Showing posts with label amazon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label amazon. Show all posts

Monday, May 2, 2016

3 Stupid Snapchat Custom Geofilter Mistakes


Not that I love telling the whole world what a dumb-dumb I am, but I am pretty sure if I am making stupid mistakes, other people are as well (I hope). If I don’t share my experience, even if it is not very flattering, I am just being a dick. So here we go:
  1. Know Your Time Zones: Geofilters are posted at PST (Pacific Standard Time). Pay attention to the timezone you are posting in!! I made this mistake for a posting I made in Maryland for an event Gary Vaynerchuk was speaking at (and the filter was directly to him), but I was three hours off! Was he even there to see it? I don’t know. I didn’t hear anything. So it either sucked and he ignored it, or he didn’t see it. I prefer to think he didn’t see it. It got used, it got shared, but not by him.
  2. Know Your Target Zone: I made a custom filter advertising my book for the Pepperdine University graduation this weekend. I had it all planned out. Along with filters for the Dodgers game that night, and SF Union Square that day, I was running free download on Amazon Kindle. It was perfect! So much exposure to people in the markets I want to be noticed in. What could go wrong? Well, if you put the “fence” around the wrong part of campus, no one can use your damn filter! $10.85 down the drain. I looked over every picture I could find, read all the descriptions of where the ceremony would be, and I totally whiffed. I don’t know if they moved it, if the map of the campus was off, or what, but I whiffed. I was all over Twitter and Instagram to “connect the dots” and instead I was just an idiot with a frowny face superimposed over photos of Pepperdine University (you can see them all over my Instagram and Twitter page). Stupid!
  3. Know Your Audience: I am on a mission to get certain people to notice me: Gary Vaynerchuk, James Altucher and Metallica. I bug GaryVee and Altucher on Instagram and Twitter (and at events with Snapchat when my dumbass puts the right time). I wanted to make something cool for Metallica. They are putting some final touches on their upcoming album and I thought a custom filter for their HQ would be rad, different, and get me noticed. Not in a, oh look at that idiot sort of way, but, oh, that’s cool, let’s call him and see if he wants to hang out with us sort of way (by the way, the answer is yes I do, for all three of you: GV, JA, and Metallica). So I built it out, launched it, and absolutely nothing happened. Zero. They didn’t even snap that day. I made something and had no idea if it would even get eyeballs on it. $5, down the drain. I did make one for their Record Store Day performance in Berkeley a few weeks later. It got used a ton, but still no call to hang out. *sigh
Those are my errors so far. Hopefully I will be writing more “how to’s” and not “how-not-to’s” in the coming months. I think this is a killer platform and I thought of a cool way for brick and mortar stores to use it in an awesome way. Hit me up on Twitter or Snapchat to find out!

Eh, f*** it, I will just tell you here: Pay people to come in to your store and snap their experience. Like a “man on the streets” sort of thing. I thought this up walking around Coscto today. I could have made a killer snap story about my trip. I mean, I would have made it WAY more interesting than it was in real life, but all the stuff in my head that I could have done were gems! Talking to people, checking out food, playing with crap, hanging out with the guys that give away freebies and demo blenders. It could have been awesome.

Take from this what you will.

Adios.

Joey

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

My First Day In Prison



This WAS my first day in prison. At San Quentin. I pulled this directly from my book, Prison Diary(a): A San Quentin Comedy, Kinda. Enjoy! I didn't!

