For the women doing time alongside their inmates... This is our reality as well as theirs.

Friday, November 25, 2011

Thanksgiving Thoughts

Yesterday was Thanksgiving. I woke up in a wonderful mood, full of the holiday spirit. I drank my coffee, enjoyed the beautiful weather on my porch, and hung out with my cat before heading downtown to volunteer in a soup kitchen for the day. It was an eye opening experience. My man had suggested I do it a few weeks earlier when I was pondering what to do with my day off. I'd never volunteered for anything before, let alone on a holiday. But I like to follow his suggestions as it makes me feel closer to him, and so I went.  

I spent four hours helping the church set up and then serving the homeless Thanksgiving dinner. The food was not anything fancy, but it was hot and nourishing, and those I served were mighty glad to receive it. It gave me a warm feeling inside to see their faces light up as I smiled at them, and handed them a full plate. It made me realize just how lucky I am to live the life that I do, with my solid job, my small cozy apartment, and the ability to feed myself (and my man!) I was ashamed to think of those times in the last few months where I've broken down and felt so sorry for myself. I may not be rich, and I may not have my love home with me, but I am blessed in so many ways.

One man who shuffled in late, when the food was almost gone, was shaking like a leaf when I gave him his plate. I was almost positive he was a late term alcoholic. He was so thin that I was convinced only the shape of his clothing made him visible at all, and I recognized the tale tell signs of alcohol abuse from the way his reddened eyes peered out of his flushed face. Before he turned away to go eat, he nodded to me and said, "Bless you, child." 

There but for the grace of God, go I. Or my man. 

So yeah... things might not be perfect. Being so far away from my love is extremely hard, and we each have our own struggles in our everyday existence. But there are far worse things that could have happened to both of us. We have a roof over our heads, we have food to eat, friends and family who love us, hope for the future, and each other.

Case in point. Last night as I sat staring out at the stars, missing him so much that it hurt, the phone rang. It was him. I wasn't even supposed to be home- I had plans to go out to dinner with friends to celebrate the holiday but they were cancelled last minute. How did he know I would be there?

"I could feel it." He told me, laughing. And hearing that deep ferocious voice, I felt so incredibly thankful for everything in my life... especially him.

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

The Simple Pleasures of Mail

So last night, I got a treat. I arrived home to find a Thanksgiving card in the mailbox for me, from my Man.  It was, of course, the type of card he would never send were he free- it was your typical mushy religious type card that your grandmother would send you at the holidays filled with sentimental well wishes. That's so not my big savage wolf. However it's the best he can do, given the circumstances, and I'm always touched that he sends them at all.  But what really made me laugh and cry all at once was what it contained inside.

He'd turned the card sideways, outlined his hand, and then made it into a turkey. The last time I'd seen that (or done that) I think I was five years old. To see it now on the inside of his card, and to see the sheer size of his big paw, was poignant. It showed a certain letting down of his guard, showed me his tender playful side, and showed me that he knew how much such gestures meant to me. When that's the only medium you have of showing intimacy and affection, you find creative ways to make yourself present in your partner's life. Of course I immediately put my hand up inside the outline of his- his hands are so big!  I smiled to see it even as tears escaped the corners of my eyes. 

So often that happens in the world of prison relationships. Smiling through tears. This lifestyle is overcrowded with bittersweet emotion.

My perfume plays a huge role in the connection we share. When I first started writing to him, my man begged me to spray the letters with perfume. There is no smell in there; its a sterile gray scale environment.  Moved by the request, I complied, and sent that first perfume laden page to him. He wrote me back telling me that my perfume was beautiful, and somehow magical, and he slept with one next to his head so he could turn over and smell that fragrance in his dreams. Now he receives one every day and opens several at a time to scent his whole cell. Inmates and guards alike comment on the sweetness of the perfume. I think it makes him proud to say "That's from my woman." I know it makes me proud to be his woman. 

