Six cubic feet. That’s how much stuff each incarcerated person in California is allowed to have in his or her cell. The few personal objects you keep with you in prison are precious. But what’s left b...Show More
Six cubic feet. That’s how much stuff each incarcerated person in California is allowed to have in his or her cell. The few personal objects you keep with you in prison are precious. But what’s left b...Show More
Recommendations
write2tg recommended:Jan 10th
This is a wonderful podcast for its storytelling and the layered insights. What I find most interesting is how personal things or artefacts may give comfort to some and cause pain to others. Growing up, I wasn’t into collecting objects and never bothered to hold on to anything. But after losing my M...Show More
I thought this episode was:
epekilis recommended:Jan 10th
Objects and possessions have tremendous psychological power, particularly when you cannot have them. The autistic inmate and his journey to free himself from the mistakes of his past by confronting the objects of his youth on his journey to redemption is top level psychological storytelling.
I thought this episode was: