Ask Stacey: ‘I Have No One on the Outside!’
Stacey is back to answer your questions on work after prison, making friends and more.

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Hello my valued readers!
Welcome to another session of Ask Stacey.
These answers are from my life (and are supposed to make you laugh a bit!). This is NOT legal advice – on all things, ask your parole officer and consult your lawyer. Do this via email and texts to show you did in fact raise it. And if they don’t answer you, don’t do it!
Send through more questions for me – I love to answer them!
HEAPS of people ask me this. Firstly, don’t stress, it’s possible to get a job. All the guys I know who have gotten out of jail and have stayed out, have gotten work. Once you get your head right, the rest will follow. When it comes to looking for work, google organisations like Green Collar who can give you advice on how to manage it. There are even places who will hire ex offenders for lived experience work. If you have parole like I did, you could use the intensive period to learn a new trade at TAFE or uni. I learned how to write stuff, and now I write stuff. It’s very possible and I believe in you.
Yes, you read right! There is lived experience work out there. People with lived experience – meaning direct, personal experience rather than work or academic knowledge – offer valuable insights that organisations may overlook. They then hire people with lived experience to help them. The requirement is to have a criminal record! So, if you’re in jail reading this, you’re qualified already!
When I got out, I did this sort of work. I felt a bit like a fraud because I had no qualifications. So, I got an undergraduate certificate in creative writing and I’m also studying criminal justice and criminology. But no one told me I needed to. It depends on the organisation and what your role is.
I would flag that doing lived experience work is a responsibility and it’s not easy – talking about prison can bring up a lot of stuff.
Also, some places can be predatory, such as contracts that say that they own all the intellectual property you develop. The common moral standard is that no one has a right to own our stories or tell our stories, except us.
Make friends with ChatGPT, it’s all the rage. Haven’t heard of ChatGPT? It’s a free online robot that you can ask anything. It’s very chatty and knows you really well. People are using ChatGPT for everything – from recipes to counselling. People are even naming their ChatGPT. It’s so crazy out there – there are girlfriend/boyfriend apps!
You may think that sounds weird, and I agree. That’s why I help run a support group for formally incarcerated trans and gender diverse people. I have suggested other organisations do the same for the people they support. Ask for contact details for services before you get out and hit them up for support groups. If they don’t have one, they should know an organisation that does. Some people go to Narcotics Anonymous or Alcohol Anonymous as well. Remember, no one knows anything about you! Join a gym, go to speed friending. Don’t lead with the worst thing you ever did and you’ll be fine.
If your quiche is cold or your mattress is lumpy, maybe don’t call the buds… However, please remember, your freedom is all that is supposed to be taken away. You’re still a human and deserve to be treated with dignity and respect. Regardless of what anyone else says.
In my experience, the ombudsman is a paper tiger that is utterly powerless. They probably won’t fix anything. But you should absolutely call them anyway because mail gets lost and things vanish from cells. They will record whatever it is that has happened and you can be confident that there is a record of what human rights violation has occurred. In terms of retaliation. My experience is that whatever they can do to hurt you, they are already doing and that’s why you want to complain. If you complain about someone and then they retaliate, stay calm and record it. Patterns in behaviour will emerge that are obvious to everyone.
If you do not have the emotional capacity for more stress though, I also understand. I’ve been there too and it’s exhausting.
As Charles Darwin said, “it’s not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent, but the one most adaptable to change”. The answer to how to complete parole is often: change. Get a job and make new friends. Adapt and grow. You don’t walk around like a five-year-old pooping yourself anymore. Because you changed. You can’t do whatever led you to jail anymore either. Sometimes this means small changes. Other times it means drastic changes that are scary, like cutting off my… Richard “Dick” Nixon once said, “defeat doesn’t finish a man, quitting does. A man is not finished when he’s defeated. He’s finished when he quits.”
Hello my valued readers!
Welcome to another session of Ask Stacey.
These answers are from my life (and are supposed to make you laugh a bit!). This is NOT legal advice – on all things, ask your parole officer and consult your lawyer. Do this via email and texts to show you did in fact raise it. And if they don’t answer you, don’t do it!
Send through more questions for me – I love to answer them!