Day 1

Really long day. Slept on a bench last night in the county jail. Don’t worry, I had a dirty t-shirt for a pillow. Super comfortable. They got us up at 6am (not like any of us were sleeping). We had to strip naked so they could check if we were carrying any paraphernalia under our ball sack or in our buttholes. Just a room full of dudes, naked, bending over and spreading our butt cheeks, totally normal. When I first came in to county and they asked me to lift my balls and spread my butt cheeks, bend over and cough, I asked him if he was serious. How big are your nuts that you can hide anything behind them? Maybe roll something in to them like a tortilla? What the hell is going on down there? And who is going to go through the trouble of shoving something up their butthole and letting a little piece of it stick out so the guards could see? If I am stuffing anything up there, it is going all the way baby! Go big or go home!! Even though you can’t,you are in jail. I had been in court all day, there was no way I was stuffing  a weapon or drugs up my asshole at 8am and then sitting on it all day. Just  for the record, it’s not like I would have brought it in that way no matter what the situation was that day, but you know what I mean. We got dressed up in our transfer gear: orange jumpsuits (just like the movies! Orange Is The New Fucked). They wrapped a chain around our waists,chained our handcuffed wrists to our waist, and attached another chain to our feet which was then connected to our chained up ankles. Basically, we weren’t going anywhere. I mean, we could run, but it would have to be really fast baby steps. Fence climbing is totally out at this point.  They loaded the “dangerous” guys first. I don’t know why I put dangerous in quotes, the dudes in red are dangerous as shit. They had their own separate cages, dressed in red instead of orange. Crips and Nortenos are twice as angry at this point. They are heading to prison AND they have to wear red. Poor guys.
We loaded on, two to a seat even though it was really made for one. Even the big fat guy got stuck next to someone, luckily it was the smallest dude in the group. From what I learned later about the little guy, I don’t think he was too upset about having to snuggle up next to a big ‘ol teddy bear.
You are on the road before the first light, peering through the bars in the bus, trying to catch a glimpse of anything familiar. Keep in mind, I had only been outside once in the last two weeks, and that was basically in a huge concrete box. All I could see was the sky. They had all sorts of fencing and barbed wire at the top of these 35 foot walls. Who the hell could climb up there to even need the fencing? There must be some pretty acrobatic dudes in here, or guys still high on PCP. Those guys are nuts. Don’t mess with someone on PCP, they are like the White Walkers in Game of Thrones. Anyways,we were squinting, looking at “home” through the windows. It felt like a field trip in elementary school (if field trips were years and years long). It was raining so we could barely see anything, but just being out of the cell felt amazing. We are on the road with everyone heading to work, the traffic was pretty bad in a couple spots, but the longer we were in the bus meant the less time we were at San Quentin. We thought the CO was messing with us when he said we were going to SQ.
“Ha Ha. Very funny copper.”
He wasn’t kidding, not that it would have been that funny of a joke anyways.
It takes about an hour and a half to get there. I had never even driven by San Quentin before. The only visual I had was from Metallica’s St. Anger video they had done about a decade earlier.  That was all the visual I needed. This is going to be so fucked. All the guys in county were telling me how everyone goes to Delano for reception, no big deal. Dorm living, people are laid back, blah, blah, blah. No one mentioned SQ. Dickheads.
