Showing posts with label The Beat Within. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Beat Within. Show all posts

Friday, August 20, 2010

Friday Prime Time Spotlight: San Francisco

Here it is...

3 of my favorite spotlights on San Francisco...

SAN FRANCISCO!! WOW!

IT'S ALL THERE!

VISIONARIES IN ACTION,

POWERFULLY EFFECTIVE PROGRAMS

AND VOICES WORTH LISTENING TO!!!

GOTTA LOVE IT!

#1 Delancy Street

Delancy Street and Dr. Mimi Silbert...I have known about this program for about 5 years or so now...this program just blows me away!

Incredible impact and hope for people who are at the end of their rope!





#2 The Beat Within

Ming Toy Lee speaking about events in her life...this young lady has a long history with The Beat Within...speaking to the powerful positive difference this program has on young people caught up by negative influences on the streets and challenged to be more, do more of what's positive and avoid the negative that keeps one in a cycle of violence and incarceration.


#3 Train and Patrick Monahan

Wow! Patrick Monahan! Love that voice! Here's When I Look To The Sky with Train...


(Maybe this town will be my next destination in about 5 or so years! =)

Friday, August 13, 2010

Behold! Creative, therapeutic outpourings!

When David Inocencio and the Beat Within staff came to Durango in 2003, they shared this writing with us. Though the name of the author was not given, this piece speaks for itself.

A Sound Silence

When you read this

Realize I’m not asking for pity.

But I’m trying to share my experience

As I experience it.

The most influential person in my life

is no more.

And it is because of his death

that he has influenced me so much.

I didn’t want what happened

to happen .

And I could’ve never imagined

that it would happen.

After the death,

My emotions were numb,

I couldn’t think straight,

Eat a meal,

Or even sleep at night.

I would close my eyes

and have images of the night he died

pass through my head,

and I would remember everything so vividly

that I felt it was happenening right there and then.

When I did sleep,

My dreams

were only reenactments

of the night I’d wake up sweating,

Panting,

And sometime calling for him

as he died in my hands.

That is an experience that will never leave me,

The loss of human life in front of your eyes

In your arms.

Watching the last breath seep from the lips

And having no idea that this painful moment

would be relived countless times

throughout the rest of my life.

It seems that my experience

has made me realize life's fragility

It’s abrupt turns

And its sudden ends.

I now have to make the most

of every moment

Even though my life doesn’t seem worth living anymore.

I don’t feel my experience would be different

to anyone who saw those ten minutes of my life.

Who saw those ten minutes go by a blink of a eye,

But at the same time lasted forever.

Those moments are still occurring now

In my mind

As you read these words;

Every day he dies again,

Every day I grieve,

Every day he dies again,

Never more will I be free.

Anonymous

This piece is reflective of the words written and shared by many young people found in detention. They often spoke of witnessing death or the losses of friends to gang violence. Not only was death a reoccurring theme, but such topics brought intense emotions. The kids often seemed stuck in that moment or in the memory of the death, reliving it over and over, memorializing their friend or "homie". Experiencing events such as these often seemed to intensify feelings of hopeless and a reckless abandon of the future, expecting and anticipating a similar fate for themselves.

I will never forget an experience I had with a young man in 2003. While in detention after just being committed to time in ADOBE, he found out that his older brother had just been shot and killed. What added to his pain was that he was not to be allowed to attend his brother's funeral for a variety of reasons. His shock, anger and anguish were heart wrenching. I couldn't help but sob, right along with him while, at the same time, trying to give him comfort and hope.

A Sound Silence describes another common phenomenon in the juvenile detention setting, that of jarring dreams, nightmares and night terrors. It was common for young people to share experiences of intense dreams and flashbacks, explaining why they had gotten little sleep the night before or what was really bothering them or why they didn't want to go to sleep or why they were on suicide watch. They often expressed how these reoccurring images left them with feelings of dread, fear and great sadness.

Due to the nature or content of these creative writings, staff often expressed rebuttals or wariness of The Beat Within. The kids wrote out of their own experiences...and yes! those experiences were often dark and full of pain and trauma.

As someone who has been journaling for years, myself, I understood the importance of these creative writing experiences. Not only were these young people being given an opportunity to talk and share their opinions on a variety of topics and to develop their writing skills, but writing and journaling provided them with a therapeutic outlet.

