4.9 • 606 Ratings
🗓️ 4 May 2023
⏱️ 88 minutes
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0:00.0 | On today's episode of Lockton with Ian Bick, I interviewed Ginger Wolf, who was involved in litigation in regards to her incarceration after spending time in prison for leaving the scene of an accident. |
0:12.7 | Make sure you guys like, comment, subscribe, and share. And if you're listening to this on our audio streaming platforms, leave us a review. |
0:20.6 | As always, thank you guys |
0:22.3 | for tuning in to Lockton with Ian Bick and enjoy the show. |
0:30.6 | Ginger Wolf, welcome to Lockton with Ian Bick. What's up? Oh, what's up? That's all I get, |
0:35.3 | just to what's up? Wow, she's in the hot seat today. You had quite a bit of travel. You came from Louisiana, right? Yeah, I flew in from MSY. Awesome. So I always start my podcast at the beginning of one story, kind of, you know, open up to the person and see where their journey started from and how it finishes. So where are you from? |
0:56.6 | How did you grow up? What's your childhood like? So I grew up in St. Augustine, Florida. It's a small |
1:01.8 | town, like south of Jacksonville, so northeast Florida. I was the youngest of three children. So my |
1:09.4 | brothers were six and seven years years my senior. They were basically |
1:12.8 | like Irish twins, you know, like 10 months apart. My mom fell and broke her back when I was two, |
1:18.4 | and my mom has like a third grade education. I'm the only person of my family to graduate high |
1:23.1 | school, never mind to get like a full ride to go anywhere for college um it was tumultuous uh in my family there was a lot of drug use like in and out i wouldn't say my parents were addicts um my dad owned a small business who's a breadmender so he's like the guy that like picks up the bread and takes it to the store and then stocks the shelves. |
1:47.7 | And my mom couldn't really work. |
1:49.9 | Like I have a lot of memories of my mom being fucked up in the hospital, having multiple surgeries. |
1:55.6 | And me being with my grandmother a lot. |
1:59.6 | Also, I think it's important to note that everyone in my family has had |
2:06.4 | some type of sexual trauma, literally everyone except for my oldest brother. Everyone. If you ever |
2:12.9 | want to fuck your life up, do a family tree of trauma. Yeah, it's really, it's really game changing when it comes |
2:21.4 | to being able to understand and have empathy instead of being angry over some of the things |
2:27.9 | that transpired while growing up because I just realized my parents were people that I kind of |
2:33.4 | tended to put on a pedestal |
2:36.4 | and they had a lot of things that were, you know, trauma-wise, |
... |
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