It has been forever since I have posted anything here. I almost forgotten that this place even exists.
Life has been surreal. I never thought it would be me walking down that runway with all the cameras flashing and the people applauding. I honestly never thought I would come to a place in my recovery where I would be comfortable being in front of a camera again. I laugh at the idea that here I am, the world's only introverted model. It has changed things, modeling I mean. I used to be terrified that somebody would see me in the supermarket or out in public in general and recognize me from when I was a child, and to be honest, it has happened before. It can be devastating. But, I have been recognized here because of my modeling pictures that have been in magazines or whatever... and it was kind of a weird thing for me. It was both the old fear of being recognized for the things that happened in my past, and being flattered that I have been recognized for the present. I honestly struggled with trying to figure out how to handle it other than stuttering and stammering like an idiot.
Who knew a model lived in BFE Montana...
Everyday it's like I look back, and everyday it amazes me how far I have come, and everyday I am shocked that it seems I have come even further. Moving on and growing up, and healing from the bleak existence of my past has been such a struggle and a constant fight, and yet it has been so subtle that it is like it sort of just snuck up on me. Like, it seems like just yesterday I was that emotional wreck that Wintreath knew years ago... but it has been years. The nightmares and dread memories of my past, and the story of the life I had to fight and bleed to survive have stopped being my enemy, and instead have become something I coexist with and I guess it has almost become symbiotic I daresay.
My deepest darkest shames, and all the scars and tears and waking up screaming at night was the burden I carried, and was the burden that gave me the strength to carryon and survive.
I was told early in my recovery by one of my psychologists that it is a lonely journey in the end... and she was right. That's not to say that I have no friends or people that I love and care about and people who care about me... It's more of looking at old pictures from when I was in prison, and my old crew and the people that fought and in some cases died with me. For such a huge chunk of my life, these were the people that stood by my side and we bled together and lived and survived together. It is a terrible loneliness remembering all the chaos and fear of everyday life... and all that noise is gone now. I'm no long wondering if I will survive the night, or on the other side of that coin, hoping I don't.
I remember toward the end of my sentence in prison, there were four of us sitting around a table out on the rec yard, myself, Ben M, Ben H, and Curtis and on the surface, we were a group of people that should never have been in proximity in prison; I was the hispanic kid that ran with the Mexican gangs, Curtis was a black guy and former Vice Lord out of Chicago, Ben H was a white supremacist and Ben M was a Jewish guy... By all the normal "rules" of prison, we should NEVER have been at the same table with each other... and yet there we were. We just sat there in total silence. We were all about to be released about the same time and we had all done time in real prisons before; places we called 'gladiator schools'... we'd all seen some pretty awful things, we had all fought, we all belonged to different groups, and those groups rarely got along...But anyway, there we sat in total silence, for a long time. We didn't need to speak. We just knew. We knew what we had all been through, we knew that deep, very profound comraderie of people that have suffered through truly horrible things together and side by side. These three other guys would fight and die for me, and I for them... and thinking about it, it was us four... we were the four that were left... there were others along our journey that didn't make it. After a long while, Ben H said it best, very bluntly "We survived..."
That was the last time I ever saw them...
A million things go through my mind remembering all the horrible things I have seen and experienced in prison. Nightmarish things. Riots and fights and stabbings and things magnitudes worse that I won't go into detail here. And the terrifying thing is... it's addictive. Going through that kind of stress and that kind of trauma with a set of people that on day one were my mortal enemy, and somewhere along the way became closer than brothers... we formed a bond that I have never found anywhere else, and have never experienced since. I can remember that feeling of power when somebody raised their voice at me in the corridor and instantly the Mexicans were pouring out of their cells just to back me up. I remember sitting at those long cafeteria tables and being surrounded by people that would fight along side me and always had my back. Like the first time in my life I was important, I was worth fighting over, I had value... and coming from a home where I was seen as a burden at the BEST of times... being valued is such an intoxicating feeling.
The day I was released... They take you to a holding cell, the same holding cells they put everybody in when they are coming in, and these cells are designed to hold 50 people or so, and they usually have like four or more of these cells. And, there I was in one of these giant cells, and nobody else, and these cells always ALWAYS stink of this weird melange of diesel fuel and stale body odor... absolutely always. And when you are coming in, and going through processing, they are hot as hell... the same place when you are leaving is freezing. And quiet. Prison is never quiet. And for the first time in a very long time, it was just... quiet. They eventually strip search you and take your uniforms and prison issues away and you get street clothes and I remember thinking how strange the clothing looked from the street, and they smelled really strongly. What I was smelling was detergent. And then the guards come, three of them, and one at a time they ask you a series of questions to confirm your identity, and they do it over and over and over. Then they hand you your release papers, your court orders, and a bank card with all your money (if you have any) on it. And then you get patted down... again...
