Tuesday, December 27, 2016

10 Things NOT to Do in Prison


A lot of my blog posts address things you should do to get along in prison.  Today I’d like to give some examples of things NOT to do, all of which happen to have been attempted by the same person, the forever clueless G-Money.  As one old-timer put it, “That boy is a crash-test dummy, just keeps on slammin’ his head into the dashboard again and again.”  In no particular order then, here are Ten Things NOT to Say or Do in a Federal Prison:

1.     Drop your trousers to change clothes in an open pod or cube (as G-Money did on his first week on the Beach here).  When advised not to do this, he compounded the problem by stepping right into…
2.     This reply:  “How ‘bout you don’t look at my ass?”  (Um, seriously?  I mean, never EVER accuse a man of looking at your butt unless you are prepared for a harsh consequence, which in this case was a swift punch to the face.)
3.     Do not go on about how your sentence is just a blip in front of guys who are serving 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 year bids.
4.     Do not openly refer to fellow inmates as “you prisoners.”
5.     Do not talk about how you will refrain from ice cream or candy or soda for the duration of your blippy 18-month bid (no one wants to hear it).
6.     Do not openly compare your case to others and explain why you got less time.
7.     Do not go into the tv room and sit on top of someone else’s blanket, then when confronted tell the guy to “lighten up, it’s just a blanket.”  (In here, a cardinal rule is that you do not sit on, touch, or move someone else’s stuff unless you have express permission.)
8.     Do not lecture a guy that he may not understand what you are saying because it may be over his head.
9.     Do not express anger at being gloved (in prison parlance this means losing a card game 5 times in a row, a full glove) in gin for the 4th straight time by your truck driving redneck cellie, grab your cards and storm out of the cube. (Being a poor loser in prison is a license for trouble.)
10. After “taking the ball and going home” re 9 above, do not then attempt to smooth things over by explaining that you are simply not accustomed to losing games to those clearly of inferior intellect.

Maybe some of these transgressions seem silly to you, but here in prison, let me just say that each is an offense for which getting punched in the face would be considered a perfectly reasonable punishment.  Luckily (and incredibly), so far G-Money has only suffered that one punch out, though he has been threatened and yelled at too many times to count.  Most of the guys seem to have decided that he is a clueless, short-timer, smug asshole, not worth the trouble to straighten out.  For all of us, at least, he does provide some entertainment.

Monday, December 19, 2016

AAAGGGGGHHHHH!!!!


Last night I was sitting on my bunk with my earbuds in, listening to the radio and crocheting a holiday blanket to donate to charity.  In my own little domestic bubble.  I did not want to look at, talk to or hear another human being.  Just minding my own business.  Can you picture the scene?  Peaceful, right?  WRONG!  Nothing is ever calm or peaceful in prison.  You can seek a moment of relative quiet, try to carve out a little space, but never with much success.  So, as I sit with my radio and crochet, at last I can’t take it anymore.  I unplug the earbuds, set the radio and blanket down on my locker, pull out my stool and climb up onto my desk, so I can see over the room divider.  Then I scream:  AAAAGGGHHH!!!  (I’m not a big guy, but I can be loud, just ask my kids.  They used to put me on restriction for their events, ordering me to yell only at half volume, and other spectators would sometimes ask me to pipe down.)  So, when I shout this time, all eyes turn my way.  The block falls silent and I let loose:

“I can’t take no more, no mores can I take!” (to quote the wise philosopher Popeye).  Starting at one end of the dorm, I point down the rows, singling guys out as I go.  “You, yes I know you a “mans”, you’ve been telling us all this same thing for nine month at insane volume.  EVERY day at 6 am.  Furthermore, I know that “one of these days someone is gonna make you do sumthin you don’t wanna do.”  Well get to it, will you?  Either smack somebody in the head or shut the F__K up!

Ok, next.  You, the Where’s Waldo on Meth looking fool.  No, you were not head diesel mechanic for Werner Trucking for the entire nation.  You can’t even change the batteries in your radio.  You do not have an architecture degree on the side from the University of Nebraska.  I don’t know if Nebraska has an architecture program, but I do believe a prerequisite would be the ability to speak coherently.  And no, you were not the lead singer of a chart topping country western band.  When you sing at church the minister falls to his knees and begs the Lord Our Father to deliver him from the agony.

Dude with a tattoo that is “an exact copy of the solid gold badge” you had on your “clubbin’ car”!  Well, I hate to break it to you but it’s Aston Martin, not Ashton Martin.

Hey, guy who calls himself the “Black Warren Buffet.”  You did not under any circumstances earn $125k per day currency trading for over three years.  Every day, “right off da rip.”  Over $45 million?  How do I know this?  Well, you’re serving a 15-year sentence for selling crack.  Something you claim you did on the side for just a little cash.

