1. The Illusion of Control
From the outside, people think prison is about order. Steel doors, guards, routines — all designed to maintain control. But if you’ve ever lived it, you’ll know the truth: it’s one of the most chaotic environments imaginable. Nothing feels stable. One minute, everything is calm. The next, the whole wing can erupt because someone’s been disrespected, or a rumour has started, or a deal’s gone bad.
The documentary showed some of that — the fights, the smuggling, the fear. But even that can’t capture what it feels like when you’re inside those walls. You learn quickly that control is an illusion. The officers think they control the prisoners. The prisoners think they control the officers. In reality, no one is really in control. Everyone’s just trying to survive the day.
Prison isn’t just a punishment; it’s a pressure cooker. Every emotion — anger, fear, frustration, boredom — gets magnified ten times over because there’s nowhere to release it. You can’t just walk away. You can’t take a breather. You sit in your cell with your thoughts, your regrets, your pride, and your paranoia. And that combination can drive anyone to the edge.
2. The Officer Who Was Shot
In the program, there was a story about a prison officer who was shot dead. It hit hard, even for someone like me who’s seen more violence than I care to remember. He was portrayed as a man just doing his job — and maybe he was. I never want to see anyone hurt or killed. I do not condone violence. I’ve seen what it does — to victims, to families, to entire communities. It doesn’t solve anything.
But, and this is important, not every officer is like the man they showed on TV. There are good officers, yes — ones who treat you like a human being, who talk to you with respect, who understand that you’re already paying for your mistakes. But there are others who abuse their power every chance they get. They treat prisoners like dirt. They come into your cell and move things around just to get a rise out of you. They insult you, humiliate you, act like they own you.
And when you push back — even verbally — they get defensive, write you up, or make your life harder in a hundred quiet ways. That’s the part the public doesn’t see. It’s not always about violence or corruption. Sometimes it’s about provocation — that slow, grinding pressure that makes it almost impossible to keep your head down and do your time in peace.
If you want peace in prison, it comes down to one rule: treat people with respect. It doesn’t matter if you’re wearing a uniform or an inmate number. Respect earns peace. Disrespect breeds conflict. It’s that simple. And yet, it’s the one lesson the system seems unable — or unwilling — to learn.
3. Corruption Behind Bars
Let’s talk about contraband. Every time the news reports that a prisoner was caught with a phone, or drugs, or tobacco, they make it sound like inmates have some magical way of getting things past security. But let’s be real: if you’re caught with a mobile phone in prison, it didn’t fall from the sky. Someone brought it in. And more often than not, that someone works for the prison.
I’ve seen it with my own eyes. Officers who smuggle in phones for money. Officers who turn a blind eye when drugs come through. Officers who trade favours for sex. It’s not every officer, but it’s enough to poison the whole system. The corruption runs deep — and when it all blows up, guess who gets the blame? The prisoners.
The officers go on record as heroes who “uncovered a smuggling operation,” when in reality they were the ones who started it. It’s hypocrisy of the highest order. And it’s one of the biggest reasons rehabilitation fails — because you can’t rebuild trust in a place where deceit and manipulation are part of daily life.
When the people meant to enforce the rules are the same ones breaking them, the line between right and wrong disappears. And when that happens, survival becomes the only goal.
4. Violence and Survival
I’ve been asked many times how I managed to survive more than three decades inside without losing my mind completely. The truth? You adapt. You harden. You become someone who can read a situation before it explodes. You learn who to trust — and more importantly, who not to.
Violence is never far away in prison. Sometimes it’s obvious — a fight in the exercise yard, a stabbing over debt, a gang dispute. Other times, it’s quiet and psychological. A few words whispered in the wrong ear. A dirty look that turns into a vendetta. Everyone’s on edge because everyone’s vulnerable. You don’t have weapons in there, but you have pride — and pride is the sharpest weapon of all.
I won’t lie: there were times I felt rage so deep I could barely breathe. Times when I wanted to lash out. But I learned — often the hard way — that violence never gets you what you think it will. It only brings more punishment, more isolation, more time. Still, I understand why it happens. When you’re treated like an animal, you start to believe you are one. When you’re constantly disrespected, eventually, you explode.
That’s why I don’t judge people in there too quickly. You never know what someone’s been through, or how many times they’ve been pushed before they finally snap.