Writing about one's pain is like the release valve on a pressure cooker, and can ease the tension, anger, or hopelessness, just enough, to allow one to continue on for another day or another moment, without acting out in a destructive manner towards self or others.

My personal and professional opinion is that the presence of a creative, therapeutic writing program, such as The Beat Within, is a necessary positive outlet for pain, anger, frustration and a host of intense emotions, experiences, and thought patterns. In my experience and observations over the 12+ years of working with kids in detention, journaling and creative writing increases safety and security on a unit by providing a value for pent up anger, pain, boredom, frustration, and despair. Declaring this witness again in verses from Hope Found...

Recognizing this truth

and then witnessing year in and year out

the proof

in the power of the written and spoken word

to give opportunity for expression of soul.

Even when to live

is unbearable and confusing,

it’s a relief to know you’re not alone

in your experience and the emotional truth you own.

...At what a mind can become

when the pain is released and one,

bent on restoration and redemption,

finds life not death

Hopefully it will spread

this vision of releasing voices in the west

across the nation,

Stand not in the way of this tide lest

the overwhelmed dam of hate and strife

break and down us all

finding our voices may we stand or silent we may fall

Don’t stop writing beaten hearts,

write what you can, say what you need to say

Write as if your very lives depended upon it

Tkaeu

Tribute to The Beat Within

In 2007 I was involved in a fundraising project with Maricopa County. It was a talent show and I chose to enter and showcase a Spoken Word piece. I need to eventually get it put on video...maybe a personal project to complete soon. But here it is in written form...it took me about a month to write. When I started writing it wasn't necessarily my intention to put together a tribute to The Beat Within, but being involved in this program was what made me excited and "pumped" about my job and working in the detention setting. I guess it was inevitable that out of my soul would flow a piece that spoke about what was nearest and dearest to my heart at that time.

Hope Found

Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks

Pouring out self on paper, what is it anyone seeks

In creating verses worth repeating,

could it be the sublime

Accepting the inevitable

that articulate verses and rhymes

Will flow sometimes when I least expect it,

in hard times

When the emotions I carry within

are no longer contained

Sometimes I surprise myself,

and am surprised at the same

in others, how in the midst of personal pain

one can be so inspired

Life has often pummeled

a creative soul aspiring

to reach within for a glimpse of heaven

others may behold.

I guess it stands without reason

that talent will unfold

and come to light in dark places,

where you find hearts aching.

Yes, there are people held in prisons

of their own making.

Sometimes these prisons are hard to detect,

others perpetrating

incredulous acts of violence or greed

find themselves

now estimating

the days they will have to spend

behind intimidating walls.

Their desperation found in pent up scrawls

Searing words stabbing paper,

endless verses

intimating deep emotions,

once hidden in foul curses.

For beaten hearts, is there hope?

The answer is found when one reads

the words written by teens doing time.

Hope harvested after planting seeds

of literacy that could lift these young minds

out of the haze

and challenge them to grow

beyond limitations. In juvenile detention,

I’ve seen young people come and go

talented and intelligent,

yet scoffing at education in school,

eyeing authority with bravado

and distrust, identifying with the gang

and drug culture.

Entrepreneurs, in a sense, looking for a quick buck

But it’s when they hear the loud clang of metal,

are enveloped in silence and endlessly stuck

in their own thoughts, needing a listening ear,

an outlet for the emotions they hold back

that once ignored, books and reading

take on new meaning,

relieve the boredom. And the impact

on this captive audience

is that they might just get hooked

on the power of words

and the relief of finding an audience

for what flows through their soul...

so how will they be heard?

In 2003 editors and writers from San Francisco,

visited the Valley of the Sun

and shared their vision and goal

of a publication releasing voices in juvie hall

through paper and pencil,

The Beat Within,

birthed in the heart of Sandy Close and David Inocencio

Perceiving these teenagers

could no longer remain ignored

Beat staff began a journey of exploration,

because they’d been floored

in 1996 from the intensity of emotion sparked

by Tupac’s demise.

Now what The Beat Within attempts to create

each week

flies

in the face of conventional wisdom.

