45 Former Inmates Share Secrets About What Being Incarcerated Is Really Like

People Share What Being Incarcerated Is Like

The movies make things dramatic, entertaining, and eye-catching on screen. That means that what you see on TV isn’t always true and, at the very least, isn’t the whole picture. With shows and movies about jails almost everywhere you turn, some people took to Reddit to ask real inmates what their experiences were really like. We’ve compiled the most honest answers…

Not Exactly Like the Movies

We’ve already touched on the fact that when you turn on Orange Is the New Black or Shawshank Redemption, you’re getting a dramatized version of jail or prison on screen.

Not Exactly Like the Movies

As for this person, they said that those movies and TV shows really didn’t line up with their experience when they were in High Desert State Prison in Nevada. It seems like nothing is quite like it seems on the silver screen.

Not Built for Comfort

When you go to prison or jail, you’re going somewhere that’s housing you for the duration of your stay. After all, the whole point is that you aren’t allowed to leave.

Not Built for Comfort

This person shared that during their time in a holding cell, they learned that while it might be built for housing people, the jail was far from comfortable. Even the temperature stood out to them as nearly unbearable to the point of huddling for warmth.

Losing Everything

One thing about going to jail or prison that can be incredibly difficult is that you don’t have much of your own. In fact, your personal belongings are confiscated when you walk in the door.

Losing Everything

This person’s former fiancé was incarcerated for a time and noted how he had to start over with nothing once all of his personal belongings were confiscated, including the literal shirt off of his back. Clearly, that’s not something this person agrees with.

Your Privacy Too

Aside from your belongings, there’s a lot more that you lose when you’re incarcerated. For example, you aren’t going to find a lot of privacy either.

Your Privacy Too

When this person described the monotony that the days can take while incarcerated, it was a few notes here that most of us would especially find difficult. Most people want a little privacy when they head to the bathroom or shower — which isn’t something that many jails and prisons offer their inmates.

Missing People Outside

30 years is a long time to do anything. For this person’s brother, they were six years into a 30-year sentence when their sibling posted this on Reddit.

Missing People Outside

They noted that they try to keep him entertained as much as they can. However, he still finds it hard not to be around his family, especially his growing nieces and nephews. There are a lot of people you can lose contact with when you’re incarcerated.

Not Easy to Stay in Touch Either

That problem we just described isn’t just for lack of effort either. We’re sure that plenty of inmates would spend more time on the phone if they were offered the access they wanted.

Not Easy to Stay in Touch Either

In reality, this person found that during their time incarcerated, those phone calls home didn’t come cheap. So, that makes it even harder to keep in touch with people the way you’d like to.

Sticking Together

When you turn on the TV, shows about jail, naturally, tend to stress the drama that can happen while someone is incarcerated. How accurate is that really, though?

Sticking Together

In this person’s experience, it wasn’t nearly that dramatic at all. If anything, it was a rather boring place to be most of the time. However, she also said that she and other inmates watched out for each other more than she had expected.

Keeping Your Head Down

We’ve used the terms prison and jail thus far. So, it’s important to highlight that, at least in the United States, there’s a difference between the two terms.

Keeping Your Head Down

This person says that it’s pretty easy to keep your head down. Don’t get involved in a few key things and don’t get involved if you see something happen. As long as you do this, this person found that the stay wasn’t as dramatic as the movies say.

A Simple Answer

If you move out of your home and into a new one, you might feel a sense of anxiety when you’re settling in. After all, there’s a lot of change to get used to.

A Simple Answer

As this person seems to put it, that feeling of anxiety never goes away when you’re incarcerated. As a matter of fact, we’d guess that it’s a degree of anxiety most of us can’t imagine. As we’ve covered, being incarcerated isn’t nearly the same as moving to a new place.

Choices and Circumstances

You meet a lot of people when you’re incarcerated. As we said, there’s not always a lot of time to yourself, and chatting can help pass the time.

Choices and Circumstances

This person said that they noticed a lot of people they’d met had made really bad choices or circumstances put them in an unfortunate position. They said that violence does exist but that they still found their own ways to make fun… given the circumstances they were in.

Stuck Here

It’s hard to put into words exactly what it’s like to be incarcerated. After all, it’s not an easy thing to experience, so it wouldn’t be an easy thing to describe either.

