Sunday, November 29, 2015

Someone to Miss

Each hour of every day you miss someone.  Your wife and kids, parents, siblings, cousins, even the familiar face you saw every day when you stopped for a morning cup of coffee on the way to work.  It hurts to think about all the experiences, the potential memories, that you're missing behind bars.  Birthdays, anniversaries, ball games, recitals, snow days, sick days – in your mind you convince yourself that everything is special.  You also begin to believe that all those people you miss so much will start to forget about you as they go on with their lives.  As much as that hurts, it’s better than feeling nothing at all. 
  
Compared to many of my fellow inmates, I feel fortunate because I actually have people to miss.  They serve as something to hold onto, to keep my head above water when I feel like I'm drowning, helping me get through the tough days.  These special relationships also give me hope for when I get out, looking forward to rebuilding and making new memories.  I don’t know how I would make it without the support of those who love and miss me.

Unfortunately, my situation is not the norm.  Most of the people I have met inside are alone and forgotten.  It is heartbreaking to see them go day after day without making a phone call, sending or receiving a letter, having a visitor, and never having any money show up on their account to purchase items from the canteen.  It is easy to see how one could lose hope.  I would rather cry every day for those I long to see than have no one at all.

Friday, November 27, 2015

Really?


Welcome to another installment of “If You Don’t Laugh, You’re Gonna Cry,” alternatively known this week as “Has My Life Really Come to This?”  A group of us have shortened this lament to one word:  “Really?”  It’s our code to signify otherwise absurd situations that are commonplace behind bars, for instance:

  • Sitting at lunch debating the best way to sneak napkins out of the Chow Hall (Yes, Napkins!  Really!)
  • Getting to know guys with cool nicknames like Fats, Shorty, Wild Man, Main Man, Half-Baked, Thug, Little B, Big B, and Blank.  (Really?)
  • Waking up at 4 am to pee and having to wait in line!  (Really?)
  • Watching a blind man in a wheelchair get searched by the guards when leaving the Chow Hall.  (Really?)
  • Then seeing the blind man in the wheelchair nearly get in a fight with the guy who pushes his chair for hiding 12, count ‘em 12, milk cartons in the chair.  (Really?)
  • Sewing a secret pocket in your shorts to conceal condiment packets that are banned from the Chow Hall.  (Really?)
  • Not only having the TV relentlessly tuned to daily reruns of “Charmed,” but watching two guys fight over which tv witch is hotter.  (Really?)
  • Discovering from your neighbors’ conversations that the stories on Jerry Springer are totally legit.  (Really?)



That’s it for this week!  Back soon with more.  Really!

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Get Him a P-Number

Without being able to find humor in the face of adversity, a person can go crazy.  As you might expect, we have plenty of adversity in prison and therefore an abundance of laughter, too.  It helps us cope.  Often, the humor will be a result of a wry observation on prison life.  For example: 

1. We can’t buy pencils, because they can be made into a weapon, but we can buy razors!

2. The Dairy Drink we are sometimes offered in lieu of milk lists “Non-Dairy Creamer” as its #1 ingredient.

Both ridiculous, both true!

The second major source of comedy is what’s known behind bars as “That Boy Just Ain’t Right” or “Get him a P-Number”. (A P-Number is the ID given to inmates on the psychiatric unit.)  Characters who fall into these categories may not be intending any humor, but their peculiar comments and antics are entertaining.  The two main actors in our unit’s Theatre of the Absurd are my old Appalachian mountain buddy Billy Joe and a fellow known as Half-Baked. (He got that nickname after someone commented, “His Mama popped him out of the oven a little early.”)  The anecdotes I’m about to tell have become part of Unit Lore.  Now it only takes one keyword dropped into a conversation to set off the laughter.

Ailment

One morning, I pass Billy Joe in the hallway and note that he is looking particularly disheveled and wan.  Against my better judgment, I ask, “How ya doin’ Billy Joe?”  
    “Not so good, man,” he replies.  “I’m sicker than a Motherf_______.”
(Keep in mind that Billy Joe has his own sickness rating scale that is a little different from the one your doctor uses to rate your pain.  From least sick to most, the scale goes:  (1) not so good, (2) sick as a 3-legged dog, (3) sicker than a Mother______, and (4) cut down the pines (to make him a pine coffin).
    So I reply, “How so Billy?”
    “Well,” he says, “the doctor tells me I got 13 ailments.  Six major ones and eight more.”
    “You sure about that Billy?  6 and 8 is 14, not 13.”
    “Dayumm,” he sighs, “I’s getting’ sicker by the day.”

