The Prison Journal Ep 2:: "The Strip Search and Opal" cover art

The Prison Journal Ep 2:: "The Strip Search and Opal"

The Prison Journal Ep 2:: "The Strip Search and Opal"

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The moment I opened my mother's handwritten prison journal from 1993, I knew this wasn't just about uncovering her story – it was about breaking generational chains of shame that keep us all silent.

Reading her perfect cursive now as a 43-year-old mother myself feels wildly different than anything my 11-year-old self could have processed when it was happening in real time. Her words leap off the page like she's sitting across from me, coffee in hand, catching me up on everything I missed. What's uncanny is how the dates in her journal – June and July 1993 – align perfectly with our calendar today, 32 years later to the day.

Through her eyes, I'm witnessing not just her experience at Mariana Women's Federal Prison Camp, but the stories of forgotten women like Opal, a grandmother who received a 54-month sentence for a first-time offense while men sentenced before her for attempted murder got mere probation. My mother's descriptions capture both the dehumanizing aspects of incarceration and the beautiful ways women showed up for each other – sharing toiletries, finding humor in brown uniforms and orthopedic shoes, discovering discarded tennis shoes in trash cans, and building community when everything else was taken away.

This mini-series isn't about redemption stories with neat endings. It's about exposing what still needs change in our justice system, giving voice to the voiceless, and creating space for your story too. Because the question remains: who is hurting because you're hiding, and what secrets are keeping you sick? We don't heal in hiding around here. So whether you're carrying something that was never yours or a chapter you've been too scared to open, let this be your invitation to finally break free.

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