But after witnessing the grief

and widespread loss of a generation,

found in piece after piece,

reflecting the heart of detained youth

is what staff in the Bay

strive for, releasing imprisoned minds and hearts

by providing a way

for young people to find themselves

and to know that they are not alone

This medium of self-expression is sewn

together with pulsating heart

and sheds light on dark subjects.

What Beat writers have to say

is sometimes shocking, and reflects

a view of society struggling beneath a weight

of confusing messages of worshipping wealth

and expressing hate

through computerized violence;

the rich and famous pampering their pets

while returning from war, as heroes, Iraq war vets

who deserve

efficient, top notch medical and psychiatric care

are left instead to face the reality

of Vet hospitals in disrepair;

look into the inner cities,

find american dreams mired in dope

sold to make a profit at another’s expense,

a risky downhill slope

work hard to achieve the American dream…

but isn’t it funny,

deranged that some of our hardest workers

are making

the least amount of money?

Yet we still subscribe to have all we can,

no matter what the cost

And we say the best things in life are free,

while lost

in mounting credit card debt

amidst materialistic wonder

Facing personal lack and faceless existence,

family’s asunder,

teens looking to belong and fit in,

find themselves locked in a cell

Sent to prison for their attempts at seizing heaven

while living in hell

Is it any wonder our young people are confused

and tell us they are lacking in hope,

Contemplating their futures while high off dope

No sense in setting goals, don’t plan to live

past twenty one

Is it possible the ruthless nature

they are thrust into

can be undone

We believe we can contain hate and strife

behind barbed wires

but I ask instead is there a lesson to be learned

in all the forest fires

engulfing second homes up the coast

and mountainous desert terrain

That it only takes a spark, a flame fueled

by fury uncontained

to destroy what we hold dear.

Recognizing this truth

and then witnessing year in and year out

the proof

in the power of the written and spoken word to give

opportunity for expression of soul.

Even when to live

is unbearable and confusing,

it’s a relief to know you’re not alone

in your experience

and the emotional truth you own

I give props to The Beat Within for stepping up

against great odds

Year after year advocating for young men

and women living in pods

of stone and steel, not fanning the flames

of hate and strife, but offering answers to games

of life played out for decades

and challenging us

to open our eyes

and see that our youth behind bars

have a voice and the size

of audacity and talent that when nurtured

with time and direction

may result in a positive impact on a community,

may stun

a neighborhood not with fear

but awe and amazement

at what a mind can become

when the pain is released and one, bent

on restoration and redemption,

finds life not death

Hopefully it will spread

this vision of releasing voices

in the west

across the nation,

stand not in the way of this tide lest

the overwhelmed dam of hate and strife

break and down us all

finding our voices may we stand or silent

we may fall

Don’t stop writing beaten hearts,

write what you can,

say what you need to say

Write as if your very lives depended upon it...

Props Beat Within for each and every day

You give hope and a voice to beaten hearts.

Hearts with lessons of life, resilient,

the words they impart

Takes flight above stone and sand.

Hope found

In being read...heard...

valued...profound.

Tkaeu

092907

THE BEAT (The Beat Within) Goes On and On and On

I received a pleasant surprise in my personal email today. An email from David Inocencio with a link to this video. Listening to this video brings tears to my eyes...so many memories.

I was definitely blessed to be a part of the Beat movement within Maricopa County juvenile detention. David and several Beat staff introduced those of us at Durango to The Beat Within in the summer of 2003. This was a drastic turning point for me, working in juvenile detention at the time. Attempting to promote, encourage and develop creative writing opportunities for The Beat Within became my passion for the next 6+ years.

Writing the responses was challenging and stretched me, but it was the kids and their writings that kept me glued to this project. What talent! What heart! Absolutely mind blowing at times-the content and flow of their pieces. So much growth and self-confidence witnessed through such an incredible program.

Well here it is...Check out this video on The Beat Within!

SF State Beat Within Video from New America Media on Vimeo.

Though I am no longer working as staff in detention, I hope to someday return to the juvenile detention setting to help with Beat workshops and creative, therapeutic writing projects.


Much love and radical props to all the Beat Within staff, and any and all staff in detention centers who promote creative, therapeutic writing behind bars to give young people hope and a positive outlet while they are on the "inside"!