At 3:50 this morning Lent began for me. During my devotional period I read Psalm 102. A verse jumped off the page:
“From heaven the Lord
gazed upon the earth, to hear the groaning of the prisoner….”
That verse has sustained me for much of the last five Lenten
seasons as I have dealt with my incarceration and the losses that flowed from
that. Where I am now in that spiritual
journey is a long way from where I began, as my life – on that sunny August
Monday – collapsed around me. Over and over
those first few days I asked myself why, why was this happening to me? The truth was, I put all that was happening
in motion years earlier when I strayed from the course set out for me. And, the decisions I made had
consequences. The problem was
consequences, I always assumed, bore a rational relationship to our
action. Embezzle and be arrested, you
deserve to make restitution, spend some small amount of prison time (maybe),
and endure a minimum amount of public exposure.
But, that wasn’t how it played out.
I was scared, angry, and lonely for longer than I care to
admit. I found myself in a foreign
world. Everything I thought I knew didn’t
make sense “inside”. Right and wrong
were blurred as both inmates and officers felt justified in behaving expediently.
There were a number of people who claimed to be my friends
who withdrew from me almost immediately after my arrest. A few came by the jail for visits. But, I soon realized they weren’t there to
lend support. I was an animal in a
cage. They looked, left, then told our
wide circle of acquaintances how I’d fallen.
I thought of Bob Dylan’s bitter “Positively Fourth Street” on more than
one occasion.
“You got a lot of
nerve
To say you are my
friend
When I was down
You just stood there grinning.”
Almost immediately, I knew my wife would leave me. I had resigned myself to that fate years
earlier. You know the feeling, when you
look at that someone and don’t see back what you crave, what you need. The divorce took its toll. I heard a minister remark one day that
nothing is more painful than rejection.
It was one of the purest truths I ever heard.
I built up scars.
Trials will do that to you. I lost
hope weekly and somehow found it with a letter, a visit, a story, or a simple
prayer. And I decided I wouldn’t let
this place, this experience, define me.
I survived perhaps the worst four months of my life going through DOC’s
Receiving center and landed here, a low custody facility with an overwhelming
need first for GED tutors and later college tutors.
It was as if God’s hand had directed my journey here. Slowly, Bible verses I had read dozens of
times at the start of my incarceration (in my prior life, I was “too busy” for
Bible study) began to make sense. I
understood Deuteronomy 8:2.
“You shall remember all the ways which the
Lord your God hassled you in the wilderness…that He might humble you, testing
you, to know what was in your heart….”
Five Lenten seasons.
Five years of preparation and reflection. Five years of waiting. For a man whose main attribute was
impatience, waiting has been a struggle.
My friend DC – no odder pair of friends may exist – told me once he felt
for me. How ironic, a man locked up
forty years felt sorry for me. “You know the world out there. You know what you could be doing. You know how the system plays and creates
different results. Every day must feel
like a month to you.” He was right.
Prison isn’t’ easy for anyone. And, I’ve learned no matter how heinous the
crime, with few exceptions, most people are redeemable. But that redemption won’t come from places
like this. Even at a low level facility,
prison is a dehumanizing experience.
There is nothing to be gained rehabilitatively by locking a man – or woman
– away. We as a society should stop
lying to ourselves about prison being about rehabilitation and re-entry to
society.
If we want to punish and break people and subject them to a Thunderdome
world of filth, violence, heartbreak, and hopelessness at least be honest and
say that’s what we believe. But, we won’t
say that because we’d have to admit this Judeo-Christian nation doesn’t give a
damn about the tenets of that theology and we’re no better than anyone else.
But, this is about Lent, and reflection, and
anticipation. As I fasted today I
realized there was much to be thankful for in this experience. For one, things could be much worse. My prison experience is not even comparable
to the experiences some of the men I know have endured. Nor is it on par with the problems so many
face around the world. I have a
wonderful support network – close family and friends and others who hold me up
in prayer. My ex and our sons are doing
well, very well in fact. My parents are
healthy and together – fifty eight years this May.
Me? In small ways day
in and day out I seem capable of touching the lives of men in here. This week, three more of my GED students
passed the exam and earned their diplomas.
I’ve been able to use my life experiences – my successes as well as my
failures – to help some younger men in here who never had a father. It’s funny, but many of these kids have
become like sons to me. They have
helped fill a void I miss so terribly.
I began this blog telling you I ask myself, who does God see
when He sees me. The answer, I’ve
concluded is simple. He sees one of His
children and in God’s eyes each child is precious, each child can be redeemed,
no matter how far off the path they wander.
If God could continue to love me, to hold me close even as I
drifted farther away, how could I do any less?
I don’t know who reads these postings and it doesn’t matter
if you knew the “Old Larry” versus the “New Larry”. I’ve learned one important lesson the past
five years, and it’s a “father” lesson – I will never give up hope in my sons,
in my life and in my future.
There is a lot I could write this week about prison. But, this isn’t the time. It’s Lent and it’s about anticipation,
reflection and waiting. I’m waiting on
Easter and Easter is hope.