So we are all breaking our necks trying to catch a glimpse of our new home. It is worse than any of us ever could have imagined. Huge walls,shitty, run down houses surrounding it (I am guessing where COs live?), all gray, dark, ominous, just awful. We pull through the gates. It is still early enough that no one is out at yard yet. We see mostly old buildings but pull up next to a modern one. My thought was, “ok, there are some old parts, but since we are only here for a little while, we must be staying in the new part.” I was totally wrong, but I didn’t know that yet. We get off the bus, check our names against the roll sheet, and strip naked, again. Do a nuts and butts check, again(like we stopped off for some heroin and weed on the way in). Then finally we get our SQ blue uniforms. Keep in mind we are in San Francisco at 730am in February. It is freezing. All the COs are wearing beanies, gloves, and huge jackets. We are standing in front of a wide open door, butt-ass naked. It is coooooooollllldddd! Not the most flattering weather for a gear check either.Just saying, I had to postpone my Playgirl photo shoot that day. I was experiencing Minimus Wienerus. Very humbling experience so far, not expecting it to get much better. 
The hallway is lined with holding cells. Imagine walking through a hospital but instead of rooms there are big steel doors with little windows and a bunch of sad people dressed in orange inside. That’s what this hallway looks like. They put us in to our holding cell: 12x12, maybe 15 ft.ceilings, off white walls, two 4ft. benches, sink/toilet combo thingy, and we wait.
And wait.
And wait some more.
Finally they move us to a different holding cell so we can take pictures for our badges, finger printing, and do our check in interview.
This is how the interview went:
(just for the visual, I am in a tiny office and the woman interviewing me is about 6’3,240):
CO: name?
Me: Joey Reghitto
CO: Age?
Me: 34
CO: Height?
Me: Six foot one
CO: Weight?
Me: 210
CO: Highest education level?
Me: Master’s degree
CO: What the fuck? What the hell are you doing here?
Me: Made outwith a senior in high school.
CO: That’s it? 
Me: Yup
CO:Bullshit. You fucked her.
Me: Nope.
CO:Bullshit. She sucked your dick.
Me: Nope.
CO: Hmmm.What’s the deal?
Me:  I was the Assistant Principal.
CO: Oh.Shit. That was dumb.
Me: You think?
CO: Didn’t you have a lawyer?
Me: Yup.
CO: And you still got prison time?
Me: Yup.
CO: Should have gotten a better lawyer.
Me: It’s looking like it. 
CO: Well, I hope it was worth it.
Me: Of course not, (chuckle) are you serious?
CO: Yes I am.Next!
We went back in to the holding cell to wait for everyone to finish, then we headed back to our original holding cell.
We waited.
And waited.
And waited.
They brought us a bag lunch: two pieces of bread wrapped in cellophane, packet of grape jelly, a packet of peanut butter you have to rub together (you look like you are trying to start a fire with sticks) so it will come out, milk, and two squares of a graham cracker. Bon apetite!
There was a clock on the wall in the hallway, so we knew exactly what time it was, and there was room in the cell for some people to spread out on the floor, or on the benches, but not really. It worked great for the 5’0 Pisas (unaffiliated Latinos), but not for me. I was the tallest and subsequently the most uncomfortable. The guards came by and dropped off the sheets and blankets that we will be using (one thin white sheet, one thin wool blanket, and one thick, super itchy wool blanket) and some guys tried to sleep while we waited. Nothing like concrete and wood benches for sleep, but when you are up all night you can pretty much sleep anywhere. Not me. ADHD had my brain spinning out of control. I just sat there, and thought. Blah.
Dinner came by around 630pm. Salisbury steak? I think. Boiled green beans, piece of lemon cake or something, and some milk, all on a maroon cafeteria tray with a spork. After dinner we had medical checks. We had to see a couple different nurses, get some shots, and then talk to a psychiatrist to see if we were nuts, if we were going to commit suicide, stuff like that. My answer to the suicide question may have been different if I had seen where we were going to be living before the interview, but I didn’t, so the answer was “No.”
I came to SQ a few days before the Super Bowl (Seattle v.Denver). There was a TV in county, so I was able to have my heart broken by Seattle a couple weeks earlier. I thought maybe there would be a TV in here too. The building we were in was nice, there was no reason to think the living situation would be much different than county (I was very wrong), so I was shooting the shit with the guard about watching the game. He said there are some TVs in the cell blocks, maybe I would be able to see one from my cell. Cool, I thought. One small victory. Got my blood pressure taken, temperature, flu shot,etc. Then I went in to see the psychiatrist.
This is how that conversation went:
Dr: How are you?
Me: Fine, not great, obviously.
Dr: Are you feeling depressed, sad, anything of the sort (he has a Russian accent also, so add in your head while you read).
