Ep. 152: Telicia Maxwell on the power of vulnerability.
When the world goes quiet at night, most of us feel safe.
But for many women and children, that’s when the hardest questions begin:
Where will I sleep? Who will protect me? Will tomorrow be any different?
In this episode, I sit down with Telicia Maxwell, director of My Sister’s House at Atlanta Mission—and her perspective will challenge the way you think about service, faith, and people.
This conversation isn’t just about homelessness.
It’s about what it means to truly see someone.
Telicia shares how real transformation doesn’t begin with programs or quick fixes—it begins with presence. With trust. When choosing to show up in someone’s life, not as a solution, but as a person.
Because often, the moments that change everything aren’t big at all:
It’s remembering a name.
It’s offering a small act of kindness.
It’s simply sitting with someone long enough for them to feel safe.
Key Takeaways:
People don’t need to be fixed—they need to be seen.
Trust is built through consistent, genuine presence.
Healing often starts with small, human moments.
Vulnerability creates connection—not weakness.
Community is essential—we were never meant to do life alone.
So here’s the challenge:
Don’t just listen—act.
The next time you encounter someone in a vulnerable place, pause.
Look them in the eyes.
Learn their name.
Because that moment might be where healing begins.
Listen now—and start seeing people differently.
Listen to the full episode:
Learn more about Telicia’s work, My Sister’s House, and the Atlanta mission at Atlantamission.org.
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Thanks for listening. We want to hear from you!
Email us at info@mercycast.com.
For more conversations like this one, check out my book, Vulnerable: Rethinking Human Trafficking.