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The hallway felt colder somehow, less enchanted. She carried the baby monitor with her, its plastic warm from her grip. Her husband had gone to bed hours ago, exhausted from work. She understood his fatigue but missed the early days when they'd both been home, taking turns with the baby, discovering their new reality together.
"Laws are for people without the means to transcend them."
Her body was tired—bone-deep exhausted in the way that only new mothers understand—but her mind was still half in the nursery, hovering protectively over the crib. As sleep began to claim her, Lulu's last conscious thought was of gratitude—for the perfect child sleeping down the hall, for the husband breathing beside her, for the home that held them all safely within its walls. Everything that mattered in her world was here, protected, secure.
Clarissa's hands shook so badly she had to try three times to fit the key into the ignition. Annie's cries from the back seat had escalated to a full-throated wail that matched the storm brewing inside her chest. The birth certificate lay on the passenger seat where she'd tossed it, the manila envelope splayed open like a wound. Forgery. The word repeated in her mind with each beat of her heart. Not a clerical error or a bureaucratic mishap, but a deliberate deception crafted by someone—most likely her own mother. Clarissa drew in a deep breath, trying to steady herself as she reached for her phone—one more avenue to explore before confronting LaToya directly. "Shh, Annie, please," she pleaded, twisting in her seat to look at her daughter. Annie's face had flushed a deep red, tiny fists batting at the air as if fighting invisible demons. "I know, baby. I know. Everything feels wrong to me, too." She performed a quick Google search, fingers tapping impatiently against the steering wheel as the results loaded. Memphis General Hospital. Main switchboard. The number glowed on her screen like a lifeline. She pressed the call button, then engaged the car's Bluetooth system. Annie's cries competed with the ringing phone, creating a chaotic soundtrack to her racing thoughts. "Memphis General Hospital, how may I direct your call?" A woman's crisp voice emerged from the car speakers. "Records department, please," Clarissa said, then added, "Birth records, specifically." "One moment." Music filled the car—a tinny rendition of something classical, interrupted periodically by a recorded voice assuring her that her call was important. Clarissa's leg bounced against the floor mat, a nervous habit she'd never been able to break. She reached into the back seat, finding Annie's tiny hand with her fingers. The baby grasped her index finger tightly, her cries subsiding slightly at the contact. "It's going to be okay," Clarissa whispered, unsure if she was reassuring Annie or herself. "We'll figure this out." The hold music had cycled through three complete iterations when Annie's fussing escalated again. Clarissa unbuckled her seatbelt and climbed awkwardly into the back seat, contorting her body in the small space. She offered the baby her pinky finger to suck on—a temporary pacifier until she could find the real one buried somewhere in the diaper bag. "Birth Records, this is Administrator Grayson." A man's voice suddenly cut through Annie's whimpers, startling them both. Clarissa scrambled back to the driver's seat, breathless from the quick movement. "Yes, hello. My name is Clarissa Jones. I'm trying to verify my birth records from February 16th, 1993." She could hear the clicking of computer keys in the background as the administrator responded, "Give me just a moment to access that time period. Our records from the nineties were digitized about five years ago, so this shouldn't take long." More clicking followed. Clarissa found herself holding her breath, the air trapped in her lungs like the truth trapped in her past. Annie had quieted temporarily, distracted by a toy attached to her car seat. "Jones, you said? Clarissa Jones?" the administrator confirmed. "Yes. February 16th, 1993." Her voice sounded strange to her own ears, too high and tight. The clicking stopped. "I'm sorry, Ms. Jones, but I don't show any record of your birth at Memphis General during that time period. I've checked a month in either direction as well, in case there was a dating error." Clarissa closed her eyes, the final hope she'd been clinging to dissolving like sugar in hot water. "Could the records have been lost during digitization? Or misfiled somehow?" "It's extremely unlikely," the administrator replied, his professional tone softened with what might have been sympathy. "The digitization process was thorough, with multiple quality checks. If you were born at Memphis General during that period, there would be a record. We've even kept the original paper records in storage as backup." "I see." Clarissa's voice sounded hollow, disconnected from the turmoil churning inside her. "Was there anything else I could help you with today?" "No. Thank you for checking." She ended the call before he could respond, her finger jabbing at the screen with unnecessary force. The car interior fell silent except for Annie's soft babbling and the persistent tick of the hazard lights Clarissa hadn't realized she'd activated. She stared straight ahead, not seeing the parking lot, the county records building, or the people moving between them. Instead, she saw her mother's face when she'd handed over the birth certificate—the forced casualness, the way her eyes had never quite met Clarissa's. She saw the empty spaces on the walls where baby pictures should have been. She saw Jessica's face in that high school hallway years ago, a mirror image staring back at her with identical blue eyes and the same crescent-shaped birthmark behind her ear. Slowly, Clarissa turned to look at Annie in the rear-view mirror. Her daughter had settled, fascinated by the toy dangling from the handle of her car seat. Those same blue eyes. That same wavy hair was beginning to sprout on her tiny head. And on the left side, behind her ear, the same crescent birthmark—only on the opposite side from Clarissa's own. "We deserve to know," she whispered, meeting her reflection's gaze in the mirror. The face that looked back at her was no longer confused or desperate but hardened with resolve. "No more lies. No more running." She started the engine properly this time, her hands steady as she shifted into drive. She knew where she needed to go. LaToya had spent twenty-three years constructing an elaborate fiction, six of those years literally running from the truth. But that ended today. For Annie's sake. For her own sake. And perhaps even for Jessica's. As she pulled out of the parking lot, Clarissa remembered the first time she'd seen Jessica in that high school hallway. The shock of recognition had rippled through her body like an electrical current, setting off alarms she'd been too young to understand fully. Now those same alarms blared with new urgency and purpose. Whatever the truth was—however painful or complicated—she would face it head-on. She checked Annie once more in the rear-view mirror, drawing strength from her daughter's innocent gaze, then turned the car toward her parents’ house.
