Healing From Trauma & How It Distorts Identity

Aggie Park speaking on the Unmasked podcast about healing from trauma and shame
Aggie Park joins Wesley Farnsworth to discuss healing from trauma, identity restoration, shame, abuse, toxic relationships, and learning to live unmasked.

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How Trauma and Shame Distort Identity

There are some wounds people can see immediately.

And there are others that quietly shape how a person sees themselves for years.

Episode 59 of Unmasked with Wesley Farnsworth is a conversation about those hidden wounds — the ones created by trauma, shame, rejection, abuse, and silence.

In this episode, Aggie Park shares her deeply personal story of healing from trauma and learning how to rebuild her identity after years of emotional abuse, toxic relationships, depression, and self-worth issues.

Her story spans multiple countries, cultures, and painful seasons. But underneath all of it is one consistent truth:

God did not waste any part of her story.

🎧 Listen to the full episode:

Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/3eHboKDDsxejrxdbH9cRfS?si=5fdb90f80c1e4062

Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/unmasked-with-wesley-farnsworth/id1851549420

YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/@Unmasked-WF-Podcast

Childhood Trauma Shapes Identity Early

Aggie describes growing up between Indonesia and Germany while experiencing emotional and physical abuse from her mother during childhood.

As a child, she internalized messages that told her:

  • she was unwanted
  • she was not enough
  • she had no value
  • she needed to earn love

Those beliefs became foundational lies that followed her into adolescence and adulthood.

Trauma often works this way.

Painful experiences do not simply hurt in the moment. They reshape how people interpret themselves, relationships, trust, safety, and worth.

Aggie also experienced bullying and racism after moving to Germany, which reinforced the same internal narrative she already carried from childhood.

Over time, shame became normal.

And shame has a dangerous way of convincing people that unhealthy treatment is all they deserve.

Why People Stay in Toxic Relationships

One of the most powerful parts of the episode is Aggie’s honesty about toxic relationships.

She openly explains that because her self-worth was already damaged, she repeatedly attached herself to people who mistreated her.

That insight matters.

Many people assume toxic relationships are only about poor decisions or weak boundaries. But often, deeper emotional wounds are driving the pattern.

People who believe they are unworthy of healthy love often tolerate unhealthy treatment far longer than they should.

Aggie’s story illustrates how healing from trauma requires more than behavior modification. It requires identity restoration.

Healing From Trauma Often Gets Worse First

One of the strongest moments in the episode comes when Aggie explains that healing initially felt worse instead of better.

That honesty is important because many people quit healing too early.

When people finally begin confronting buried wounds, painful memories, distorted beliefs, fear, and emotional patterns start surfacing. That process can feel overwhelming.

Aggie compares it to opening a wound before it can heal.

That is often what emotional healing looks like:

  • confronting lies
  • processing pain
  • uncovering hidden beliefs
  • learning new patterns
  • rebuilding identity slowly

Healing is rarely instant.

But that does not mean it is failing.

Identity Restoration Through Christ

Throughout the conversation, Aggie repeatedly returns to one central theme:

identity.

For years, she believed she needed to become different versions of herself to gain acceptance from others.

People-pleasing became survival.

But eventually God began teaching her something different:
she did not need to earn worth through performance.

That shift fundamentally changed how she viewed herself, relationships, ministry, and purpose.

Aggie explains that many Christians quietly carry burnout because they are trying to prove value through serving instead of abiding in God’s love first.

That distinction matters.

Serving God is not supposed to replace intimacy with God.

God Uses Unqualified People

Another major theme throughout the episode is obedience.

Aggie repeatedly explains how unqualified she felt to launch a podcast or publicly share her story. Yet God continued pushing her beyond her comfort zone.

Wesley and Aggie both discuss how God consistently uses people who feel inadequate:

  • Moses
  • David
  • Joseph
  • ordinary believers today

The pattern remains the same.

God is not looking for perfect resumes.

He is looking for willing people.

That perspective removes enormous pressure from people who feel disqualified because of:

  • past mistakes
  • trauma
  • fear
  • insecurity
  • shame
  • lack of experience

Your Story Still Matters

Near the end of the conversation, Aggie shares a powerful reminder:
someone needs your story.

Not a polished version.

Not a perfected version.

A truthful version.

Many people remain trapped because shame convinces them silence is safer. But silence also keeps healing isolated.

Aggie’s story demonstrates that honesty becomes powerful when God redeems it.

Not because pain becomes good.

But because God refuses to waste it.

Final Thoughts

Episode 59 of Unmasked is ultimately about identity restoration.

It is about what happens when someone stops believing the lies trauma taught them and slowly begins believing what God says instead.

Aggie Park’s story is honest, painful, hopeful, and deeply relatable for people carrying hidden wounds.

And for many listeners, this episode will likely expose something important:

healing from trauma is not about becoming someone else.

It is about finally becoming who God created you to be.

🌐 Connect with Aggie:
https://www.instagram.com/un_spokenpod/

🎙️ More from UNMASKED:
https://www.wesleyfarnsworth.com

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