Survive Prison — Ask the Inmate
Surviving prison, mentally, physically, and with your record intact, requires a set of skills and strategies that nobody teaches you before you go in. The adjustment is enormous, and how you handle the first days and weeks sets the tone for everything that follows. This section covers the practical realities of daily life inside a correctional facility, how to navigate the social environment without becoming a target or a participant in activities that will extend your sentence, how to protect your mental health during a long sentence, what the research shows about maintaining family connections and why they matter for survival, how to use the time productively rather than letting it use you, and what the people who come out strongest have in common. The guidance here comes from someone who served 66 months in the federal system and built a business around helping the people left behind. Do the time. Do not let the time do you. See also our sections on Prison Violence, Prison Discipline, and Re-entry and Rehabilitation.
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This is a serious situation and the frustration of watching someone you love get repeatedly denied protection while facing genuine danger is one of the hardest things a family can go through from the outside. The internal grievance process is the necessary first path even when it feels like it is going nowhere. A denied 805 request for administrative segregation is not the end of the road. The next step in the federal grievance process is a BP-9, which
Read moreGenerally, no, and in practice, older inmates tend to have some of the smoothest experiences inside. There is an unwritten respect that exists in prison culture toward older inmates that outsiders rarely hear about. Younger inmates typically leave older people alone. An older inmate who carries themselves with dignity, minds their own business, and does not insert themselves into conflicts that have nothing to do with them is almost universally left in peace. The prison yard has its own
Read moreIt depends largely on where you are doing your time. In some facilities and at certain security levels, gang affiliation does provide a form of protection that feels necessary to people who are new and uncertain about their surroundings. But it is not the rule and it is not the only way to survive a long stretch. The vast majority of inmates doing serious time never join a gang and never feel they had to. The decision to join
Read moreThe most important mindset shift anyone can make going in is to decide that the time is going to work for them rather than against them. That is not a platitude. It is a daily choice that separates people who come out stronger from people who come out the same or worse. Before anything else, make a plan. Decide what you are going to accomplish with the time available. Learn something. Get a credential. Get physically fit. Read everything
Read moreFederal prison camp is not like anything you'd see on television, it's not like "Orange is the New Black". There are no cells, it is an army barracks-like sleeping arrangement. Large dorm with rows of bunk beds separated by lockers. The basic inmate profile consists of low threat, shorter term inmates with non-violent pasts. All inmates must have a job whether it be in the kitchen, cleaning the dorms or bathrooms, working in commissary, the library, in education or landscaping
Read moreThe county jail system is the worst because there is nothing for the inmates to do. That lack of activity sometimes causes temperatures to boil as personality clashes manifest themselves in this environment. She will have an easier time in the prison environment because it is easier to get into a routine that consumes more of her day. The biggest issue for inmates is keeping their mouths shut and respecting the space and privacy of the other inmates. This is not like
Read morePatience is genuinely required when someone you love is inside. The timeline and rhythm of life in a correctional facility operate completely differently from the outside world and the gap between what you expect and what actually happens can be jarring, especially early in a sentence. On the phone access question, newly arrived inmates at a state prison typically go through an intake and orientation process before they get full access to facility services, including the phone. Getting assigned
Read moreSix weeks feels like a long time when someone you love has essentially disappeared into a system and you are getting very little information about what is happening. Understanding what actually goes on during that period makes the wait more bearable, even if it does not make it shorter. The diagnostic or reception phase exists because the prison system needs a complete picture of every incoming inmate before deciding where to house them permanently and what programs they need.
Read moreMostly, prison is not like what you see on television. It is boring and the best way for an inmate to do their time is to stay busy with some sort of routine. Inmates that have goals and want to come out better than they went in will survive the experience. There are fights but the consequences of having them is that it will make the time ahead more difficult on the inmates involved. There is TV, there is exercise, there is a library, recreation areas and plenty
Read moreThe diagnostic prison is to assemble information on the inmate for further classification, designation, treatment and programming. Your inmate may not be prison material but very few are when they go in. There will be an adaptation period where he will need to keep to himself and observe the routine of others and find one that will best fit his personality and interests. Prison is like a little town with everything that you would see in a community, just in
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