Choice:

Billy Joe walks into the tv room and announces:  “I’m a goin’ home boys!”
    “What you talkin’ about BJ?”
    “Well, they got new rules about Armed Career Criminals and it’s getting’ me out!”
    “You sure it applies to you, Billy?”
    “Hell yes!  It’s RADIOACTIVE!”
    “Say what?”
    Billy Joe stares at us as if we are stupid children and repeats, “Yeah, goin’ back in time, y’know?  Radioactive!”  He shakes his head and walks out, mumbling, “No use talkin’ to these idiots.”

Ghosts:

    Another evening in the tv room, Half-Baked leans over to ask his neighbor a question.  Those of us within earshot assume it will be a question about the tv show.  But no, that would make too much sense.  Once he sees that he has everybody’s attention, Half-Baked poses the following riddle:  “To earn your freedom, would you rather spend one week alone at Alcatraz or one week alone at a closed down Insane Asylum?”
    I chuckle lightly, assuming the others will, too, but to my surprise they fall deep in thought.  I offer up that all things being equal, I’d choose Alcatraz, because from there at least you can see the lights of San Francisco.  Everybody looks at me as if I'm crazy.  What about the ghosts haunting both locations?  The tortured souls seeking revenge?  As the only non-believer in evil spirits, I take a step back while the debate heats up.  One guy eventually decides he would rather serve eight years here than spend even one night with the ghosts.  Finally, however, Half-Baked tops them all.  His face grows serious as he prepares to drop some knowledge.  In a quiet, solemn tone he explains, “Think about it guys.  Alcatraz got the ghosts of gangsters, rapists and murderers.  An insane asylum’s got women.  So you could be bangin’ some hot ghost-chicks, not fightin’ for your life!  Easy choice!”  At that, Half-Baked leans back with a satisfied look on his face.  I'm waiting for the laughter.  It does not come.  As I walk away, though, I hear the conversation turn to what it would be like to have sex with a ghost. 
    I wish I was making this up.  As odd or funny as these stories may be, they are so commonplace here that no one ever doubts their veracity.  I’m just thankful for the free comedy!

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Crazy is the New Normal


In prison you quickly realize that your definition of normal needs an adjustment.  Allow me to illustrate.  Start off by establishing in your mind a “Sanity Scale” with a range of 1 through 10.  1 is a well-adjusted, self-actualized person, 5 is someone slightly off-kilter, and 10 is a totally batshit crazy individual.  This is not an even distribution, but your typical bell curve with a few 1’s and 10s on the end.  Everyone would like to believe they are a 1, but most of us are more 2.5-3.  So, as with any good measuring tool, we must properly calibrate it.  To do this, we will consider one of the more – if not the most – popular conspiracy theories heard in prison:  the true cause of the 9/11 attacks.   

You will not have to look hard to find a person who will tell you that the U.S. orchestrated the attacks.  Maybe outside prison, that person would be considered a 5 on the Sanity Scale.  Depending on how outlandish the rhetoric, he might even approach a 10.  In the Bizarro World of federal prison, this theory would not rate above a 2, because most inmates would agree with it.  I have given up debating the topic.  After all, nothing can change the mind of a zealot.  Unfortunately (or fortunately, if you consider the entertainment value), 9/11 plots are only run of the mill conspiracy plots in prison.  Each of the following theories merits at least a 5 on the Sanity Scale in my opinion, but in here they barely move the needle.   

In no particular order, here’s the rest of the Top 9 Most Popular Conspiracy Theories in prison:

1. During Hurricane Katrina, the U.S. government blew the levees on purpose in order to wipe out the poor neighborhoods and make New Orleans a “white city”.

2. The BP oil spill was a government plot, too.  The spill could have been capped immediately, but was not, so the U.S. could control the world’s oil supply (how this makes sense, I can’t explain).

3. The Illuminati run the world.  For example, the Pope (chief of Illuminati) told John Boehner to step down or he would be eliminated.

4. The flu shot given in prison contains a microscopic tracking device, because Big Brother is always watching.

5. The U.S. government creates and tests new diseases on prisoners, in order to find the best way to eliminate all black people.

6. The food in prison is doped for many reasons, but the two main ones are estrogen (to make us all gay) and a secret testosterone-killing agent to make us weak.

7. The recent Supreme Court Gay Marriage ruling is a plot to “gayify” America.

8. The light towers give off signals that weaken people in order to control the masses.

These theories are widely accepted truths in prison, which leads me to ask, “Are the mentally unstable more likely to end up in prison or does being in prison make you mentally unstable?”  Which then leads to the bigger issue of whether or not inmates are being given the help they need to reenter society.  From this side of the wall, the view is bleak.  Mental illness, for the most part, goes untreated.  Unless you are aware enough to go ask for help, treatment is just a few pills, and the people who need help the most don’t have it together enough to seek help.  Something needs to be done.  I don’t have an answer, but at least now I know there’s a problem and can work on being part of the solution.