To this whole crew over here, I do not care how much you “love the gun,” how many free bodies you killed, how much product you moved, or anything else about your glamorous criminal exploits.  One, I don’t believe you, and two, I DO NOT CARE!

To the dude who likes to scream at his Baby Mamas on the phone.  Any clue why they won’t send you any money?  Maybe has something to do with you calling them b__ches and whores and ordering them to send some money or else?  Have you noticed you are in prison?  Take what you can get and shut up.

In fact, and this goes for all of you, anything you care to tell me about what a badass you were on the outside, understand that there is not a chance that I could ever care less.  You were not Jay Z’s manager, you were not drafted by the Cincinnati Reds (you can barely make our softball team), you did not spend three years in solitary at Leavenworth for strangling a guard, nor were you set up and sent here by the President because he fears what you know.  Nobody in here was a CIA hitman, and no, you were not a Viet Nam war sniper.  How do I know that?  Well, you’re 54 years old, for one thing.  So, um, you were like one of those notorious 9-year old American snipers in Nam?

My rant coming to an end, I announce that I want to be left alone!  I do not want to talk, I do not need someone to confide my problems to, I do not need a distraction from my concerns.  I know my problem:  I’m in prison.  So, thanks for caring, but sometimes you can even get sick of words of inspiration.  You wake up and see the damned bars and beyond them the barbed-wire coiled fences between you and the world and you just want to be left alone.

I opened my eyes.  I was still sitting on my bunk with my crochet project in my lap.  I’d dozed off.  Earbuds had fallen out.  Hmm, maybe I really should climb up on the desk and unload, tell everyone what I think.  I looked around at the relentless, everyday jabber and clamor.  Put the earbuds back in.  Turned up the volume.  Picked up my crochet needles and went back to work on my blanket.


Saturday, December 10, 2016

Death of a Friend


My friend Bill was taken to the prison hospital last week, where he died in their hospice unit.  A 64-year old man with pancreatic cancer, he died alone, though if they’d considered taking him to an outside hospital, maybe his family could have been at his side (there, of course, he’d have been chained to the bed even as he breathed his last).    Yes, Bill was a prisoner, and he never claimed to be innocent of the crime he committed.  He already had cancer’s death sentence on him when he was tried and convicted of extorting money and given a 20-year sentence he knew he’d never outlive. 

They tell us there’s a program of “compassionate release”, but in Bill’s case, he hadn’t served enough time to qualify.  He begged the guards to let him spend his last few days in his cube, among the friends he’d made during four years in prison, but they wouldn’t hear of it.  He’d hoped for a slice of pumpkin pie and to trade snacks from his holiday bag at Christmas, maybe thank the guys who’d lifted him up when he was down, but nobody is ever allowed to die on the Unit.   That would be bad for statistics.  The public can’t hear that people die in prison.  So during his last days, facing the cold fact that he would never again take a breath outside of these walls, no friends, no caring, no empathy.

Before they took him away, Bill told us not to mourn.  Up until the end almost, he was out on the yard playing softball and racket sports.  If a guy failed to hustle, he’d admonish him, “Hey, I’m a walking corpse, what’s your excuse?”  Bill never felt sorry for himself.  He wanted to die with dignity, and I have to think that he did.

I hate this place.  I hate what they do to people.  I won’t let it infect me.  I won’t succumb to anger.  I won’t become bitter.  I won’t lose hope.  I won’t let these walls change my heart.  That’s my position always, but you know what?  Today, I hate this place.  Today I am angry and sad and disillusioned.  Tomorrow, Bill will be gone, but the rest of us will still be here.  The sun is going to rise, I’ll get off my bunk, and it’s going to be a beautiful day.  What other choice do I have?

Monday, November 28, 2016

Gettin' Money


In my never-ending quest to blend into my environment and possibly even shed my “Whiteman” nickname, I continue to add to my prison vocabulary (think of this as a warped version of Sesame Street’s Word of the Day).  Today’s term, boys and girls, is “Get Money.”   Any guesses?  Okay, here’s a hint:  If you think it has anything to do with real money – bonk! – you’re wrong!  After all, as I’ve explained before, we don’t have any money.  Yes, we do use stamps as currency, so the phrase could be about acquiring stamps.  But no.  Hey, maybe it has something to do with our prison jobs and pay day, when the balance on our commissary accounts get adjusted?  Good guess, but again, nope.  Give up?  Okay.  In here, Getting (or more precisely, Gettin’) Money = Working Out.  For example, “Yo Cheesepuffs, you gettin’ dat money?” or “I’m headin’ outside, gotta get some money!”  Yes, I’m dense.  Been in here nearly two years and just figured this out last week. 

