To About Time,
My name is Kerrin, currently in Marngoneet Correctional Centre.
Nothing but positive feedback for your paper. I can only see it getting better with time. I only have a short stint of a few months, but like most find myself forced to become distant from my family, mainly due to unaffordable call rates. I work in metal fabrication, paid $33 per week (available spend). I smoked vapes outside, due to a nicotine dependency and I need my $17 box of lozenges weekly, so my usual canteen spend looks like this: $17 for lozenges, $2 for long-life milk, $4 for coffee, $2 for soap, $3 for the Geelong Advertiser (as it has tv guide for the week) and maybe a pack of biscuits (if on a sale) for under $2. This usually leaves me around a couple dollars.
For my phone, I'm lucky my partner pays for an engine number and mum has a home phone or I just wouldn't be able to speak to anyone. Thank god my son (three years old) is able to visit me with my mother fortnightly or I’d go mad. As his mother has a CRN from years ago, I'm unable to get zoom calls with him.
All my other family, being my dad, sisters, brothers and my 19-year-old twin boys have mobile numbers as their only way of contact, so I haven't spoken with them unfortunately. There are so many issues with the system, but these sorts of issues are definitely the main ones. I've found every prisoner has similar problems around the phone system.
Thank you for your piece on depression (in the October issue). It definitely did lift my spirits, after getting a better understanding of the condition and to know that there are so many prisoners in similar circumstances to myself. There is always a brighter day ahead.
Regards,
Kerrin
P.S. I also made sure I got the postage stamp and envelope so I could say thank-you for your paper. I really think it gives us all hope for change and a feeling that we do have a voice. We can only hope we are heard.
To About Time,
My name is Kerrin, currently in Marngoneet Correctional Centre.
Nothing but positive feedback for your paper. I can only see it getting better with time. I only have a short stint of a few months, but like most find myself forced to become distant from my family, mainly due to unaffordable call rates. I work in metal fabrication, paid $33 per week (available spend). I smoked vapes outside, due to a nicotine dependency and I need my $17 box of lozenges weekly, so my usual canteen spend looks like this: $17 for lozenges, $2 for long-life milk, $4 for coffee, $2 for soap, $3 for the Geelong Advertiser (as it has tv guide for the week) and maybe a pack of biscuits (if on a sale) for under $2. This usually leaves me around a couple dollars.
For my phone, I'm lucky my partner pays for an engine number and mum has a home phone or I just wouldn't be able to speak to anyone. Thank god my son (three years old) is able to visit me with my mother fortnightly or I’d go mad. As his mother has a CRN from years ago, I'm unable to get zoom calls with him.
All my other family, being my dad, sisters, brothers and my 19-year-old twin boys have mobile numbers as their only way of contact, so I haven't spoken with them unfortunately. There are so many issues with the system, but these sorts of issues are definitely the main ones. I've found every prisoner has similar problems around the phone system.
Thank you for your piece on depression (in the October issue). It definitely did lift my spirits, after getting a better understanding of the condition and to know that there are so many prisoners in similar circumstances to myself. There is always a brighter day ahead.
Regards,
Kerrin
P.S. I also made sure I got the postage stamp and envelope so I could say thank-you for your paper. I really think it gives us all hope for change and a feeling that we do have a voice. We can only hope we are heard.
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When I paint, I'm not in prison anymore. I'm lost for hours in my artwork.
I’d think there are a lot of inmates looking for someone to talk to, for some people it might help with the healing process.
Since having my first ever grandson nearly 3 years ago now, it’s made me realise that I not only want to change, but I need to do it not only for myself but for my family.
My name is Jean. I am a wiry spitfire, 65 years young, and incarcerated for the past 24 years with a L.W.O.P. (Life Without Parole) sentence.
Help us get About Time off the ground. All donations are tax deductible and will be vital in providing an essential resource for people in prison and their loved ones.
Help us get About Time off the ground. All donations are tax deductible and will be vital in providing an essential resource for people in prison and their loved ones.
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