Me: How could I not be, look where I am?
Dr: True true, but are you suicidal? How are you coping?
Me: I’m still here
Dr: Ok. Good. I overheard you talking about watching the Super Bowl with the guard out there. Are you a football fan?
Me: Huge. I love it. (I’m thinking we will start talking about the game).
Dr: Have you been so privileged in your life that you have not had to worry about physical harm before?
Me: Wait. What? I guess nothing out of the ordinary. Why?
Dr: Because you are getting ready to go in to a penitentiary,and you are inquiring about a football game.
Me: Yeah?
Dr: What you should be worrying about is being murdered. This is a very dangerous place, with dangerous people. Inmates are stabbed and killed here all the time. But your thoughts are on an American football game?
Me: Well, not any more.
Dr: Keep your eyes and ears open, be safe. Bad things happen all the time. Next!
So, if things weren’t bad enough, they got WAY worse after that conversation. Holy shit. This shit can’t be like the movies, right?
Back to the holding cell, this time only for a little bit. We got pulled out about 8pm. They line us up, hand us a piece of paper with our assignment on it: Alpine 318L. Here we go. My heart is beating out of my chest. My eyes are scanning everything as we walk out of the nice building we have been sitting in all day and head towards what looks like castle walls towering above our heads. They were so close together it felt like they were holding us in(which, I guess, ironically, they were). Bright lights in certain places, pitch black in others. Cold and wet, COs yelling at us to hurry the fuck up, calling us retards and faggots. We pass a handful of other, towering buildings as we are forced to stay on the yellow line. All the nice buildings are where the medical offices and holding cells are, the rest looks like a medieval city. We walk around the corner and see two towering doors wide open, must be home. We walk in, the hallways were damp. Metal staircases, barbed wire, guards lined up. It looks like there are four cell blocks connected on either side of a hallway, stairs towering up the middle to get to the level you need to be. We walk in to the first door on our left. The noise from the different cell blocks was echoing throughout the hallway.  Yelling,chanting, anger, aggression, pouring through the cracks. We walk through the “Alpine”door, and it hits you like a fucking train; ho-ly shit.
If I were going to write down what I thought prison would be like (I mean before I got there, obviously), if I was thinking worst case scenario, this is honestly worse than I could have even imagined, but I can’t say I was shocked. You walk through the door and are looking down a narrow room,five stories high, towering windows on the right wall, bridges, catwalks, barbed wire, and rows of tiers and cells on the left. Arms are hanging out the cells,holding mirrors, middle fingers from others. Trash is flying down from the upper tiers. Yelling and screaming the most horrible things.
“Fuck you guys,”
“Where are you from?”
“I’m going to fucking stab you.”
“Let me see your buttholes.”
“You guys are going to die.”
All kinds of the worst shit you could possibly hear in this given situation. Actually, I can’t think of any situation where you would want to hear the shit they were yelling. We could be at Disneyland, and if someone yelled at me, “I want to see your butthole,” or “I am going to slit your fucking throat,” the day would have just taken a dramatic turn for the worse.
I’m going to die?
Great.
You want to see my butthole?
Splendid.
We are a bunch of faggots and we are going to get fucked like faggots?
Aw, shit. Sign me up!
They line us up on the first tier (where the biggest nut bags are housed) and how do they make the situation even better? You guessed it,they made us strip naked (again) and change in to different blues, right thereon the tier, right in front of everyone.
Voyeur much?
Holy shit.
Naked?
Again?
When  does the fun stop?
So the guys really do get to see our buttholes? Perfect! I hope mine was just dirty and hairy enough to deter any carnal thoughts,actually, deter any thoughts that weren’t, “ew, look at his butthole.”
