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Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Waiting

The Lenten season began this morning.  More traditionally observed by Catholics, since my incarceration I have tried to use Lent as a day of fasting and reflection each week.  I spend time trying to figure out what I am called to do.  Who, I ask, does God see when He sees me?  Lent, I’ve come to appreciate, is a time of reflection, confession, and anticipation.  Lent gives way to Easter and in Easter I find hope.

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.

 

14 comments:

  1. you are a fantastic writer,I plan to read more of your blog. I too have talent with words,I lack discipline. I hope you are free soon.

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  2. There is some portion of prison that helps people to re-enter society - but prison is equally about PUNISHMENT. The fact that you are blogging tells me that you have it better than AT LEAST 1/3 of the world's population who committed no crime - yet you still complain.

    I've asked several random people what they think it would be like to be locked in prison - all more or less agree....loss of freedom, small cramped living conditions, lack of free time, un clean living conditions, great chance of being assaulted or raped and so forth...there is a strong consensus what prison is like, even at low level security. In other words, there are no surprises.

    To me, then, the answer is quite simple - if you already KNOW prison is that bad, don't do something that will get you to visit. And for a very select few, I do feel sorry for - but an already well to do white male who simply couldn't control his animal - not so much - especially after you had already been disbarred from stealing years before.

    Perhaps you should have spent a couple years in prison the first go around and that would have stopped you from stealing $2 million from your last employer. Hopefully this time you finally learned your lesson.

    I'm sure it does your heart well to crusade against the "evil prison system" and terrible right wing politics in Virginia. But here's the bottom line - when you break the law (for years in your case) you are putting your freedom and life in somebody elses hands - don't bellyache, you enjoyed your Vegas trips - have some accountability and suffer in silence.

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  3. The punishment must fit the crime. 15 years is more than some murderers and child pornagraphers get!

    His ex also enjoyed the Vegas trips and other perks yet she is not in jail!

    Based on his blog postings, I believe he has learned his lesson and has become a better man.

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  4. You are trying to rationalize a situation based on another situation - every set of events are uniqu period - our system seeks to punish based on the unique circumstances. He stole many years ago got off with a slap on the wrist. He stole for many years from his employer, then he got 15 years. Tough? Yes, but that's what happens when you break the law - don't belly ache and say well child pornographers (some get 50 or more years - again UNIQUE circumstances) get more - the fact is you break the law, you deal with it. And when an inmate is crying about how bad the system is and this wo-is-me crap - I seriously question accountability.

    Maybe is ex is guilty - I don't know - but she wasn't charged. Again, more belly aching about the sytem. You are probably a con yourself.

    Get over it - belly aching and rationalizing shows no accountability - show some accountability - suffer in silence.

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  5. You didn't like what I wrote so that makes me a con? Not even close!!

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  6. I fail to see how articulately describing the circumstance he is in and how he is learning from his mistakes qualifies as bellyaching. What I see is someone taking accountability, doing their time, trying to help others along the way but also being intelligent enough to show the general public from the inside out where the system is failing those he is trying to help. And maybe if the right person reads his accounts of what it's like to be inside, it just might be a deterrent to them to not take the same road in life and to make better choices. Write on Larry...your thoughts are interesting to read and are also being shared with others on the inside, passed around and making an impact. ~Chesapeake, VA

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  7. Half of the cons want to go on some crusade against the evil system. The evil jail system. The evil republicans who eliminate parole. The list goes on and on…blah blah blah. Here are some facts – the general public knows prison sucks. We assume prisoners aren’t safe, they get raped and so forth. The rule is simple – don’t do something so stupid to get put there. For folks living in poverty and many minorities, I almost empathize with them because they are at a disadvantage. Not Larry. Larry had every advantage afforded to a while male. Income wise, he was better than 98% of Americans. That wasn’t enough. Even more, he stole before and got away with a slap on the wrist. He proved back then why there shouldn’t be parole – once a con, always a con. Describing the evil system that’s so mean is just bellyaching – why? We KNOW it’s bad….Larry stole, got away with it, stole again. He can write whatever he wants, but he is getting what he deserves….and that IS the bottom line.

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  8. I've read several times where he has acknowledged that very statement...getting what he deserves. The bottom line IS you are pissed that an inmate has access to the internet and has a voice from the inside where you would have him locked away and the key thrown away...are we sure someone is not posting for him? I'm not judge nor interpreter so I don't presume to tell the world what or how another man thinks; however, the State with which you entrust the doling out of the perfect punishment "one for all and all for one" has seen fit to entrust students into his tutelage and him into a lower security level facility that apparently warrants internet acdess so maybe you should complain to your governor. Or better yet, how about letting your governor know that just because his balance sheet has fooled the sheep on the outside, there are intelligent ones he's keeping on the inside that are smart enough to let the taxpayers know exactly how their taxes are NOT being spent. Yes, he screwed up more than once...fact is, we are all a phone call away from being in exactly the same situation...depends on who the judge believes...the accuser or the accused. At least he has the courage to stand up and say yes, this is what I did and I'm paying for it...but while I'm here - you people should know a few things.....most everyone else on the inside is innocent. *shrug*

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  9. First off, we are not all a phone call away from being in that same situation - to say that is to say we all live the life of a felon - maybe you and the people you know do; however, I do not.