I spend a lot of money on perfume ;)

Monday, November 14, 2011

Every Day Hum Drum

It's Monday. I hate mondays. Not just because it's back to work, but because it's back to two or three days without hearing his voice. Calls are expensive, ranging about $2.50 for fifteen minutes- which may not seem like a lot, but trust me, it adds up. And that's just the beginning. The cost of stamps is astronomical when you write every day, and send multiple sheets of paper with research, news articles, and comics along with your letter. My man has a voracious mind for knowledge of all kinds, and there is no internet connection where he is. So I'm the go to girl to keep his brain entertained and active. I also make sure he gets his newspaper every day, and the science magazine he loves once a month.

Then of course, there's money for canteen. Those conservatives that insist inmates are fed three square meals a day should go live there for a few days and see exactly what inmates eat. They are given the bare minimum nutritionally, and often the food itself is rancid, making it impossible to eat. So if the inmates are lucky, they have a family member or significant other who can afford to give them money to buy supplemental food at canteen.

And then visits. I live eight hours from my man's prison, which adds up quite a bit in gas and wear and tear on my car. Not to mention the hotel, meals, and the money for the vending machines in the visiting room. There's nothing more satisfying than watching him tear into vending machine food, proclaiming how good it is. Mind you it's really not very good. I don't ever eat there. But it's such a step up from what he's used to being served inside that it must taste like gourmet fare to him, and that's all that matters.

So, in short, having a man in prison is rather expensive in a myriad of ways. Many of us prison wives and girlfriends work second jobs to be able to afford to care for our men and still pay our own bills. But my point was, calls were expensive when grouped with the rest of the costs, and therefore, I don't hear from him every day. He calls me two or three times a week, and twice on Sundays.  Sundays are his day and I don't leave the house all day for fear of missing those precious two calls. There's a certain sense of serenity waking up Sunday morning and knowing soon I'll be hearing that phone ring. The ring tone on my home phone has become sexy to me because I associate it with his deep rumbling voice. It's a very Pavlovian response when it rings- my heart pounds and I leap to my feet to run for the handset like a little girl on her first date. I'm spending the day with him, in a way, as close as I can without driving the six hundred miles to get to him.

And then Monday comes. And that comforting feeling of being so close I feel I could reach out and touch him, is gone. It's back to the grind. Back to a grueling, stressful job week. Back to coming home to an empty house and sleeping in a lonely bed. Back to stalking the mailman for a letter. Back to constantly handling the stresses and the isolation and the hope that he'll be home soon.

Sigh. Yeah... I hate Mondays.

It will be better tomorrow.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Dispelling the Myths- An Introduction

Yes, it's true, the love of my life is doing time. A lot of time. And I plan to stick with him through it- in fact, I have put every resource at my disposal towards lessening the time he does via a lengthy and expensive appeal. Fingers crossed!

I met my love before he went in. We dated briefly and were friends, and then he got himself in trouble. I corresponded with him while he was in county awaiting sentencing, and within six months, was visiting him at a state prison. We decided at that first visit that we were more than just friends, and we've been a couple ever since. I've been a prison girlfriend now for over a year and have learned to adapt to this strange new world I've stumbled into. I'll be a prison girlfriend for the full extent of his sentence, however long that ends up being, and when he comes home, I'll marry him and become his wife.

Those are the basics. I won't get into detail further than that- not on the length of his sentence, what he did to land himself there, or what state he's in. Those things really don't matter to the point of this blog.  What I'm creating this blog for is to dispel the myths surrounding the women of inmates and give my readers an inside glimpse into what this life is like, and who we women are. I think you will be surprised.

We're tougher than you think, smarter than you think, more loyal than you think, more successful and educated than you think. We love harder and believe stronger and are self contained power houses. We hold our men down in a world that is often brutal and always corrupt. We are a force unto ourselves, and contrary to popular belief, we do not suffer from lack of self esteem or self worth. We know very well who we are and what we are worth.

In my following posts, I will give you a glimpse of a world few people know or understand.  It's very easy to make assumptions when you are unfamiliar with the reality. I challenge any of you to maintain your current judgements on either inmates, or their women, once you have followed this blog for a while. That world is both more and less than what you think it is.

So come in, get comfortable, and welcome to the world of loving an inmate.