Stuck Here

Plus, how do you paint a picture of that experience to someone who has never experienced it? You definitely can’t make them understand it but this woman put it into terms that this person might understand. If you had a job you hated and couldn’t leave for years on end, then you might get the idea.

Put Another Way

Of course, she’s not the only person who has tried to communicate what it’s like to be incarcerated to someone who hadn’t been. This guy had another way to put it.

Put Another Way

Think about hanging out with a bunch of people you don’t really like and spending all your time with them doing things you don’t enjoy and eating food together that you all hate. This would really wear on you day after day.

Out of the Loop

What do you think would be the hardest thing to handle about being incarcerated? This person had a few answers from their 128 days incarcerated. One of the hardest things that they said was handling the boredom paired with a lack of freedom.

Out of the Loop

Most of us don’t think about all the freedoms we have in daily life but losing them all can really make you appreciate them more. All of this would be so much harder not knowing what’s going on with your case.

Things Lost and Taken

Earlier, we talked about how hard it is to lose pretty much all of your possessions when you enter incarceration. This person knew how difficult things were for their loved one.

Things Lost and Taken

This person was very familiar with the rules of what inmates could have because they made sure they knew the rules before getting things for their mom. Still, it seems that the guards would make up their own rules, so they were still left to see whether they could leave things that day or they’d have to try again.

Learning a Lot

What do you do when you don’t have a lot to work with? Well, as this person explains it, you learn how to make a lot with just a little at your disposal.

Learning a Lot

They advise that you’ll never meet anyone that’s honed their crafting skills more than someone who has been incarcerated. They said they actually met some of the smartest people in prison and while it wasn’t a good time by any means, it changed their life.

Reading Into It

First and foremost, this person wanted to get out of the way that there wasn’t anything “fun” about being incarcerated. All in all, it just really isn’t a great time.

Reading Into It

Like we’ve said, you have a lot of downtime to try and fill, so what can you do? This person found that books were the things that really kept them and many other inmates busy. In fact, they had their own value to the people there.

A Lot of Down Time

This OP shared a similar sentiment from someone they knew who’d been to prison more than once. Once again, the mind-numbing amount of downtime stood out.

A Lot of Down Time

When you don’t have the freedom to choose your activities as freely as you would at home, what do you do to fill the time? This guy managed to teach himself a rather niche and complicated skill during his time in prison. Not many people know Ancient Greek.

The Food Sucks

When you go out to lunch right now, the options available to you are nearly endless. Even if you just walk to your fridge, you probably have a few favorites stocked up.

The Food Sucks

When you’re incarcerated, you don’t have this freedom. Unless you have the money to buy your own food with a commissary, you’re stuck with what they offer. Even if you had commissary money, we’re sure the options were still limited.

No, it Really Does

It’s easy to say that the food isn’t good but it doesn’t quite get the point across. As this person puts it, the food is so bland and gray that it’s dehumanizing.

No, it Really Does

On top of that, they said the smell wasn’t that great. As a matter of fact, they could place exactly what it smelled like all the time — dog poop. Without basic cleaning products, it’d be all the more impossible to avoid.

Adding an Unfortunate Layer

Claustrophobia is an incredibly common fear as far as phobias go. Most people start to get uneasy when they’re stuck in one spot for too long, even without this intense fear.

Adding an Unfortunate Layer

If you want to work on a case of claustrophobia, it’s best to work closely with a mental health professional. From a first-person account, this person can verify that if you have claustrophobia, being incarcerated is about as bad as it gets.

Avoiding This

In the movies, you’re led to believe that there’s a fight almost every day. That wasn’t really the experience that this Reddit user shared.

Avoiding This

During their time incarcerated, they said they saw fewer fights than you might expect but, then again, that makes a lot of sense. After all, no one really wants to stay there longer than they need to, so people weren’t keen on getting into fights that could get them into trouble.

In Some Places, a Real Nightmare

Not everyone’s experience is the same when you’re incarcerated. In fact, you can really see differences in how different facilities are when you go from one place to another.

In Some Places, a Real Nightmare

This person said that during their time in jail, it was overcrowded, unfair, inhumane, and about as hot as it gets. It seems like this level of overcrowding wouldn’t help you cool off when you got back to your cell either. These conditions are nothing short of intolerable.

