Hidden Brain - Radio Replay: Prisons of Our Own Making
Episode Date: November 4, 2017Discussions about healthy living usually revolve around diet and exercise. Social interaction is often left out of the conversation, even though research shows that it's critical to our well-being. On... this week's radio replay, we'll explore research on the extremes of social interaction: from the consequences of constant connection, to the high cost of solitary confinement.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
And then see if you can begin to deepen your breath here,
nice long inhale in, and a nice long juicy exhale out.
There are some commonly accepted ideas about what it means to be healthy.
Healthy people eat lots of fruits and vegetables.
They don't do drugs, and of course they exercise.
Draw your palms together at the heart, take a deep breath in each time we get here.
While physical activity and food dominate our discussions about well-being,
the importance of social interaction is often overlooked.
I think the movie was better than the book.
I'm alright.
What's your horse go?
I like a large-scale-
Long time no see!
There's a large, ongoing body of research about how critical social contact is to human survival.
That awful looks so good on you, where do you go to choose?
A University of Utah's studies showed
that people with strong relationships
have lower blood pressure than lonely counterparts.
I've got two redepth books, though.
It's time for you to get a watch.
I'm a huge character.
Researchers at the University of Chicago
found that people who report strong feelings of loneliness
are more likely to binge eat.
That plays as the best of it.
That plays have the worst.
I'll take two spoons of mint chocolate chips.
And at Harvard, one study found that people with good relationships
actually live longer and live happier.
Happy birthday, baby.
Our social ties are unquestionably at the core
of what it means to be human.
Anything good on that?
I just got back from Vogue or something.
Are you going to have your answer tonight?
I'm trying to have a dinner.
Have you worked?
All right, so let's go.
Let's go. So what happens if you're cut off from human contact? We want to have you out tonight. Dinner? After work? That's a pleasure.
So what happens if you're cut off from human contact?
LITER IN THE SHOW
We talk about the effects of long-term solitary confinement.
People talk about not having seen the moon in years or decades
and how much they miss that.
And then people talk about missing just pure human touch.
First though, we start by exploring
the other end of the spectrum, interaction overload.
In her 20s and 30s, Rachel Leonard
lived all over the United States.
El Encalorado and upstate New York and I lived in Vermont
for a long time and then I was living in Asheville,
North Carolina.
And she traveled all over the world.
She met lots of different people in all these places.
To keep in touch with them, she signed up for Facebook.
I was traveling in Central America, 2006 and 2007,
and I did not have a phone, and I was in pretty remote areas.
I signed up then because I kept meeting all these wonderful people,
and one of the ways to immediately connect with them
was to friend them on Facebook.
The site became an important tool for Rachel,
to keep in touch with people she'd met on her
travels to share her adventures with friends and family back home.
That's actually when I started sharing like my travels with other friends, my pictures of
my trip.
But as much as Rachel loved traveling and felt good about the choices she'd made in her
life, other feelings started to sneak up on her.
Having Facebook also allowed her to see what everyone else was up to, while she was
back packing in Central America, or moving from one city to another.
You know, everybody's getting married.
Some people have one child, some people have two children.
All my friends have these high-powered jobs, and they own own houses and all of these things.
These feelings were at the back of her mind a few years later when she met a guy
and decided to start a relationship.
I met him and I had been planning to leave the country and go to Southeast Asia to teach
and I met him in December and I was supposed to leave in June and I didn't go.
A new boyfriend asked her to stay with him in Asheville, North Carolina.
She wasn't sure it was the right thing to do, but she agreed.
It was a turning point in my life in lots of ways because up until then I'd kind of been this free spirit
and did what I wanted and traveled a lot and still had that wanderlust. But I was also 33 and kind of looking around
and realizing that other people were getting married
and having kids and I decided maybe I should try this out.
Soon, like so many of her friends,
she was posting pictures and details
about her happy relationship.
We got engaged pretty quickly. And, you quickly and at this time I'm posting my pictures and posting our
hikes.
We lived in the Blue Ridge Mountain, so we'd have these beautiful hikes in this lovely little
town, and of course I'm posting all of this.
Her engagement was chronicled, the new house they moved into, the view from the porch.
All of it looked beautiful on Facebook.
If you looked only from the porch, you could see mountains straight, but if you looked
to the left, you could see this huge factory.
