Breaking the Silence with Dr. Gregory Williams

Dr Gregory Williams

“Breaking the Silence with Dr. Gregory Williams” Now is the time for you to step out of your own personal darkness and break the silence that has been hidden and closed up inside of you. “Breaking the Silence with Dr. Gregory Williams” radio program will offer the listeners a Road Map to Hope each and every week with keys to discover within yourself that ray of light to make your day better and brighter. Dr. Williams will not only discuss his own personal journey of overcoming the darkness of years of horrific sexual child abuse in the hands of his father and his father’s friends, but Dr. Williams will also feature special guests that have their own personal stories of overcoming obstacles in their lives and becoming victors instead of victims. “Breaking the Silence” will also feature information from the professional and medical field that will dive into the important research involving Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and how to build Resiliency in yourself and in your children. Along with this information will be special guests from greatest minds in the United States to share their expert research and thoughts on this very important subject that each person needs to be aware of. Now is the time to invest a few minutes each week with some awesome information to give you steps to HOPE and keys to HAPPINESS and PEACE. NOW is the time to Break YOUR Silence and breakout into a NEW and BETTER YOU! Join us each week beginning August 13, 2019 for “Breaking the Silence with Dr. Gregory Williams”. You won’t want to miss a single program. Heard around the world on the best radio network on the airwaves, BSS Radio Network available on iTunes, Google Play, iHeart Radio, Facebook Radio, Spotify and over 100 other high quality digital radio stations.

  1. 6d ago

    Breaking the Silence, June 28, 2026

    Breaking The Silence with Dr Gregory Williams Outcry, Healing, and the Courage to Face What Fear Has Hidden Guest, JoDee Neil, Owner of Neil Now Legal, Prosecutor, Attorney and Author of "Outcry Witness: A Former Prosecutor's Guide to Healing and Justice After Sexual Violence" This week's guest is back by popular demand. JoDee Neil is an acclaimed trail attorney and author of the new book: "Outcry Witness." She owns Neil Now Legal, PLLC. She has served as a prosecutor of sexual abuse cases and specializes in Crimes Against Children cases. Interested in our guest? Visit their Website at: https://www.jodeeneil.com/ Don't forget to check out her book: "Outcry Witness: A Former Prosecutor's Guide to Healing and Justice After Sexual Violence" on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1965766196/ Opening From Houston With Gratitude and Hope In this episode of Breaking the Silence, host Dr. Gregory Williams welcomes listeners from his home in Houston, Texas, and reflects on the city, the Texas Medical Center, the approaching Fourth of July weekend, and gratitude for military service members and veterans. He then introduces the evening’s guest, JoDee Neil, attorney, author, advocate, and returning guest. The episode centers on trauma, anxiety, disclosure, recovery, workplace harm, and JoDee’s book Outcry, Witness. A Practical Game Plan for Anxiety and Triggers Before bringing JoDee into the conversation, Dr. Williams shares a practical ten-step approach for dealing with anxiety when a traumatic trigger appears. He encourages listeners to recognize and name the trigger, breathe slowly, ground themselves through the five senses, challenge fearful thoughts, relax the body, replace fear with truth, take one small action, reduce outside stimulation, practice gratitude, and, for those who believe, turn to God in prayer. He explains that these steps can help move the brain out of panic and into a more rational, grounded state. JoDee Neil on Becoming Unfrozen JoDee responds by describing anxiety and trauma response as a kind of frozen state, where a person may feel unable to move, think clearly, or act. She affirms Dr. Williams’ grounding tools and adds that writing can also help people come out of that frozen condition. She speaks candidly about her own past reliance on pills and other numbing methods, explaining that many people try to avoid discomfort rather than face the pain underneath. For JoDee, healing required learning to feel, endure, and move through the truth rather than continually medicating it away. Disclosure, Truth, and the Possibility of Joy The conversation turns to disclosure, which JoDee defines as first admitting the truth to oneself and then saying it aloud to someone else. She explains that healing begins when a person recognizes that present pain may be connected to something that happened long ago, and that a joyful life requires facing that reality. Dr. Williams asks whether she once believed she was worthy of happiness, and JoDee says happiness felt distant and almost imaginary until she began accepting the truth and healing from it. From Courthouse Healing to a Wider Calling JoDee reflects on her career as a trial attorney, particularly her work with sexual abuse cases and crimes against children. She describes how helping others in court once made her feel whole and purposeful, but after writing Outcry, Witness, she no longer feels the same need to keep healing inside courthouses. Instead, she now sees a broader calling to bring her experience, communication skills, and trauma-informed understanding into businesses, schools, boards, leadership groups, and public speaking settings where she can reach more people at once. Workplace Trauma, Retaliation, and Better Leadership A major part of the interview focuses on how JoDee’s legal and survivor experience can help organizations. She discusses workplace sexual harassment, retaliation, human resources failures, and the need for better reporting protocols. JoDee says retaliation often causes additional harm and liability, and she argues that organizations should create clearer, safer processes before matters escalate into legal battles. She also discusses de-escalation, communication, chain of command, listening, smiling, reducing tension, and creating healthier workplace cultures that protect both people and organizations. Facing Fear and Choosing Life As the interview closes, JoDee describes her dream of speaking widely, including a future TED Talk, and says she wants people to hear her and decide that life is worth truly living. She encourages listeners who are trapped in despair, addiction, or avoidance to take the first step toward healing, saying that the fear of facing pain is often worse than the act of beginning. Dr. Williams and JoDee also discuss a possible future Houston event connected to their books and nonprofit fundraising. The episode ends with Dr. Williams reminding listeners that both he and JoDee have survived deep pain, that help begins with a first step, and that as long as there is breath, there is hope.

