Lockdown, Prison, Routine
In 23, Confusion, Prison, Sleep on May 8, 2009 at 3:33 pm
Here we go again. Same routine repeated all through the day. The call gets shouted that it’s lock down time. Failing to plan ahead – not a big priority here – the mad rush to get to the ice machine, score one last cigarette, bum a soup or a chili or a popcorn from a neighbor, and finish up the phone call causes the normal pandemonium of the day to seem like the calm of the tomb.
Finally, all last-minute errands having been completed, everyone scurries for the cell doors – to be caught outside the cell after the officer makes his door-slamming rounds is not a wise move. Doors clang shut. Another night of hyper-confinement begins.
Cellmates move around the cell, chronically in each other’s way in the tight space. Personal matters concluded, lights turned off, and televisions are turned on, headphones donned and each one enters the relative – and blessed – silence of his own thoughts.
But tonight mine are not silent. They’re roaring. Sleep’s going to be tough tonight.
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23, Count Time, Impatience
In 23, Deliverance, Prison on February 25, 2009 at 6:54 am
Count time – the last four o’clock count. That feels strange to write. That tomorrow at this time I will be somewhere else, with someone else, away from here, doesn’t seem real yet.
I’m still on the bunk for there’s nowhere else to go – no other options. The TV news is on but I can’t focus on it. Mentally I’m trying to rush through the stages – the predictable and endless cycle of stages – that still stand in the way of my departure. It’s repeated itself so many times that it’s all not even in the memory anymore. It’s just a habit. When the door slammed at 1530, the timer in my head started and, without checking the watch, I know it’s about time for count to clear. I’ll hear the alert tone sound over the officer’s radio – will that sound ever leave me? – and then he’ll open the doors.
The mental alarm is screaming at me and it occurs to me that the significance of this day may be interfering with the accuracy of it. But, according to my watch, it’s dead on. Count is late clearing – the geniuses are at work again. The standing joke is that count time only ends on time if the officers’ boot laces are not so tight to prevent them from having access to their toes.
Whatever the problem, I wish they’d hurry up. There are still several stages awaiting before I can lay down and try to go to sleep, and this count thing is holding me up.
I’m ready to get started!
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