Showing posts with label prison ministry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prison ministry. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Buddhist on Death Row (Book Notes)

Recently I read The Buddhist on Death Row - How One Man Found Light in the Darkest Place by David Sheff. It's an excellent book...one I would highly recommend. 

From the inner cover, the book is described as, "Jarvis Jay Master's early life was a horror story. He grew up in a house filled with crack, alcohol, physical abuse, and men who paid his mother for sex. He and his siblings were split up and sent to foster care when he was five and he progressed quickly to juvenile detention, car theft, armed robbery, and ultimately San Quentin State Prison. While in prison, he was set up for the murder of a guard and convicted - which landed him on death row. He's been there since 1990."

Having been involved in a prison ministry program and corresponded with many people since March 2013, many of the references in the book made sense to me - the solitary confinement (or "the hole"), the restriction of items that could be used as weapons, lockdowns, and more. 

I was so impressed with Jarvis Master's ability to spiritually grow so much in such a challenging place, and - even more so - his desire to want to help others on death row in San Quentin. Some of the parts of the books that were particularly insightful for me are below:

 - Hurt people hurt people. ("Warlock," former Crips shot-caller, in a GRIP (Guiding Rage into Power) class at San Quentin State Prison.

- "Deep sadness came over me as I watched these powerful men lift hundreds of pounds of weights over their heads. I looked around the yard and made the gruesome discovery that everyone else had the same deep gashes - behind their legs, on their backs, all over their ribs - evidence of the violence in our lives..." 

- What have I done with my life? Have I been of benefit or have I caused harm? 

- The judge said, "If people don't want children, they shouldn't have them. Apparently, his mother didn't know how not to have them." This made him think If my mother shouldn't have had me, I should never have been born; the world would have been a better place without me. He felt he had been born useless.

- As hard as it is to accept, this is where you have to be now. You may not see it, but you are fortunate to be in a place where you can know humanity's suffering and learn to see the perfection of all beings and yourself.

- Continue facing your pain, because the more you free yourself from being held back by your past, the more you can focus on others. 

- Studies have shown that solitary confinement is psychologically damaging....Courts have ruled that solitary confinement and cruel and unusual punishment. A UN report concluded that a stay longer than 15 days in isolation amounts to torture. Jarvis had been in the hole for 22 years.

- In marriage, cultivate generosity, kindness, enthusiasm, discipline, wisdom, patience, and most of all, compassion, not only for yourselves but for all beings. The most important thing is for you to be kind to each other.

- The judge who sentenced Jarvis to death row didn't believe in the death penalty but her job required her to ignore her conscience and follow the law. When Judge Savitt sentenced him she acknowledged that deciding the punishment was the most difficult decision she'd ever faced.

- Buddhism teaches you there's always another way.

- The smallest things Jarvis makes the biggest thing over (like a leaf on the ground) and the biggest things he sees as nothing at all.


- He thought about all the suicides he's heard about while he's been on death row.

- Regarding the guards: I was thinking how it must make them feel to work all day in a place where they're hated. They're prisoners too.

- Hope and fear are two sides of the same coin. Both are traps. Both rob you of the present moment.

- A highlight for Jarvis was when he was able to take 3 steps on the grass. He hadn't walked on the grass in 30 years.

- Mantra: How can I be helpful?

- Life is hard for everyone - we're all suffering together. We cause so much of our own suffering.

- Your practicing in a place where you're living among the suffering of lives lost, dreams lost, families and futures lost; the suffering of remorse and regret, old age and dying, the suffering of guards, and the suffering of pain and causing pain.

- My religion is very simple. My religion is kindness. (Dalai Lama)

- In Buddhism, just as in Christianity, there is a notion of hell. In Buddhism, it's not a literal place - no fire and devil - but a state of mind where there's unceasing suffering.

- Comparing yourself to others, you never win.

- How will I use today? Will I be asleep or awake? What will I notice? How can I help? Whose life will I touch?

- In the end, these things matter most: How well did you love? How fully did you live? How deeply did you let go? (Gautama Buddha)

Thursday, June 3, 2021

Help Yourself Now

 When I was at the library recently, there was a book on the new-book shelf called Help Yourself Now - A Practical Guide to Finding the Information and Assistance You Need by Jan Yager. 


There are a lot of resources and information packed into this book. The links below are ones that are relevant to my family and me that I want to read more about. There are many more chapters in the book than what are noted below.

Business, Entrepreneurship, and Employment

- Amber Grants - helps women achieve entrepreneurial dreams. The grant is $2,000 each month to a woman business owner. Once a year, the annual recipients are all eligible to get one $25,000 grant.