    57 min
  2. Jun 22

    Breaking the Silence, June 21, 2026

    Breaking The Silence with Dr Gregory Williams Unconquerable: Chief Matt Antkowiak on Trauma, Resilience, Faith, and Becoming a Protector Guest, Chief Matt Antkowiak, Former Police Chief, Detective, Author and Survivor This week's guest is Chief Matt Antkowiak, Author and Survivor Scoop was conducting an interview with Chief Matt, when something amazing happened. You Will NOT want to miss this life-changing program! A Father’s Day Conversation About Resilience and Hope In this Father’s Day episode of Breaking the Silence, host Dr. Gregory Williams welcomes Chief Matt Antkowiak for a deeply personal conversation about childhood abuse, trauma, resilience, law enforcement, faith, and the mission to protect vulnerable children. Dr. Williams opens by reflecting on his recent visit to a juvenile detention center, where many young people had experienced abuse, trafficking, foster care, fatherlessness, and serious criminal charges. He uses that experience to introduce the theme of resilience, stressing that children need adults who teach them how to recover, adapt, keep moving forward, learn from failure, and believe that there is always hope. Learning Resilience the Hard Way Chief Antkowiak explains that resilience is not simply something people are born with; it must be taught, modeled, and practiced. He says he did not learn healthy resilience as a child, but later encountered it in the military through drill sergeants who taught him that each step forward is a choice. He describes how, as a young person, he dealt with trauma through hiding, shame, drinking, fighting, and suppressing pain. Looking back, he says he was leaving “breadcrumbs” and wanted someone to notice, ask the right questions, and help stop what was happening, but the adults around him did not respond in the way he needed. Abuse, Silence, and the Need for Protectors Much of the conversation centers on the silence that surrounds childhood abuse and the urgent need to equip parents, teachers, pastors, coaches, and other adults to recognize warning signs. Chief Antkowiak says most abusers are known to the child, often occupying trusted roles within families, schools, churches, sports, or community circles. He argues that society must shift from merely responding after abuse happens to building protectors on the front end. For him, breaking the silence means removing shame from survivors, asking better questions, teaching children what trusted adults look like, and understanding that the shame belongs to the abuser, not the victim. Law Enforcement, Human Trafficking, and Searching for Justice Chief Antkowiak reflects on his long career in law enforcement, including military service and decades as a police officer and chief. He explains that working sex crimes, child abuse, and human trafficking cases gave him a way to pursue justice for others, even while he had not yet publicly spoken about his own abuse. He discusses major investigations, including the Blakemore human-trafficking case, and says that catching offenders did not fully heal him because he was still searching for justice for himself. Over time, he came to understand that his pain had become part of his purpose and that his experience helped him connect with survivors while also understanding the behavior of predators. The Moment the Silence Broke One of the most powerful parts of the interview comes when Chief Antkowiak describes publicly revealing his own abuse during a media interview connected to a school-related abuse investigation. He says an investigative reporter recognized that the case seemed deeply personal, and Antkowiak unexpectedly disclosed that he had been abused as a child. Moments later, he repeated that disclosure in a press conference, realizing only afterward that he had broken a silence he had carried for decades. Rather than stopping, he returned to the work, but the moment forced him to begin processing what he had long buried. Faith, Healing, and Taking Back What Was Stolen Chief Antkowiak also speaks openly about faith, therapy, forgiveness, and his belief that God was present with him even in the darkest moments of his life. He recounts a life-threatening incident as a Dallas police officer in 2000, when he survived being dragged by a car and badly injured, and says his young son’s comment that “God went to work with my dad” changed the way he understood God’s presence. He connects that experience to his later healing, saying he has come to believe that God did not create the abuse but was with him through it. He also shares how a trafficking survivor once told him about Jesus and reminded him that God loved him, a moment that deeply affected him. Team Unconquerable and the Call to Expose the Darkness The episode closes with Chief Antkowiak describing his developing movement, Team Unconquerable, and his upcoming book, Unconquerable, which he says is planned for a Black Friday release tied to reclaiming the anniversary of one of the hardest moments in his own story. His mission is to expose darkness, speak up, and build protectors who can recognize abuse, support survivors, and prevent harm. Dr. Williams thanks him for the conversation and says he wants to bring him back for another episode. He closes with the show’s recurring message: survivors are not alone, healing is possible, the silence can be broken, and there is always hope.