Here’s how:  The library where I work was closed for the afternoon, so I got to enjoy a little time outside.  Weather was beautiful, cool breeze, sky above the wall a cloudless blue.  I was playing racquetball with a friend when he hit the ball onto the roof.  It was our only ball, so game over.  That’s when another guy from the unit called us, shouting, “Yo, you wanna get some money?”  I asked him what he meant and after all the other guys within earshot finally stopped laughing at my ignorance, they explained that it means lifting weights.  Why, I asked?  No really clear thought on that, except maybe building muscle is like “putting money in the bank.”  You know, like you can count on it.  I still didn’t quite see it, but as with many things here, I realized I just had to roll with it.  So we all had a good time working out.  Strenuous, but it felt great.

Jump ahead to the next morning.  Every muscle is sore.  I’m hobbling down the hallway, barely able to move, when someone yells out, “Hey Whiteman, I saw you gettin’ that money yesterday!”  To which I responded with what I thought was bound to catch on as the newest prison slang, “Naw, it’s more like my body kited a check.”  Two people in the vicinity chuckled, but one of them only laughed because he thought I said “kike” and he always laughs at jokes about Jewish people.  So I had to explain that kiting a check means writing a fraudulent one.  Let’s just say that if it takes two or three minutes to explain a punchline, the air kind of goes out of a joke.  A slow and painful death.  On the plus side, though, I am expanding my prison vocabulary.  On the negative side, attempting a joke that was understood by exactly one other person (a white guy) may have dug my Whiteman nickname hole a little deeper.  Glad I didn’t go with my first instinct, something like, “I just wish we could change to a Supply Side model!”

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Our Very Own Birdman


I’m both a librarian and a sports referee in this town of 1300 residents, all confined to an area less than one half mile by one half mile, so I know a lot of people and -- being a gregarious guy -- can talk with most of them, whatever their mood or situation.  But I don’t even come close to this one guy, the most infamous inmate on the compound:  Birdman.  Okay, before you ask, no, he was not given this nickname in homage to the famous Birdman of Alcatraz.  He got it because he communicates exclusively using bird sounds.  That’s right, he walks around all day chirping, cackling, and squawking like a bird.  And people actually ANSWER him as if he’s making sense!  One thing I’ve learned from this, though, is that language is not just words.  Most of what we communicate is non-verbal, body language, tone, glances.  You can convey a lot with hand gestures.  So sometimes I find myself trying to talk with Birdman, the way you might with an actual bird person, if you can imagine such a creature.

This is all amusing, I suppose, until you’re walking up the hill to chow and Birdman calls in the seagulls, which swoop in like a deranged flight of the Navy’s Blue Angels, buzzing the guard tower and your head!  Yes, the birds understand him perfectly!  Let me assure you that I have seen Birdman reading and writing.  In fact, he is quite literate.  Like so many behaviors here in prison, his bird talk is all part of the Hustle.

So what, you may ask, is his hustle?  Well, the guy was having headaches and complained of blurred vision.  Turned out he had a brain tumor, which was removed without a hitch, but when he woke up from surgery he could not speak; he could only make birdlike utterances.  This was nearly three years ago!  So most people accept that his disability was caused by a botched brain tumor operation.   If Oliver Sacks were still alive, no doubt he’d be flying down for an interview.  But as it turns out, Birdman has a plan.  He’s going to file suit against the government for negligence, cruel and unusual punishment, pain and suffering, etc., then get discharged with a big settlement and live a life of luxury.  There is just one flaw to his logic:  people have heard him let his guard slip and actually speak English.  Which is understandable, since it must be hard to maintain his charade 24-7.  People have heard him arguing with his cellie, talking to himself while typing in the library, and even singing to himself in the shower.  Still he persists, no doubt counting on the unwritten rules of prison life to help him.  In this case, the rule is our intense desire to get something over on the administration.  We would all like nothing better than to see Birdman win, so we can all laugh at the idiocy of the BOP.  Little victories like that can help you get through a bad day.  Which is why if I’m ever asked about Birdman’s speech, my answer will be a resounding, “Caw!  Caw!”

Saturday, November 5, 2016

A Plea for Change


Incarceration, according to the Department of Justice and Federal Bureau of Prisons serves three purposes:  Punishment, Deterrence, and Rehabilitation.  They are definitely getting the punishment aspect right, or wrong in the view of those being punished.  The U.S. jails more people than any country in the world and for longer periods of time.  Sentences continue to rise in duration, in spite of evidence that except for severe circumstances which may merit lengthy incarcerations, no sentence beyond 5 years actually makes a difference.  In other words, if a person does not “learn his lesson” in 5 years he is not likely to do so in 10, 12, 15, 20, etc.  Our nation keeps men and women locked up long past any point of effectiveness, then sends them back into society with very little support, forcing them to relearn life on the outside, while fending for themselves.