- Awesome Foundation - each month, a $1,000 grant is awarded.

- Walmart Foundation- $250+ grants.

- Entrepreneur Media - educates entrepreneurs through podcasts, videos, magazine, books, and online articles.

- Entrepreneurs' Organization - networking organization.

- SCORE Association - provides business guidance at no charge.

- National Association of Women Business Owners

Startup Professionals

- Whatever It Takes - for teens to launch a social entrepreneur enterprise and gain leadership skills. College credit is earned for doing the course. 

- HARO - media opportunities that is sent to over 800,000 subscribers.

- USA.gov - find a government job.

- Minnesota government jobs

Education - 197

Lemonade Day - helps youth become business leaders, social advocates, and community volunteers

- Internships.com - for college students

- Children's Defense Fund - college internships

- Acton Children's Business Fair - free program that has a free launch kit.

- Toastmasters International 

Financial Assistance

- The Pollination Project - awards $1,000 grants

- Suze Orman - financial advice

- FundRazr - fundraising campaigns

- Indiegogo - fundraising platform

- Patreon - fundraising platform for artists 

Health and Wellness

  Center for Journal Therapy

International Association for Journal Writing

Parenting

Foster Grandparent Program

Relationships 

Friendship Force - Twin Cities - travel abroad and live with host families.

Transportation, Travel, and Recreation 

Amtrak 

Road Scholar

Volunteerism

Do Something - for youth

Global Volunteers

The Innocence Project 





Saturday, December 9, 2017

Countdown to Christmas - Days 1-5

For over ten years, I've done a countdown to Christmas for Sophia and Olivia. I started with brown-construction-paper gingerbread men in a chain. Each one had a date and label on it with things we would do that day.

Eventually, I made an advent calendar with little embroidered envelopes made from wool felt and embroidery floss.


It hung by the wood stove for the first couple of years. One year, I moved it to the banister in the front hall.


Cooper, who was still a young dog at the time, ate some of the envelopes when we were gone. I haven't replaced them so we don't use the calendar anymore. (I need to repair that this year so we can use it again.)

This year, I have the days planned out - special things that we will do each day. Some days have more "exciting" things than others. The point is that we are doing something a bit out of the ordinary to enjoy time together as a family and/or do new things that are meaningful to us.

My overall goals for myself on each day during December/Advent:

-          Start a gratitude journal. I am using a special book for this and am using the following links that have gratitude images and prompts:


http://homegrownhospitality.typepad.com/files/attitudeofgratitude.pdf

http://homegrownhospitality.typepad.com/files/habitofhappy1.pdf

http://www.allisonkimball.com/files/akimball_gratitude-1.pdf

http://www.allisonkimball.com/files/akimball_gratitude2_lists.pdf

http://www.allisonkimball.com/files/akimball_gratitude_piegraphs2.pdf

I printed and cut each one, and glued it into the gratitude journal. Using Prismacolor markers and colored pencils, I color them and write on them. 

Around them, I am using a kindness calendar that Mothering Arts offered during December. I write about the things I did each day.

-          Clean the house and declutter for 15 minutes. (I'm doing this more in blocks of time rather than each day.)

-          Gather one bag of items that can be donated to the second-hand store. Do this every day until Christmas so we donate 25+ bags of items that we no longer need, but may be useful for another person or family. The money from the sale of the items will help support programs that help others in the community. (Again, this is being done in blocks of time so some days I'm getting more items than other days.)

-          Read one Christmas story each day from now until the 25th. (I haven't started on this one yet since we are still going through the Christmas bins. Will catch up this weekend with reading.)

- Use the Family Reflections during the month and write down what each person says. (We haven't done this yet, but I would like to do this each year from this point forward and see how our answers change.)

December 1, 2017

I walked Scooby by Demontreville Lake while Sophia had her harp lesson. He was so happy after his walk.


We even found a tennis ball on the walk which we brought back with us in the car. He's watching for Sophia to come out of her lesson in the photo below.


I donated three bags of items to Goodwill. Felt good to get them out of the house.

Saturday, December 2, 2017

Sophia hosted a blood drive with the American Red Cross as well as oversaw the assembly of 30 comfort bags for children who have cancer who are undergoing chemotherapy.

During the last couple of weeks of November she had purchased lots of items to fill the comfort bags thanks to donations and grants from individuals and businesses.

She instructed people about what to include in the comfort bags - giving each person the opportunity to fill a bag for a particular gender and age group.


