ISSUE NO. 13
August 2025
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Letters

The Simple Things in Life

By
Edward

Edward writes from a prison in New South Wales.

My name is Edward. I am from New Zealand and have worked in Australia for the last nine years as a pro chef.

I have been in prison for 10 months now. I have always loved reading your monthly letter. I have been cooking pro for 22 years and have been doing art since I was 15 years of age.

I have done a lot of art courses in NZ including a Degree in Arts. But I still struggle with spelling, but that still never stopped me from getting educated. Since being in prison I have realised so much about how much I relied on money and thinking success was about money. And trying to please too many fake people.

From being blessed with the gifts God has given me I now share it with other inmates. Drawing cards for their loved ones, birthday, anniversaries etc. The prison have noticed my talent and over the last six months I have painted murals at work and in all four pods of our prison. And I am about to paint in the clinic.

After working in so many restaurants in Sydney, why is it that painting these murals means more to me than cooking for thousands of people in the restaurant? The murals are a mixture of landscapes or Australia and animals, with every pod having the Nyora Memorial representing ANZAC. It to me is the only day all nations are one: PNG, Fiji, Samoa, Tonga, NZ, Torres Strait, Aboriginal and Australia.

So I have been doing what I have always loved doing – art and cooking. Sharing with inmates what I can make even with the simplest of ingredients. Sometimes that’s all it takes. The simple things in life mean so much more.

So to all the team at About Time, I thank you. We thank you.

My name is Edward. I am from New Zealand and have worked in Australia for the last nine years as a pro chef.

I have been in prison for 10 months now. I have always loved reading your monthly letter. I have been cooking pro for 22 years and have been doing art since I was 15 years of age.

I have done a lot of art courses in NZ including a Degree in Arts. But I still struggle with spelling, but that still never stopped me from getting educated. Since being in prison I have realised so much about how much I relied on money and thinking success was about money. And trying to please too many fake people.

From being blessed with the gifts God has given me I now share it with other inmates. Drawing cards for their loved ones, birthday, anniversaries etc. The prison have noticed my talent and over the last six months I have painted murals at work and in all four pods of our prison. And I am about to paint in the clinic.

After working in so many restaurants in Sydney, why is it that painting these murals means more to me than cooking for thousands of people in the restaurant? The murals are a mixture of landscapes or Australia and animals, with every pod having the Nyora Memorial representing ANZAC. It to me is the only day all nations are one: PNG, Fiji, Samoa, Tonga, NZ, Torres Strait, Aboriginal and Australia.

So I have been doing what I have always loved doing – art and cooking. Sharing with inmates what I can make even with the simplest of ingredients. Sometimes that’s all it takes. The simple things in life mean so much more.

So to all the team at About Time, I thank you. We thank you.

Sistas, Support Each Other!

By Anonymous

This letter is to remind you all that, as Sistas, we need to be there for one another to raise women up.

Letters

ISSUE NO. 23

2 MIN READ

Strip Searches

By Nikita

It’s daunting enough when you get arrested by police, then placed into custody and thrown into a cell. Then you have to go through a degrading strip search.

Letters

ISSUE NO. 23

1 MIN READ

If It’s Broken, Then Fix It

By Andrew

I’ve spent most of my adult life behind bars, and I’m not proud to say it. It’s been such a bloody waste.

Letters

ISSUE NO. 23

3 MIN READ

Routine is Good, Not Bad

By Dane

Anyone who has spent a significant amount of time in prison can relate to the concept of prison rituals and routines.

Letters

ISSUE NO. 23

3 MIN READ

Welcome to About Time

About Time is the national newspaper for Australian prisons and detention facilities

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Help Us Keep Publishing About Time

Without About Time, I don’t know where I would be – Mark, from a prison in Victoria

We need your help so that we can print and distribute the paper to every person in every prison for at least the next year. We value whatever you can spare, no matter how big or small.

Australia’s prison population is growing, and our many prisons are spread far and wide.

We need your help so that we can print and distribute the paper to every person in every prison for at least the next year. We need your help to cover postage for anyone who sends us a letter from the inside.

We value whatever you can spare, no matter how big or small.