But of course, I didn't take pictures of the factory because why would you do that?
Because Facebook is not a place for pictures of ugly factories.
It was very taboo not to share positivity.
You know, one ever put negative stuff on there.
And if they did, people were like, hmm, what's going on with blah, blah, blah.
So it was always about being positive and showing your best side and your best moments.
Facebook is also not a place for ambivalence.
Celebrating triumph, that's welcome.
Morning of tragedy, that's okay too.
Expressing uncertainty and doubt?
Not so much.
We all intuitively understand the rules.
Posts about engagements and babies will receive ravenous applause.
News about a grandparent passing away will elicit virtual hugs,
but fears about not making rent,
marital tensions,
hesitations about becoming apparent,
those are verboten.
Rachel started to feel constricted.
The more she posted about her happy life on social media,
the greater the disconnect she felt with her real life.
I know now that at the time, while it looked great and it looked right, it didn't really
feel right for me, but I think that putting it out there and having my friends say, oh,
this looks so wonderful, you look so happy, this is great, it was kind of my way of convincing
myself it was.
And I'd say that the more things didn't feel great, the more I posted.
The golf widened between her real relationship and the Facebook version.
What I'm not posting is that we fought a lot and what seemed to be kind of perfect to other people was not.
When the new couple took a trip to Charleston, Rachel says her friends on Facebook only saw
the beautiful pictures.
She boasted photos of the two of them sitting on the beach, drinking memoses, eating good
food.
And really we were fighting the entire time.
I had actually tried to break up with him. And it was a miserable trip.
But I didn't tell anybody that.
And I, you know, what I shared was the pictures
of us in front of the fountain or at the aquarium
or eating something delicious,
and not that we fought 90% of the time.
You're kind of curating your life.
Just these very specific moments,
the best of the best that you're putting up there with no context.
More and more, Rachel found that she was turning to social media for validation.
She wanted confirmation from her social media for validation. She wanted
confirmation from her social media feed that her life was on track. The more
she posted photos of her relationship, the more positive feedback she got.
Like, I'm so happy for you. You're finally settling down because I'd been
traveling forever and you know you look great, you two look beautiful together.
So Rachel convinced herself that this was what she wanted.
She had constructed a beautiful version of the truth
and now she felt she had to live it.
She got married, posted photos of the wedding.
She says that she and her husband moved to a new city.
They both got jobs, they bought a house, put down roots.
You know, on the outside it looked like
we had this beautiful new house
and he had this great new job
and I had this great new job
and still things were not good.
The house looked beautiful from the outside
but ended up being costly and difficult to fix.
Worse than that, Rachel increasingly felt
she was with the wrong person.
The best way that I can put it is that we were just not
suited for each other.
And I knew it.
You think that part of my psyche was just trying to ignore
all of these signs that were just this person
and I were not, we were not matched well.
Rachel quickly got pregnant.
She had a difficult pregnancy, but again,
that wasn't something she shared on social media.
It was taboo to say that this doesn't feel good.
This is really hard, as if you're not grateful that you were pregnant.
And instead of being able to say those things out loud,
I just posted pictures of my growing belly and, you know,
cute things and working on the nursery and, you know, things like that, instead of really
focusing or sharing what was going on for me internally.
The unhappy original felt, the more she posted.
And she spent a lot of time looking at other people's posts too.
I would just scour other people's lives.
I would just, to compare, you know, their happiness against my happiness, you know.
And I felt like I shouldn't be feeling the way I was feeling.
It seemed like the grass was always greener for everyone else.
Everyone else seemed more successful, happier in their marriages,
having more fun with their pregnancies and the early days of motherhood.
Eventually, Rachel's marriage fell apart. She said she decided to move back to Cleveland where her family is from, along with her son.
And in that moment, something happened. You know, what was really interesting was when I knew I was moving back to Cleveland,
I was trying to kind of put feelers out there because I knew I needed to find a job.
And I didn't know how to say it without really saying what was going on.
And so I, you know, posted that my son and I were coming back to Cleveland and we'd be
there in June and I was looking for some, you know, a new adventure or something like that, put some spin on it.
And I got so many private messages from friends of mine who were like, are you guys getting
divorced?
Blah blah blah.
And I have been separated for six months or we're getting divorced or I've been divorced
for two years.