After we changed, the guards asked if we were retarded and if we were going to stand there all day or get up to our fucking cells. I wanted to be retarded, but that really wasn’t an option. My cell was on the third tier, so I had to walk up the narrow staircase in the middle of the block,everyone asking where we were from, throwing stuff at us, mirrors everywhere,trying to catch a glimpse of the new guys. I get to the third tier, turn to head down to my cell, and all I see are mirrors sticking out of pitch black cells. I am zoned out at this point. In a trance. Fight or flight. My mind was going so fast I could barely processing anything. I must have been in survival mode. I get to my cell, total blackness. Guys on either side asking where I’m from, telling me they are nice, I can talk to them, to help them pass stuff down to other cells. I just stand in front of my cell and wait for the bar to get thrown to get in. The “bar” (literally a bar that goes along the top of all the cells to keep them closed) is on one end of the tier. It allows the guards to control the cells being opened or closed. If the bar is not “thrown” you can’t get in to the cell, even with a key. I walk in, my new bunky turns the fluorescent light on, and I am home.
I didn’t check out any cells as I was walking up. Actually, I wasn’t looking because I didn’t want to make eye contact with anyone. I was terrified, so this was the first I had seen what I was going to be living in. It was TINY! Like, holy shit tiny!Two people? In here? Are you crazy? It was smaller than my bathroom! The foot of the bunk bed basically butted up against the cell doors, the distance from the side of the bunk to the wall was about two feet, and the distance from the back of the bunk to the back wall was just big enough to fit a small toilet with a little leg room. 4x9? 4x10? Holy shit. How long am I here? The crazy thing was I was watching The Rock (great movie) the night I left county and thought,wow, those cells are small. And that was for one person! These are the same damn cells but for two! Shit! How old is this place? (Later found out it was builtin 1852) I am living in a historical landmark, without many updates. I’m surprised we aren’t living by candlelight. I guess they are just keeping it OG. 
Completely overwhelmed, my bunky tells me where my shelves are and which bunk is mine. He is posted on the bottom bunk, and I am in no mood to argue (even though I am “L” for lower bunk), so I hop up on the top one. The shelf is so close to the top of the bed I can’t turn on my side all the way and even have trouble rolling over. It is about a foot off the bed, if that. Man, this is shit. I know I am in prison, but fuckin’ a.
My bunky seems like a cool enough guy, said not to get too overwhelmed (easier said than done my friend). He said he cried the first night he was here (the first time he was in, three times ago), and that it was awful here, but it will be fine, just run a program (have a routine) and it will help. There are some crazy ass people in here (I am sure you are shocked to hear that). I am already feeling lucky that my dude at least seems normal.There are others that couldn’t fake it even if they tried.
He tells me we get out of the cells for about 40 minutes a day. 20 minutes for breakfast and 20 minutes for dinner. We pick up our bag lunch at breakfast on the way out of the chow hall. If my math is right, that means we are in our cells 23 hours and 20 minutes a day. Once or twice a week for yard (1 hour), and a couple times a week for showers (10 minutes) and that’s it. I am in a concrete bathroom nearly 24 hours a day with another human being. I have no idea when I transfer out of here. Could be a month, could be three,some guys have been here nine. Total crap shoot. Actual, total crap in general.All around. Everywhere. Smeared on the walls.
Not much to say or do, so, lights out.
But no sleepy for Joey.
I am sure you are not surprised that I ended up having a hard time falling asleep. This place is so loud. Yelling, screaming, chanting, all kinds of stuff. It sounds like a big angry party. If you didn’t know better you would expect to see people out walking around, but they aren’t, all the conversations are being yelled between guys hanging on the bars of a prison cell. Surreal. My mind is racing, my heart is racing. I am in prison. I fucked up so bad I am now in prison. Fuck. Fuck. Fuck me. I hate my guts. I fucking hate the shit out of myself. I have for the last year and a half. This brings it even more to a head. Fuck. Laying in my bunk, looking through bars at a sign that says: There are no warning shots in this cell block. This is what I have become. What a shitty son I am. Fucked up husband and father, friend, grandson, nephew, everything. I am fucking loser. A piece of shit loser. Fuck myself.