Deterrence, I think, is also over-rated.  Very few inmates here that I’ve talked to even considered the consequences of their acts.  Not being able to process cause and effect is probably a key reason that people get in trouble with the law.  Therefore, making laws more onerous and draconian in order to “make people think” before committing a crime has very little impact.  Most guys never even entertained the idea that they’d get caught.  They just keep doing what they are doing until they can’t do it anymore, always thinking they are smarter than the next guy.

Unfortunately, because of our skewed perspective  on punishment and deterrence, a majority of inmates, once released, just recycle back in the system before long.  To offset this pattern, the BOP claims to provide Rehabilitation Programs for inmates.  Yes, Rehabilitation.  The word conjures images of busy inmates learning a trade or taking college classes, joining self-help groups and workshops.  The Number One factor most highly correlated with lowering recidivism is education, no one will argue that.  So logically one would expect the system to provide as many opportunities as possible for guys to better themselves to prepare for a productive life on the outside in order not to return to prison.  But that’s not what I’ve seen.   Granted, I have only been in one federal prison, known as a “good spot”.  It’s safe, clean, and does offer amenities that probably aren’t seen at many other prisons.  We have a large, grassy Recreation Yard, a well-stocked library, slightly better than marginal food.  It’s not the Four Seasons or even the newly remodeled Red Roof Inn, but it could be worse.  From what I hear, it’s exponentially better than a county jail or state prison.  So, with these accommodations, you might suppose the BOP would also provide educational programming to support rehabilitation, right?  Not so fast, my friends.

Let’s first get to the public perception of life in federal prison, as portrayed on tv and the media.  The following is a list of items that do not exist here at what is known as one of the “crown jewels” of the BOP:  (1) community college level classes, (2) training in things like welding, carpentry, plumbing, or any other popular trade for that matter, (3) computer access, (4) support for taking college correspondence courses, or (5) any reward or incentive to pursue education on your own.  No time off, no preferred housing, no quiet study area, no access to supplies, nothing.  Now before you climb the steps to your cozy room in your ivory tower, I know you are going to say that the reward should be the education itself.  That it makes you a better person, striving to learn how to live outside of prison.  I agree, in theory, but if you could only spend a week, even a day, in prison, I guarantee you that you would change your mind.  As I’ve written before, many guys here do not have any support system to rely on.  They are going it alone, navigating this prison system without any guidance.  They feel cast aside, cast out of society, waking up every day staring at the same walls and counting down 5, 10, 15, 20 years behind bars.  They came into prison with little education and no marketable skills and they see no way of obtaining any before they go home.  They need HELP!  And when I say help, I don’t mean some uninterested case manager telling them to “program”.  A case manager who has never read their file and may not even know their name.  Yes, like you, I would never have bought into this “woe is me” whining of inmates in the past, but now that I have seen it with my own eyes, as our Nobel Laureate Bob Dylan sings, “things have changed.”

OK, maybe I can’t convince you that the emotional and psychological beatdown inmates go through makes it hard to do what it takes to aggressively pursue some kind of rehabilitation.  We can agree to disagree.  But until you have walked in our shoes, and in this case that would mean walking in circles for about 25 laps of the dorm to clock a mile, but you get what I mean.  How about we flip the script and look at the numbers in terms of what is available?  This prison has 1300-1400 inmates.  Each quarter two or three self-help styled classes are offered through the Psychology Office.  Re-entry Affairs may offer a class, such as industrial sewing, to stock the Unicor Plant here.  The Drug and Alcohol counselors will do 12 Steps.  Sometimes you can throw in CDL (the book version only) and HVAC.  Sounds good, right?  Rehabilitative education and job training both!  But consider:  We’re talking about maybe 12-13 classes tops, each enrolling about 15 people, bringing us to about 195 slots available for students.  That’s about 15% of the prison population with the opportunity to work towards prison-sponsored rehabilitation goals.  We do have GED classes, too, and I don’t know how many inmates enroll.  I do know that last semester only 3 received their high school diplomas.  Maybe that has something to do with the teachers rarely being in the classroom or bothering to actually teach the class.  In the past two years I can state unequivocally that I have never seen any staff member holding the title of “teacher” actually do any teaching.  Fellow prisoners who have been at other institutions say that’s par for the course.  So who does teach?  Who do we have investing their efforts to offer these men a chance at a better future?  Other inmates hired as tutors.  And yes, many of us do have the sincere motive of wanting to help our peers.  What are the requirements to be a tutor?  Gotta have a high school diploma or GED.  That’s it.  No training.  No background in education.  That doesn’t mean that you won’t stumble upon a prisoner with a talent or knack for teaching, but typically you just get guys with good intentions who quickly become frustrated by the lack of any institutional support.

