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Issue 2, February 2007


Irrelevant

by Antonio Howard
Writer, Poet, Artist, Solutionary, Prisoner and Human Being

When you’re a man sentenced to life in prison, becoming relevant is your only way out. So, for years I’ve aspired to become relevant—relevant in the lives of others. And I have, in the lives of many prisoners. However, the fact I’ve been unable to extend that relevance, beyond the prison environment, has reeked havoc on my soul. But I hadn’t fully acknowledged the effects until today. Because today I received the letter.

Though not unlike the others I’ve received throughout the years, it’s the first of its kind to pierce my armour. And after 15 years of successfully parrying its blade, there’s something to be said about that. Who better to say it than me? And what better place to start than at the beginning?

I was 15 years old when I was arrested, convicted and sentenced to spend the rest of my life in prison. And make no mistake about it, prison is prison. But apart from my share of adjustment problems, I spent the first few years just passing time. And during that time, my favorite pastime was letter-writing. As long as that was an option, despite whatever else was going on, prison was bearable. So, I wrote and people responded. Mainly girls my age, which at the time, was enough.

But there came a time when I started reading more, and through books, learning about the world beyond what was familiar to me. Subsequently, my needs changed. Corresponding simply for the sake of having a pen pal had lost its mystique. I needed letters filled with substance rather than hugs and kisses. Unfortunately, none of the letters I received provided that. To make matters worse, my overzealous attempts to “reeducate” those who were willing to communicate with me, ended up pushing them away. So, for several years, I received no mail at all.

Eventually, I made a decision to stop trying to reeducate others. Instead, I sought out the kind of people I’d become: socially conscious and politically aware, people well beyond my years and limited life experience. Soon, I was sending letters to places where the words “INMATE MAIL PA. DEPT. OF CORRECTIONS” rubber-stamped on the envelopes, destroyed any chance I had of eliciting a response. Still, I expected once they received my initial letter informing them of my existence, a deluge of letters would follow. I was wrong. No one responded.

Meanwhile I continued to read. I read nearly everything I put my hands on. I even sought out literature that was unavailable through the prison library. I wrote to bookstores, book clubs, libraries and publishers. Some responded; others didn’t. Those who did informed me I was no longer relevant. Of course they didn’t use those words; they used these:

“We regret that we cannot accept your order because your mailing address has been identified as a correctional facility.” Writers Digest Book Club, Central Islis, NY

Which brings me back to the letter. The one I mentioned earlier. The one whose blade pierced my armor and did what none before it had: wound me. It comes from one of the largest booksellers around: Barnes and Noble. It begins:

“We would like to inform you that all book orders to be sent to a Correctional Facility must be purchased at the store. Your family and friends are welcome to visit our store to purchase books and magazines and have them sent directly to you.”

They wouldn’t permit me, however, to place my order directly. So, they were kind enough to return the check for the book I wanted. And along with the check came that letter: society’s most recent assessment of my relevance.

That was the letter that wounded me—the blade I parried for 15 years: the stark reality that I’m no longer relevant.
 


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