Monday, November 2, 2015

Where Can I Get Me One of Them Yamahas?


Religion in prison is not just a spiritual salve.  For many inmates it offers immediate material benefits if you can play the hustle.  It’s not just about faith, strength, brotherhood or forgiveness of sins.  It’s about getting one over on The Man.  Which plays into an important rule of prison life:  If you can get something more than what is standard issue, you must take it.  Even if you don’t need it or want it, you take it solely because you can get away with it, thus sticking it to the administration, AKA The Man.  This is why a guy who is always complaining that it’s too hot, who wears shorts in the dead of winter and walks barefoot on the yard once the temperature hits 50 degrees also has four blankets.  Is he supposed to have four blankets? No.  Does he need four blankets or ever use them?  Of course not.  Why then does he worry over these blankets, hiding them during shakedowns and constantly fretting that they might be confiscated?  Because they represent his victory over The Man.  Other guys hold onto their jackets past the turn-in date, hoard plastic utensils swiped from the chow hall, or pack a shoebox full of condiment packets they will never use.  You’re not supposed to have these things, so having them is a win.

How do these scams relate to religion?  The key is that various religious traditions come with privileges.  For instance, if you are Jewish, you can get kosher food daily and order special meals at Passover.  I have never seen such a clamoring for Matzo!  Approaching Passover, interest in conversion to Judaism really picks up.  One guy I overheard say, “Instead of converting, where can I get one of them Yamahas?”  As if wearing a yarmulke alone would be enough to qualify him for a Jewish diet.

If you’re not into kosher food, is it possible you may have Native American heritage?  If so, you can wear a brightly colored headband.  But even better, you can participate in sweat lodge ceremonies that include smoking a ceremonial pipe filled with real tobacco!  Now that smoking is banned in all Bureau of Prisons facilities, an amazing number of prisoners with heavy tobacco habits have discovered Native American ancestors.

Not a smoker?  Perhaps Islam will appeal.  Muslims are entitled to a prayer rug, prayer oils, and special bag lunches of food each night during Ramadan to break their daily fasts.  Prayer rugs are multi-purpose, of course, and come in handy to keep your feet warm in the morning.  As you might imagine, school cafeteria-quality linoleum tiles get cold, and no self-respecting prisoner would ever allow his bare feet to touch the floor.  As for the prayer oils, they work in a pinch as a substitute cologne when a loved one comes to visit.  Just splash on a little prayer oil, and you’re ready to see your wife or girlfriend (hopefully not at the same time, if you happen to have both – one guy did that and ended up with neither).

And then there is Rastafarianism, which comes with one major perk, arguably the best of all, the Rasta Crown.  This is a black knit skullcap with yellow, green and red stripes that is allowed to be worn in places where everyone else must remove their hats, such as the chow hall, the library, and medical.  Though this privilege also applies to the Jewish yarmulke and Muslim Kufi, the Crown wins on style points (think Bob Marley vs. your local rabbi for who looks coolest).  Plus, the Crown is not easily acquired.  The Rastafarians are very discerning at weeding out uncommitted wannabees.

I understand that the whole idea of adopting a religion just to garner a few privileges seems hypocritical.  But prison is a unique culture with mores that are different from the outside world's.  It all comes back to the Scam The Man mentality.  Get yours, even if and especially if The Man doesn’t want you to have it.  While I don’t condone thinking this way, particularly in regards to religion, I’ve come to appreciate it.  Now I just have to figure out the best way to tell the family about my new name:  Rudeboy Mohammed “Old Bear” Ibromowitz.

Saturday, October 24, 2015

The Rules of the Game


I’m sure you’ve heard the old saying, “You learn something new every day?”  Despite the routine of the prison experience, I’ve discovered that this saying is more true here than anywhere else I’ve lived.  And what you learn in prison is likely to fall into a category along the lines of “I Couldn’t Make this Stuff Up.”  For instance, allow me to introduce one of my neighbors, Billy Joe.  An Appalachian mountain man in his late 60s, Billy Joe could easily be the model for half a dozen characters from the tv show Justified.  He has spent most of his adult life as a guest of the federal or state prison systems.  I’d stayed clear of him and couldn’t imagine that he might be able to share anything interesting from his limited experience of life on the outside.  This all changed one day when he sat down opposite me and commanded me to listen up.  Usually something of a goofball, his seriousness at this moment caught me off guard.  I put down my book, thinking that maybe I had misjudged Billy Joe, and readying myself for some homespun mountain wisdom.

