembly #OutOfTheShadows

What’s that? A brand new website?! 😍
Along with our rebrand we are so excited to launch our shiny new website, created by the brilliant Jo and Pim at @love.child.studio ⭐️ They’ve managed to create something fresh and exciting that perfectly capture our approach of serious joy.
Secrets Worth Sharing is the biggest open platform media source for intersectionality on childhood sexual abuse so there’s LOADS of free, educational content on our website waiting for you. So what are you waiting for? Check it out now by clicking the link in our bio! 🔗
#rebrand #websiteupdate #sexualviolence #csa #charity

🎙️ EPISODE 3: WORKING IN THE SECTOR 🎙️
For our third episode we are joined by the wonderful Sean Coughlan, director of @tozeroorg, to discuss the joys and challenges of working in the child sexual abuse sector.
To watch or listen to the full episode now click the link in our bio! 🔗
#sexualviolence #charity #thirdsector #csa #safeguarding

We’ve had a rebrand!! New logo — same serious joy 🤩
Huge, enormous, massive thanks to the wonderful @lilykongyuet for designing this logo and capturing Secrets Worth Sharing so perfectly 🧡💚🩵
More info about our brand new website coming soon… 👀
Who gets missed when we make assumptions about who is vulnerable to CSA during conflict, and who isn’t?
If you would like to listen to the full episode, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#war #conflict #migrants #refugees #sexualviolence

We were recently joined by the wonderful Charu Lata Hogg from @allsurvivorsproject on our podcast in which we explored some Dos & Don’t when working with CSA survivors from war & conflict settings. We’ve broken them down for you here!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Charu, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#war #conflict #migrants #refugees #sexualviolence

We were recently joined by the wonderful Charu Lata Hogg from @allsurvivorsproject on our podcast in which we explored some Dos & Don’t when working with CSA survivors from war & conflict settings. We’ve broken them down for you here!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Charu, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#war #conflict #migrants #refugees #sexualviolence

We were recently joined by the wonderful Charu Lata Hogg from @allsurvivorsproject on our podcast in which we explored some Dos & Don’t when working with CSA survivors from war & conflict settings. We’ve broken them down for you here!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Charu, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#war #conflict #migrants #refugees #sexualviolence

We were recently joined by the wonderful Charu Lata Hogg from @allsurvivorsproject on our podcast in which we explored some Dos & Don’t when working with CSA survivors from war & conflict settings. We’ve broken them down for you here!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Charu, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#war #conflict #migrants #refugees #sexualviolence

We were recently joined by the wonderful Charu Lata Hogg from @allsurvivorsproject on our podcast in which we explored some Dos & Don’t when working with CSA survivors from war & conflict settings. We’ve broken them down for you here!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Charu, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#war #conflict #migrants #refugees #sexualviolence

We were recently joined by the wonderful Charu Lata Hogg from @allsurvivorsproject on our podcast in which we explored some Dos & Don’t when working with CSA survivors from war & conflict settings. We’ve broken them down for you here!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Charu, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#war #conflict #migrants #refugees #sexualviolence

We were recently joined by the wonderful Charu Lata Hogg from @allsurvivorsproject on our podcast in which we explored some Dos & Don’t when working with CSA survivors from war & conflict settings. We’ve broken them down for you here!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Charu, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#war #conflict #migrants #refugees #sexualviolence

We were recently joined by the wonderful Charu Lata Hogg from @allsurvivorsproject on our podcast in which we explored some Dos & Don’t when working with CSA survivors from war & conflict settings. We’ve broken them down for you here!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Charu, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#war #conflict #migrants #refugees #sexualviolence

We were recently joined by the wonderful Charu Lata Hogg from @allsurvivorsproject on our podcast in which we explored some Dos & Don’t when working with CSA survivors from war & conflict settings. We’ve broken them down for you here!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Charu, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#war #conflict #migrants #refugees #sexualviolence

We were recently joined by the wonderful Charu Lata Hogg from @allsurvivorsproject on our podcast in which we explored some Dos & Don’t when working with CSA survivors from war & conflict settings. We’ve broken them down for you here!
If you would like to listen to the full podcast with Charu, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#war #conflict #migrants #refugees #sexualviolence
When sexual violence is situated within the context of life or death situations, do we tend to minimise or neglect it?
If you would like to listen to the full episode, you can check it out now by clicking the link in our bio 🔗
#war #conflict #migrants #refugees #sexualviolence
Our founder, Sophia, shares her experience of navigating a global conference as a childhood sexual abuse survivor and advocate 🩵
#fundraising #csa #survivor #charity #conference
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