~~~~
Warning: This book contains baby kidnapping scenes
You choose, but the scene to say a second child Ranks 10 in my opinion...
In the Prologue, readers are immediately confronted with a mother and father who has just settled in for a night's sleep, with a baby monitor nearby so that they could hear if their new baby cries...
Instead other sounds and smells come racing into their bedroom... The house is on fire and they cannot get out of their bedroom door. They get out through their room's window... The mother carries the baby monitor in her hands as she gets out and then screams to the firemen that there is a child in the house, pointing out her room...
The baby monitor never picks up anything during that long night..
As often is the case with Prologues, you will be left at the point where the prologue ends and the book is broken down into three parts and epilogue... One hint, there are name changes, so be on the alert...
Nothing in her demeanor suggested the weight of what she'd done, the lives she'd shattered by taking Ellie. The ordinariness of her actions made my blood simmer with quiet rage.
I know, I know, this type of story is very hard to read. You will, however, be amazed in the twists and turns that the author presents to us to begin to potentially carve out the answer to the mystery... Actually, there are two kidnappings many years apart. The second is when Eva Rae Thomas, FBI, becomes involved and represents the major part of the book... beginning at Chapter 1... Thomas' daughter's new baby has been kidnapped. And they have on tape who had picked her up, as a nurse, and succeeded in walking out of the hospital! Thus that investigation begins!
I shot Matt a grateful glance. He knew when to smooth my rough edges, especially when dealing with other agencies. My personal stake in this case was clouding my professional judgment, and we both knew it.
That's how you might miss the extraordinary scenes that begin in Part I. Your notice will be drawn by the word "Then" and will take you into another subplot that runs parallel with the second kidnapping...
"You're a cop," she hissed, the words carrying the weight of the ultimate prison betrayal. She slid away from me on the bench, putting distance between us. "You’re a disgusting pig."
Within the first chapter you will see the FBI grandmother decide to get herself placed in the women's prison. Their investigation had shown that the woman who kidnapped her granddaughter has a sister in prison. Eva's plan is to get close to that sister and try to discover what she can about the kidnapping... But there was not enough time and she was attacked by the inmates!
Pinewood Heights had been transformed for Clarissa. It was no longer just the town she'd fled; it was now a map of deception and lost possibilities, of lives that should have intersected but were kept deliberately apart. Eight blocks had never seemed so vast a distance.
Folks, this book is so complex with twists and turns that it is not easy to share much without giving the storyline away... I do want to highlight with just a comment that a favorite character for me was Clarissa who was the first child kidnapped. Her entire life was being raised in lies, lies, lies... Her story does not end like the second baby kidnapped... The author chose to merely close out what happened to Clarissa. For me, it wasn't enough--but then, as we all have begun to realize when somebody around us lies about about anything and everything, you can be sure that somebody is going to be either hurt or dead soon. Are we learning anything about how lying can change each person's life drastically? This one story will reveal so much!
Twenty-three years of living someone else's version of her life, of carrying questions she hadn't even known to ask, crashed over her in waves.
Finally, I was holding my breath as Eva Rae promises to find her granddaughter and then see the thrilling action that takes readers into a final totally unbelievable airplane scene that I would rank, itself, as a 10! Each character that is in that scene is so finely written and merged into paragraph after paragraph that readers feel as if they are watching what each character is doing while ensuring that they perform as necessary to get everybody landed and home alive! An outstanding climatic ending to a unbelievably shocking tale of what happens when selfish people choose to act for their own gratification without thought of others...
"But you have no right to take my granddaughter from her mother." "An eye for an eye, Agent Thomas," he replied, cold satisfaction settling over his features. "You took my family, so I took yours." His finger caressed the trigger of his gun almost lovingly. The blood loss was making it increasingly difficult to think clearly. My arm trembled slightly with the effort of holding my weapon steady, and a chill that had nothing to do with the desert night began spreading through my limbs. If I passed out now, Ellie would be gone forever. Christine would never see her daughter again. I had one card left to play. "Take me instead," I said, the words deliberate and clear despite the heaviness of my tongue. "I'm the one you want. The one who destroyed your family. Not Ellie."
