Keshia, 42

Keshia, 42

Meet Keshia…

If I only get the chance to be outside again, to get my freedom back, to be able to hug my kids,  I would never lose that part of my life again. I promise. 

Incarcerated:  5 years
Housed: Fluvanna Correctional Center – Troy, Virginia

I’ve been a nurse since 2004. I had two beautiful children. I was a hard working mother and the best mother I could be. I wanted to make them proud of me. I lived life trying to do everything right. I never thought for one second that I would have to live life without my kids. I miss being a mother. I have the best kids in the world, ones a mother could ever pray for! I love taking care of my kids. We were each other’s best friends. When I was outside my whole life was to work hard to become successful. To be the best mother my children could ask for. I realize the things I took for granted, memories that come to mind when I reminisce. They sometimes bring tears to my eyes. Being incarcerated makes me pray harder for myself and my children. I was so broken and so were they. I taught them to pray when all else fails. As a praying mother, I’m still a part of the outside through my children. I’m included in their life as if I never left. I’m now the grandmother of a beautiful baby girl. God has shown me that my kids would be awesome while I am gone. I am ;proud of them. Everything I taught them while I was on the outside would make them stronger and unbreakable with the unfairness of life. If I only get the chance to be outside again, to get my freedom back, to be able to hug my kids,  I would never lose that part of my life again. I promise.

 
Jeffrey, 65

Jeffrey, 65

Meet Jeffrey…

My desire for more of a life, for direction and meaning is undiminished. I’m living in the nest of the enemy and my fear is great, yet it only feeds my rage.

Incarcerated: 42 years
Housed: Stateville Correctional Center,Joliet, Illinois

I was in Cook County Jail fighting a triple murder. Beat one, convicted on one, I had one left and was facing the death penalty. I ran outta loot, my lawyer left. I was juggling to come up with some quick cash to attain proper representation and maintain my dame, Ada Marie and 18 month old little girl. When I would call I would say to her mama to put her on the phone.. She would make my day, listening to her explaining whatever it is she’s talking about. I got convicted, facing the death penalty. I had an emptiness inside me that couldn’t be filled. I was in an Abnormal Behavior Observation Unit (ABU)and was allowed to have visits. I was on one side of a concrete wall with a window with little steel holes to talk through. Not given chairs, we had to bend down to talk through the holes. We hear loud electronic gates which make a ton of noise. Opening and closing. Ada Marie has Pumpkin in her arms and the loud noise has Punkin shaking like she was out in the cold. I see her bottom lip trembling on the verge of tears, holding on to her mama tight. She put her face in her mother’s neck. The gate shuts with a loud bang, her little legs shaking. Ada Marie is telling her to say hi to daddy and I’m saying, “Hi Punkin’, don’t cry.”  She wouldn’t budge. Ada Marie puts her ear to the steel hole. She resisted wholeheartedly. “NO, MAMA, NO,” her feet kicking. Ada Marie held her head to the hole, and I roared like an 800 pound lion, “ARRRRRRRRR”. Her little feet stopped kicking, trembling, eyes watery, lip shaking, she looked through the glass and I roared again. Her pretty brown eyes got big, her lip stopped shaking and her little hand reached out to touch the glass. A sly cute smile began to take form, “Daddy – Mama look it’s Daddy!” At that moment, the empty hole inside me overflowed. The dark cloud was no longer. My desire for more of a life, for direction and meaning is undiminished. I’m living in the nest of the enemy and my fear is great, yet it only feeds my rage. I’m confident I’ll achieve my freedom, one kind or another.

Charles “Chuck”, 52

Charles “Chuck”, 52

Meet Chuck…

My department of corrections number doesn’t define me as a human being. My body is confined yet my mind is free. Unburdened by life’s chains. 

Incarcerated: 25 years
Housed: Plunsky Unit – Livingston, Texas

I view each day as a blessing, I hold onto my memories. I live life one day at a time. Never knowing what the next day has in store for me. I fret not over the past, my eyes firmly on the future goals, as I work towards a new life. A life I hope to get a second chance at some day. Reading brings my day some peace, a slight break from the constant reminder that I am sitting on death row. We have no TVs or tablets, yet. I am told we will receive tablets this August. I miss so many things about freedom – the outdoors, watersports, swimming, fishing, hunting, riding motorcycles, going on trips to suffice the traveler’s blood is in my veins. I paint, draw, blog and work to bring social awareness about the human rights violations in our world. I care about the environment, our planet, animal rights, the innocent, the weak, and those who have found themselves in life’s unfortunate circumstances I too reside in. My department of corrections number doesn’t define me as a human being. My body is confined yet my mind is free. Unburdened by life’s chains. 

 

Montreal, 52

Meet Montreal…

I got myself right with God, I help to steer the youth and everyone in the right direction. I tell them, no matter their past, they can change their futures.