5. The Human Side of Prison
Here’s something most people will never understand: prison isn’t just a place full of criminals. It’s full of people. Broken people, yes — angry, scared, addicted, damaged — but people all the same.
You see fathers who’ve lost touch with their kids and cry quietly at night. You see young lads who came in tough and fearless but crumble after their first fight. You see men who’ve been inside so long that freedom actually terrifies them. You see small acts of kindness — sharing a cup of tea, lending a book, helping someone write a letter home — that never make the headlines.
Those are the moments that keep humanity alive behind bars. Because in a place designed to strip away your dignity, even the smallest bit of compassion feels huge.
I’ve seen officers who understood that too. The good ones stand out. They treat you like a person, not a problem. They talk to you, not at you. They remember that the uniform doesn’t make them better — just different. I respect those officers deeply, because they make an impossible environment just a little more bearable.
Unfortunately, they’re outnumbered by the ones who think authority means cruelty. And those few ruin it for everyone else.
6. The Provocation Game
You’d be shocked how often officers deliberately provoke prisoners. They know exactly which buttons to press. They’ll call you names, mock your family, search your cell in the middle of the night, throw away letters or photos “by mistake.” They’ll write you up for things you didn’t do. They’ll do it to remind you that they’re in charge.
And when you react — even if it’s just shouting back — suddenly you’re the violent one, the troublemaker. It’s a system built to push you, then punish you for reacting. I’ve been on the receiving end of that too many times. I’ve seen men lose years off their sentences because they couldn’t take it anymore and lashed out.
But here’s what I’ve learned: keeping your dignity in that situation is the biggest act of defiance there is. Staying calm, refusing to give them what they want — that’s power. Real power. It took me decades to understand that.
7. Reflection: Respect, Responsibility, and Change
After thirty-five years behind bars, I came to one conclusion: respect is the foundation of everything. Without it, there’s no order, no trust, no rehabilitation.
Respect doesn’t mean weakness. It means seeing the humanity in someone, even when they’ve done wrong. It means understanding that punishment isn’t supposed to be humiliation. And it goes both ways — prisoners must respect officers, and officers must respect prisoners. That’s the only way prison can work.
The system right now doesn’t build respect. It builds resentment. It teaches people to hide their emotions, to play the game, to manipulate or retaliate. It doesn’t teach accountability or empathy — and those are the things that actually change lives.
You can’t rehabilitate someone by constantly breaking them down. You can’t expect a person to come out better if every day inside they’re treated worse.
Rehabilitation has to mean more than time served. It has to mean giving people the tools to think differently, to control their emotions, to rebuild a sense of purpose. But that can’t happen in a system infected with corruption, hypocrisy, and hate.
The documentary showed glimpses of this — the officers who care, the inmates who try to change — but what it didn’t show is how exhausting that fight is. Every day inside is a battle between who you are and who the system tries to make you.
8. Why I’m Speaking Out
I didn’t write this to glorify prison life. There’s nothing glamorous about it. It’s pain, monotony, fear, and wasted potential. I’m writing this because people need to see the truth — not just the violence, but the cause of it. Not just the corruption, but the system that breeds it.
When you spend decades behind bars, you start to see patterns. You see that most of the men who come in are broken long before they ever commit a crime. You see that poverty, addiction, and trauma are the real chains holding people down. You see how easily society writes people off, and how hard it is to change once that label — “criminal” — is stamped on your forehead.
I’m not asking for sympathy. I did my time. I earned my punishment. But I’m also asking for understanding. Because until we stop seeing prisoners as monsters and start seeing them as humans capable of change, nothing will improve.
There are thousands of people in prison right now who want to do better, who want to make amends, who want to rebuild their lives. But they’re trapped in a system that often makes that impossible.
And there are officers — good, hardworking men and women — who want to make a difference but are dragged down by a culture of corruption, politics, and fear. They deserve better too.
9. What I’ve Learned
If prison taught me anything, it’s patience. It taught me how to listen, how to control anger, how to read people. But it also taught me how fragile human decency can be when power gets involved.
I’ve seen the worst sides of people — including myself. But I’ve also seen redemption, forgiveness, and strength. I’ve seen men who came in broken walk out changed. I’ve seen officers who risked their careers to do the right thing. Those moments matter. They remind me that change is possible, even in a place built on punishment.