How shall I phrase my final recommendation? For some, the emotional impact of what happens when a baby is kidnapped out of what was a safe place, is a traumatic experience. It is tragic! On the other hand, when you can learn just how these types of criminal actions occur--and how easily it can happen--then I think it is a "must-read" for those who care about the mother-child relationship...
I've read Willow Rose before and this one was the very best. She's already a top author, but her ability to keep multiple plots going at the same time for an ultimate perfect closing is a spectacular achievement!
Why Federal Oversight of Education Remains Essential: Lessons from the Front Lines
By Michael A. Smith, Ph.D. Candidate in History, Assistant Professor
As legislative proposals circulate to dismantle federal education programs and return funding exclusively to state control, I find myself compelled to speak from a perspective shaped by nearly four decades in higher education and a childhood spent in one of America's most educationally disadvantaged states. My experience—spanning ten degrees, twelve years teaching in Christian education, decades teaching graduate and undergraduate courses across multiple institutions and socioeconomic contexts, and research in both American history and educational systems—has taught me a fundamental truth: when it comes to educational equity and excellence, decentralization is not a panacea. It is, in fact, a dangerous regression to a class-based system we worked decades to overcome.
The GI Bill: How Federal Investment Built the Middle Class
Before we dismantle federal involvement in education, we must remember what federal investment created. When President Truman faced the challenge of millions of returning troops after World War II, he confronted a potential economic catastrophe. The GI Bill was not just veteran support—it was a revolutionary reimagining of who could access higher education in America.
Before the GI Bill, college was the exclusive domain of the wealthy. Universities were finishing schools for the privileged class, not engines of social mobility. But millions of "regular guys"—men who would never have dreamed of university education—came home, went to school, earned degrees, and formed the great American middle class that became the envy of the world. They did not just gain credentials; they gained critical thinking skills, professional networks, and most importantly, aspirations for their children. They wanted the same opportunities for the next generation.
This was not an accident of the free market. This was not state-level innovation. This was deliberate federal policy that democratized education and transformed American society. It proved that when you invest in education broadly rather than limiting it to those who can afford it, everyone benefits—the individuals, the economy, and the nation's competitive position.
Now we are being asked to dismantle the mechanisms that continue this legacy. Please make no mistake: destroying federal education programs returns us to the old system where the privileged class controls access to the primary tool of social mobility. And that is not a bug—for some, it is a feature.
The Historical Record Speaks Clearly
I entered eighth grade in 1972, eighteen years after the Supreme Court's landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision. My Southern state had dragged its feet for nearly two decades, employing every legal maneuver and political tactic to avoid integration. This was not an accident. This was policy. This was the deliberate use of state-level control to maintain a social order built on inequality, including educational disparities that preserved economic hierarchies.
When we discuss returning educational authority to the states, we must reckon with this history. Federal intervention in education did not emerge from bureaucratic overreach—it emerged from necessity. It appeared because, left to their own devices, states routinely failed their most vulnerable students. The GI Bill worked precisely because it was federal, universal, and not subject to state-level gatekeeping that would have excluded many veterans based on race, class, or geography.
The resistance to Brown was not simply about race, though racism was certainly its animating force. It was about power…the power to control what children learned, who had access to quality education, and ultimately, who would have the tools to challenge existing hierarchies. Access to education is access to economic mobility, and those who benefit from the current class structure have always understood this better than those fighting for broader access.
The "Slow Learner" States and the Reversal of Progress
My home state remains near the bottom of national education rankings. It continues to struggle with racism, misogyny, and patriarchal structures that many other parts of the country have at least begun to address. This is not coincidental, nor is it primarily a function of poverty, though economic challenges certainly compound the problem. It is, in significant measure, a function of political will—or rather, the strategic lack thereof.
States that benefit from keeping their populations "manageable,” less educated, less critically engaged, and less equipped to challenge authority have little incentive to improve educational outcomes when left solely to their own discretion. Education is power. An educated populace asks uncomfortable questions. They recognize manipulation. They demand accountability. They organize for better wages and working conditions. They vote based on analysis rather than tribal loyalty. Those who advocate local control apparently close their eyes to the incessant battles that go on with local school boards over religion, book bannings, and culture war issues, which make it difficult to find citizens willing to serve in such a chaotic and dysfunctional environment.
The sons and daughters of those GI Bill recipients expected quality public education for their children. They had seen what education could do. They had experienced social mobility. Federal standards and programs helped deliver on that promise—imperfectly, but meaningfully. Now we are told that those very programs are the problem, that states should be free to chart their own course without federal "interference."
But we know what that course looks like. We have seen it. We have lived it.