There must be more, right?  This guy just woke up on the wrong side of his two-foot wide steel bunk and is venting.  He’s just disturbed by the pre-op transsexual with the perm who has decided to run a floor buffer up and down the hallway at 5 am.   Maybe couldn’t sleep through the night-long shoutdown over which state – NC or SC – keeps it more One Hundred.  Well, yes, probably, you’re right.  I’m feeling crabby.  But I promise you I have thought this through before writing and I’m trying to be as unbiased as possible.  So let me add that each quarter these inmate volunteers offer 10-12 classes that have to be approved, of course, by the staff.  Even though they receive no allowance or compensation for this effort, they teach material ranging from economics to public speaking to Shakespeare.  These courses can actually be quite mentally stimulating and challenging.  And in here, anything that can keep your mind active is okay in my book.  The problem with this system is that it relies on the talent pool and interests of potential inmate instructors.  I applaud their efforts, their good intentions, and I know that some of them are extremely knowledgeable guys who were fabulously successful on the outside, but all of that does not necessarily make them good teachers. 

Again, you may be thinking, “You are all criminals! You deserve nothing!”  Okay, but consider that (1) your tax money is paying for this mass level of incarceration and (2) most of us will be getting out of prison someday.  We will be living among you.  Wouldn’t it be logical to spend a few more dollars to help us reenter society successfully?  So maybe we wouldn’t be so likely to recycle back to jail again?  As I’ve written before, I’m not allowed to use a computer in here, so I can’t look up the source, but there’s this quote that says something along the lines of:  “You can judge the humanity of a society by how they treat their prisoners.”  Based on the scorn, warehousing, and disenfranchisement American felons face, what does that say about our society as a whole?

What to do?  Support some recent bills that would reduce time served for inmates who follow the rules, stay out of trouble, and make efforts to reform themselves.  As things stand now, federal inmates serve 85% of their sentence, even on good behavior.  You get that for staying out of trouble.  There’s no additional incentive.  You can sleep all day, watch TV all night, scratch yourself awake long enough to gamble and eat, and you will earn your good time credit.  Just the same as the guy who studies The Bible, takes classes, helps out his fellow inmates, tries to learn some kind of trade, attends self-help seminars and maybe teaches a class himself.  This needs to change.  I’d so like to see some kind of community college-level and college level coursework, leading to some kind of certificate or degree, offered in here.  And at bottom, sentences are just too long.  Guys facing 15-20 years have a hard time even imagining living on the outside, so it’s hard convincing them to put in the time and effort to “program” when there’s no tangible goal to work towards.  I’m in for eight years and that’s considered a short Federal bid.  Let me just say, I learned my lesson long ago, but here I sit, like everyone else, counting the days.

The bottom line is that our society continues to pour good money after bad into the prison system, supporting a cluster of laws that are not in the least effective.  We ignore the problem, locking people up and throwing away the key, convincing ourselves that these bad people got what they deserved.  You think that this will never affect you.  That no one you know is in prison or will ever end up there.  I used to think the same way, and I’m sure my family did, too.  But even if you are fortunate enough to never have to face incarceration or the incarceration of a loved one, you will be affected.  Our society is suffering.  Our criminal justice system is the laughing stock of other civilized countries.  The system is not working.  I work towards the little bit of change a prisoner can effect.  I offer help to anyone in here who wants to better himself.  I tutor, I counsel, I share resources, telling myself that every little bit counts.  I just wish that I could do more, and I call out from this forgotten place to ask society to take another look in the mirror and ask what we all can do to help ALL of our citizens have a chance to succeed.

Saturday, October 29, 2016

Idle Chatter


One of my jobs on the Rec Yard is umpiring softball.  The field is a little unusual – a running track cuts through the outfield, there’s a drainage ditch and a light pole, too – so among other adaptations the ground rules require an umpire to stand on the track.  No one else would take this job, which seems to be an insult to their manhood, so I raised my hand, thinking, Dude we’re already in prison.  Seriously, is doing this least prestigious umping gig really going to be the thing that kills your ego?

As the trackside ump I earn a dollar a game (good money in the prison economy!), hang out watching softball and, most importantly, get to overhear all the wacky conversations the runners are having as they jog past.  Granted, I only get snippets, but in a way that’s even better, providing a stream-of-consciousness, channel switching ear to the zeitgeist of our community.  Below, I give you merely two games’ worth of what I consider Entertainment Gold:

1.     Guy says he’s sick of this place and needs to figure a way to get out.  His partner asks his plan:
Gonna file for that compassion (sic) release.
Oh yeah, heard about that joint, what you got wrong with you?
I got somethin’ called Chronic Death.
That sounds bad.

