I see the attacks about Biden’s love for his son and it hurts my heart. I was a drug addict, I was in prison for many years, and the unconditional love from my father was pivotal in my journey out of the darkness. Let me talk about it.
Growing up, my Dad was stern. I used to fear him - not in an abusive sense - but in the sense that he was the disciplinarian. He was also angry, something that I now attribute to being overworked and having a crumbling marriage with my mother.
I was addicted to meth in high school and dropped out. My parents debated whether to send me to rehab before I turned 18 - but my Dad didn’t like the idea of forcibly snatching me up and sending me away.
My first major arrest happened at 18. I was handcuffed to a drop down ladder in the hallway when my Dad arrived at the house. I saw him from down the hall and I saw his eyes. They burned me, I felt so much shame.
I didn’t want to speak with him, my fear was so great. I stared at the floor and begged the cops to take me out the back door of the house so I didn’t have to walk past my father. They obliged and I went to jail.
The first time my father visited me in jail - I saw something different, something I hadn’t seen before. My arrest led him to reflect on his own life, on his role as a parent. He recognized my mistakes but alluded to mistakes he may have made as a parent, as well.
My Dad came to every single court appearance. For the two years I was in jail and prison, he visited every month. Sitting with one another’s undivided attention for 6 hours each month built a new relationship between he and I. Something I never would’ve imagined previously.
My father’s father died before I was born, when he was a young man. My Dad told me that the prison visits were giving each of us something he’d never been able to have with his own Dad: an adult relationship between father and son. We hugged. He kissed me. We said, “I love you.”
After paroling, when I was 21, I did fairly well. My father had become my best friend. I started drinking and smoking pot occasionally and my Dad worried about it. But he didn’t judge me.
I was with my Dad when I got the news that my best friend killed himself. I was devastated. When my father dropped me off at my home that night, he said, “Please don’t do anything Pat (my dead friend) wouldn’t want you to.” I knew what he meant, but I couldn’t help myself.
I became a daily drinker and relapsed on meth shortly thereafter. My father started to see what was happening and tried repeatedly to reach out to me. I had so much shame. I didn’t return his calls. I can only imagine the heartbreak he felt. I was spiraling.
I was arrested about a year and a half later, facing life in prison for a 3rd strike. My father came up from San Diego to visit me in the county jail. I had such a hard time looking him in the face. I was so embarrassed.
He said to me, “Matt, there’s nothing I can say to you that you’re probably not already saying to yourself. I just want you to know I’m here for you”. I looked at him from across the table and cried.
“Dad”, I said and stumbled on my words. “What is it?” he said, choking on his words. I looked him in the eyes and saw the tears. It was the first time I’d ever seen my father cry. “Dad, I’m a drug addict.” It was the first time I’d ever said that to him.
A few months later, I was due for preliminary hearings, when evidence against me would be presented. I didn’t want my family to come because I was so ashamed of what I’d done, again. I told my father in no uncertain terms that I didn’t want him coming to the hearing.
“Oh, I’m coming”. I told him not to. He refused to budge. So I stopped calling him, hoping to punish him for his obstinacy. I hoped that by ignoring him he wouldn’t show up. But come preliminary hearing day, he was sitting in the courtroom.
I refused to look him in the eyes. He sat behind me for two whole days while the damning evidence was presented. I could feel my father’s eyes, my shame really, burning holes in the back of my head the entire time. Count after count, shame after shame, he sat there for it all.
When the hearing was over, the bailiff escorted me out and I didn’t look at my father. As I was walking out the door, I heard my father yell from across the courtroom, “I love you, Matt. I love you”. My heart was broken. I knew I couldn’t ignore this man any longer.
For 7 years in prison, my father visited me every single month. He never once judged me. He only loved me. He only showed care and support. He showed me the meaning of love and what manhood can look like.
Two weeks before paroling, my Dad visited me one last time. When it was over, we hugged and I wept in his arms. He kissed me and said, “I love you, Matt”.
I imagine this hug and kiss didn’t look all that different than the photo of Joe and Hunter circulating on Twitter right now. How dare anyone judge this. How dare anyone judge the love that saved my life.
And this anecdotal moment from last year, my father and I:

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More from @hahnscratch

21 Oct
When I vote, I do my best to consider those most affected by my vote. I try to think of the worst possible consequence of a vote, apply that consequence to myself, and decide if I’d be willing to endure it. If not, the choice is clear.
Part of this practice is recognizing that I, as a straight white man without serious financial troubles, will not bear the greatest burden of any vote cast. Thus, voting is almost entirely an exercise in considering the welfare of others.
And this is essentially the definition of systemic racism / sexism / homophobia / classism: the fact that in any given election, the worst possible consequence for any vote will invariably fall upon those who are not white, not male, not straight, or not rich.
Read 5 tweets
21 Oct
My local leadership is considering scrapping a $390 million jail construction project after seeing that a decreased jail population - down 1/3 since covid - has led to no spike in crime. This is what I like to see.
“If this unintentional pilot program is working, I question whether we need to build a new jail altogether,” Cortese said. That’s @DaveCortese, my local county supervisor. Thank you.
“We know community care is the best model for these patients,” @SupEllenberg said. “We could make a facility light and bright and more therapeutic, but ultimately, it’s still a jail, and we know the jail is not an appropriate environment for rehabilitation.” Again, thank you.
Read 7 tweets
15 Oct
I just learned that a prison guard who I worked alongside for 3 years while incarcerated committed suicide. Despite the complicated guard-prisoner dynamic, this information has shaken me. Nothing is promised and everyone is hiding something.
This man repeatedly tried to get me to snitch on other prisoners until I finally put the kibosh on that. He also caught me masturbating in the shower - more embarrassing for him than me. He was the only guard who ever bought me food when we had to make trips outside the prison.
As is often the case with suicide, I search my memory for signs that something was wrong. He struck me as awkward - someone perpetually uncomfortable with where he was, the skin he was in.
Read 10 tweets
14 Oct
As if #yoga hasn’t been appropriated enough - @Lenovo has a Yoga computer & tablet line-up. Y’all do realize Yoga is one branch of Hinduism, right? That it’s a term for certain Buddhist practitioners? lenovo.com/us/en/yoga/pro…
This squarely falls into the orientalist-capitalist project of exoticizing Western wares with Eastern branding - as if owning a @lenovo Yoga tablet in some way points towards the peace of mind that may result from actually practicing Yoga / meditation.
Trying to imagine similar branding with more familiar religious “branches”. Imagine the Apple Shi’ite or the Samsung Hasid or maybe even the Hewlett Packard Catholic. It’s just ridiculous to me that somebody thought it a fine idea to name things this way.
Read 5 tweets
29 Oct 19
@kevinchlo This isn't entirely true, and I am speaking as a former incarcerated firefighter. I served on fire crews in prison with men who are now firefighters and fighting fires as we speak. There are obstacles, for sure, but they are not barred because of conviction. Continued...
@kevinchlo There is a program (opened in last few years), specifically designed for paroled firefighters to gain employment with CalFire.
@kevinchlo One of the biggest obstacles to paroled firefighters gaining employment with CalFire or US Forestry is gaining EMT certification, which has been difficult for people with convictions to get. However, CA passed a bill last year that alleviates the restriction for EMT licensure.
Read 18 tweets

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