Myth of Local Accountability
Proponents of state control often invoke the principle of local accountability, arguing that communities know best what their children need. This sounds reasonable until you examine what "local control" has historically meant in practice—and whom it has traditionally served.
In my years teaching history, I have had students from states where textbooks present the Civil War as primarily about "states' rights" rather than slavery, where evolution is treated as a controversial theory rather than established science, and where American history is sanitized to remove uncomfortable truths about genocide, slavery, and systemic oppression. This is not education—it is indoctrination designed to produce citizens who will not question the narratives that maintain existing power structures.
I teach courses in composition, rhetoric, and academic writing. The students who arrive from states with weaker educational systems face a steeper climb. They have been denied not just content knowledge, but the critical thinking skills necessary for genuine intellectual development. They have learned to memorize and recite rather than analyze and question. This is not their failing—it is a systemic one, the predictable result of educational systems designed more to produce compliant workers than thoughtful citizens capable of economic advancement.
The GI Bill veterans understood something crucial: education is the great equalizer, but only when it is actually equal. When states control standards and funding without federal oversight, education becomes a tool for maintaining class distinctions rather than overcoming them.
The Federal Role: Guarantor of Opportunity
The Department of Education, for all its imperfections, serves a crucial function: it ensures that children in Mississippi have access to at least some of the same opportunities as children in Massachusetts. It provides funding that poorer states could never generate independently. It enforces civil rights protections that many states would abandon without federal oversight. It establishes basic standards that prevent a complete race to the bottom.
Just as the GI Bill did not ask whether veterans "deserved" education or whether their home states valued higher learning, federal education programs recognize that educational opportunity is a right, not a privilege to be granted or withheld based on ZIP code or state politics.
Those pushing to eliminate federal education programs often come from states that have never needed them—states with strong tax bases, well-funded schools, and populations that value and invest in education. They forget, or choose to ignore, that their own students benefit from competing with peers who have had access to federally supported programs. They forget that American competitiveness—the very competitiveness built by those GI Bill-educated workers—depends on educational excellence across the nation, not just in privileged enclaves.
What We Risk Losing: The Death of Meritocracy
In my dissertation research on Dr. Charles H. Townes, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist who co-invented the laser, I have been struck by how his intellectual development depended on access to quality education in an era when such access was far from guaranteed, even for a white male in the early twentieth-century South. Townes succeeded despite limitations, not because of them. The GI Bill and subsequent federal education programs were designed to ensure that capability, not class background, determined educational access.
How many brilliant minds have we lost because state-level decisions prioritized other concerns over educational investment? How many potential innovators, entrepreneurs, scientists, and leaders never got the chance that federal programs might have provided? And how many more will we lose if we return to a system where educational opportunity depends primarily on family wealth and state priorities?
As I grade papers from students across the country, I see the legacy of both systems. I see students from well-funded districts who have been taught to write, research, and think critically—often the grandchildren of GI Bill recipients who valued education because it changed their lives. And I see students from underfunded systems who have been taught to survive standardized tests but lack the foundational skills for college-level work. The latter are no less capable—they have been less served. Without federal standards and funding, those gaps will only widen until higher education once again becomes what it was before 1944: the exclusive preserve of those born to privilege.
The Contemporary Context: Class Warfare by Other Means
We must also recognize that the current push to dismantle federal education programs does not exist in a vacuum. It is part of a broader project to restructure American society along lines that privilege certain groups while limiting opportunities for others—essentially reversing the democratization of opportunity that the GI Bill began.
Having researched and written extensively on Christian nationalism and threats to democratic institutions, I recognize the patterns: the rhetoric of "freedom" deployed to justify policies that actually constrain freedom for the majority; the invocation of "parental rights" used to mask efforts to control curriculum and limit exposure to diverse perspectives; the claim of government overreach made by those seeking to impose their own ideological vision while dismantling the mechanisms that created the middle class.
States that want to teach a sanitized version of American history, that want to pretend systemic racism ended in 1965, that want to treat LGBTQ+ students as invisible, that wish to prevent discussions of climate change or economic inequality—these states do not need "local control." They have plenty of control already. What they want is freedom from accountability, freedom from standards that require them to educate all their students effectively, and freedom from federal protections that ensure education remains a path to advancement rather than a system of class reproduction.
The GI Bill threatened the old order precisely because it educated people who were not "supposed" to be educated. It created economic competitors where there had been compliant labor pools. It produced critical thinkers where there had been deferential workers. The current push to eliminate federal education programs threatens to recreate those old hierarchies, returning us to a world where your life chances are determined at birth by your parents' economic status and your state's political priorities.
A Call to Defend Educational Democracy
I write this not as a defender of bureaucratic inefficiency—federal education programs certainly need reform. I write as someone who has spent a lifetime in education, who has seen what works and what fails, who understands both the theory and the practice, and who has witnessed what happens when educational access is restricted versus when it is expanded.