Incarcerated: 23 years
Housed: Cummins Unit, Grady, Arkansas

I am doing a life without parole for murder. I went to Hall high school until the 11th grade. My father was a minister and my mom was a school teacher. I have one daughter who is 32 years old. I moved to Oklahoma in 1998 after I did five years in AOC. That’s where I caught this charge I’m on now and got a life sentence. I am doing my time here closer to my family. I got myself right with God, I help to steer the youth and everyone in the right direction. I tell them, no matter their past, they can change their futures. I do a lot of positive things with my time. I have three projects doing good at the moment. One is a published book called ORIGINAL PLAYER. My other projects include a co-ed magazine, and a book about the true heroes of the pandemic. I feel they will all do great if they get seen. I love my family, thank them for their support and I do what I do because they inspire me to do good. 

Michael, 55

Michael, 55

Meet Michael…

My journey to true self acceptance has indeed been crazy, humbling, and not by any means easy.

Incarcerated: 23 years

I was 28 before I came to recognize what happened to me as a child was wrong, a violation, a molestation. It was not violent by recall. I was groomed by a school social worker. It became an identity… imposed, but most importantly… not my choice and definitely not my fault.

I’m sure the epiphany was birthed from the years of chaos and fleeting situational happiness I had experienced. I had fashioned a mask that spoke of self-confidence, gregarious warmth, and a lively welcoming personality. Yet inside I was a wounded insecure man who had learned that my only value was in his physicality.  At 30, manifestation had become empty and meaningless, but I didn’t know anything else. I was in the throes of addiction and had no static history of being successful in any area of life save the mask of my familiarly unfamiliar sexuality. With little or no progress from the divinely sown seeds of my awakening to my unfamiliar true self, four years later I found myself with a 20-year-to-life sentence in California. 2,500 miles from my Wisconsin home. 

Twenty-two years later, my journey to true self acceptance has indeed been crazy, humbling, and not by any means easy. I believe on a God-ordained, this divine level was necessary for me to become the man I am today. It is not just about understanding me, but others as well. It’s my personal journey to empathy, learning to love myself in order to really love others.

Being an American of African descent in this penal system, the conversation about sexuality outside the “Norm”  or “Straight” is no conversation at all, unless it was to degrade, intimidate or torture. For years in this toxic, hyper-masculine environment I donned the mask of my youth, out of an abundance of fear. Not just level four penitentiary fear from stories about what they do to people like me in prison, but more so out of fear of a continuing history of not belonging, and not being accepted. I could probably get over the physical pain but what if they don’t like me? All too familiar.

I hid behind the mask of fear and self doubt, unworthiness, compounded with codependency, yet in that mess and darkness, a light shone through. A light that called me to faith. A living faith in Christ. One who declared to love me as I was. A lifeline.

My journey to empathy has not been conventional, if there is any convention to be found therein. Even in coming to faith there has been no miraculous instantaneous change, but gradual exhaustive change in perception. I will say  I was struggling to figure out who I was/am, many around me were telling my story for me, based on their perception of who I was. 

Targeted from 2007 as the only “gay guy” in my unit, a title I hadn’t even given myself. Gay yet had to live through, and have lived through… victoriously! It is through many self-help groups like IMPACT (Incarcerated Men Putting Away Childish Things), VOEG (Victim Offender Education Group) and A.C.T. (Acting with Compassion and Truth) that my intentions at the start of this journey were met with the power of Grace. There is a scripture in Proverbs that says, “Wisdom is the principal thing, therefore get wisdom, but in all you’re getting understanding.” Proverbs 4:7.

I now understand through a myriad of circumstances and horrible choices, that I stopped caring,  mostly for myself. I can honestly say through those divinely sown seeds all those years ago, empathy goes before me, without thought, fear or expectation. Today I do all I can to love GOD with all my heart, soul and strength, and love my neighbor as I love myself.

Osbun “OG Walt”, 78

Osbun “OG Walt”, 78

Meet OG Walt..

The older boys proudly embraced me into their group. They became family, like older brothers. They taught me street life.

Incarcerated: 27 years

As the oldest, I felt obligated to help my mother and grandmother whenever possible, so my mother awarded me a nickel for a treat at the corner store. I was dressed in short pants, a t-shirt, no shoes and no socks. I was suddenly surrounded by five older boys and one my age and size. None seem to have ever allowed a smile to touch the surface of their faces. They wore creased Levi’s, khakis and women’s solid color scarfs, stocking caps with steel choke chains hanging from their belts. Society’s rejects, outcasts and hoodlums.  

“Where are you from?” he said, looking me up and down.  

“I’m from 37th street,” I said, trying not to look him in the eye. 

 “You got any money?” 

“All I got is my nickel.” 

“You got to give that up.” 

“You ain’t getting my nickel. My mamma gave this to me.”

He grabbed me by the collar, cussing me, threatening me. My fists began landing punches in the boy’s face and head. He took off running. After the fight, an older boy said, “Get rid of that friendly-stupid smile, walk like you’re the king of the street and I better never catch you in short pants, without shoes and socks like a square-ass person.”  I still had my nickel, but the store had closed. The next morning, I was ready to spend my nickel, thinking that everything was all right, but the older boys were already waiting on me. They told me I had to continue fighting boys my age. My first three fights I’d attack before any introduction and catch my contender off guard.  In the fourth fight, the boy outweighed me and was taller. He charged me like a madman, then slipped and fell. The older boys proudly embraced me into their group. They became family, like older brothers. They taught me street life. I still had my nickel and my introduction complete.

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