    59 min
  3. Jun 15

    Breaking the Silence, June 14, 2026

    Breaking The Silence with Dr Gregory Williams Scars, Service, and Built-to-Lead Resilience: Turning Struggle Into Strength Guest, Keith Grounsell, a 28-year law enforcement veteran, two-time Chief of Police, former DEA Special Agent, international police advisor, entrepreneur, speaker, and multi-book author Back by popular demand, this week's guest will be Keith Grounsell. Keith is a veteran law enforcement leader with nearly 30 years at the city, county, federal and international levels. A former deep undercover narcotics officer and 2-time Chief of Police. He is the author of more than 12 books. You can find all of Keith's book at his author page on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Keith-P.-Grounsell/author/B08J456MMW?ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1&qid=1773710088&sr=1-1&shoppingPortalEnabled=true A Night of Hope After Hurt In this episode of Breaking the Silence, host Dr. Gregory Williams opens from his home near the Texas Medical Center in Houston, welcoming listeners to a Sunday evening conversation about trauma, healing, and perseverance. He reminds the audience that the show’s purpose is to give people something useful they can carry into the week, whether for themselves or someone they care about. He also notes that the program is approaching seven years on the air, making the episode part of a long-running effort to help people break the silence around personal pain. The Value That Trauma Cannot Destroy Before introducing his guest, Dr. Williams offers two illustrations about value after damage. First, he uses a $100 bill to show that even when something is crumpled, stepped on, or dirtied, its value remains unchanged. Then he tells the story of a broken antique vase repaired with gold, making the cracks visible but even more beautiful and valuable. He applies both images to survivors of sexual abuse, domestic violence, trafficking, emotional abuse, verbal abuse, and other forms of trauma, emphasizing that their worth has not been diminished by what was done to them. Scars as Testimonies of Healing Dr. Williams connects the broken-vase image to spiritual healing, saying God does not pretend that wounds never happened but instead binds broken pieces together in a way that turns scars into testimonies. He cites Psalm 147:3, which says God heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds. His message is that survivors may still carry visible cracks, but those scars can become signs of victory rather than defeat. He also acknowledges his own ongoing healing process, describing progress as sometimes taking two steps forward and one step back. Keith Grounsell Returns by Popular Demand Dr. Williams welcomes Keith Grounsell, a veteran law enforcement leader, former deep undercover narcotics officer, two-time police chief, international law enforcement professional, and author of more than a dozen books. Dr. Williams says Keith is returning for a third appearance by popular demand and highlights both his leadership experience and writing career. Keith responds to the opening message by saying that struggles and scars have made him stronger, more empathetic, and more committed to helping others. Failure, Work Ethic, and the Drive to Help Others Keith explains that his own life has included failures, struggles, and setbacks, but he does not allow those failures to define him. Instead, he says the way a person rebounds from failure is what reveals their character, especially in leadership. He also discusses being diagnosed with a learning disability early in life and how that challenge forced him to work harder, memorize more intentionally, and develop a strong work ethic. Keith says that what first seemed like a handicap later became fuel for his drive, education, writing, and leadership. Teen Takeovers, Social Media, and Personal Responsibility Dr. Williams asks Keith about recent incidents involving large groups of youth taking over public areas, including one in downtown Houston. Keith frames these “teen takeovers” as criminal activity tied to declining personal responsibility, social media influence, weak accountability, and breakdowns in family structure. He argues that parents and caregivers must be held responsible when minors participate in destructive behavior, while adults involved should face serious consequences. He also points to the role of viral attention, influencer culture, and online reward systems that encourage shocking or chaotic behavior. Leadership, Iran, and Peace Through Strength Dr. Williams also asks Keith to comment on breaking news about a reported peace agreement involving Iran. Keith says effective leadership requires conviction, courage, and the ability to ignore constant criticism. He praises Donald Trump’s approach as “peace through strength,” saying Trump showed restraint while still demonstrating power. Keith argues that the prevention of a broader regional war and the limiting of Iran’s nuclear ambitions required unusually difficult negotiation and strong leadership, though he notes the agreement still needed to be signed. Writing, Discipline, and the System Behind Many Books After the break, the conversation shifts to Keith’s writing process. Keith explains that he now devotes around sixty hours a week to writing and has developed a system that allows him to complete books efficiently. Instead of trying to perfect each chapter immediately, he focuses on getting the story down first, often using dictation in Microsoft Word and then editing afterward. He also discusses the value of self-publishing, retaining creative rights, and transforming his books into scenario-driven online leadership courses through the Institute of Global Integrity and Leadership. Books on Policing, Leadership, and Character Keith describes several upcoming or recent books, including a leadership book on community policing, a book for frontline law enforcement supervisors, and a book about field training officers. He also discusses his children’s books in the Kids’ Character and Confidence series, which he created to help families have deeper conversations about values, boundaries, kindness, and personal growth. One book focuses on inappropriate touching and the importance of children being able to say no when something feels wrong. Keith also shares plans for a future book inspired by his adopted son, who was born drug-addicted and later faced developmental challenges. Built to Lead and the Daily Standard of Discipline Dr. Williams closes the interview by focusing on Keith’s book Built to Lead, especially the chapter “Discipline Is the Leader’s Daily Standard.” Keith says discipline begins with self-discipline, because people are always watching how leaders live. He describes daily routines involving health, exercise, focus, goal-setting, and protecting one’s most productive time of day. Dr. Williams and Keith discuss the importance of knowing one’s peak mental hours, reducing distractions, and using that time for the most important work. The episode closes with Dr. Williams reminding listeners that storms eventually pass, hope remains, and no one should ever say they are worthless.