Federal involvement in education represents an acknowledgment that educational opportunity is a national concern, that we sink or swim together, that Mississippi's students matter as much as Massachusetts's students. It represents the continuation of the GI Bill's revolutionary premise: that capability, not class, should determine educational access.
To dismantle these programs is not to empower states—it is to abandon millions of children to the vagaries of state politics, many in states that have repeatedly and recently demonstrated they will prioritize ideology and control over educational excellence. It is to return to a system where college is once again the exclusive province of the wealthy, where social mobility becomes increasingly rare, and where the middle class created by the GI Bill gradually disappears.
We have run this experiment before. It was called the era before the GI Bill, before Brown v. Board of Education, before Title IX, before the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, before federal student aid programs. We know how it ended: with massive inequality, with generations denied opportunity based on accidents of birth, with American potential squandered because we refused to invest in all our people.
The GI Bill's success proves that federal investment in education works—that it builds prosperity, creates opportunity, and strengthens the nation. Those who now claim that federal education programs are the problem ignore or dismiss the most successful democratization of higher education in human history. They offer us a return to the old system, dressed up in the language of freedom and local control, but leading inevitably back to educational access determined by class and geography rather than ability and effort.
Those who do not learn from history, as Santayana warned, are condemned to repeat it. We cannot afford such repetition. Our students cannot afford it. The American middle class cannot afford it. America cannot afford it.
The question before us is not whether federal education programs are perfect; they are not. The question is whether we will defend the principle that every American child deserves access to quality education, regardless of where they are born or the economic class of their parents. That principle requires federal standards, federal funding, and federal oversight. Not because Washington knows everything, but because history has proven, repeatedly and painfully, what happens when states are left entirely to their own devices—and what happens when the federal government ensures that education remains a public good rather than a private privilege.
I have lived that history. I have taught the children of both systems. And I will not be silent while we prepare to repeat mistakes we spent decades overcoming, destroying the mechanisms that built the American middle class in the name of returning power to states that will use it to recreate the very hierarchies the GI Bill helped dismantle.
Michael A. Smith is an Assistant Professor of History at several institutions and a Ph.D. candidate completing his dissertation on Nobel laureate Dr. Charles H. Townes. He is the author of "From Christian Fundamentalism to Christian Nationalism: A Primer Detailing the Danger to America" (2024) and has taught at the college level for nearly four decades.
“A writer must stare at a blank page until blood comes out of their forehead." --Ernest Hemingway
Also, A Dark, Comedic, New Mexico Whodunit (Humorous Amateur Sleuth Noir Crime Thrillers Book 1)
LOL
I have to say that this may be the longest subtitle of a book I've ever seen... I can't quite figure out whether the writer didn't know which to use, or, that, it was very important that the potential reader knew what they were getting into...
Ok Comedic and Humorous could mean the same thing...
Whodunit implies mystery, but this is a crime thriller also... multiple genre, right...
Most books don't declare the setting as Really Important... New Mexico must have different types of stories to tell???
Or does this all mean that the writer wants us to know in advance to beware of the story???
We'll See, I'm game, but are you?
And by the way, when I typed in the title, Google Search automatically changed stiff to stuff...
Kinda makes you wonder, doesn't it?
Is this book really worth all this trouble to get to start reading... This one wants to know, So I did start...
My first check is always on You Tube... You guessed it, all the videos came up about Good Stuff...
Doesn't anybody know that Stiff is another word for a dead person?
I did...but maybe I know "stuff" about "stiffs..."
I've read or watched stories enough about them so I'm good for just about any description to say that somebody is dead...
How they're dead is the key...
But I can also remember that Hammer--you know who he is, I hope--called bodies stiffs--I think!
Anyway, all this is to show writers that if you add all this stuff onto your subtitle, readers just may never be able to find you, especially on sites that require a full book title, including subtitle...
Believe me, I know... I could have just been linked to the book, bought it, and then when I wanted to find it again to review, I can't find it! Writers need to know about the full idiosyncrasies of selling books, in my opinion... LOL
Or, I am just silly this morning realizing that I may be the only person in the world that knows what a stiff is...
Writers Beware...
On with the story
But, let's get one thing straight...
Death is not a funny matter
Is Fiction Now Reality?
And can a whodunit ever be a comedy?
I think so, because these actions by authoritarian leaders are NOT LEGAL!
He convinced himself that he never lied to me and couldn’t understand my disappointment. Self-delusion epitomizes the imprisoned mind.
There’s outright racism, hidden racism, and differential treatment for people of color. It’s all here...
