Frank Brown Cloud

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Poems from the Jail Dorm

  • On Matthew Walker’s ‘Why We Sleep.’

    We’re asking addicts to learn whole new ways of living … and expect them to do it while utterly sleep deprived in jail.

    January 19, 2018

    Frank Brown Cloud

    All posts, Book reviews, Psychology
    cocoffala, Communion of the Saints, enhanced interrogation, false confessions, heroin, incarceration, jail, jail poetry, learning, mass incarceration, Matthew Walker, Menachem Begin, methamphetamine, Monster House Press, opiates, Poems from the Jail Dorm, poetry, prison, prison poetry, probation, sleep, sleep deprivation, sleep deprived, sleep spindles, The Story of a Prisoner in Russia, torture, White Nights, why we sleep, William Booker
    On Matthew Walker’s ‘Why We Sleep.’
  • On changing a life.

    We can’t be *forced* to change … & sometimes it takes a jolt to realize that we want to.

    June 30, 2017

    Frank Brown Cloud

    All posts, mass incarceration
    AA, addiction, Alcoholics Anonymous, Becoming Ms. Burton, Cari Lynn, drug use, drugs, getting sober, halfway houses, heroin, I Felt Your Presence in the Absence of Time, incarceration, jail, jail dormitory, John-Michael Bloomquist, junk, Max E., meth, methamphetamine, Monster House Press, New Leaf, New Leaf New Life, opiates, Poems from the Jail Dorm, poetry, prison poetry, recovery, rehab, release from prison, San Diego 1985, shame, sober, Susan Burton, teaching, teaching in jail
    On changing a life.

Frank Brown Cloud

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