    56 min
  4. Jun 8

    Breaking the Silence, June 7, 2026

    Breaking The Silence with Dr Gregory Williams Breaking the Silence and Building Resilience: Dr. Gregory Williams and JoDee Neil on Abuse Disclosure, Justice, and Outcry Witness Guest, JoDee Neil, Owner of Neil Now Legal, Prosecutor, Attorney and Author of "Outcry Witness: A Former Prosecutor's Guide to Healing and Justice After Sexual Violence" This Week's Guest will be JoDee Neil. She is an acclaimed trail attorney and author of then ew book: "Outcry Witness." She owns Neil Now Legal, PLLC. She has served as a prosecutor of sexual abuse cases and specializes in Crimes Against Children cases. Interested in our guest? Visit their Website at: https://www.jodeeneil.com/ Don't forget to check out our guests book: "Outcry Witness: A Former Prosecutor's Guide to Healing and Justice After Sexual Violence" on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1965766196/ Dr. Gregory Williams Opens with Concern, Resilience, and Public Awareness In this episode of Breaking the Silence, host Dr. Gregory Williams opens from Houston by reflecting on the coming World Cup activity and the dangers that large events can create for children, including increased risks of trafficking, prostitution, and abuse. He urges listeners to stay alert and watchful in communities that may host large crowds. Before introducing his guest, Dr. Williams also shares a brief teaching on resilience, encouraging survivors to acknowledge their feelings, seek trusted support, learn about trauma, set healthy boundaries, develop coping strategies, practice self-compassion, and allow healing to unfold over time rather than trying to force it. He frames resilience not as something to buy or imitate from someone else, but as something already present inside a person that can be uncovered and strengthened. JoDee Neil and the Purpose of Outcry Witness Dr. Williams then welcomes JoDee Neil, an attorney who has spent more than two decades working with survivors and prosecuting or handling cases involving sexual abuse and crimes against children. He praises her recently released book, Outcry Witness, and strongly recommends it to parents, counselors, teachers, attorneys, judges, and police officers. JoDee explains that the title comes from a Texas legal term describing the first adult to whom a child discloses abuse. That adult, the outcry witness, may later testify in court about what the child said. She says she intentionally wrote the book in a concise, practical format that people could carry easily, read privately, and use as a helpful guide rather than an overwhelming legal text. The Scale of Abuse and the Hidden Reality Survivors Carry A major theme of the conversation is the widespread prevalence of sexual violence. JoDee cites statistics showing that one in four girls may be sexually assaulted before age 18 and that significant numbers of women and men live with the effects of contact sexual violence. She says these numbers likely remain underreported, especially for boys and men. The two discuss how abuse is often far more common than people want to admit and how many survivors carry silence, shame, and isolation for years or even decades. JoDee says some of the hardest cases for her to emotionally process involve abuse within biological families, and she also warns about the growing horror of AI-generated child sexual abuse material and the many ways new technology can exploit children. Shame, Disclosure, and the Need to Be Believed JoDee and Dr. Williams spend significant time discussing shame and disclosure. JoDee explains that many survivors remain frozen and unable to speak because trauma creates paralysis, fear, and deep internalized shame. She says that when a child or adult finally discloses abuse and is not believed, that response can be even more damaging than the original abuse. Both stress that a child usually has nothing to gain by making such a disclosure and that the details children share often reveal knowledge and experience they could not easily fabricate. JoDee says adults must listen carefully, believe children, and understand that disclosure is often a slow and painful process. Dr. Williams adds that survivors can spend decades suppressing trauma, only to have it damage their relationships, bodies, and emotional lives over time. Parents, Predators, and the Failure to Take Warning Signs Seriously The discussion then turns to what parents and adults miss or ignore. JoDee says one of the most basic failures is simply refusing to believe a child who says someone is creepy or that something bad happened. She urges adults to stop automatically giving suspicious people the benefit of the doubt when warning signs are already present. The conversation also explores predator behavior more broadly, with JoDee explaining that predators often do not resemble the stereotypical stranger in a van. Instead, they may appear respectable, trusted, polished, and safe. She argues that adults now need evidence-based self-protection and far greater vigilance in everyday life, including around sports teams, sleepovers, schools, public bathrooms, phones, social media, and internet-connected devices. Both speakers say parents must know the adults around their children, supervise access to technology, and stop assuming that danger only comes from obvious outsiders. Technology, Sextortion, and the Limits of Legal Protection Another major section of the interview focuses on technology and the legal difficulties surrounding online exploitation. JoDee warns about AI, deepfakes, image scraping, online grooming, and the permanence of harmful digital content once it is created or circulated. She says schools and parents are often not doing enough to lock down devices and online access. When Dr. Williams asks about sextortion and app-based exploitation, JoDee responds that large technology companies remain difficult to challenge because federal legal protections shield them from much civil liability. She explains that this leaves many survivors with little recourse even when harm began through apps, platforms, or online tools. Her frustration with those systemic barriers is part of why she says she is moving more toward consulting and broader public education rather than relying only on courtroom-based solutions. A Justice System That Often Re-Traumatizes Survivors JoDee also speaks candidly about the legal system itself, arguing that survivors often receive very few protections while defendants receive numerous constitutional safeguards. She describes child sexual abuse cases that drag on for years and says survivors are too often treated as though they are presumptively lying. She expresses frustration about the lack of structural protections for children and about the emotional toll of watching vulnerable people repeatedly retraumatized by court processes. When asked what kind of change is needed, she says she has a long list of reforms in mind and points especially to the need for a system that treats child survivors with greater dignity, urgency, and care. Even while acknowledging tools like forensic interviews and closed-circuit testimony, she says the broader justice framework still fails many of the people it is supposed to protect. JoDee Neil’s Own Healing Journey and a Closing Message of Hope Near the end of the program, JoDee shares some of her own experience as a survivor, explaining that it took her many years to meaningfully speak the truth about what happened to her. She says she survived for a long time by compartmentalizing pain, avoiding it, and using unhealthy coping strategies, but eventually began to release it through writing and truth-telling. She describes healing as a non-linear, deeply spiritual process and says holding her published book in her hands felt like reclaiming authorship over part of her life and purpose. She also mentions future writing projects, including books on how mothers are treated in family courts and how perpetrator behavior affects workplaces. Dr. Williams closes by praising Outcry Witness, encouraging listeners to buy and review the book, and reminding survivors that no matter how painful their experiences have been, there is always hope and healing remains possible.

