Please contact Lisa Lavaysse if you would like to purchase the full PDF or a printed copy of this issue.
Continue ReadingMonth: February 2020
Ed Note 25.09/10
Welcome to another fabulous issue of The Beat Within. By the time you get this one of a kind magazine, we will be in the early days of March, as the spring season is knocking on our door. We can’t thank you all enough for your kindness and support with each workshop and /or submission you give to this important work. All right, given space is a premium, lets pass the keyboard over to our dear friend and colleague, OT…. We welcome you readers and writers to another great double edition of the one and only The Beat Within. It’s
Continue ReadingHomelessness
by Corey J. Elder I believe that prison can take many forms. One form of a prison is the issue of homelessness. Homelessness is a prison because it “locks up” human potential and creativity. And as a result the family, the community, and the society suffers. Many of those homeless are women and children. And to have women and children homeless is a tragedy that we may never recover from. Homelessness is crippling and debilitating. It demeans and devalues the human spirit. It oppresses ones hopes and dreams. And the longer one is homeless, the more damaging the results. We
Continue ReadingStuck
by Y I’ve been coming here on and off for four years. That’s like nine times in total. I was fourteen the first time I came here. It was for some dumb shhh in school. My first time here I was locked up for two months. Today I’m seventeen, fighting to get back home, though my PO recommends hall time and placement 6-9 months then some, basically a year, for what? Getting caught up with a little as gun. The first time I came here i should have done my max time and I would have been terminated. Now, because
Continue ReadingWhen I’m Gone
by Cd When I was fourteen years old, I went down. I got separated from my mom, aka my best friend. She was really disappointed in me because she knew I could do better. I was down for eight months and that eight months was hell because I couldn’t have fun or enjoy being with my best friend – my mom. That was my dad too. My mom means everything to me because she always has been there for me since my dad left me and got locked up for a double murder. He got twenty-five to life without parole. To be
Continue ReadingVolume 25.07/08
Please contact Lisa Lavaysse if you would like to purchase the full PDF or a printed copy of this issue.
Continue ReadingEd Note 25.07/08
Greetings friends! Welcome to issue 25.0708! This issue is packed with solid writings and art from our many friends around the state of California and beyond… We are incredibly grateful to you writers, artists, friends, collaborators and partners for making The Beat Within the one of a kind publication that it is. This week we have back our dear friend, OT, in Nicaragua, who is sharing a brilliant piece of heartfelt writing. We could not say it any better than he does in the following. Without further ado, lets pass the keyboard to OT…. Now enjoy this amazing issue! We
Continue ReadingI Wasn’t Ready
by Osbun Walton It was an early morning, uncommonly quiet, and with no movement because of a fog alert, yet people were going to different places, to work, to the yard or day room to play cards and chess. My cellie went on a visit. After my usual routine of cleaning up the cell, I had nothing else to do but relax, because I got my homework and letter writing finished last night. My brother Timothy’s fifty-dollar JPAY to me was still sitting erect against the wall, middle ways on my bunk, which I received three day ago. A JPAY
Continue ReadingThankful
by Jz There are three classes in human society: dead broke, payin’ bills and nothin’ more, rich and “above all” as people refer to it. Dead broke are most of the time lookin’ for fast money and end up in prison or dead. Middle class get by but don’t get nothin’ less, nothin’ more. “Above all” is not worried at all, and I mean ever damn thing. You can come from poverty and have two directions. Either stay broke and have your next generation stay broke or come up an illegal way or some have a job. They starve every night most of the time and go to
Continue ReadingSeparation In My Life
by JH I could tell you a million stories of separation in my life. It almost happens religiously. What I mean is that it’s happened so many times; it’s almost like a daily routine but over time. The first time I was separated from someone I care about was when my biological parents went downhill in their lives. My dad was arrested for a crime he did not do, and my mom overdosed with a needle in her arm while I was in a playpen next to her. I was separated from my whole family and put in foster care
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