May 4, 2018
We don't always get "good news" at
prison mail call, but tonight I got an uplifting letter from Caits Meissner,
PEN America Prison and Justice Writing Program Manager in New York City. She
told me that my poem, "How Should I
Look?" was performed at the PEN America World Voices Festival 2018
last month, along with other literary works by prison writers. She included a
letter from Demian Vitanza, a Norwegian-Italian playwright and author, who read
my poem at the festival, and who had some inspiring insights into my work.
This is how I got to this point: on my bunk in a
crowded human warehouse in August, 2012, in one of those lightning bolts of
inspiration that come from I don't know where, I quickly scribbled out "How Should I Look." In the
meantime, I had a kangaroo court parole hearing and suffered through a punitive
transfer to a harsh, distant prison closer to Mobile, Alabama, than to my
family and friends.
The new "mailroom lady" didn't think I
should be allowed to write and publish my thoughts — they never heard of the
Constitution, the First Amendment to the Bill of Rights, or freedom of speech
in Okaloosa County Florida — and she began the first of several attempts to silence
me. "Inmates can not [sic] write short stories," she said.
Wrong. I'd been teaching creative classes for
thirty years. When "How Should I
Look" was published, however, she wrote a fabricated disciplinary report
that cost me thirty days in solitary confinement. Guess what I did during those
thirty days in the box? I wrote poems, essays, and blogs!
That did not endear me to her. I did not care. You
can't let evil have a "chilling effect" on your writing. I fought
back.
Meanwhile, PEN America honored "How Should I Look?" with their
first prize in poetry for 2012, and I filed a federal retaliation lawsuit
against the angry woman. The prison inspectors investigated, and she was
eventually fired for lying, but not before I endured another period in
solitary. It took years, but I was finally vindicated.
If you've never been locked away in solitary
confinement for something you wrote, I don't recommend it. I was deprived of
visits with my longsuffering wife, no phone calls, no exercise, no daylight,
meager rations. I survived. It wasn't the first time they threw me in the hole,
but hopefully it will be the last; however, I'm getting negative rumblings from
another mail person at this new prison. She recently stated, "It's against the rules for you to send in
publications or write books."
Au
contraire. So the travails continue.
If you'd like to see the Youtube video of the PEN
World Voices readings, click here. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FuGVKQyOnPc
If
you haven't read the poem, it follows.
I
am grateful for over 33 years of support and encouragement from a succession of
PEN mentors and members who have helped make this life sentence more bearable.
And I am truly honored to have been included in this year’s World Voices
Festival Breakout Event.
As
always, we welcome your comments and opinions.
Charlie
By Charles Patrick Norman
How should I look, or act?
I asked him, in answer when he said,
You don’t look, or act like you’ve spent
that much time in prison.
(Three decades, plus some change, meter running).
Should my eyes be crazed, glazed, unblinking, uncaring?
Should my face be lumped and creased,
teeth rotted, gapped, and broken?
Perhaps the nightmares I’ve lived have twisted me,
the brawls and beatdowns broken my back?
Ought my arthritic hands shake, palsy from the deeds I’ve done,
Defend myself, offend thee, have blooded and bled
The Dead who fell, unrisen to the bell?
Do you wonder at my outward normalcy and doubt?
Did you expect to gaze upon faded blue teardrops
dripping from the corner of my sad eye,
Or crude tattoos of zodiacs, hearts, forgotten names
of lovers cavorting, my neck encircled with blue dashes,
subscripted, "cut on dotted line?"
Or rather you would frown at “LOVE’ and “HATE” paired
on the battered knuckles of each hand, endnotes
to jumbled creeds and symbols snaking down my arms?
How should I act?
Would you prefer I meet your expectations,
Grasp your neck with yellow-clawed fingers,
tobacco-stained tips squeezing off your airway,
Sour breath tinged with yeasty fumes of prison wine
burning your eyes
while I rip the watch from your wrist with my free hand?
Does that suit your notion of what a man becomes
when he’s been caged for decades with wild beasts?
Can you only imagine the outward destruction of a man,
and not the inner?
Can you not see beneath the surface to the scars
of broken hopes and dreams inside my heart,
the life unlived in freedom, x-ed out?
The loss of love and family snatched away
like a rooftop in the storm, exposing
the trashed memories, meager belongings soaked
in the shattered house below?
Of course you
can’t.
You only see the outward man, cleanshaven,
smiles, upright posture yet unbroken, unblemished
as the wanted poster says: no scars, marks, or tattoos.
Except for those you cannot see, trauma obscured
beneath the sedimentary layers of life in prison.
My life.
In prison.
Sorry to disappoint you.
You only see the outward man, cleanshaven,
smiles, upright posture yet unbroken, unblemished
as the wanted poster says: no scars, marks, or tattoos.
Except for those you cannot see, trauma obscured
beneath the sedimentary layers of life in prison.
My life.
In prison.
Sorry to disappoint you.
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