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NEWS & LETTERS, March 2002 

Letter from woman in California prison

Chowchilla, Cal.–When you invited me to write to you, you said "thoughts develop by sharing them with others." I find it hard to share my thoughts and feelings about being here with others—even with those I am close to—because unless you have personally experienced this, it's hard to relate or understand. For me and other women, I know the most predominant feeling is the one of powerlessness or helplessness.

When you first get locked up, you are in a sense cutting your close ties with those on the outside, whether it be spouses, parents, children or friends. Once in here, you find out who does and who does not have your best interests in mind. (I'm speaking of the people with ties to our heart on the outside.) A lot of women lose their children to the system or to their relatives. Some even lose their emotional ties. You may once have had material possessions, a house, furniture, animals, keepsakes, but now you are powerless. And what of the closeness you once shared with spouses, siblings, parents, friends when their whole attitude to you changes. You are powerless insofar as the outside world is concerned.

In here, you have to learn to live with and get along with many women who come from many different backgrounds and cultures. You must learn to work out your differences, verbally or physically. You must learn to live for yourself and for leaving here.

And then we have the system, the correctional officers, the lieutenants, the captains and others. We live in rooms with eight women to a room. D-yard is mainly for drug offenders. There is no privacy here, your room is subject to search and seizure at any time. That means if you have an extra coat or any extra state clothes, they will be taken. If you happened to borrow a curling iron or hair dryer from someone, and it doesn't have your name on it, they take it.

We have one lieutenant here who tries to make everyone's life miserable on our yard. Surprise inspections, no smoking coming back from chow, no makeup allowed going to the yard. If any of the correctional officers have allowed the unit to become lax, he will make sure the strictest of rules are applied so everyone feels uncomfortable. You know that he is such a miserable person himself that his goal in life must be to make the women on D-yard miserable, too.

The most important and vital problem here is the medical help we receive. A doctor at Chowchilla women's prison was charged with sexually molesting two inmates during medical exams. He is,. of course, denying the charges and has been put on paid administrative leave. But it's not only a case like this. It's the lack of an adequate medical staff and the ignorance they reveal.

Or maybe it's that they just don't care that women are not being cared for properly. It's not just little things. There are women in here with cancer, hepatitis, grand mal seizures, and other serious conditions who are simply not being given the proper medical attention. Their conditions are just left to drag on and on.

I'm going to try to get other women in here to write to you with their thoughts, too. Sharing them with others is difficult, but it is important to us to know that someone is listening.

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