    58 min
  5. May 18

    Breaking the Silence, May 17, 2026

    Breaking The Silence with Dr Gregory Williams Staying Calm in Crisis: Faith, Discernment, and a Family’s Emergency with Baby Baron Guests, Blake and Veronika Bristow Joined by this week's special guests: Blake and Veronika Bristow Blake and Veronika will be sharing their personal story that happened to them and their son, Barron just a week or so ago. You will NOT want to miss this very special interview and hear how Hope, Faith and Prayer latterly saves lives. Opening the Conversation on Calm Under Pressure In this episode of Breaking the Silence, Dr. Gregory Williams opens from Houston, Texas, and introduces the evening as a powerful, fresh story involving personal friends from his church community. He explains that the episode will focus on how people respond when something frightening and unexpected happens, especially in moments they cannot control. Before bringing on his guests, Dr. Williams frames the discussion around stress, family emergencies, and the importance of remaining calm enough to think clearly. He cites Proverbs 14:29 and describes calmness not as weakness, but as “wisdom under pressure.” Introducing Blake, Veronica, and Their Family Dr. Williams welcomes Blake and Veronica Bristow, who join the program with their baby son, Baron. They introduce themselves as a family from Pearland, Texas, with Blake working as an elevator mechanic and Veronica as a hairdresser, stay-at-home mother, and full-time mom. They also share that they have four children, including their older children and baby Baron, and that they are members of Faith. Dr. Williams explains that the story centers on Baron and on a frightening medical emergency that had happened only days earlier. Veronica’s Motherly Discernment Veronica explains that the emergency began on a Thursday, when one of their children, Freddie, was preparing for his final school band concert. Baron had been teething and fussy, so Veronica decided not to attend the concert and instead stayed home with him. She noticed that Baron was acting unusually still and cuddly, which stood out because he normally did not lay his head on her that way. Then, after a small movement and a comment from her mother that he was staring straight at her, Veronica turned him over and saw that he looked catatonic, unresponsive, and unlike himself. She immediately sensed something was wrong and believed he was having a seizure. Blake’s Response and the Drive to Emergency Care Blake recalls that he had just come home from work and heard Veronica say Baron’s name in a tone that was different from normal. As a husband and father, he recognized the desperation in her voice and immediately responded. Veronica did not want him to stop and analyze the situation because she feared he might freeze or collapse emotionally, so she urged him to start the car and get them moving. The drive to emergency care was intense, with construction, traffic, lights, and hazards in the way, but Blake drove quickly and decisively while Veronica held Baron in the back seat. They describe reaching the emergency room in roughly half the normal time, with no one waiting when they arrived. Prayer, Surrender, and Peace in the Emergency Room Once medical staff began treating Baron, the situation shifted from panic into prayer. Blake describes falling to his knees beside the bed, holding Baron, and surrendering the child to God. He says he prayed for God’s will and stood on the promises of Scripture, especially the belief that God is faithful and present in crisis. Veronica says she expected Blake to fall apart, but instead saw a calm and spiritual steadiness in him that deeply affected her. She describes the peace they experienced as the “peace that surpasses all understanding,” saying that even though they were worried, they knew Baron was in the right place and surrounded by prayer from family, church members, and friends. Trusting God Through the Crisis By the end of the episode, Blake and Veronica reflect on what the experience taught them. Veronica emphasizes the importance of listening to discernment, even when the signal seems small, and jokingly adds that wives should let their husbands drive in emergencies. Blake focuses on God’s faithfulness, saying that God is always present, keeps His promises, and wants people to turn back to Him. Dr. Williams closes by calling the interview one of his favorites because of the family’s honesty, faith, and the clear way the story points back to trusting Jesus. He encourages listeners to lean into God, no matter what crisis they may face.