Satisfied that he had my attention, Billy Joe opened with, “Listen up city boy, I’s about to learn you somethin’ good.”  My mind raced, what could it be?  Some pearl of wisdom about life in prison?  How to deal with the tedium? The boredom?  The loneliness?  Possibly a cautionary tale so I wouldn’t end up a lifer like him?  No, Billy Joe had more important fish to fry.  He was ready to share an ultimate, hard won secret, which he labeled “My Rules for Runnin’ Whores.”  This being your lucky day, allow me to pass along this knowledge to you, pretty much verbatim as he said it:

Rule One:  One, two, three, or four whores is good, but five are too many.  Just trust Billy Joe, he said, five are hard to manage.  Plus, they don’t all fit in a sports car.

Rule Two:  Never keep your guns, dope, money, and women in the same place.  If you get busted, you lose everything and your charges will be worse.  Plus, you can never trust a woman not to steal your dope and guns.

Rule Three:  Don’t ever hit your women.  It’s much better to control them with dope.  (Apparently, on the Pimp Humanity Scale, hitting is less advisable than enabling an addiction to a deadly drug such as meth, crack or heroin). 

At this point, Billy Joe paused, and I thought he was finished.  But he had more wisdom to impart, boy did he have more.  He had to think about whether I could be trusted with his final and most important rule.  As a newbie to prison life and a city boy, he wasn’t sure I was ready.  He took a deep breath, thought things over.  Then made a decision.  The theme song from Shaft played in my head as I prepared myself for his gift of the Holy Grail of Appalachian Pimpin’, which I here quote:

Rule Four:  “Get a midget, a sexy midget.  Guys will pay anything for a midget.”

This was it.  No explanation needed.  He stopped, as if he had imparted a known law of the universe.  Gravity, Inertia, Entropy, and Midget Prostitutes.  Period.  Lesson over.  You can thank me later.  Billy Joe wore a satisfied smile on his grizzled face.  He stood up and walked away without another word.  Class Dismissed!

Friday, October 16, 2015

The Hardest Part

      I have gotten used to people wanting to talk about “what is the hardest part of being locked up?”  If we take away the most obvious – missing your family and friends horribly – I think my answer often surprises people.  Not that it doesn’t make sense, it’s just something about which most people don’t think.  My informal polling of those who have written, visited, and called has provided the top three contenders for perceived hardest part of being locked up:

1) A forced schedule – not being able to do what you want when you want
2) The people – the common view that convicts are bad people
3) The food – prison food, ‘nuff said.

Let’s take a look at these and I will tell you why each is not as bad as you might think.

      A Forced Schedule.  In jail, you are told when to eat, when to exercise, when to shower, when to do your laundry, the list goes on and on.  While this can be annoying, it does add structure to your day.  It helps you avoid the trap of sitting on your bunk all day wallowing in self-pity.  Do I miss the impromptu trip to Starbucks or the day of meandering errands around town?  Of course, but the imposed schedule is not the hardest part about being locked up.

     Okay, so if not the enforced schedule, it must be the People, right?  Again, I disagree.  Most of the men I have met in jail are just normal guys who made a mistake.  Often they did nothing that many others don’t do, except get caught.  The majority of convicts want to stay out of trouble, serve their time, and rebuild their lives, even those convicted of more serious crimes.  Do you have your hardened criminals, your unstable recidivists, your outright sociopaths?  Yes, but they are the minority and can generally be avoided.  I found that the people may be different from what you are used to, but people are people and you can make friends anywhere.

     That leaves us with the Food.  I am not going to lie to you, we are not talking fine dining.  In fact, you would be hard pressed to even compare it to Denny’s.  Some of the meals served are truly disgusting – mystery meat covered in mystery sauce, with a side of soggy mystery vegetables.  However, at least every other day, one of the meals will actually be tasty, palatable enough to keep you going until another good one comes along.  Surprisingly, no matter how awful you think something is, someone else will like it.  You can enter the world of Jailhouse Barter and double up on the meals you like in exchange for those you don’t.  You learn to live with, and at times even appreciate, the food.  So if it’s not the Schedule, the People, or the deadly un-gourmet Meals, what is the hardest part of being locked up?

     To answer the question, I want you to think about something.  On average, how many times per day do you think you have physical contact with another person?  From something as brief as a pat on the back, to a hug, a cuddle, a kiss…anything?  10?  20?  30?  I know my number on the outside would have been pretty high.  I hugged and wrestled and and snuggled quite a bit with my wife and kids.  Now try to go a whole day without coming into physical contact with anyone, not even your pets.  Imagine doing that every day for a week, or a month, a year, 5 years.  No one to hug when feeling down or to celebrate a happy moment, to roughhouse, to encourage – nothing!  That is the hardest part.  The deprivation of touch, the lack of the most basic human instinct of physical companionship.  Simply put:  It sucks and it’s lonely!