Then the longest walk of my life. The prison I was released from has this walkway, kind of like a covered and enclosed bridge you have to cross to get out and it's about 100-150 feet long and about 20 wide. And the floors are white and the ceiling is white and on both sides is floor to ceiling glass and your about two floors up. That walk seemed like a million miles. At the end of it, you get to basically an armored door, and through this speaker in the wall, they ask you a million questions again and tell you to look at this mirror (one was glass) to confirm you identity again. Then you enter this armored box basically where there is a door in front of you and one behind you, and only one door can be opened at any time. Then you walk out into a lobby where there were more guards, and for the first time in such a long time people called me by name... "Good luck, Lucas."
Sitting in the car on the way home, I remember looking back at the prison and feeling sad. I felt lost. Being out around "normal" people I felt like an alien, I felt like my crime was tattooed on my forehead and my simply walking on the side walk was a crime and I was the outsider. Seeing people walk and talk and laugh and joke and just be people and doing normal everyday life things was an incredible culture shock to me. Seeing alot of the things these people did would actually get you hurt in prison or worse. And the smells. You never realize how much perfume and cologne and detergent and things like that actually smell until you've been away from it for a long period of time.
We went to this place where we could look out over the mountains and stuff, and that's where I broke down. Just sitting there, and it was absolutely quiet except for the wind. There were no other people, no cars, no constant announcements over a PA, and my view wasn't obstructed by razor wire and guard towers... That's where it overwhelmed me. All of that pain, all of that fear and anxiety and everything that prison rules say you as a "man" cannot be come back... and I was terrified of being out of prison, i was scared to death to be outside that fence line. I cried. I cried because of the people I left behind, I cried for the people that would NEVER come home, I cried because of the horrible things I had to do inside just to survive. I cried at the monster I had no choice but to become. Everything the prison had taught me to be just to survive, no longer worked. The rules inside no longer apply outside the fence. I cried because once again, I was horribly alone.
I knew my father for 13 days after getting home. A measly 13 days is all I got with my dad before he died. In that time I had, he told me that I was a radically different person from the kid he saw go to prison. I was meaner, I had "the eyes that have seen some horrible things", I even talked different and was aggressive with people. He told me my mom was actually complaining to him about how mean I was....
I had no choice... I wasn't trying to be mean or aggressive, Hell, I wasn't even aware I was doing it. I just wanted survive... and that's how I did in prison. Here I was out in the world "rehabilitated"... and once again the outsider.
Like the psychologist said, recovery is lonely. It has immense and wonderful rewards, but it is a profoundly lonely experience. And even with all the changes and growing up that I have done, and many of you have witnessed, I still carry my battle scars from my past. I still have habits. I still guard my food when I eat by wrapping one arm around my plate and eating very very fast. I still use my prison laundry bag, the same one from prison in fact. I have a locker buddy (for those who know what that is), even though I don't have a locker nor do I need a locker buddy because shelves aren't contraband in the real world. Calling somebody a 'punk' is still a grave insult to me. And I guess from what I see and what I am told, I'm still pretty aggressive.
I guess no matter how far I have come, I will always carry my past with me. And I know this will not come as a shock to anybody, but it really forged who I have become. I do not wish what happened to me on anybody, not even my worst enemy. Nobody deserves that kind of life. But at the same time, I can't say I would change it either. I know what I am now, I know what I have become... but I don't know the person I would be had my life been different or even better.
I cry for the little kid that I was never allowed to be. That little boy never stood a chance and he is dead... that kid that I never got be is gone. I did the best I could, with what little I had, and all of my choices, good and bad, were all based on a single goal... survival at any cost...
Though the child that I wish I could have been is gone, it is my duty now as an adult to stand monument to the cost of abuse and addiction and all the other things I have suffered. I could not save that kid, but I can damn well protect his memory. Looking back helps put all of that in perspective for me.
Sorry if this was kind of rambling and chaotic... i just needed to put all this out there i guess