HEAPS of people ask me this. Firstly, don’t stress, it’s possible to get a job. All the guys I know who have gotten out of jail and have stayed out, have gotten work. Once you get your head right, the rest will follow. When it comes to looking for work, google organisations like Green Collar who can give you advice on how to manage it. There are even places who will hire ex offenders for lived experience work. If you have parole like I did, you could use the intensive period to learn a new trade at TAFE or uni. I learned how to write stuff, and now I write stuff. It’s very possible and I believe in you.
Yes, you read right! There is lived experience work out there. People with lived experience – meaning direct, personal experience rather than work or academic knowledge – offer valuable insights that organisations may overlook. They then hire people with lived experience to help them. The requirement is to have a criminal record! So, if you’re in jail reading this, you’re qualified already!
When I got out, I did this sort of work. I felt a bit like a fraud because I had no qualifications. So, I got an undergraduate certificate in creative writing and I’m also studying criminal justice and criminology. But no one told me I needed to. It depends on the organisation and what your role is.
I would flag that doing lived experience work is a responsibility and it’s not easy – talking about prison can bring up a lot of stuff.
Also, some places can be predatory, such as contracts that say that they own all the intellectual property you develop. The common moral standard is that no one has a right to own our stories or tell our stories, except us.
Make friends with ChatGPT, it’s all the rage. Haven’t heard of ChatGPT? It’s a free online robot that you can ask anything. It’s very chatty and knows you really well. People are using ChatGPT for everything – from recipes to counselling. People are even naming their ChatGPT. It’s so crazy out there – there are girlfriend/boyfriend apps!
You may think that sounds weird, and I agree. That’s why I help run a support group for formally incarcerated trans and gender diverse people. I have suggested other organisations do the same for the people they support. Ask for contact details for services before you get out and hit them up for support groups. If they don’t have one, they should know an organisation that does. Some people go to Narcotics Anonymous or Alcohol Anonymous as well. Remember, no one knows anything about you! Join a gym, go to speed friending. Don’t lead with the worst thing you ever did and you’ll be fine.
If your quiche is cold or your mattress is lumpy, maybe don’t call the buds… However, please remember, your freedom is all that is supposed to be taken away. You’re still a human and deserve to be treated with dignity and respect. Regardless of what anyone else says.
In my experience, the ombudsman is a paper tiger that is utterly powerless. They probably won’t fix anything. But you should absolutely call them anyway because mail gets lost and things vanish from cells. They will record whatever it is that has happened and you can be confident that there is a record of what human rights violation has occurred. In terms of retaliation. My experience is that whatever they can do to hurt you, they are already doing and that’s why you want to complain. If you complain about someone and then they retaliate, stay calm and record it. Patterns in behaviour will emerge that are obvious to everyone.
If you do not have the emotional capacity for more stress though, I also understand. I’ve been there too and it’s exhausting.
As Charles Darwin said, “it’s not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent, but the one most adaptable to change”. The answer to how to complete parole is often: change. Get a job and make new friends. Adapt and grow. You don’t walk around like a five-year-old pooping yourself anymore. Because you changed. You can’t do whatever led you to jail anymore either. Sometimes this means small changes. Other times it means drastic changes that are scary, like cutting off my… Richard “Dick” Nixon once said, “defeat doesn’t finish a man, quitting does. A man is not finished when he’s defeated. He’s finished when he quits.”
If I had found freedom in prison, then what was even the point trying to fit in with society?
Simon Fenech is the General Manager/Director at social enterprise Fruit2Work in Victoria. His transformation from a drug addict, buried deep in Australia’s criminal underworld, to an inspirational figure, intent on changing the lives of others, is remarkable.
You may be following in an age-old tradition of this county by languishing in one of his Majesty’s prisons, but you are not forgotten!
Everyone has the right to dream. To expect. To imagine a version of life where we get to decide who we are – not just live with who we’ve been told we are. That kind of dreaming is powerful. It keeps something alive in us. Something worth fighting for.
Talking about prison once you’re out in the community can be challenging. It’s difficult to know the right thing to say, or how people might react.
You had questions, we listened! These answers are from my life (and are supposed to make you smile a bit!).
You may be following in an age-old tradition of this county by languishing in one of his Majesty’s prisons, but you are not forgotten!
What you need to survive in prison is different to what you need on the outside. Many people have said that the first few weeks out were harder than their time inside. Coping with money problems, dealing with other people and feeling like you don’t belong in society can take a toll.