Entries From My Journal

Note: This year, I’ve asked Terry Robinson to share entries from his journal. We often see innocent individuals get out of prison after decades – but we can never fully appreciate what they went through. This is a small attempt to touch on the surface of what it is like to be innocent and on death row. How did Terry Robinson end up on death row? Two people physically connected to the crime scene accused Robinson of murder. That’s it. This is the first in this series. These entries are not edited, but shared in their original format.

February 5, 2014 (Wednesday, 12:43 a.m.)

Sitting here on my bed staring off into nothingness as so many thoughts fill my head about where I am and why I am here.  Does it even matter whether I’m innocent or not?  Am I destined to die here regardless?  Sometimes I wish they would just get it over with.  The heartache and pain from missing my family is unbearable – death has to be better than this.  Then I think… does this make me suicidal to prefer death over agony?  To know sadness day in and day out for more than fifteen years is a recipe for insanity.  Constantly engulfed in darkness.  Always alone, even when others are present.  Avoiding my reflection in the mirror each morning as I am afraid to face myself and the reality that is my life, or so my death.  I may never get to hug my mother again or go fishing with my father.  To many others that knew me, I am long forgotten; a conviction and a sentence has erased me from existence in all the ways that count.  The tears are more frequent and the numbness is without end. Some say, ‘prayer changes things’.  If that’s true, then the only thing it seems to have changed in my mind is that prayer changes things.  My hope is not just fleeting – it has long fled, but who the hell cares?

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:  Terry Robinson writes under the pen name ‘Chanton’, is a member of the Board of Directors of WITS, and heads up a book club on NC’s Death Row.
He has always maintained his innocence, and WITS will continue to share his story and his case. I have asked Terry to share some of his journal entries with us.

Terry continues to work on his memoirs, as well as a book of fiction, and he can be contacted at (Please Note, this is a change of address, as NC has revised the way those in prison receive mail):
Terry Robinson #0349019
Central Prison
P.O. Box 247
Phoenix, MD 21131
OR
textbehind.com

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