    59 min
  6. May 4

    Breaking the Silence, May 3, 2026

    Breaking The Silence with Dr Gregory Williams Youth Foster Care, Social Workers and the Juvenile Justice System Guest, Journey Ishmon This Week's Guest is Journey Ishmon. Journey is a first-generation college student at the university of North Texas studying social work and maintaining a 4.0 GPA. She has a strong focus on advocacy for youth in foster care. Her work is shaped by lived experience inside the foster care system and juvenile justice system that strengthen her commitment to supporting children impacted by systemic harm. If you wish to get into contact with Journey, invite her to speak at an event or interview Journey. Feel free to contact her at her email: ishmonjourney91@gmail.com Dr. Gregory Williams hosts social work student and advocate Journey Ishmon to explore the profound pressures facing modern youth and the systemic failures of the foster care system. The discussion highlights the critical importance of breaking the silence surrounding personal trauma and demonstrates how lived experience can be transformed into a powerful engine for social reform. Invisible Burden of Modern Youth Today’s youth face a unique landscape of pressure that differs significantly from previous generations, primarily driven by the omnipresence of social media and heightened societal expectations. Dr. Williams notes that young people often feel a relentless need to succeed and "fit in," which is exacerbated by the digital age where every mistake can be broadcasted and archived forever. This environment fosters a "masking" culture, where individuals smile publicly while struggling privately with anxiety and isolation. Journey Ishmon corroborates this, noting that social media creates a false standard of perfection that makes real-life struggles feel shameful and isolating. Navigating the Failures of Foster Care Journey Ishmon’s personal narrative reveals the harrowing realities of a system that often prioritizes placement over well-being. Entering foster care at age 13 due to domestic violence and neglect, Journey experienced 10 different placements over four years. Her time was largely spent in group homes and emergency shelters rather than traditional family settings. She describes environments where basic rights like privacy and safety were compromised, including facilities where doors were locked from the inside and windows were bolted with plastic. Despite her "basic" care level and high academic performance, her pleas for a safer environment were frequently minimized or ignored by caseworkers and the system at large. Turning Pain into Purpose Despite the systemic harm she endured—including a period of being over-medicated with antidepressants to "manage" a poor environment—Journey maintained a 4.0 GPA and is now a social work student at the University of North Texas. Her advocacy focuses on the shortage of foster homes and the need for "safety nets" that prevent children from entering the juvenile justice system. She emphasizes that while her trauma was temporary, her commitment to changing the system is permanent. Journey now works with programs like PUSH to support foster care alumni in higher education, ensuring that their voices, which were once silenced, are now heard at the highest levels of policy. The dialogue between Dr. Williams and Journey Ishmon serves as a stark reminder that while the foster care system is often "failed," individual resilience and advocacy can forge a path toward healing. Journey’s story underscores that a person's history does not define their identity, and that "breaking the silence" is the first step in turning life's pain into life's purpose.

