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The Dreadful Walls of Somber Days
Day 2, 290; Lonely, noisy, empty. Locked behind these bars, caged
 inside these cement walls, with not a single thing to do except think.
 So I do. I think all day. I think about getting out of here, I think
 about being trapped, I think about not having a purpose. It has been
 so long since I was a free man. I have long lusted for a glimpse of
 autumn's amber sunsets on top of a Colorado mountain. I can hardly
 remember what it was like to be on my own and not being watched by
 uptight security guards 24 hours a day. Time is moving and I can
 hardly say that I even realize it anymore. They call me inmate number
 365M.
 
   My cell is roughly 10x10 feet. Most of my days are spent in that
 small amount of space. There is a poster of Johnny Cash on the
 otherwise blank gray wall. It reminds me of the Folsom Prison Blues
 song that he sings. It makes sense that that poster would be on my
 wall. The only thing that inhabits the floor is me and my cot. My cot
 is like a hard board, that I attempt to sleep on. There is a small
 window covered in bars. I don't look out of that window anymore.
 Something as simple as a window, overwhelms me with false hope. There
 is no hope. This is all I have to look forward to every morning.
 
   Henry is the inmate that is in the cell next to mine. He talks to
 himself all night, every night. I don't know what he is in for. But it
 must be bad because one night he started yelling about how he would do
 it again and he was going to do it again once he got out. The guards
 came in and took him away for quite some time. Ever since he has been
 back he whispers over and over to himself, never again, never again,
 never again… He is in here for a life sentence. I don't want to turn
 out like him but these walls do something to you that makes you unable
 to think straight.
 
   So far tonight I have not been able to get a glimpse of sleep. But
 this time I am not thinking. This time I am feeling. I was feeling
 these walls closing in on me, fatser and faster. The cell was getting
 smaller. I not only felt trapped, I felt anxious. More so than ever
 before. My mind was racing not with thoughts but with disquiet
 emotions. I have to get out of here. Beyond these walls is open fields
 of clarity. Clarity, something that I have not had in a long time. If
 only I was able to release my body back into the world. The Colorado
 mountains would see me again, as I watch the amber sunset. There would
 be no restrictions and no walls would threaten my freedom.
 
   Day 2,291; I am still here. The walls did not close in on me. Only
 now I wish they had. I still have to be here all day thinking and
 thinking and thinking. I still have to relate to that Johnny Cash
 song, I still have to avoid the small window, and I still have to fear
 turning into Henry as time drags on more and more. Stuck in solitude,
 I am. Here I will be for God knows how long. Will I make it? How many
 more nights like last night will I have? Will I even be able to adapt
 to the new world? How many more days must drag on before I lose it? I
 need to get out of here. It seems like the day will never come when
 the guards come to take me to my parole conference. I will be here
 forever, and not a day less it seems like. With no hope. Stuck here in
 this disconsolate atmosphere waiting for the next dismal day.
 
   Suddenly a stampede of foot steps drew near. My cell door opened and
 the head guard steps in and says, "Inmate number 365M, you are due for
 your parole conference."
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