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Growing Up with Prisons - A Correct-ional State of Mind

If that railroad train was mine -I bet I'd move out over a little farther down the line- Far from Folsom Prison - let that lonesome whistle -Blow my Blues away. Johnny Cash

Whenever I hear a train - the rails appear in my mind as the whistle carries me back to being 15 - racing my paint bareback in the open fields - trying to catch a glimpse of the waving arms that the engineer or cabooseman would toss my way. Usually - I made it just in time for one or the other - satisfied in my mind that my sweating mare and I would escape this town one day. It was an ever present feeling since "first thought" or "memory" slipped into my consciousness as a toddler.

My connection with a train started as far back as my bedwetting days. When I was in elementary school - I invented a train in my mind that would come at night - under my bedroom floor - magically a door would lifted up and I'd be placed gently into a soft car seat and given a ride to the loo. There - the floors would open again and I would be placed onto the toilet and returned to my warm...wet bed...when I awoke - again realizing I had no control over my bladder or my living environment.

I don't recall my father ever working for the jobs my mother told me he had prior to working at Soledad Prison or any other prison job he had afterwards before becoming part of an elite group of undercover agents for the Department of Corrections "Special Service Unit." What I do remember is that my father was an arrestingly handsome man with a distinct laugh that often had tears running down his face - even when he yawned his eyes teared up - a genetic characteristic he passed onto his daughter.

With three siblings male - I was odd girl out - my father and I had a different relationship. I wasn't the pink ribboned little girl he probably had wished for. I was the bow-legged and tubby little dishwater blonde who stripped her clothes off and stashed them strategically under different bushes in various yards. I don't remember that part - just my mother screaming after me down the street trying to catch me after the neighbors had told on me and threatened her with police action if I weren't roped back in --- My God - there were "boys" who lived on the same street, don't you know?! For a time she and I shared the same hair color but definitely different brains. I was two and only understood what trapped felt like and didn't like it.

I loved my father and perhaps in many ways we were more alike in intellect - stubbornness and courage - yet I'd baste that with a natural shyness covered by thicker exteriors. Your basic introvert/extrovert rolled into one and he had such a soft heart for the work that he did. Prison changed my father like a war would to any individual touched by it on an ongoing basis. 

One day he surprised me and asked me to come to work with him. Inwardly, I was screaming -yayy! - as he told me we were going to Folsom Prison to see the protestors outside the walls who were vehemently against the death penalty. My father's job? - was to have me get license plate numbers of the protestors. I was on their side - which did not make my former prison guard - now elite special service agent - father - happy.

The entire ride there he tried hammering his beliefs in me which always changed because he was a fair man but when the law said he had to follow - he followed. He always called me the odd one of his kids - the free-thinker who actually believed change could be made.

We arrived outside in the hills east of Sacramento, California - where Folsom State Prison stands beside a man-made lake - surrounded by granite walls built by inmate laborers. The gun towers have peaked roofs and Gothic stonework that give the prison an ominous and forbidding appearance of a medieval fortress. For more than a century Folsom and San Quentin were the state's only maximum-security penitentiaries. We got out of the car among cars parked along the streets in this beautiful countryside. I was struck at the incongruity of it all. A man inside maximum security to be gassed soon and people outside with signs - songs - literature being passed to protest with conviction and hope to overturn events.

My dad handed me a pencil and paper and explained that everyone would know he was a cop and that it was up to me to find out the license plate numbers so they could be run to find out who was there. Everything inside of me was screaming - wrong! rat! run away! - but I was stuck with my dad and scared as well as exhilarated. I got some plates but not to his satisfaction and on the way home he railed into me about how important it was to get facts straight - to be correct and how dangerous these people really were that were freely walking around.

Since I was now a teenager and had gone through quite a lot with my father's career - the experience helped shape and mold me to become even more free-spirited - which was never his intent and in an odd way feel more connected to my father.

I realized that the hardness of working both inside several prisons and the streets had him bringing home a perception of the world as constantly dangerous - sick and twisted - from a personal standpoint - not the news. My father rarely believed anything on the news and did pass that onto me. He actually would tell me what the real deal was after a news cast ran locally.

