Sunday, November 17, 2013

No Treatment Couches in Jail Cells



Wyoming, like other states, is having a crisis that legislators wish to sweep under the rug…again.  Our jails and prisons are becoming the recovery and support facilities for the mentally ill and non-violent drug offenders.  That is wrong because of so many reasons, and the costs the state is already paying because of no rational action to create support systems in communities is obvious now. What really makes this writer sad is that they shouldn’t have to told…they already know; but denial persists.

Cutting costs by cutting services through attrition and tabling physical plant investments makes each community subject to economically disabling circumstances.  When mayors and council members, county officials and citizens face more homeless persons on their streets, shouldn’t they ask why this is happening?  One of the answers they will hear is that once an inmate is released, that person may no longer have a job, a home, or any means in which to support themselves, and in many cases, their family suffers as if the members had committed offenses. Spouses and children do not deserve the consequences that have lifetime effects. Employment becomes near impossible when an application reveals the arrest and adjudication outcome (or lack of finality). Housing is more difficult to obtain, and both friends and family are more hesitant or unable to assist.

There are four corners of identifying the resolution to this growing problem of not treating mental illness and addiction: 
1)     Offering a spiritual connection.  Not religion nor dogma; just identifying and connecting on a personal spiritual journey to a higher power.
2)     Offering physical security for the time needed to create their own, in a community of mindfulness.
3)     Offering training of both job skills and other learning skills that help secure the future material needs.
4)     Offering both professional and lay support to assist in gaining enough confidence in order to become a giver of life to others.

There is no cheap alternative to real healing.  Jails and prison are not alternatives society can afford, nor really want, when one considers the extreme costs of disenfranchising individuals and families.  People who find themselves in jail could be considered “lost souls” in that the basis for their incarceration rules their thinking, their lives and the consequences placed on others, as well.  All yearn for a sense of community, warts and all.  Facebook and the likes are not replacements for community; they are tools. Healthy humans desire to give as much as they are given; sometimes more.  In economic terms, the concept of “giving back” is very profitable to communities.

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