    59 min
  7. Apr 27

    Breaking the Silence, April 26, 2026

    Breaking The Silence with Dr Gregory Williams Leadership, Integrity and Generational Character Guest, Keith Grounsell, a 28-year law enforcement veteran, two-time Chief of Police, former DEA Special Agent, international police advisor, entrepreneur, speaker, and multi-book author This Week's Guest is back by popular demand: Keith Grounsell! Keith is a veteran law enforcement leader with nearly 30 years at the city, county, federal and international levels. A former deep undercover narcotics and officer and 2-time Chief of Police. He is the author of more than 12 books. You can find all of Keith's book at his author page on Amazon: Amazon.com: Keith P. Grounsell: books, biography, latest update In this episode of Breaking the Silence, Dr. Gregory Williams hosts author and former police chief Keith Groundswell to explore the essential pillars of leadership. The discussion moves from the personal influence of mentors and family to the high-stakes realities of international undercover work and global counter-terrorism. Groundswell emphasizes that true leadership is built on a foundation of integrity that must remain consistent across both public and private life. The Foundation of Leadership: Integrity and Accountability Keith Groundswell posits that leadership is a lifelong journey of learning, where the primary responsibility is to mentor others and make them better than oneself. He identifies integrity as the "first brick" of any leadership foundation; without it, even qualities like courage and discipline can be misdirected toward harmful ends. In the modern era, Groundswell notes that the ubiquity of social media and cameras acts as a form of external accountability, ensuring that a leader’s public "happy face" matches their private actions. He argues that as one rises in an organization, the responsibility to work harder and act righteously increases rather than diminishes. A critical component of maintaining this integrity is the presence of an "accountability partner" or a tight inner circle. Groundswell highlights that leaders must surround themselves with people—whether a spouse or a professional command staff—who are empowered to tell the "honest truth" and challenge potentially poor decisions. He stresses that a leader must create an environment of trust where respectful disagreement is encouraged, ensuring that once a collective decision is made, the entire team supports it. Mentorship and the Influence of the Father Groundswell attributes his drive and work ethic to his father, a 22-year U.S. Marine who worked three jobs to support the family. This model of sacrifice taught him that a leader’s role is to step up and support those around them, regardless of personal cost. He acknowledges that while some have positive models to mimic, others use a negative upbringing as motivation to "not repeat the process." Regardless of the source, Groundswell believes that finding a mentor—someone who "checks" you at critical crossroads—is what keeps a person on the correct path. Global Security and Decisive Action Drawing from his experience commanding a 5,000-man SWAT team in Afghanistan and working in international narcotics, Groundswell offers a stark critique of current global affairs. He discusses the dangers of "narco-terrorism" and the strategic importance of maintaining a U.S. footprint abroad to prevent the growth of terrorist networks. He specifically criticizes the abrupt withdrawal from Afghanistan, which he claims left vital intelligence databases and $90 billion in weapons in the hands of the Taliban, effectively making them one of the most powerful terrorist organizations overnight. He advocates for decisive leadership in the face of regimes like Iran, arguing that diplomatic policing and human rights protection are essential for a safer world. Shaping the Next Generation A significant portion of the conversation focuses on the "diminishment of society" caused by instant gratification and the lack of personal responsibility. Groundswell has authored a children’s book series to help parents spark tough conversations about kindness, boundaries, and self-respect. He argues that respect for authority must begin in the home; if children do not respect their parents or caregivers, they will inevitably become a disruption in school and society. His goal is to move youth away from "victim culture" and toward a mindset of accountability and resilience. The dialogue serves as a powerful reminder that leadership is not defined by title or power, but by the consistency of one's character. Whether managing a national SWAT team or raising a child, the principles remain the same: take responsibility, maintain a foundation of integrity, and never be afraid to take a stand for what is right.

