
Two hours. Forty-six cards.
Thank you for showing up.
This page belongs to you, now. Everything you need to keep thinking — and to do something with what you learned.

A note before anything else.

You came to a workshop on a subject most people avoid. You stayed two hours. You read the cards, listened to others, said things, were silent, perhaps disagreed.
That is not nothing. That is, in fact, the entire point.
The most important sentence in the workshop is rarely heard in the room — it’s what gets said in the days that follow, by you, to one person in your life. To make that easier, here is what we leave you with.

Access the cards.
The 46 cards you worked through are available as a reference page on the site, with the question, the workshop’s answer, and a simple written explanation for each one. This page is password-protected — reserved for participants — to keep the workshop fresh for those who haven’t attended yet.
The password was sent to you by email after you submitted the post-workshop evaluation form. Keep this page open in a tab, or bookmark it.


Keep learning.
The Preventorium videos
Short educational videos on consent, risk factors, and prevention strategies — to deepen specific topics at your own pace.
Watch the videos →
Safety & Support
If you or someone close to you needs immediate support, this page lists international resources we trust — for victims, for children in danger, for people seeking help, and for mental health crises.
See the resources →
FAQ
The questions we hear most often — clearly answered.
Read the FAQ →
The most useful next step.

The workshop only exists because people keep running it.
You’ve now lived the method from the inside. You know what works, what made people pause, what shifted in the room. That experience is exactly what a first-time facilitator needs. You don’t need a diploma or special training to host the next workshop — you need the book and a small group of adults willing to spend two hours with you.
If even one in ten participants runs a workshop within the year, the project doubles. Whether you do it for your family, your team at work, your community group, or your students’ parents — the impact is real, immediate, and very local. That’s how the project travels.
Take it further: host your own workshop.
You can run a workshop yourself
The full method is in the book. Read it, gather a few people, and host your first workshop in your city, your company, or your school.
Become a regional representative
Lead the project in your country or region. Build the local community.

Donate.
If you’d like the project to keep growing — more languages, more free resources, more subsidised workshops where they’re needed — your support makes that possible.

Recommended reading.
The Sexual Violence Prevention Workshop is part of a wider ecosystem of prevention materials. The following books, also aligned with WHO and UNICEF prevention guidelines, complement the workshop in different ways — for adults wanting to go further, for parents, and for use with children.

Thank you.
The workshop is not the end of anything. It’s the place where two things converge: what you already knew without knowing it, and what you now know clearly. What happens next is up to you.
Take care.
— The SVPW team