Olivia was in charge of giving rewards to each of the blood donors as well as encouraging them to eat a snack. Each donor received a thank you card, heart-shaped window star, one of Sophia's CDs, and a gift certificate to either Kwik Trip, the movie theater, or Pizza Hut.


Family members, friends, and people who were attending the holiday fair in the same building helped create the bags. Below, my sister filled a bag.


This is an example of what was included in the comfort bags:


We tied eight fleece blankets. There are six more that we still need to complete at home.


We were so grateful to have the help of girls who knew how to tie the blankets and enjoyed doing making them.


The bags were created throughout the day by people of all ages.


By the end of the day, all 30 bags had been assembled.


There were 12 blood donors - of which 25% were teens. This was the first time that a blood drive had been held at this location, so the American Red Cross was pleased with the number of new donors as well as teen donors.


We were pretty exhausted by the end of the day since we left the house around 7:00 a.m. and didn't get home until close to 5:00 p.m. Ended up having pizza for dinner.

That night there was a super bright moon. It literally lit up the entire backyard.


Sunday, December 3, 2017

We picked out a tree today from Prairie Restorations. Sophia chose it and ended up hauling it over to the ruler on the post that determined how much it cost.


The girls helped tie the three to the top of the roof of the Jeep.


That afternoon, we had another fire in the fire pit in the backyard. We're trying to burn brush that has been sitting there for quite a while. If we didn't burn it now, birds and wildlife (rabbits and skunks) would nest there over the winter and into the spring. We would have a huge brush pile that would have been there another year since we wouldn't want to burn it when they were nesting in it.

It's nice to have it cleared out now (for the most part). We'd like to create a smaller fire pit next spring and sod around the area that we burned.

Also on Sunday, I cleaned my home office and put things away that were on the floor. Spent 2 hours and 45 minutes doing this. Got rid of 7 bags of garbage, recycling, or donations.

Monday, December 4, 2017

The intention today was to celebrate Chalica - a Unitarian Universalist holiday. It starts on the first Monday of December and goes for seven days. Each day represents one of the seven principles of Unitarian Universalism.

The first one basically is that each person is important. So, there were two things that I wanted to do: have a meal where everyone’s favorite food is represented and watch Meet the Robinsons.

We ended up doing the meal, but didn’t watch the movie since I had a Lions Club foundation board meeting that night.

The meal included: Papa Murphy pizza (Olivia's choice)...


 bratwurst (Paige's choice)...


fresh fruit (my choice)....


and sparkling grape juice (Sophia's choice).


Everyone was happy because there was something that each person liked that was included in the meal.

While I was at the board meeting, the girls decorated the Christmas tree.


They each picked ornaments that they wanted on the tree.


Many of the ornaments are ones we bought in China when they were adopted in 2001 and 2003.


Aspen and Danny oversaw the decorating of the tree.


When we turned the light out, I monkeyed around with the camera. Had fun with creating "light pictures."

 

The girls wanted to make sure I got a "normal" picture of the tree...which I did:


Tuesday, December 5, 2017

This was an unusual and memorable day. Sophia was able to observe three bunion surgeries with her podiatrist/surgeon. He gave that opportunity since she is doing a 4-H project/presentation on the surgical removal of bunions.

After driving on very icy and slippery roads thanks to an overnight rain, freeze, and snow, we arrived at the hospital by 7:45 a.m. One of the surgical nurses showed Sophia where to change into scrubs. 


She was able to observe up close the procedures which were fascinating for her. She learned a significant amount in the three hours she spent in the operating room watching the surgeries. 

There she is taking photos (one of over 400 photos from the morning!) with Dr. Benjamin Clair doing a bunion surgery. Techically, it was a "Lapidus arthrodesis (also known as a first tarsometatarsal or first TMT arthrodesis) hallux valgus correction." 


After the surgeries, Sophia went to the homeschool co-op to take her piano lesson and PSEO course (American Government). It was full day.

While she and Olivia were at the co-op, I dropped off five bags of donations at Family Pathways. I'm up to 8 bags of donations so far this month.

For the second day of Chalica, the focus was on doing something nice for someone else - or being kind in all you do.

So, I wrote two Christmas cards to the Charlie and Yovani through the prison ministry program I'm involved with that focuses on letter writing. I write letters regularly to these two men who are in prison in Missouri and California respectively. I've been writing to Charlie now for a few years and Yovani since earlier this year. 

It's been rewarding and enlightening for me to correspond with both me; and I've learned quite a bit about the prison system. I wish there were more things to help inmates improve their lives, gain marketable skills, and receive a solid education so that when they are released the recidivism rate would be lower.