Monday, April 11, 2016

My Worst Day In Prison


Spoiler Alert!!

There is no spoiler alert.

This story isn’t in my book.

If you have read Prison Diary(a): A San Quentin Comedy, Kinda, (please write a review) you know I had some REALLY bad days. REEEAAALLLLY bad. (If you haven’t read it, what are you waiting for? Paperback. Kindle Version) All the fights, murders, threats, screaming, stripping down, and booty hole checking were better than my worst day in prison. That is saying a whole lot by the way (for those who have read the book, you know exactly what I mean).

The Day

Four months after I left San Quentin I was at the beautiful CTF in Soledad, CA. Actually, CTF was not beautiful at all, but the valley was. Soledad is a gorgeous place, but it was very central valley of them to put a prison there. Short-sighted to say the least. It could have been another Napa, or Santa Ynez Valley. It’s that beautiful and they have the second best soil for growing grapes in THE WORLD, but prisons are easy money, and the central valley is all about easy prison money. It was actually “nice” walking back from chow in the mornings on my “weekend” and looking up at the mountains that separated Salinas Valley and Carmel. I was very blessed to be there instead of some place outside of Fresno or Bakersfield, the crown jewels of the California prison system.

It was towards the end of July and I hadn’t talked to my wife or parents in over a week. The phones were down for repair. This was confusing to everyone because we used payphones. I am pretty sure on a scale of 1-10 the level of technology needed for these phones was somewhere around a zero, so I am not sure what needed to be fixed or what took them so long, but who am I going to complain to? Someone who doesn’t give a shit? Exactly.

The phones were finally up that Sunday night. We were finally able to line up and get our loved ones on the phone, connect to the outside world, the real world. Night yard was only an hour, so my time was extremely limited. I got though the line, made it up to the phone, dialed through the operator, beep boop beeped my wife’s number, and I can hear it in her voice as soon as she answers. Something is very wrong.

“Babe, I know there is not much time and I need to tell you something……”

Ok  

“It’s your mom. She’s sick.”

Sick how?

“They found tumors all over her body. It’s in her pelvis, her lungs, her shoulder, and a little spot on her skull.”

*silence

*gut punch

*searching for breath

“Babe? Are you ok?”

*holding back tears, barely.

*Eyes watering,

*lump building rapidly in my throat

Is it, is it, going to be ok? How bad is it? *voice quivering

“They don’t know yet. She has tests this week.”

Fuck.

Ok.

Shit.

Fuck.

*loudspeaker “Yard recall. Yard recall.”

Babe, I gotta go.

“I know. I heard. Are you okay?”

Yeah. I will call you if I can tomorrow.

Please tell my mom I love her.

“I will. I love you. It will be ok.”

I love you too sweet baby. Goodnight.

*click

In a fog I walked across the yard. Everyone streamlining in to the buildings. Program over for the day. I was in a bubble. Eyes down, thoughts lost, body collapsing from the inside out. In to my cell block. Loud, bright, inmates everywhere. Half naked ones that took a shower, blues and beanie caps for the ones that were out on the yard. Bro hugs for friends, kissing for those in relationships. Cleaning up the tattoo guns, wiping the blood from their brand new work, tucking everything away before the guards comedown to lock you up for the night. You better be by your door or you are going to have a long night.

Walking in a fog through the block.

Walking in a fog up the stairs.

Silence.

I can’t speak.

My brain is spinning so bad I can’t even send the signal to my mouth to move.

I am gone.

I am lost. 

Mom.

Fuck, mom.

I am so sorry. I am so sorry you have such a fucking loser as a son. You are wonderful, I am just a piece of shit.

I am so sorry mama.

I didn’t sleep at all that night. I broke down completely. Between tossing and turning, wiping my tears and blowing my nose, time nearly came to a standstill as I waited to talk to my mom or dad or anyone on the phone the next day.

Tumors?

Cancer?

Her hip? Lungs? Shoulder? A spot on her head?

That’s everywhere!

That is her whole fucking body!

My mother has cancer all over her entire body. She is going to die. I have never heard of anyone with cancer all over their body that survived.

My mom? Dead? Fuck.

Lungs?

Head?

Shit.

My family is dealing with cancer out there and I am in here for the next 2 months.

Will she make it 2 months? Will I ever see her again?