    56 min
  8. Apr 20

    Breaking the Silence, April 19, 2026

    Breaking The Silence with Dr Gregory Williams Navigating Youth Safety and Human Trafficking in the Digital Age Guest, Heidi Chance, Author of the book "Talk to Them: Navigating Difficult Conversations with Youth in the Digital Age." This Week's Guest will be Heidi Chance. Heidi is the author of the book: "Talk to Them: Navigating Difficult Conversations with Youth in the Digital Age." She has over 27 years of distinguished law enforcement experience and is recognized as one of the nation's leading subject matter experts in sex trafficking, undercover operations and online safety. This episode of Breaking the Silence features host Dr. Gregory Williams and guest Detective Heidi Chance, a 27-year law enforcement veteran and expert in sex trafficking. The discussion centers on the urgent need for personal boundaries and the evolving dangers of the "digital white van"—the smartphone—which has become the primary tool for child exploitation. The Philosophy of Personal Boundaries Dr. Gregory Williams opens the program by defining boundaries as "guardrails" designed to protect individuals from falling into "deep ditches" or off "cliffs" in their personal lives. He emphasizes that boundaries are not about being standoffish but are essential for safety and minimizing emotional damage. He identifies several critical areas for boundary-setting, including Time (learning to say "no" to protect family time), Emotional (avoiding the "vicarious trauma" of taking on others' pain), and Mental (shutting the door on negative, intrusive thoughts). He notes that for those who have experienced trauma, the goal is often a "manageable life" rather than a return to a perceived "normal." The Digital "White Van" and Online Exploitation Detective Heidi Chance introduces the concept of the "digital white van," explaining that the traditional stranger-danger threat has moved from the street into the child's bedroom via the smartphone. Statistics show a 93% increase in online child exploitation since the COVID-19 pandemic began. Predators are increasingly bypassing traffickers to message children directly on platforms like Instagram and Facebook. Detective Chance warns that grooming is alarmingly fast; in undercover operations, she has seen the transition from an initial greeting to a request for a physical meeting happen in as little as 23 minutes. Law Enforcement Challenges and High-Risk Events The conversation highlights a significant gap in proactive law enforcement. In large cities like Phoenix, only a handful of detectives are dedicated to undercover sex trafficking work, leaving many departments purely reactive. This vulnerability is exacerbated during major events like the Super Bowl or the World Cup, which attract traffickers who follow the "client" base. Detective Chance stresses that because police are overwhelmed, parents must take the lead in educating their children and monitoring their digital footprints. Strategies for Parental Intervention Detective Chance provides practical advice for parents, including the use of specialized devices like Bark or Gabb phones that have built-in safety filters. She emphasizes that parents should never allow phones in bedrooms at night and should lead by example. When discussing difficult topics, she recommends "rapport building" and "verbal judo" rather than immediate confrontation, which can cause a child to shut down. If a child is caught in a "sextortion" or compromising photo situation, parents are urged to stay calm, capture evidence with a separate device, and contact professionals immediately rather than engaging the predator themselves. The digital landscape has fundamentally changed the nature of child safety, requiring parents to move beyond the "white van" warnings of the past. By establishing firm personal boundaries and actively monitoring digital interactions, families can create a safer environment against the rising tide of online exploitation. As Dr. Williams notes, as long as there is "air in your lungs," there is hope for healing and protection.

    57 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
10 Ratings

About

“Breaking the Silence with Dr. Gregory Williams” Now is the time for you to step out of your own personal darkness and break the silence that has been hidden and closed up inside of you. “Breaking the Silence with Dr. Gregory Williams” radio program will offer the listeners a Road Map to Hope each and every week with keys to discover within yourself that ray of light to make your day better and brighter. Dr. Williams will not only discuss his own personal journey of overcoming the darkness of years of horrific sexual child abuse in the hands of his father and his father’s friends, but Dr. Williams will also feature special guests that have their own personal stories of overcoming obstacles in their lives and becoming victors instead of victims. “Breaking the Silence” will also feature information from the professional and medical field that will dive into the important research involving Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and how to build Resiliency in yourself and in your children. Along with this information will be special guests from greatest minds in the United States to share their expert research and thoughts on this very important subject that each person needs to be aware of. Now is the time to invest a few minutes each week with some awesome information to give you steps to HOPE and keys to HAPPINESS and PEACE. NOW is the time to Break YOUR Silence and breakout into a NEW and BETTER YOU! Join us each week beginning August 13, 2019 for “Breaking the Silence with Dr. Gregory Williams”. You won’t want to miss a single program. Heard around the world on the best radio network on the airwaves, BSS Radio Network available on iTunes, Google Play, iHeart Radio, Facebook Radio, Spotify and over 100 other high quality digital radio stations.