    I like how you retort about me being mad about him having internet. I'm not mad, but the reality is Larry has it better than most of the people in the world and he still wants to whine...and you seemingly agree. I'm sorry but a two time felon doesn't deserve to have it better than most of the world.

    My issue is this. Yes, he admits, many times what he did is wrong....but he ALWAYS follows it with how bad the prison system is. Attention - I don't care how bad it is nor does anybody else. As I have said many times, I assume it's a shithole. The system already spends too much money on housing convicts. The system is only partially (and I argue a VERY SMALL portion )about rehabilitation - they do offer education and other programs. I want to know they are being punished - and while God forgives, Larry seems to forget that GOd and punish as well.

    Don't bellyache about a system when you have it better than most in the world - especially when you are the one that got you there and you knew what it was like.

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  10. And by the way - you can quack all you want about the evil system and how we should rehab folks to make yourself feel better...but here is another fact...

    Look at the crime rates in Singapore and other countries with a bit more extreme punishment. They take a cane to your ass and extract flesh. They have some of the lowest crime rates in the world. Save your philosophic BS for somebody else. Perhaps if Larry had lost some flesh off his ass the first go around when he stole, he wouldn't have done it again.

    SO you have it wrong - the system needs to be more brutal and that will help deter people...not make it club med. Want to help others? Don't whine about how bad the system is - but perhaps blog about your rape encounters - because that's what will help deter folks.

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  11. Larry does NOT have access to the internet. He handwrites all of his blogs and sends them to a relative for posting!

    "Negative" Anonymous - not sure who you are, but am curious as to why you read this blog?

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  12. You're quite judgmental & opinionated about others...me...Larry. Your ego sends you back to an April forum to see if anyone cares what you think. You are incorrect in several assessments. I do not quack but I do state my opinion as do you and as you are entitled to, without being insulted I might add. Your issue as you state, is just that...YOUR issue. That doesn't give you the right to tell another that they are wrong for what THEIR issues are. Larry, you, me - we all have our own path to walk. He is walking his and being berated for it...by some. I am walking mine and chuckling and how important it seems to be for another human to attempt to reason me out of my own belief. And if for one second you don't think you are a phone call away from the same or similar fate.....(i do not live the life of a felon by the way...i am a productive and somewhat intelligent contributor to society)....let someone make a call to the police, accuse you of some crime or other, let the system assume you are guilty rather than innocent (and i am not comparing Larry here to this because he admitted guilt), then let the system decide your fate or offer you a plea bargain for a lesser fate....ultimately, yes, it is up to a judge and/or jury to believe that you are telling the truth...just what if they got it wrong? Anyone can accuse you and darlin' with your emotions so visibly on the surface, I'm betting you piss a lot of people off. Suffer in silence? How about "walk a mile in another man's shoes"...."let he who is without sin cast the first stone"....how about any of those before you decide that your thought process is the only one that matters. Or come back tomorrow and get your ego fix...maybe you will only succeed in getting Larry more publicity which ironically is only going to piss you off since you want him to suffer in silence.

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  13. I still don't get how we are all one phone call away from the same fate - that is a VERY delusional and paranoid way to live life.

    Make Larry famous? Do you think he's the only con that complains about the penal system? Please.

    Accountability is a two part process. Coming to grips with the crime and punishment. Saying yea I did it, but I really don't deserve this rough treatment is not exactly coming to grips with accountability. And I love how certain Christians cling to select bible versse of the bible - I could quote Exodus 22:2 that basically says it's OK to kill a thief. Cling to the scripture that makes you feel warm and fuzzy though....

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  14. Wrong again hoss, I despise Christianity and any organized religion but I don't begrudge anyone their faith of choice...goes back to each person walking their own path. You can let them do it without throwing rocks at them along the way.
    If you don't get it yet, I'll simplify and this has nothing whatsoever to do with Larry so sorry Larry for hijacking your blog...say I didn't like you for whatever reason and I accused you (to a magistrate) of something horrible. If I appear more credible than you, then the burden of proof of innocence really falls on you and your attorney, I don't care what they say about innocent until proven guilty. Now since prosecutors receive their promotions based on convictions and many defense attorneys are former prosecutors, well most of them are all in bed together anyway (business-wise, not literally), a sweet deal could be made for you if you only plead to this instead of that; otherwise you could be facing "insert worst case scenario here". The State wins, the judge wins, the prosecutor wins and the attorney, well he got something out of it whether you paid him or the taxpayers paid him. The taxpayers lose and so does the individual. What Larry is saying and what a lot of us see has nothing whatsoever to do with the punishment for the crime. It is the system itself. It is a money-maker for the State and it starts with one accusation. We're not in Singapore and it doesn't and never will work that way here. They actually have it right...punish offenses. Here, it's the rich get richer and when you have a first hand account of it and still wish to remain naive, that is your path to walk. And that my friend is why I say I see no bellyaching going on here...just an intelligent human who did a dumb thing twice, telling it like it is while doing the time he was sentenced to by "our" system.

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