2.     Two guys resuming an argument started earlier on the basketball court:
Man, you lucky I’m givin’ you a ticket!
A ticket?  What you talkin’ about mother_____?
A ticket, a pass not to whip your *ss.
(Laughing) N***er, you hand out more tickets than a State Trooper on a holiday weekend!

3.     Monologue, with buddy’s rejoinder:
I’m sick of this mother_____ing place, I gotta get transferred.  Ya see a g__damn lion can only take so much of these little punk *ss b**ch zebras and giraffes thinkin’ they run the jungle!  Talkin’ back and shit.  At the end of the day you gotta teach ‘em a lesson.  I’m ‘bout to go full on hyena on sum these mother____rs!
Hyena?  Thought you were a lion, dumbass!  Who ever heard of a lion goin’ hyena?

4.     Four guys in a group.  One explaining that he was out “bangin’” when someone shot into the car and he got nicked.  He laughs and asks, “Y’all know what that means?  In unison, the other three reply, “Freebody!”  (Later I asked a former gang guy what that meant.  Seems the concept of a freebody means they are justified in shooting back, thinking they won’t get arrested for a crime if they shoot in self-defense.  Thus, a “free body” for their street rep.  Yes, just in case you are as slow or naïve as I am, I asked for clarification that they do indeed mean killing the person, adding to their body count.)  By the way, I do understand that this is dark humor.  I find nothing funny about killing people; it’s just the sheer absurdity of it that amazes me.

In addition to these four anecdotes, I have overhead endless boasts about how rich-bad-tough-connected-dangerous, etc. inmates were on the outside, along with a string of former careers ranging from airline pilot to lead singer in a top band to professional bowler, Mormon minister, architect, writer, rapper, cartel leader, tv producer and more.  Who knows how much if any of it’s true?  But next time, I’m going to try to take my journal with me and jot down as many of these passing conversations as I can.

Monday, October 24, 2016

New Playlist


You may have read my previous post about the songs on my “prison-pod” music player.  Well, gradually, when I can, I’ll buy more.  So here I present my current prison playlist (with no apologies for however corny or lacking in artistic merit they may seem):

Everybody Hurts by REM:  The first cool band that I liked in high school, hard to make out the lyrics, parents didn’t care for them, Michael Stipe had attitude.  Listened to Radio Free Europe over and over, trying to make out the words.  This song came along later, when Stipe started enunciating, but it’s one of my favorites, with understated emotional power.  Message is all in the title, we’re not unique in our suffering, try to hang on:  “If you feel like you’re alone, no no no, you’re not alone!”

Through Glass by Stone Sour:  What ever happened to this band, anyway?  This song says a lot about what it’s like to be in prison, stuck looking out through a pane of glass, unable to interact with the world, though sometimes tantalizingly close.  “How do you feel?  That is the question, but I forget you don’t expect an easy answer.”  In here we do appreciate those of you who understand that asking us how we’re doing can be a more complicated question than if you asked someone on the street.

Ain’t No Man by The Avett Brothers.  I have very fond memories of attending an Avett’s concert with my wife.  This song for me is all about the refrain:  “Ain’t no man can save me, ain’t no man can enslave me, ain’t no man, a man that can change the shape my soul is in, there ain’t no body HERE who can cause me pain or raise my fear, ‘cause I got only love to share, if you’re looking for the truth, I’m proof you’ll find it there.”

Alive by Pearl Jam (aka Mookie Blaylock):  Did you know this band was originally named after NBA basketball player Mookie Blaylock, who wore the number 10, hence the title of their seminal work, Ten?  Yeah, I know way too much about this band I love so much.  They played this song at a concert my wife suffered through for our anniversary (Thank you!!!).  Angst, anger, determination – that’s what the song means to me.  “I’m still alive!”

Bad Blood by Ryan Adams (covering Taylor Swift):  Dude was able to just transform this song in his own style.  I’m no Taylor Swift fan, but I can appreciate her songwriting a little more after hearing this.  No big message from this song.  Just like it.

Bittersweet Me by REM:  When Stipe sings, “I couldn’t taste it, I’m tired and naked,” I feel like he’s speaking directly to me.  In here, you often feel stripped down to the basics, to the essence of whatever you are.  Even in this so-called “easy” prison, I have seen guys who did not like what they discovered when forced to face themselves.

See You Again by Wiz Khalifa and Charlie Puth:  My daughter recently went to a Wiz concert, so thought I’d check out his music other than Black and Yellow.  Maybe not a typical song for him, but I like it and its message of seeing those I love again.  “Our friendship turned to a bond, our bond will never be broken, the love will never get lost.”