The system won’t fix itself overnight. But it can start with honesty. With people admitting that the problem isn’t just “bad prisoners” — it’s a broken structure that turns everyone, on both sides of the bars, into something less than human.
10. Final Thoughts
If you take anything from this, let it be this: respect saves lives. Corruption destroys them.
Watch Behind Bars: Sex, Bribes and Murder. Look beyond the headlines. Ask yourself how a system meant to protect and rehabilitate became one that breeds hate and violence instead.
And next time you hear about a prisoner caught with a phone, or a fight breaking out inside, remember — there’s always more to the story. Someone’s pride, someone’s pain, someone’s provocation. It’s never as simple as it looks.
I’ve spent thirty-five years living that truth. I’ve seen good men become monsters and monsters become good men. I’ve seen officers break down in tears because they couldn’t take the stress anymore. I’ve seen corruption rot the core of a place that was supposed to teach justice.
But I’ve also seen hope — fragile, stubborn, and real. Because no matter how dark it gets inside, there are still people trying to do right. And maybe, just maybe, if we start talking honestly about what really happens behind those walls, something might finally change.
If you take anything from this, let it be this: respect saves lives. Corruption destroys them.
Watch Behind Bars: Sex, Bribes and Murder. Look beyond the headlines. Ask yourself how a system meant to protect and rehabilitate became one that breeds hate and violence instead.
And next time you hear about a prisoner caught with a phone, or a fight breaking out inside, remember — there’s always more to the story. Someone’s pride, someone’s pain, someone’s provocation. It’s never as simple as it looks.
I’ve spent thirty-five years living that truth. I’ve seen good men become monsters and monsters become good men. I’ve seen officers break down in tears because they couldn’t take the stress anymore. I’ve seen corruption rot the core of a place that was supposed to teach justice.
But I’ve also seen hope — fragile, stubborn, and real. Because no matter how dark it gets inside, there are still people trying to do right. And maybe, just maybe, if we start talking honestly about what really happens behind those walls, something might finally change.
The Point I’m Trying to Make
The point I’m trying to make is simple: the prison system is full, overcrowded, and broken. It’s not working — not for prisoners, not for officers, not for society. We talk a lot about “rehabilitation,” about putting offenders through groups and programs, about teaching them how to change. But how can you truly rehabilitate someone in a place that’s collapsing under its own weight?
Prisons today aren’t focused on helping people grow; they’re focused on just keeping order — keeping bodies locked away, managing chaos, surviving the day. It’s not about rehabilitation anymore. It’s about damage control. And you can’t rebuild lives in a system that’s already broken.
Rehabilitation shouldn’t mean sitting in a classroom ticking boxes or being forced into a program you don’t believe in. It should mean real understanding — getting to the root of why people offend, what trauma or pain drives them, and how to help them face it. But that kind of change requires a system built on trust, respect, and consistency — not fear, corruption, and overcrowding.
The truth is, until the system itself is repaired, no amount of “rehabilitation courses” will work. You can’t heal in a place that keeps reopening your wounds. You can’t find peace when you’re constantly provoked, disrespected, and dehumanised.
For thirty-five years, I’ve watched governments come and go, each promising to fix the prisons, each introducing new policies, new targets, new buzzwords. But nothing changes. The overcrowding gets worse. The violence gets worse. The hopelessness grows.
It’s time to stop pretending the system just needs a “tweak” or a “review.” It needs rebuilding — or replacing entirely — with something that actually works. Something that recognises that rehabilitation doesn’t happen through punishment alone. It happens through understanding, opportunity, and genuine care.
I’ve spent over three decades waiting for that kind of rehabilitation — and I never got it. Not once in thirty-five years did I receive the kind of support that could’ve helped me understand myself, my actions, or how to change. I had to do that alone, the hard way, in a place designed to break you, not build you.
So when I speak out, it’s not from bitterness. It’s from experience. The prison system isn’t just overcrowded — it’s outdated, toxic, and crumbling. And until we fix that, we’ll keep creating the same problems over and over again.
Because real rehabilitation doesn’t come from paperwork or punishment. It comes from respect, honesty, and the courage to rebuild a system that’s long past repair.
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