Forsaken
In Forsaken, the Felonist enters the darkest stretch of her incarceration, confronting the emotional collapse that comes with prolonged isolation, family separation, and the mental health toll of life inside …
In Forsaken, the Felonist enters the darkest stretch of her incarceration, confronting the emotional collapse that comes with prolonged isolation, family separation, and the mental health toll of life inside …
This episode captures the exact moment when the Felonist feels herself slipping between who she was and who she is becoming, suspended in the uneasy space where hope, fear, and …
In Okay, So Now What?, the Felonist stops circling the wreckage and finally stands in the center of it—not triumphant, not healed, not redeemed, just awake. After months of fear, …
Finally, the Felonist stops running from herself—not the polished self, not the competent self, not the charming self, but the real one underneath the drinking, the denial, the self‑punishment, the …
After being in jail for a while, the mind starts stitching meaning into the chaos—dreams, signs, conspiracies, memories, pennies on the floor, anything that might prove the universe is still …
There is a moment in every unraveling when the floor finally drops—when the rituals that kept you upright, the faith that steadied your breath, and the discipline that held your …
In this episode, The Felonist rides the emotional whiplash of legal updates, sleepless nights, and the countdown to freedom. Valentine’s Day hits different on the inside, stirring memories of real …
In Bless Me Indeed, The Felonist doesn’t sugarcoat a thing -- this is the moment she finally stops seeing herself as broken and begins to believe she might actually deserve …
It's a new tradition: Feloni$t Friday, a Friday reflection on the current realities faced by felons. In this bonus episode, the Feloni$t dives headfirst into the emotions and triggers that …
Holding My Head marks the moment the Felonist stops collapsing into herself and begins, inch by inch, to lift her head again — literally and figuratively. Hunger, exhaustion, doubt, and …
In Sifting Drama from Truth, the Felonist begins to separate instinct from noise, fantasy from reality, and self‑protection from self‑betrayal, capturing the messy, moment‑to‑moment mental work of surviving incarceration and …
Something shifts in Are You There God, It's Me Felonist — not a miracle, not a revelation, but a strange, steadying clarity that feels like it comes from somewhere just …
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