THE BEAT WITHIN/The Crime Report

Today, the Crime Report, based in New York City, picked up, posted, and is featuring the powerful contribution from our colleague and friend, Emile DeWeaver, who tackles his journey through the “school-to-prison pipeline.” We can’t wait to share the news with Emile and our writing group this weekend, when we participate in The Beat Within’s monthly writing workshop inside San Quentin State Prison. We hope you will give a read and share with your community http://www.thecrimereport.org/ The Butterfly Effect: “Everything You Do Matters” http://www.thecrimereport.org/news/inside-criminal-justice/2016-02-everything-you-do-matters

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THE BEAT WITHIN/JJIE

Greetings friends, Today, the JJIE (Juvenile Justice Information Exchange) based in Kennesaw, Georgia, picked up and posted Beat writer and juvenile lifer, Jensen Ramos’, “Broken Promises and Heartache” piece that he sent to us from the California State Prison Los Angeles in Lancaster, California. Late last year, The Crime Report picked up this piece and now to our surprise the JJIE is running it as well.  We too think it is a fabulous piece of writing that we can only hope will touch many of our young people living on the edge who may unfortunately find themselves in such a position. This

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Down But Not Out

by Eddie “Edito” DeWeaver There have been many times in my life where I felt that I could not go on. It seemed, with my short-sightedness, that there were outside forces in my life that were overwhelmingly greater than me. There were times in my youth that I felt like nobody cared about me and I would isolate myself by hiding away in a closet to cry. For some reason, I believed that life should be fair, and as a result of feeling powerless, I would not want to go on in this world. In these closet appointments, I feared

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Black Butterfly

by Emile DeWeaver I’ve heard that students do not drop out of school, they’re “pushed out”. I don’t like that phrase, “pushed out”, because it’s an oversimpli cation of a very complicated process. Before today, I would’ve said that no one pushed me out of school; I ran as hard as I could to get away from getting up every morning at 5:00 a.m. to drag myself to a classroom to listen to the enemy talk about things that didn’t matter to me. Then, I thought about a book I read by Andy Andrews called The Butter y Effect. It’s

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Someone to Hear

by Chino Them days are over, mobbing around in gee rides, getting at females. Now, I sit in a cell watching my shadow, been down nine months and got a lot more to go. Two months until my birthday, then I will be the big eighteen. I see memorized in my mind, it’s a blur. Seems like it was yesterday chilling with my boys. As I sit here and face maybe, twenty- ve to life, got me thinking who was really there. If I would have stuck to school and sports things would have ended up different. I still can’t believe

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THE BEAT WITHIN/JJIE

Dear colleagues and friends, Today our partners over at the JJIE (Juvenile Justice Information Exchange), based out of Kennesaw, GA, a national website that is the only publication/site covering juvenile justice and related issues nationally on a consistent, daily basis, picked up and is featuring a piece by a new Beat writer, Mathew Edwards. Mathew is a participant in The Beat Within’s monthly writing workshop inside San Quentin State Prison.  He writes about “Addicted to the Street Life,” and what lead him to serving a life sentence as a teenager. Addicted to the Street Life http://jjie.org/addicted-to-the-street-life/181643/ If you want to read other fabulous

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Who Knew I Would Make It This Far

by Mathew Edwards Welcome ladies, gentlemen, faculty members, and fellow graduates. I’m honored to be here amongst so many believers who became graduate achievers… Have you ever reminisced on you journey through the hands of time? To think who knew I would make it this far? Who knew I would survive the struggle and still achieve? It’s amazing what you can do if you believe… Who knew this graduation would feature me, A celebration for all of us to see. Even in the midst of negativity and despair, We stare, at men worthy of being praised, Chins raised, eyes blaze,

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Never Giving Up

by Elizabeth Today at this very moment, Tuesday I feel so low, so sad. I don’t know what to think anymore. I’m stuck in Juvenile Hall just thinking about where did I go wrong? I feel so bad hurting the people I love so much. I just want to talk to them tell them how sorry I was and never meant to hurt them at all. What hurts me the most is when I look back at that court room I see them all, I see him. How could he be so strong and still smile at me? I love

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