As a young girl growing up - I rarely dated because my dad had a propensity to tackle guys in the front yard if he felt they were under-the-influence and they probably were. My world inside our home became a place that I felt confined - restricted except in my imagination. That's a place no one can take from you.

Whenever I feel a majority or mass is sharing the same belief - I tend to tilt my head and question.

I love creating worlds and characters as much as I adore meeting people from all walks of life - it's in that diversity and color pallette that I feel enriched and a little less fearful of the solitary confinement my mind places me.

I loved my father and wish he were here today to see the amazing changes in the world and the awful ones too.

He once said to me, "Damn it, Eva...people don't change!" I smiled, "You did." My father turned red - laughed with embarrassment and hugged me with, "I love you baby." I had never felt I was his baby but to him I now believe that - I was.

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Kathleen May 21, 2013 at 08:55 am
CANDLE Night at the Rockland Boulders Game Join CANDLE for a fun(d)raising game on May 23rd as theRead More Rockland Boulders take on the Trois-Rivieres Aigles. Proceeds from tickets purchased through CANDLE* will support programs that educate & empower youth and reduce substance abuse and violence in Rockland County and beyond.
Heywood Jablohme May 21, 2013 at 02:48 pm
I agree with most of your points, but surely you are not implying that teachers are expected toRead More produce funding to correct school roofs, right? I think you got a bit off topic here, but I agree that our educational infrastructure is in disrepair and is in desperate need of rehabilitation. Maybe if our teacher's unions allowed a little more leeway we could allocate funding a little more appropriately and fund the important things instead of overpaying paying dinosaur teachers who lost interest a long time ago and fight any and all forms of teacher benchmarking.
WGMom May 20, 2013 at 09:10 am
It's entirely true that every professional has out-of-pocket expenses. But as someone who worked asRead More a corporate trainer, I can guarantee you I NEVER had to pay out of pocket expenses for supplies to teach classes. Every piece of paper, supply, and even snacks for the participants were fully covered expenses. If I had to spend out of pocket money to procure supplies, I could submit for a reimbursement, and receive it, no questions asked. I am now in school to become a high school teacher and I can see the stark difference in how the education of folks in a corporate environment is incredibly different, and privileged, than the public school environment. I've sat through numerous classes in the Clarkstown and Ramapo districts, doing observations required for my education certification, and while Clarkstown certainly benefits from certain advantages, the shabbiness of being a public school is still there. Furniture, such as teacher desks, that looks like it was purchased in a garage sale 30 years ago... faculty bathrooms that are dark and dingy, nearly crumbling, and sorely in need of updating. Etc. The public expects teachers to have professional training, act professionally, but they lack sometimes basic resources and are expected to function in an environment that feels more like a dungeon than an institution of learning. The citizens of Clarkstown, if they could get a tour of some of the facilities they are expecting children to learn in, and teachers to teach in, would be very surprised. We do supply some great technology, but then we put it in classrooms with windows that won't stay closed when it's windy, as one example. I spent most of my time in South, which is the best of the bunch, facilities-wise. Clarkstown North is a mess, Woodglen's woods are littered with fallen trees no one's cleaned up after Sandy, Laurel Plains had to be shuttered thanks to that whole foul stench... the district is in a situation where there are major capital improvements that are going to be needed. Buildings are aging, and it seems it's only the most basic of upkeep that happens. The district can't even fix the roofs of the buildings without applying for a state grant.
Heywood Jablohme May 18, 2013 at 07:17 am
What professional doesn't spend $500 per year on out of pocket expenses related to their jobs?Read More Staples offering 10% (or 5 in some cases) is hardly an example of the community getting involved. Thankfully, there are other examples of the community and PTA's getting involved and providing needed services. Clarkstown and surrounding areas hardly have substantial unmet needs in their classroom, thankfully.
Truth4all May 16, 2013 at 11:37 am
I guess better late than never. LaCorte is serving his 4th year as Mayor and was Trustee for I thinkRead More 4 years before that. This year is the only time he has brought the idea to the village about participating in this program. He is motivated by the opportunity of getting positive press for his County Executive campaign. The village should have been involved in this program ( as well as the Americorps program) long before this. On a positive note, hopefully the Village will continue this worthwhile partnership for many years to come.