The Imprisoned Mind - Everyone has a story. The stories of men with an imprisoned mind may seem more incomprehensible than others. When you have a comprehensive understanding of the mindset, however, you begin to better understand the actions of the men who are trapped with it. I once came across an episode of the television show Cops. I watched as the police pulled a man from a wrecked vehicle and handcuffed him. The surrounding pandemonium suggested that I’d missed a car chase, and, as was the premise of the show, the “good guys” had nabbed the “bad guy.” The exasperated officer, clearly familiar with the suspect, placed his prisoner in the back seat of his squad car and huffed, “How many times have you ran from the police?” With a smirk on his face and in a casual tone, the prisoner answered, “Twenty-six times.” I can only imagine the average viewer’s reaction to hearing that: “Damn! Twenty-six times? That man’s crazy!” or, “What the hell’s wrong with that dude? He must enjoy getting arrested!” These viewer responses seem rational given the circumstances, but I’ve yet to hear anyone accurately explain why people, such as this man, continue to believe they can get away with breaking the law after having been caught so many times. Clearly, this man wasn’t so crazy that he didn’t know he’d broken the law—he wouldn’t have run from the police otherwise. And I’ve yet to find one prisoner who actually enjoys being arrested, so that must not be the problem. It was obvious to me there was something wrong with this man, and those like him, but what?
Tracing the development of the imprisoned mind begins with childhood. Stories of unimaginable childhood abuses and neglect are prevalent throughout “the hood” and prisons. Growing up, I remember listening to “homies” openly talk about their adverse childhood experiences. A homey once told me about watching his mom kill his dad. It was chilling to hear him describe seeing the bullet pierce his father’s chest as if it was a scene from a movie and not his actual life. Another spoke of his backside being beaten by his stepdad in such gory detail that I was reminded of hearing similar stories of slaves being whipped by their master. I remember feeling uneasy each time I listened to one of these stories. I mean, what’s a kid supposed to say to someone who’s being so open about such horrific personal experiences? All I’d say was, “Damn! That’s messed up,” or, “Man! That ain’t right.” I thought it was a coincidence when I began hearing many of the same stories in prison. Sure, each story is different, but they’re all still painfully similar. It was clear to me that each individual continued to be plagued by their past experiences as if they had only recently happened. Yet each man had no clue how their past continued to affect their present. It didn’t take long for me to notice how emotionally detached everyone seemed to be while recalling their vividly horrific experiences. Some told their stories as if they were no big deal, casually joking about them. One person laughed about being beaten, at the age of seven, by his mother’s boyfriend. He had a gun put to his head because he’d urinated while asleep on his mom’s couch. “Shit,” the man chuckled as he recalled the story, “it made me stronger, and best believe I didn’t piss myself again after that!” Of everyone who has told me a story of childhood traumas, only one person ever choked up while recalling his traumatic experience. Even then, he continued to tell his story with such numbness that I began to wonder if there was a relationship between childhood trauma and incarceration. By that point, I’d become aware of my own emotional detachment and subsequent imprisoned mindset due to childhood trauma, but I wondered just how common this link was in prison. I set out to find the answer. The development of the imprisoned mind starts with emotionally sensitive children who’ve experienced trauma that is left untreated. The child then begins to experience mental and emotional distress. Without knowledge of healthy coping mechanisms, they eventually turn to drugs and alcohol and begin making other risky decisions. These behaviors don’t heal the trauma; they only serve to temporarily numb or distract from the agony of the mental and emotional distress. The individual becomes so focused on achieving this temporary relief that their willingness to engage in criminal endeavors becomes habitual. With each illegal act, the mindset evolves into a rigid criminal mentality, one that arrests all future development. I recognized prominent and recurring themes in the lives of everyone I believed showed signs of having an imprisoned mind. Like me, everyone readily admitted to being an emotionally sensitive child prior to their initial traumatic experience. My own mother and sisters would describe me as a crybaby. I wondered if this predisposition factored into the intensity of the symptoms of having post-traumatic stress disorder.
