The crazy part is, Iโm grateful for prison. It may sound insane or clichรฉ, but coming here saved my life.
There I was, sitting in a prison cell, staring at a dingy gray cement wall, trying to wrap my head around the fact that I was going to miss over a decade with everyone I love. All the lies I had told myself during my addiction came crashing down. There was no way to rationalize or minimize this momentโno more pretending that I was โonly hurting myselfโ or that I โwasnโt a real drug addict,โ despite the fact that at my worst, I stole from the people I loved most to feed my addiction.
At first, my sobriety was forced by circumstance, but with that came clarity. This was my rock bottom, and there was no denying it. Itโs funny how you take so many things for granted when youโre freeโlike choosing what to wear, deciding what to eat, or going to the store, the beach, or the mall on a whim. For the past eight years, Iโve worn nothing but prison blues, white, and gray. Iโve eaten whatever was served at meal times, unless I could afford something like rice bowls or oatmeal.
The crazy part is, Iโm grateful for prison. It may sound insane or clichรฉ, but coming here saved my life. Without it, I likely would have never stopped usingโI would have overdosed, or at best, Iโd still be lost in my addiction. My sober date is June 6, 2016, and since then, Iโve accomplished more positive things from inside these prison walls than I ever did when I was โfreeโ because I was a slave to my addiction. My worst days now are better than my best days then.
Iโve earned college degrees in business, history, and psychology. Iโve completed over 1,000 hours of self-help groups, and Iโve facilitated AA and NA groups as chairman. Iโve set goals, like saving money, and actually followed through (lol). Iโm trained as an alcohol and drug counselor, registered with CAADE, and I work as a peer support specialist here at San Quentin, acting as a liaison between medical/mental health staff and patients, helping improve my community.
The most exciting part is that Iโll be getting out of prison in four years. If I can achieve all these things while sober and inside prison, I canโt wait to see what I can do when Iโm free.
โDonโt Dreamโ
A poem by Alexย
There once was a kid whose name I wonโt mention,
Growing up fast, paying nobody attention.
Everybody made fun of this boy,
He never went outside, never had toys.
Didnโt have a lot of friends, but he did have a pen,
He wrote a little bit, then he wrote a bit again.
He would write every day, no matter what people say,
Other kids play, but he doesnโt, but anyway.
His favorite color was gray, and if you ask why,
He wouldnโt know how to explain, but he would try.
Put black ink on enough white pages,
You might think that it sounds outrageous,
But the truth is, the colors made a mixture,
And he used this to paint another picture.
Word after word, I became a whole binder,
He put the first page in a frame, a reminder.
Before I go, I gotta mess with your head:
Do you want to know what the first page said?
โDonโt dream, a dream is something that you wanna do,
Do what you want, the whole way through.โ