Correcting a Cliché

As we said, different places do things differently but if you turn on the TV, you likely see no privacy and crude jokes about showering. That wasn’t actually the case for this person.

Correcting a Cliché

They said that they actually did get their own space to shower and that these thoughtless jokes didn’t have any basis in their experience. Although it seems that there’s an important difference here between “private” didn’t equate to “personal.”

Cliques and Fitting In

When you have a lot of people stuck together in one place, they might start to form their own cliques and groups amongst the crowd. It’s a common effect that’s stronger in some places than others.

Cliques and Fitting In

This person said that in their time incarcerated, they saw a lot of cliques and groups form amongst other people who were incarcerated with them. However, they did note that there were differences in everyone’s experience, though.

There are Bullies Too

If you put a large group of people together, as we just covered, there are some patterns that you can see. In the most recent example, we looked at cliques and what they can do. Another effect that you run into is bullies.

There are Bullies Too

This person found that the same held true when they were incarcerated. While most people were just there to do what they needed to do and kept their heads down, they did run into the occasional bully intent on making some miserable.

Louder Than Usual

As we said before, there’s a difference between prison and jail. While this person couldn’t speak to an experience in prison, they said their time in jail was unspeakably boring.

Louder Than Usual

However, it seems like it wasn’t quiet, even if there was a lot of time alone with your thoughts. Not to mention, if you build a hallway out of cinderblock or brick and use tile or linoleum flooring, all of those sounds are going to create an environment where sound echoes and travels far.

This Won’t Help

To start, this person really needed to point out how bad the food is. From its many mentions here, it’s clear that this is worse than just an off day in a cafeteria.

This Won’t Help

On top of that, the sheer volume of their experience was heightened by the televisions. Not only were they all on different channels but each one had the volume maxed out. This would make the overlapping layers of dialogue nearly impossible to escape.

And Gross Too

As we’ve covered more than once here, there are parts of everyone’s experience that can vary depending on where someone is incarcerated. For this person, that was Mississippi State Penitentiary.

And Gross Too

They shared that during their time there, it was boring but more than that, it was absolutely disgusting as well. The sheer filth would really wear on you day after day as well as probably make you more susceptible to falling ill.

Can’t Show That on TV

When you’re watching TV, there are certain things that you just can’t get across. The sound design can be eerily accurate and the visuals can be scarily reminiscent of the real thing.

Can’t Show That on TV

However, no one has quite nailed the idea of your TV giving off a smell. So, there’s no way a TV show or movie could really communicate how much jail smells. That’s one thing that this person wasn’t going to forget anytime soon.

Looking Forward to the Little Things

If you’re in jail or prison, we’ve already said that you don’t have the freedom you do to choose what you do throughout the day as you would if you weren’t incarcerated.

Looking Forward to the Little Things

While this person wasn’t in jail or prison, their father had spent time in both. He stressed how boring it was and how important contact with people on the outside. They shared how important letters and phone calls became to him.

Filling Your Time

As we’ve said time and time again now, there are only a few things that you have to fill your time when you’re incarcerated because your freedom is vastly limited.

Filling Your Time

This person found themselves lifting a lot of weights to pass the time because, well, working out was one of the few options available to them while they were incarcerated. Other than that, they used their time to watch TV, take a while in the shower, and work on appeals.

Doesn’t Seem Right

There were a few things that stood out to this person while they were incarcerated. They said there was a lot of drama — not always from their fellow inmates either.

Doesn’t Seem Right

One of the things that they couldn’t quite wrap their head around was the reasons why some of the women they met were in there. They found in many cases, they were engaging in self-defense, not something premeditated or vicious. They learned a lot about the people they were incarcerated with.

Left With a Choice

This person said that in prison, you can really choose one of three paths. You can use your time to learn something new, do just about nothing, or find trouble.

Left With a Choice

They point out that the decisions that you make when you’re incarcerated still have effects. So, they say that there’s an opportunity to ask yourself — if you want to take the chance to start over or find yourself in even more trouble than where you started out.

Setting Some Things Aside

We already talked about how you don’t really get a choice of who you spend time with when you’re incarcerated. So, you get to know some people you probably wouldn’t.

Setting Some Things Aside

As this person puts it, you aren’t really going to always kick a conversation off with, “What are you in for?” like it’s a movie trying to move the plot along. This person found that they caught themselves thinking someone was really great before learning how they got there.

