Tuesday, October 18, 2011

2000 and some to go--UU helps

October 30, day 297/2088 to go
Dear Dee,
I have heard from Church of the Larger Fellowship and I believe I have just finished qualifying for membership. They have a three-part correspondence course in which they send you some writings about UU, its history, its philosophy, etc. Then, after each one, they have a series of nine questions about what you've read. These aren't right or wrong answers, but rather the questions seek to evoke a response or reaction to what the material covered.

I got some pictures of my daughter's visit. They were not allowed to bring in a camera, but the way it works is that I buy photo tickets from the commissary for $1 apiece. Then they have an inmate on hand with a digital camera who takes the pictures. We get them 2 to 3 weeks later.

Thanks for sending me "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy." It has been on my to-read list for years. I would have gotten to it much sooner if someone had told me it was like sci-fi as written by Monty Python.
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November 29, day 327/2058 to go

Dear Dee,
Thanks for your latest letter. And no, you can't send me pens. I can only have the Bics that I get from the commissary.

It's true that UU has been a real help to me at this time in my life. I consider it a gift all by itself.

I agree with you about Lindsay Lohan. There is a mean-spirited element to our culture that loves to put people up on pedestals and tear them down and stomp on them. This young girl is clearly in the grip of an addiction that she hasn't been able to conquer. Speaking as someone who had a good life destroyed by an addiction, I can only empathize with her.

You asked about if or how I keep my things private. I'm never alone, so I do take some precautions. I keep a daily journal but I write it in code, just in case anyone else gets their hands on it. My locker, a tiny thing that holds everything I own, has a combination lock on it. But the lock has a keyhole on the back so that any of the guards or staff can open it at any time. So in the end, there is no privacy. But things are reasonably safe from the other inmates.

Thanks again for being there. Love, Kent

1 comment:

  1. What an unfolding story of hope that belies the context. To see the glimpses of such human joy in the midst of circumstances that I would think would overshadow its possibility stirs something within me, something about the resilience of the human spirit. These letters remind me, deeply, of how each person needs a sense of meaning and purpose, and that with it we can face things we never would be able to otherwise. I certainly see why you've named this blog a Congregation of One - it's rich in ministry as well as friendship.

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