Heaven Live:  A band from my 20s and early 30s, mine is a live version from the Paradiso in Amsterdam.  “I don’t need no one to tell me about Heaven, I look at my daughters and I believe!”  I hold my head high and stay strong for my kids.  They deserve that from me.

Fight Song by Rachel Platten:  Okay, no I can’t defend this song, except to say I like it, maybe mostly for the theme – “I got a lot of fight left in me!”

I’ll Be Missing You by Puff Daddy:  A memorial to Biggie Smalls, with gospel singers and a Police sample.  Corny, maybe, but it’s kind of sweet to see a rapper do a sentimental tune in honor of his fallen homey.

I Won’t Give Up by Jason Mraz:  “I won’t give up on us, even if the skies get rough, I’m giving you all my love, still lookin’ up…God knows we’re worth it.”  This one brings tears to my eyes.  Probably wouldn’t have had the same effect before, but in prison it gets to me every time.  Makes me think of my family.  It is dedicated to my wife and children.  There is a lot I do not know, but I guarantee them that I will not give up on me and I will not give up on our family, on US.  I Love You Guys!

The Muse by The Wood Brothers:  Flat out one of my Top Twenty favorite songs ever.  Used to crank it at home all the time.  I remember one day while I was stripping paint or something at home, my wife and kids came in and I turned around, voice at full throttle, to see them laughing at me.  “Times like these so sweet and so true and thinking that’s the last thing you wanna do.”  How I miss those little moments of joy.  I hold them close in my heart every day, and pray there will be more to come.

So, folks, there it is, laid out for your approval, contempt or even scorn.  No, these tunes may have no place in musical history, but they help me get through the day.  If I could, I’d shake each of these artists’ hands in sincere thanks for helping me make it through this difficult time. Where is Casey Kasam when you need him?

Saturday, October 22, 2016

Dear Readers


As always, I appreciate your taking the time to read my anecdotes about life in prison.  I’d imagine that some of you may have originally done so to avoid my mother’s pestering you (in a very loving way, of course, Mom!), but hope that you found something to bring you back.  If you don’t know my mother, and have happened upon this blog on your own, I will simply say thank you.  Please feel free to pass on the link to others who may appreciate what I have to say.

Everything here is non-fiction, with slight embellishments for the sake of humor, but hopefully those moments are obvious and do not detract from the rest.  Basically, in all of these posts, I’m trying to convey that those of us inside these walls are not much different from folks on the outside.  Most of us are good people who made a mistake and simply hope for a chance to fit our lives back together.  We want to put our past behind us and not have to live with it hanging over our heads every day for the rest of our lives.

You may know that I don’t have Internet access in here.  I send my essays to Blogmaster T on the outside and he posts them.  He mails me your comments (so far, TJV carries the response section of the blog).  So if you have something you’d like to say, I’ll eventually get your comment and write back.  If you have questions about life in prison, I’ll gladly attempt a lucid answer.  To all my readers, thanks for your attention, love and support. 

Sincerely,

The Whitest Man Alive (recently shortened to The White Guy), my prison nickname, meant with affection, I think.

Monday, October 10, 2016

Shakedown!


8 am and the loudspeaker blares, “Shakedown!”  You can hear the groans echoing off the walls.  Nobody enjoys a shakedown, which involves the guards and sometimes the case manager and unit counselor rifling through your belongings.  They may be respectful of your things or they may not, but either way you can’t do a thing to stop them.  Usually one or two people are the target, but they hit the entire unit anyway.  The idea, I imagine, is to keep us all guessing who they’re after.  They go through everything, including personal photos, letters, even your underwear!

Safely ensconced in your living room at home it may be hard to understand how invasive this feels.  As I’ve written before, I share an 88-ish square foot living space with another guy.  I have one locker with roughly 9 cubic feet of storage and two clothes hooks.  Everything I may be said to “own” is stored in this restricted space.  Letters from my kids, my crochet projects, pictures, my journal.  All of it open to inspection on the whim of the authorities.  And I hate to have my possessions messed with.  Even on the outside I was like that.  But in prison, where we jealously hold onto whatever hint of privacy we can have, these searches feel like a violation.

Then when you consider that you may have accumulated some little extra thing to make life easier – maybe an extra pillow or blanket, a handmade shelf in your locker, a mesh bag for your shower stuff – and that they can confiscate it all, well, we hate that.  Guys do not like having to start from scratch after having paid or bartered for that confiscated item.