Some of the Most Creative People They’ve Met

This perspective actually doesn’t come from someone who was incarcerated. Instead, this person was familiar with these settings from the other side as a correctional officer.

Some of the Most Creative People They’ve Met

Still, they shared, like the person who was incarcerated before, that this was where they met some of the most creative people they’d ever met. From their position, they hope that the people they meet get out to lead a better life with their talent.

Only Takes a Moment

We’ve heard quite a few times at this point how boring it can be to be in jail or prison. This person wasn’t about to argue that point at all.

Only Takes a Moment

On that matter, though, they did have something to add. While it was boring, it didn’t take long for things to get far too exciting either. If things were going to get violent, they didn’t notice a whole lot of warning when it happened.

A Quick Overview

We’ve said more than once now how boring things can get when you’re incarcerated. We aren’t talking about the boredom that comes with not deciding on a show to stream either.

A Quick Overview

According to this person’s husband, that boredom is mind-numbing and, once again, that connection to the outside was crucial. Plus, the anxieties you build in prison aren’t ones that will go away the minute you’re out. The hypervigilance stayed with him for a while.

If You Want to Wash Up

There are a lot of little things in the shower that are luxuries that you might take for granted if you’ve never lived without them.

If You Want to Wash Up

We aren’t just talking about your choice of shampoos, conditioners, body washes, and any other products you might use. Even a hot shower is a luxury not everyone has. TV can’t account for how cold the showers are. After all, we haven’t quite gotten to 4D television in our homes yet.

Never Getting a Break

Not having your freedom can really take a toll on you mentally. The lack of freedom really gave this person anxiety and we’re sure they’re not the only one. The promise of getting that anxiety back also added anxiety of its own.

Never Getting a Break

This wasn’t because they were anxious about living outside of incarceration but because it felt like the promise of that freedom was always threatened, leaving them walking on eggshells the whole time in the hopes of avoiding adding any time to their sentence.

Ultimately Unique

We’ve already touched on it but this person wanted to stress that your experience when you’re incarcerated can vary a lot depending on where you’re serving your sentence.

Ultimately Unique

It sounds like they speak from experience at more than one facility too, so they have an idea of what they’re talking about. Some of them feel like a story ripped straight from a movie and others aren’t as bad as you might expect. It all depends on what you’re dealing with and where you are.

Comparing Conditions

If there’s one thing you also don’t have when you’re serving a sentence in prison or jail is a lot of space, whether you’re dealing with severe overcrowding or not.

Comparing Conditions

This person once heard a rather apt description of what it was like to live in a prison or jail cell. All you have to do is take a few things into your bathroom and then imagine living there for anywhere from a few months to a few decades.

A Terrifying Picture to Paint

Different places can evoke different emotions. For example, when you come home at the end of the day, you might feel a sense of comfort and relaxation.

A Terrifying Picture to Paint

This person tried to stress the emotions that being in prison can really evoke in a person. To start, they said to try to imagine somewhere without any love. Then, imagine that you’re sad and afraid all of the time. Only now, you might have an idea of what prison can make you feel like.

A Psychological Impact

When it came to comparisons to TV and movies, this person didn’t actually have too many notes compared to what they saw at the facility they were incarcerated in.

A Psychological Impact

However, there was one thing that they said that TV would never really be able to portray to an audience. While going to jail is physical relocation, there’s a severe mental toll that the whole thing takes on a person. Even after leaving, the memory of that feeling is still very much there for them.

There’s No Good Version

We’ve talked about how if you have claustrophobia, jail or prison isn’t the best place to put it to the test. As this person puts it, it can make anyone feel claustrophobic.

There’s No Good Version

Compared to a years-long sentence, a month might seem short but for this person, it was enough to start to drive them up a wall after a while. Almost anyone would start to feel claustrophobic and stir-crazy under these conditions.

A Lonely, Scary Time

By now, it’s no surprise to say that putting the experience of being in prison or jail into words isn’t easy. How can you possibly make someone who hasn’t experienced it even start to understand?

A Lonely, Scary Time

Like many, this person couldn’t quite come up with enough negative adjectives to describe their time there, even if they described it as brief. Especially at such a young age, they were scared, alone, and upset with the system.