A poem by F.X. Baird.
A poem by F.X. Baird.
A poem by Richard Gross.
A poem by Jack Hoye.
A poem by Thea Schiller.
A non-fiction piece by Bill Cote.
A poem by Robyn Joy.
“Here’s the prompt. You have seven minutes. There’s no way to do it wrong. Ready? Go.”
For the past six years, Writers for Recovery workshop sessions have begun with these words. And from those words hundreds of writers have been given the freedom to tell their stories of substance use disorder and life in recovery. The stories our participants share are harrowing and triumphant, bitter and sweet, but they all have something in common: they break the silence that keeps people locked in the fear, shame, and isolation of substance use disorder.
The pieces you will read here were each written in seven minutes. Each one tells not only a story on the page, but a bigger story of a writer’s life in recovery, and of the loving, supportive communities our writers create. In person at local recovery centers or dropping into Zoom rooms from around the world, our writers share and talk about their stories. They comfort each other and cheer each other on. And they discover that writing is a great source of power. As Jacqueline Joy, one of our longtime participants, recently wrote, “The page is a place to practice talking about everything I have been warned not to talk about. As I write, I heal.”
We hope you enjoy the work.
Bess O’Brien
Gary Miller
Founders, Writers for Recovery
A poem by Judith Janoo.
A non-fiction piece by Nelly W.
A poem by Robyn Joy.
A poem by Robyn Joy.
A non-ficiton piece by Bill Cote.
A non-fiction piece by S. J. Cahill.
A poem by Cheryl Hartley.
A poem by Nelly W.
I started the workshop at Graterford Prison in January, 2017. I wanted to do this for a long time and my semi-retirement enabled me to think I finally had the time to devote to the project. Early in my career, I was the Director of the Vocational Guidance Unit for the Philadelphia Prison System, and over the years, I developed a specialty in addictions and criminal justice which included teaching college-level courses in criminal justice at West Chester University. My doctoral dissertation focused on the developmental life course of men who had established productive lives post-addiction and incarceration.
With these experiences, and as a poet myself, I fully expected to find poets at Graterford. Graterford was replaced by the new prison, Phoenix, in 2018. When face-to-face access was suspended due to the pandemic, I started conducting the workshop via email exchange in the Spring of 2020. I conduct the workshop in the same ways I have experienced workshops myself in my growth as a poet: suggest a prompt that focuses on a subject; give examples of poems, my own or others that might be responses to the prompt; and ask for participants to write a poem. When conducted in person, copies of each participant’s poem are handed out and each poet receives feedback and suggested edits for their work (this is now via email only from me).
Ten poems from five poets from the initial launch of this workshop were published in the Fall 2017 Schuylkill Valley Journal, V45. (For a more detailed account of the beginnings of the workshop, see my essay included in SVJ). The poems these men have written in response to the workshop have been remarkable. Sometimes raw and in need of editing, at times insightful, wise and vivid; and the poets are learning to re-write and re-visit their work, developing that most important question that I have found to propel my own work forward: How can I improve this poem?
~F.X. Baird
A poem by Aaron Harun Fox.
A poem by Alexander Crespo AKA Lexo.
A poem by John Buttner.
A poem by Benjamin Romeo Massiel Dymonds.
A poem by Smoov Angel.
A poem by Richard Gross.
A poem by Eduardo Ramirez.
A poem by Aaron Harun Fox.
A poem by F.X. Baird.
A poem by F.X. Baird.
A poem by Larry Stromberg.
A poem by Aaron Harun Fox.
A poem by Eduardo Ramirez.
A poem by Larry Stromberg.
A poem by Raymond Bob Tucker.
A poem by Smoov Angel.
A poem by Alexander Crespo AKA Lexo.
A poem by Alexander Crespo AKA Lexo.
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