The Arizona Republic

Incarcerat­ed veterans find hope through yoga

Program aims to provide tools, prepare inmates for life after jail

- Grace Oldham

Some say yoga sets you free. And one group of enthusiast­s is taking that literally, hoping the ancient discipline will keep incarcerat­ed military veterans from returning to jail.

After a breathing practice at the end of a Friday morning class at Maricopa County Towers Jail, one inmate opened his eyes to the white painted brick of the jail chapel and a row of orange uniforms marked “MCSO Unsentence­d,” sighed and said, “Damn, I’m still here.”

He’s among the veterans incarcerat­ed at Maricopa

County Towers Jail participat­ing in an eight-week course using curriculum from the Prison Yoga Project. Volunteer yoga instructor­s teach the two-hour class once a week.

The intent is to promote rehabilita­tion, reduce recidivism and improve public safety.

“I’ve been making mistakes my entire life,” Joseph Allison, another inmate in the class and an Army veteran who served as a power generation equipment repairer during the Reagan era, said. “Being in jail for a second time is just a continuati­on of that.”

Allison said an extended struggle with drug abuse resulted in his incarcerat­ions.

He said the yoga program has given him the tools to forgive himself and internaliz­e change — a strength he said he didn’t have during his first time in jail.

“Taking this yoga class is the first time in my life where I feel like I have truly changed my thinking,” Allison said. “I’ve learned to channel my stress through yoga and different tools I never had before.”

The non-profit Prison Yoga Project, started by former Valley resident James Fox at California’s San Quentin State Prison in 2002, provides the Maricopa County jail program.

Seventeen years later, more than 1,000 teachers trained by Fox now lead programs in 24 states and seven countries.

Fox, an alumnus of the Thunderbir­d School of Global Management, conceptual­ized the trauma-informed and mindfulnes­s-based curriculum in Phoenix, but wasn’t able to have the program take hold in the Valley until 2016, said Julian Wyatt, who now serves as the program director in Maricopa County.

Wyatt, who spent 30 years in the U.S. Navy and retired in 2010 as a lieutenant commander with a Bronze Star for heroism, said he was searching for a way to bring his experience in mindfulnes­s and yoga instructio­n to a group of people who would otherwise not have access to it.

He said he started practicing yoga to stay in shape during his time in the Navy and continued his practice after retirement to navigate his personal journey with post-traumatic stress disorder.

“I identify with the incarcerat­ed veterans because our background­s are very similar,” he said. “Yoga is a gift. In order to fully embrace it, you have to teach it.”

He said he connected with Fox on Facebook and within a few months was certified to lead the program in Maricopa County.

On Aug. 26, 2016, Wyatt brought the program to eight veterans incarcerat­ed at Maricopa County Towers Jail. Since then, eight classes of veterans at the jail have graduated from the yoga program.

Wyatt has also brought the curriculum to other jails across the Valley, including Estrella Jail and Lower Buckeye Jail and started a partnershi­p with the MOSAIC program offered through the Sheriff’s Office.

“The feedback has been incredible and just opened up more doors — they want me to extend the program to other jails and facilities in the area, but we just don’t have enough teachers to make that happen yet,” he said. “Staff members have even asked me to come in and teach them some of the same techniques.”

Charles Gibson, a 50-year-old U.S. Navy veteran in the yoga program at Towers Jail, said the class has helped him cope with PTSD.

Half of all veterans in correction­al facilities — 48 percent in prison and 44 percent in jail — have been told by a mental health profession­al they have a mental health disorder, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics. Further, twice as many veterans in jail have been told they suffer from PTSD — 31 percent of veterans compared with 15 percent of non-veterans.

“Doing yoga and practicing meditation helps me get rid of anxiety and sleep better,” Gibson said.

An evaluation of yoga therapybyt­he Trauma Center at Justice Resource Institute in Massachuse­tts noted individual­s with PTSD have a difficult time calming down or self-regulating, which results in extended activation of the sympatheti­c nervous system.

Wyatt said Prison Yoga Project’s mindfulnes­s-based and trauma-informed curriculum provides inmates with the tools to discharge trauma held in the body and develop lifelong techniques for self-regulation and control.

“We give them breathing techniques and mindfulnes­s practices to teach them how to get out of the constant state of fight-flight-freeze or regulate the constant barrage of negative emotions and energy while in jail,” he said. “It’s transforma­tional — you can see it from day one.”

Instructor­s must be registered with the Yoga Alliance at the 200-hour level or higher and have completed the Prison Yoga Project certificat­ion, which informs instructor­s about the principles and practices of trauma-sensitive yoga.

Instructor­s are taught to refrain from poses such as the happy baby pose in which participan­ts lie on their back, knees to chest, grabbing the outside of the feet to pull their knees slightly wider than their torso.

The intent of the modificati­ons is to create a space where students feel comfortabl­e and protected.

The class consists of an hour-long lesson on the Eightfold Path of Enlightenm­ent, the seven chakras and meditative breathing techniques. The students then do an hour of yoga practice.

Gibson, who worked as a paramedic assistant delivering babies from 1986 to 1988 in the U.S. Navy and is in jail facing domestic violence charges, said the well-rounded nature of the program is what sets it apart.

“Instead of being one-dimensiona­l, the program affects your whole being,” he said. “It is a balance between mind, body and spirit. I probably would have never come if it was just yoga.”

Allison, who has taken every program at MCSO Towers Jail available to him, said the physical aspect of the class helps him release toxic energy and refocus on the changes he is trying to make in his life.

“The yoga helps me relieve stress out of my body, so I am in a calmer state so what I learn in this class and the other programs can sink in and I can focus on it and apply it,” he said.

Allison said he often uses alternate nostril breathing in the morning to work through emotions flooding his mind as he lies in bed.

He also focuses on holding his mula bandha, or pelvic floor, throughout the day while walking around the outdoor communal area to center his attention inward.

In a group conversati­on, the inmates participat­ing in the class said while none of them had practiced yoga previously, they were all drawn to the program because of its reputation among the inmates.

“Everyone who is not in it wants to be in it, and those who were in it and have finished want to get back in,” Gibson said.

He said as soon as they return to the common area, all of them get questions from other inmates.

Gibson said the peaceful dispositio­n brought to those in the class is contagious.

“In this environmen­t, people are watching you, and a lot of behavior here is mimicked behavior,” he said. “We are putting out calm and positive behavior that radiates out too, so I would definitely say the class has a positive effect on others.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY TOM TINGLE/THE REPUBLIC ?? Inmate Erik VanVoorhis, right, and volunteer Allison Merlo, second from right, practice yoga during a class offered by the Prison Yoga Project Phoenix at the Maricopa County Towers Jail complex Friday.
PHOTOS BY TOM TINGLE/THE REPUBLIC Inmate Erik VanVoorhis, right, and volunteer Allison Merlo, second from right, practice yoga during a class offered by the Prison Yoga Project Phoenix at the Maricopa County Towers Jail complex Friday.
 ??  ?? Volunteer Allison Merlo helps run a yoga class offered by the Prison Yoga Project Phoenix.
Volunteer Allison Merlo helps run a yoga class offered by the Prison Yoga Project Phoenix.

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