© 2024 WYSO
Our Community. Our Nation. Our World.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Take a look inside the justice system, with people going through it.

Poetic Reentry: Cleveland Heights Man Uses Verse To Free His Mind

For Da'Jon Carouthers, the biggest contrast between free life and incarcerated life is the noise.

"It's never really quiet," Carouthers said. "Even at night when you're sleeping, you've got two people to your right, two people to your left — you have no space."

He began writing poetry and fiction as a way of creating that space for himself.

"Sometimes I'd go to the library and I'd put my headphones on," he remembered. "The next thing you know, I look up and it's three hours later and I wrote a whole chapter and imagined the next three chapters."

Writing also helped him imagine a different life, he said, helping keep his mind focused on life outside prison bars. He eventually applied for, and was granted, early release through the Cuyahoga County Reentry Court.

In exchange for completing training and substance abuse rehab programs, he shaved more than a year off his original four-year sentence. He checks in with his parole officer every two weeks.

He now works a manufacturing job at a plant that makes humidifiers, and moonlights as a personal fitness trainer.

Carouthers published his first novel, The Cross You Bear, shortly after his release. He wrote the first draft — all long-hand — while incarcerated.

He also continues to write poetry. His most recent piece was about his mother, who died in January.

"It's still therapeutic for me," he said.

"Pencil or Pen," by Da'Jon Carouthers

A pencil, of course.
I have and I will
erase bad habits and
traits that I've become
accustomed to. And by
me being a pencil and
not a pen, I can start
fresh at things and you'll
never know of the things
I've erased unless I tell
you. I guess you can say
I have a good eraser. Just writing this,
I've erased three times. I sometimes tend to
start things without putting
much thought into it, so I
have to start over.
Thank god for erasers. To
sum it all up,
pencils are temporary and
pens are permanent. And
everyone deserves a second chance.

Copyright 2021 WCPN. To see more, visit WCPN.