Shakedowns seem calculated to interfere with our sleep, too, and guys in here take that seriously.  But the reason we really hate these invasions is that they’re most often instigated by a snitcher.  Somebody is not minding his own business.  He's snooping on others even when nobody’s bothering him in any particular way.  So you may have that precious second pillow swept up because of somebody else’s petty beef or their desire to curry favor with the staff.  This violates a cardinal rule of prison life:  mind your own business, keep your mouth shut.  If it doesn’t affect you, let it go.  And if it does affect you, work it out without getting the staff involved.  Because that brings the heat down on all of us.  

Sunday, October 2, 2016

Updates aka As the Prison Turns


Inmates continue to die at an alarming rate, and when a guy went down recently it took a long time for the emergency team to show up, even though he was just 150 steps (I counted) away from their door.  When they carried him out, he was unconscious, and we still don’t know if he’s alive or not.  Even though we all live together 24-7, the guards will not give us updates on our friends.

Half-Baked is struggling at the moment.  He’s got “only” 3.5 years to go on a 10 year bid, which we call “heading downhill”, but he doesn’t see it that way.  He applied for but did not get a Presidential Commutation, after bragging that he was sure to get it, because his reason was fool proof:  “I’m sick of this place!”   Unlike the rest of us, apparently he hates being in prison.  I do feel sorry for him.  He needs mental health care.  He’s not dangerous, he just needs to be monitored, but the solution for him and so many like him seems to be – lock him up in jail.  I’ve been talking with him, treat him like the other guys, try to help him deflect the predators (guys who hustle him out of commissary items or get him to do their laundry, promising to pay him back later, which they never do).  In some ways, I feel sorrier for guys who feel the need to take advantage of those less fortunate than I do for Half-Baked.

Meanwhile, Ms. Wesley Snipes continues her reign of terror at the Rec Yard.  Not only can you not take a book outdoors to read, you can’t even have a Bible to study with friends on the Yard.  She has proclaimed that she doesn’t want anybody walking around “posterizing” (I think she means proselytizing), because it’s against policy (no one knows what policy she’s citing, as it was never a problem before).

Ms. Snipes has cracked down on my crochet class, too.  No longer can we make anything that might be considered an article of clothing, even if we plan to mail it home.  I understand the rationale that inmates might use homemade caps or whatever as a gang emblem, but not allowing us to make hats, scarves, mittens for our families on the outside?  So, of course, I asked her to explain, and she said, “If you don’t like it, I can cancel the whole program.”  A sweetheart, eh?

Finally, my early chow pass:  My mission has been temporarily side-tracked, because too many guys – some lacking what we might call the art of sublety – are also after the coveted Golden Ticket.  They don’t follow any of the generally successful strategies, such as finding a task that needs to be done at chow time, no these clowns just line up to go early with the guys who belong in the line.  Things blew up when 19 people showed up one day with the same excuse for eating early – claiming to be referees for basketball games.  The upshot?  Early chow has now been suspended for EVERYONE!

May I just say that yes, I have gotten the message!  Frankly, it had sunk in quite well after just one week away from my family, so can I go home now?  I just want to hug my kids, kiss my wife and take a nap on the couch.  That’s the general sentiment we all share.   We’re being warehoused, locked away longer than necessary in most cases.  I mean, very few people here are what you might call genuinely evil men.  Most are guys who just got off track and made mistakes.  First time offenders, for instance, who could have been given a much shorter sentence, maybe placed on strict supervision and warned not to make a mistake again.  I’d have been fine with that.  Instead I sit here, fighting all the negativity, the inertia, the feeling that society has just given up on us.  I know that every long day brings me closer to walking out that door.  I just pray every day that my wife, my kids, my siblings and parents will still be waiting for me.  That they don’t lose faith in me.  I get up every day ready to fight the good fight, but it is absolutely exhausting!

Saturday, September 24, 2016

Prayer for the Music Man


At times we focus on ourselves too much.  Stuck here in prison, these walls dominate our thoughts and actions.  We need to remember that the world "out there" keeps spinning without us, all the while hoping that we are not forgotten by friends and family.  In the end we can only take what people are willing to give and be thankful.   

I think it’s important to be aware of the struggles others are facing.  So today I’m dropping my usual rants, writing nothing about me, prison, or the criminal justice system.  This one goes out to my friend whom I call “The Music Man.”  He and his family are facing something much more important and challenging than anything I have to deal with here.  Their young child is having surgery, fighting for his life.  By all accounts, they are meeting this adversity with courage, openness, and faith.  As a father I can only imagine how frightened they much be.   

I hope you read this Music Man and know that my heart goes with you in this difficult time.  We will say a prayer here at the chapel for you and your family.  Your strength is an inspiration to everyone.  In here it helps me get off the bunk and get going.  You are in my thoughts and prayers.