How bad is it?

Could she survive this?

What the hell kind of cancer spreads all over your body like that? How is she going to survive? She’s so young.

She has had to deal with her idiot son for 3 years. His embarrassment, his bullshit, his trial, his prison time, and now this.

FUCK ME!!!

FUCK!!!

There is nothing I can do. The one thing I could do, which is be there, is impossible because I am such a piece of shit. I am in fucking prison. Now my mom is going through cancer, my dad is going through my mom’s cancer, my sister is going through my mom’s cancer, and her piece of shit son is in Soledad like a fucking loser. Not like a fucking loser…. A. Fucking. Loser.

FUCK!!!

FUUUUCK!!!!

I hate myself. I could rip my face off right now. I could smash my head in to the wall. I deserve it. Crush my own skull by bashing my head against the concrete over and over again. Let my brains ooze out of my eye sockets. Blood gush out of my ears. Beaten until I wasn’t recognizable anymore. I would be on the outside what I feel on the inside, a disaster. A piece of shit disaster. Mangled. Destroyed.

Staring at a concrete ceiling, in a concrete room, in a concrete building, surrounded by multiple fences and barbed wire, guards with guns ready to shoot without warning, and me. And my thoughts. My poor mother. Fuck. The hell I have put her through. My poor parents. My poor family. I wish they had been abusive. Been shitty parents. I wish I had a shitty wife, shitty kids, but I don’t. Everyone is perfect, and I am fucked. It’s all me. I am sitting here, crying my eyes out, my stomach turning over, stab wounds ripping through my abdomen, a vice around my head, tightening slowly, and it is ALL ON ME. I couldn’t make an excuse if I tried. I couldn’t blame anyone but me. It is all me. I am a sack of shit. FUCK myself.

FUCK ME!


Longest night of my life. I couldn’t wait until yard the next morning. Hopefully the phones work. Hopefully they answer when I call. Will they know more information? Is my imagination making this worse than it is? Is it worse than I think it is? Could all the stress from the last few years have caused this? All the spikes in cortisol and stress hormones feeding the cancer cells that have exploded all over her body? This is my fault too. Shit. All my bullshit is going to kill my mom. I want to die. Fuck. I hate myself.

All I can do is wait.

And wait.

And wait.

And……

Wait.       

The Following Days

I was able to talk to my parents regularly over the next few weeks. They slowly got more information, and the prognosis was good. It was a very treatable type of Lymphoma. It was everywhere, but it hadn’t invaded the tissue of her lungs, her brain, or her spinal column. She was starting chemo in a few weeks, and with the gaps in-between treatments, I would be out in time for her second appointment.

Exhale.

All the treatments worked. I was able to go with her to some of the appointments (including the one on New Year’s Eve clearing her of all cancer cells). Me and my bald mamma. I could finally be there for her. She could finally stop worrying about me, and give her body a chance to heal. She got that time, and it did heal, miraculously. The doctor told us after that he had never seen someone recover so quickly from such a devastating amount of cancer. He showed us her initial CAT-Scan and it was even worse than I had imagined. It was literally EVERYWHERE. Now it was nowhere. Absolutely amazing.

Days like the one I had back in July of 2014 are brutal. Worse than getting arrested, worse than having my face plastered all over the news for two weeks (that was pretty bad too), worse than getting sentenced in front of a courtroom full of friends and family. (And when I say full, I mean overflowing with supporters.) And worse than my first days in San Quentin (which you can read about in detail in paperback here, and on Kindle here. Remember to rate it when you’re done! Thank you!).

I pray that my stories will hit you in a place that allows you to evaluate where you are. You do not want to be in a position where you are separated from your family in their time of need. You need to be there. Stop all the BS and get your shit straight. Man up (or woman up) and clean your closet. You deserve it and they deserve it. It’s all about choices, it’s all about where you want to be and where you allow yourself to go. Make the right decision. It’s all on you.

Joey

And virtually ALL social media. Come find me!