Additionally, the individual with an imprisoned mind often experienced the absence of one or both parents during childhood. This absence, I found, caused some to seek out a semblance of a family or brotherhood, such as joining a gang or the military, to fill the void left by their own fractured family. Being a part of something we feel is bigger than ourselves gives us a sense of belonging to the “family” we feel we never had. The progression of the imprisoned mind is highlighted by denial and deflection. The individual who possesses an imprisoned mind is generally unaware that anything is wrong with them. It’s as if we develop a form of tunnel vision and become hyper-focused on satisfying our desires and needs. The problem with this mentality is its self-deceiving nature: the imprisoned mind causes us to believe that things we simply want are so important that we are required to have them. Our inability to differentiate between our wants and our needs leads to a sense of urgency and a lack of patience when it comes to acquiring what we feel we must have. We then develop an egoistic attitude. Our imprisoned mind leads us to believe that everything is about us and produces behavior that seems rude or inconsiderate. We lie and manipulate to get what we want. We believe that we have honor and integrity, but in reality they’re foreign concepts to us. If there are rules that hinder our ability to do as we feel, then we will attempt to find ways around those rules or just ignore them. It doesn’t occur to us that our actions affect anyone outside of ourselves. When faced with the consequences of our actions, we deny culpability, we feign ignorance, and we deflect responsibility. Saying “everybody does it” is a typical excuse, and one that is indicative of the irrationality of the imprisoned mind, yet it’s suitable enough for us to justify committing unethical or illegal acts. Once we’re caught and suffer the consequences of our actions, the imprisoned mind causes us to see ourselves as victims, virtually blind to our own accountability. The permanence of the imprisoned mind is dependent upon the further traumas we’re exposed to while involved in the criminal underworld. Witnessing violence firsthand as a child causes us to be more likely to engage in violent behavior as adults. The imprisoned mind’s self-deceptive nature convinces us that our learned violent behavior is the only way to respond to perceived threats. We then end up in precarious situations that expose us to more trauma, thus intensifying the mindset. Those who are repeatedly exposed to violence can develop an antisocial attitude that is often misunderstood as sociopathic. In our minds, the violence we engage in tends to be more reactive than senseless. We detest having to engage in it, and we typically only do so when we believe it’s necessary to protect our well-being, our way of life, or the well-being of those we care about. This attitude seems to result from overexposure to hypervigilance and lasts as long as we feel threatened in an apparently hostile environment. Once we’re removed from our hostile environments, this attitude can begin to dissipate and is eventually replaced with shame and a desire to better ourselves. I’ve been interested in human behavior since I can remember. Figuring out why people do the things that they do consumed much of my childhood curiosity. And it continues to this day. I began my informal studies in psychology during middle school. These studies only intensified during my incarceration. I’ve formally taken classes and informally read whatever books I could get my hands on to better understand myself and others. Through my studies, I discovered sociology, and I began research in criminology after taking an Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program class in 2016. I’ve taken human subjects and qualitative interviewing training through Arizona State University, and I’ve personally interviewed over 200 prisoners for two groundbreaking Participatory Action Research projects.1 Together, my studies, my training, and over two decades of experience with prisoners and incarceration make me uniquely qualified to write this book. But I struggled with how to best advance the imprisoned mind idea. I wasn’t even sure who, if anyone, would be interested in an argument from someone who is incarcerated and lacks an academic degree. That is, until a wise man told me, “It’s not about the degree. It’s the experience living that life and with being incarcerated, having the access to prisoners who can support the idea that’s unique.” I decided the only way to lend credibility to my claim would be to tell the stories of the men who I’m referring to as having the imprisoned mind: prisoners. I set out to find those on the unit who had the mindset and were willing to share their life story with me and the world. I was surprised and pleased to discover that many prisoners were eager to have their stories told. I sat with each man and took notes by hand, as recording devices are prohibited, while they recounted their life stories to me. I interviewed in our cells. I interviewed in the middle of the prison yard. I interviewed in the Arizona heat. Each meeting had to be broken down into several sessions as time permitted. We had to work around lockdowns and count times. I processed the information acquired from each discussion and wrote each subject’s story in the first person. Each individual’s story is compiled as a chapter, detailing how instances of trauma can contribute to a singular, common outcome: prison.
The chapters that follow are real-life accounts based upon the lives of six men who were emotionally damaged during the most vulnerable time in their life. Each chapter provides detailed descriptions of the harm, pain, and anguish some boys have experienced, and then later caused. I believe all six men have an imprisoned mind, but each of their stories better represent different stages of the mindset. In the first part of the book, Kidd’s and Sergeant’s stories epitomize the childhood trauma and neglect that contribute to the development of the imprisoned mind. In the next part, Oso’s and Dee’s stories show how denial and deflection contribute to the progression of the imprisoned mind. In the last part, Oakland’s and Unique’s stories demonstrate how the mindset can be fortified through continued victimization and trauma. These stories are not told to excuse our behavior or to justify our incarceration. Rather, the following brief life histories are meant to highlight the origin of the irrationalities that drastically influence the criminal mind, and to educate those who believe they have criminality all figured out. At times, what’s told here isn’t pretty. But sometimes the most meaningful lessons are born from ugliness. Dr. Kevin Wright joins me in the final part of the book on outside and inside solutions. Kevin and I have worked together on this book for over seven years. He has provided feedback and assistance on all aspects of the book, from helping me to refine the idea of the imprisoned mind to leading our efforts to secure a publisher to copyediting all drafts of the book. Here he contributes a chapter that leverages his outside knowledge as a correctional scholar to complement my inside knowledge as someone who has lived through an imprisoned mind. Where “imprisoned minds” could suggest an individual pathology, Kevin’s chapter makes clear that our life circumstances—especially our adverse experiences as young boys—limit our opportunities for healthy physical and mental development. He writes about the value of combining his outside knowledge with my inside lived experience to suggest solutions to enhance the lives of people who are living and working in the correctional system. I conclude the book with a chapter that identifies what needs to happen outside of the correctional system to prevent the development, disrupt the progression, and reverse the permanence of the imprisoned mind. In simplest terms, we need to support both the lost boys and the trapped men—especially when they are experiencing and working through the trauma that can derail their opportunity to find purpose and meaning as humans. I never thought I’d end up in prison. Nobody with an imprisoned mind ever does. We’re perpetually caught up in a moment that is our life. For me, that moment was proving that I was “a man” and making money. Others’ form of self-deceit differs, but the results are all the same. Days, weeks, months, and years go by without us even realizing that all aspects of our personal development have ceased. Once you have the imprisoned mind, I believe that there are only two destinies: death or incarceration. Unfortunately, we’re unable to comprehend that we’re blinded by our own compulsions, slaves to our impulses, while deceived into limiting our own options in life. When our perceived options are limited (and none of them seem good), then it stands to reason why we make the wrong decisions. We become trapped by an irrational mindset. While I’m unable to tell the stories of the men whose mindset led them to their demise, I can tell the stories of the men.
