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I was born inside a womenโ€™s prison in California. My mother was incarcerated, and I didnโ€™t meet her until I was five years old.

Before that, I was raised in Richmond by my God mom, the only mother that I knew at the time. So when I was taken from her and handed over to a woman that I didnโ€™t recognize, I remember crying, confused, feeling like I was being abandoned and given away at the same time.
Not long after, my mom went back to prison again. I ended up bouncing from place to place with my siblings, surrounded by violence, drugs, and instability. That became my normal. I didnโ€™t know anything different. By the time I was 12, I was already using drugs, just trying to fit into the world that I thought I belonged in.

My father was always close, but never really there. He lived around the corner, and I knew exactly where to find him, on the same corner of the same block that he sold drugs on all of my life and before. I used to go and stand by him, surrounded by drug addicts, just hoping for a moment of attention. I remember one time I told him it was my birthday, not because it was, I was lying, I just wanted him to show me some kind of love. He handed me a dollar and went back to what he was doing. I stood there smiling anyway.

Those moments stayed with me.

I made a lot of bad decisions growing up, and eventually, those choices led me here. But prison didnโ€™t just take from me, it also forced me to look at myself, my past, the pain I caused, and the pain I carried for so long.

Today, Iโ€™m a childrenโ€™s book author. Iโ€™ve published three books, with more on the way. I facilitate self-help groups and try to mentor others, especially young people, because I know what it feels like to grow up without direction, without guidance, and searching for something you donโ€™t even understand yet.
When I speak to kids, I tell them:

โ€œI am living your future if you continue living my past.โ€

Because I am.

My story started in pain, confusion, and survival. But itโ€™s not ending there. Now, Iโ€™m using everything Iโ€™ve been through to build something different, not just for me, but for anyone who sees themselves in my story.

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