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My Prison Script đź‘‘

Hope in this script is not grandiose; it is scrappy and immediate. It hides in the mundane: the perfect fold of a napkin, the way dawn hits the bricks just so, the exact moment a joke lands and the room erupts. Hope looks like careful planning—a list of small goals stitched across the inside of a shirt: learn calligraphy, finish the story you started, plant a seed in a crack of concrete if you can. It is practical, stubborn, and deeply human.

My prison script is full of stage directions: stand here, don’t stand there, silence at roll call. But within those constraints I compose entrances—quiet, deliberate—to commandeer small freedoms. I swap contraband bookmarks for recipes, smuggle stashed poems in the heel of a boot, trade sketchbook pages for cigarettes at the index of a thumb. Bars frame my view, but they don’t write my dialogue. I annotate margins with tiny acts of defiance: a doodle in the ledger, a note folded into the shaft of a broom. These annotations become the story other men and women read between the lines. my prison script

Exit strategies lurk like plot twists. Some leave with fanfare, others with the quiet of a curtain falling. I rehearse my own: apologies, paperwork, the rehearsed humility of a man who knows his future will not be a single scene but a long, uncertain series. My prison script ends not with a tidy resolution but with an index of continuations—people to visit, letters to write, skills to keep sharpening, the steady work of rebuilding. Hope in this script is not grandiose; it