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As far as I am aware, Johnny Cash is the only music artist who specifically provided a prison program during his active performing years... So immediately I remembered how those who listened to his shows were so involved and excited to hear what he had to say... When I saw this book advertised, I knew I wanted to read it. The first and only contact I'd made was through a book, of course... But in talking with the young man, he happened to mention that even when he got out, he would not be allowed to vote! To me, that just seemed wrong. If somebody has fulfilled the court's requirements, then that individual should return to the same rights available to all of us--if the prison system was doing what it was meant to do...
But this book clearly shows that the evolution of what occurs in prisons has been steadily going downhill in relation to helping our citizens to move back into a meaningful life.
The other involvement I'd had was with the WV Prison System when as the manager of classrooms on the WVU campus, we at one time had our wooden classroom seats cannibalized for ongoing use. Again, that type of program which helped provide both income and a work program apparently no longer occurs. The impression provided was that those in prison these days have little opportunity to occupy their bodies and minds...
Finally I want to highlight my personal response as I read this book. The title has a much farther possible use than for those intended by the book. I found myself responding, based upon today's world, as well as from other books, that there could be many people locked into an imprisoned mind. In fact, it could be used by those women who have experienced rape or physical assaults which have traumatized them thereafter. I quickly note that this book does not cover women--purely because of the circumstances of the writer and his location. I remember, however, when I went into burnout based upon my job, there was No term available for a medical diagnosis other than clinical depression. I was not depressed. My mind was burnt out and could no longer function... Thus, I could easily have defined my feelings as a my mind being imprisoned... Job Burnout has since then been added as a specific diagnosis for purposes of diagnosis of simply a very tired mind... PTSD is also one of those which is used across multiple mental results faced either by those in the military, or, for instance, after a rape or other traumatic event.
So, why am I beginning this discussion with this highlight of Imprisoned Minds? Because I want readers to know that this book can be valuable to other people who have never actually been in prison. Consider all of the individuals who commit crimes for which we never determine the background, the reason, or the individual who committed the crime never gets to prison...
Also not covered in this book is the major issue of gun control, drugs, sexual or physical abuse, or political influence. Be aware, however, that the individual stories by those interviewed will be discussing these issues... A final note: The number of interviews were limited by the space available for the entire book covering this important subject. Erik was responsible for identifying what he had determined to be his own diagnosis/identification of what he called how he felt. Only those identified as having "imprisoned minds" were included...
Each story takes a chapter--this is not the total first story since copyright has stopped further sharing... In my opinion this book is a must-read... The remainder of the book gets into a review of the issues within and without the prison, including support changes for programs necessary. At this time, in this political climate, it is questionable whether any of the proposals would even be considered given the racial discrimination mentioned earlier and the present DEI mandates...
But this is not a singular issue, or a single book. This issue cannot really be addressed pre-prison, in my opinion, since drugs and guns are preventing what the majority of people want to change... There are other books related to guns, for instance, that should be considered. Most importantly is that what I saw in this book was a total lack of interest on the part of too many people. Dare I say on the part of one political party in particular. We already know that even school shootings has no effect on republicans. Certainly, caring for those in prison would never be on their radar...
You know folks, I still have NO answer as to why pro-life can be considered a mandate for republicans, while at the same time, they could care less about what happens to those children once they are born. There is always talk about drugs by that party, but bombing boats really has little to do with access available in the U.S. When somebody turns to selling drugs to be able to survive, which ultimately turns into a desire for making lots of money and fighting over territories/gangs... there has to be full awareness at the state level that these issues must be addressed...
We've talked about the fact that children learn how they will live based upon their early home life. I come from a poor background, but what I saw was my widowed mother working 24/7 to feed and shelter us. When the U.S. is the only major country that allows mass shootings to continue, then each of us has to realize that something is very wrong... And it doesn't mean that more guns is the solution...
This nonfiction book should be in every library. It is published by a university, based upon the content being of value to be shared across our land... When you read an individual's story and see that they live based upon what their environment has taught them, then, in my opinion, the United States should be embarrassed that what you will read and learn about those with imprisoned minds, is very possibly NOT the fault of the individual...who...is...imprisoned...