Member Since June 2021
Skills
About
Co Executive Director, Inside Circle; The Trium Group strategic partner; TedTalk Speaker; Frequent Keynote Speaker; Leadership Coach; Facilitator. I write, speak publicly and advocate for at-risk youth, criminal justice rehabilitation, community building and overcoming toxic masculinity. As an inmate at New Folsom Prison, I found Inside Circle and began a personal journey of self-awareness and transformation that not only led to being granted freedom from a life sentence, but also to my current leadership role. As a living example of successful rehabilitation and re-entry, my life’s work now – as a facilitator, trainer and mentor – includes actively supporting others, both within and outside of prison, in overcoming their limiting beliefs.
Eldra Jackson III
Published content
article
Sep 29, 2021
How many people are left feeling hopeless, helpless and powerless? How many are left without any faith or hope or dreams?
Company details
Inside Circle
Company bio
The CSP-Sacramento Men's Support Group, what is now referred to as Inside Circle, took shape after a race riot that occurred on the B-Facility yard in 1996. Several inmates were seriously hurt during the melee, one fatally. Witnessing the madness of this event had a profound effect on inmate Patrick Nolan. During his first month of several spent confined to his cell on lockdown following the riot, he could only feel the pain and hopelessness that weighed heavily upon the environment. When he was finally released, it was with an intense determination to shift the dynamic driving such extreme violence and hatred. He met with Dennis Merino, the Deacon for the Catholic community at CSP-Sacramento, and asked him if he could start a support group. At the time, he had no experiential knowledge of what a support group was about. All he knew was that a forum was needed in this environment, a neutral group, where inmates of different ethnic and cultural backgrounds could come together and openly communicate. He started by seeking out guys from the racially segregated groups defining the prison environment, instinctively reaching out to older cons he had grown to respect, not thinking they would want to participate. Surprisingly, several did, taking on roles of leadership and drawing the attention of younger cons. The group belonged to each participant equally and it was commonly agreed that they would only get back what they put in. They experienced the atmosphere as highly charged, sacred and spiritual. Sitting in circle, these men saw that beneath their skin of whatever color, laid not their differences, but their similarities. They were not alone. They discovered that true strength was found not in their capacity for tolerating senseless pain, but in their ability to weep openly and to embrace and be embraced by one another. They developed security in their masculinity, compassion, empathy, and love.