Author: | Paul Longstreet | ISBN: | 9781452412986 |
Publisher: | Garden Park Productions | Publication: | October 11, 2011 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition | Language: | English |
Author: | Paul Longstreet |
ISBN: | 9781452412986 |
Publisher: | Garden Park Productions |
Publication: | October 11, 2011 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition |
Language: | English |
This book has nothing to do with guilt or innocence. Innocent people as well as guilty people spend extensive time in jails or prisons and some, whether guilty or innocent, are executed none the less. However as said, this book has nothing to do with guilt or innocence. This book is about the important survival skills necessary to survive in jail or prison during one’s incarceration, and how to walk out with your physical being and sanity being basically intact. This book was written to serve two purposes. One purpose is to provide counseling for 1st time offenders who are anticipating being incarcerated for a substantial period of time and since this is their first (and hopefully last) time being incarcerated, they are without any knowledge, what so ever, about the journey that they are about to take.
Therefore one particular purpose of the book ("How To Jail") is to teach 1st time offenders the survival skills of incarceration. These skills aren't being taught in advance anyplace else, but here within this publication. Entering into jail or prison without being properly advised (believe it or not) of the inmates social norms, is akin to trying to live among a group of cannibals and you're a vegetarian. Eventually without the proper survival skills, the vegetarian gets eaten.
The second purpose for this book is for the reader who has not as of yet, committed a crime that demands incarceration. It is hoped that by reading "How To Jail" before there’s a need, that the reader would realize that neither he nor she would want to experience the undesirable conditions of incarceration; and that in reading “How to Jail” and in being forearmed with this knowledge, the reader would be better able to resist the lure of succumbing to peer pressure into doing something that could result in incarceration. Jails and prisons are basically the same all over the world, some just have hasher living conditions than others, but there are still general or common in-house rules of conduct among the inmates, no matter where they are located.
This book has nothing to do with guilt or innocence. Innocent people as well as guilty people spend extensive time in jails or prisons and some, whether guilty or innocent, are executed none the less. However as said, this book has nothing to do with guilt or innocence. This book is about the important survival skills necessary to survive in jail or prison during one’s incarceration, and how to walk out with your physical being and sanity being basically intact. This book was written to serve two purposes. One purpose is to provide counseling for 1st time offenders who are anticipating being incarcerated for a substantial period of time and since this is their first (and hopefully last) time being incarcerated, they are without any knowledge, what so ever, about the journey that they are about to take.
Therefore one particular purpose of the book ("How To Jail") is to teach 1st time offenders the survival skills of incarceration. These skills aren't being taught in advance anyplace else, but here within this publication. Entering into jail or prison without being properly advised (believe it or not) of the inmates social norms, is akin to trying to live among a group of cannibals and you're a vegetarian. Eventually without the proper survival skills, the vegetarian gets eaten.
The second purpose for this book is for the reader who has not as of yet, committed a crime that demands incarceration. It is hoped that by reading "How To Jail" before there’s a need, that the reader would realize that neither he nor she would want to experience the undesirable conditions of incarceration; and that in reading “How to Jail” and in being forearmed with this knowledge, the reader would be better able to resist the lure of succumbing to peer pressure into doing something that could result in incarceration. Jails and prisons are basically the same all over the world, some just have hasher living conditions than others, but there are still general or common in-house rules of conduct among the inmates, no matter where they are located.