I had no idea. These are people who I looked at their lives and
Maybe if I hadn't been so hyper focused on my life, I would have maybe noticed that
their husbands were not in all the pictures anymore. It was eye-opening.
Once the spell was broken Rachel realized something. I look at
social media differently now.
In fact, when people are posting a ton of stuff,
I'm always kind of like, hmm, I wonder what other story
is happening, not that there has to be doom and gloom
and negativity, but there's always another story.
There's always something else going on.
There's context you could never pick up if you didn't know. There's always another story.
We might know this intellectually, but we still often feel a sense of social comparison
when we look at our social media feeds.
So, it's not that you think that others are happier than you are, but you need to prove
yourself to yourself over and over again, and this social comparison engagement makes you less happy.
When we come back, we'll explore how the amount of time
you spend on social media can determine how happy you are.
Stay with us.
This is NPR.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
All over the world, in every language and culture, Truman is the ultimate media star.
Uniting is all, history's greatest entertainment endeavor.
The Truman Show.
In the 1998 movie The Truman Show, Jim Carrey is the star of his own reality TV show,
but he doesn't know it. His entire world is constructed by producers, his wife, his kids,
his colleagues, they're all actors. His life is a series of scenes shot to appeal to an audience.
Truman's life is as real as anyone else's life. It's merely, slightly planned.
Truman eventually found that living inside a television set kept him from discovering his
real life.
Like Truman, many of us today find ourselves living inside a carefully curated world.
The difference?
These worlds are of our own making, On Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.
When I first heard Rachel Leonard's story, I kept thinking about a tragic irony. She constructed
a fake world to keep up with the happy lives of all her friends on Facebook. But many
of her friends were doing exactly the same thing. They were trying to keep up with her.
Everyone was posting pictures of their beautiful vacation,
no one was saying anything about the fight
that had during the cartridge.
What I'm not posting is that we fought a lot.
You don't need me to tell you
that there are many wonderful things about social media.
It gives us an easy way to stay in touch
with people we care about.
But many studies have shown that people who use social media
frequently appear to be unhappier than those who don't.
Until recently, it was impossible to say whether this was correlation or causation.
Do lonely people spend more time on social media in an effort to escape their loneliness or is social media itself causing people to feel isolated. A recent study at Tel Aviv University has provided what may be the first experiment
to sort out correlation from causation.
Yes, so my name is Ohad Barzilei,
and I am a faculty member at the Colors School of Management
in Tel Aviv University.
Ohad and his colleagues wanted a test
where the spending time on Facebook
actually made people feel worse.
They happened on what psychologists call a natural experiment.
A security firm in Israel decided to restrict the Facebook use of its employees.
No one was allowed to use Facebook at all for security reasons.
The employees had to delete their accounts if they wanted to continue working for the company.
But then, after some time, the firm decided to allow some employees to reopen their accounts.
They effectively created two groups, one that used Facebook, one that didn't.
None of these people were choosing which group to be in, so it couldn't be that people
who were unhappy were the ones choosing to use Facebook.
O-Hardiness colleagues collected data about the employees from the time no one was allowed to use Facebook.
And a few months after, some employees were allowed
to use the social media website.
We decided to focus on Facebook effect
on social comparison, the perceptions of others' lives
and happiness.
Social comparison, the very thing Rachel struggled with,
looking at other people's lives, and trying to figure out whether she measured up.
I would just scour other people's lives. I would just to compare, you know, their happiness against my happiness.
Ohad and his colleagues looked at both groups and they found a few interesting things.
Our first finding is that using Facebook make you more comparative.
You compare yourself to others more often.
You judge yourself, you compare am I better or worse than my friends?
Am I happier?
Are they happier?
And so on.
One surprising thing is that the study did not find that people thought others had better
lives.
They weren't fooled by all the happy vacation and anniversary pictures posted by their friends.
We know that people post on Facebook mostly positive things and they under post negative things about their lives.
So other studies have argued that users that use Facebook think that their friends have better lives than they have.
So we did not find any support for this argument and we think that maybe people make a collection
in their perception and they know that people present a better version of themselves.
In other words, many people reached the same conclusion
that Rachel did. There's always another story. In spite of this, the researchers found that the
employees who used Facebook became less happy over time compared to those who were prevented from
using Facebook. Being engaged in excessive social comparison decreasedrease one's happiness. So it's not that you think that others are happier than you are
But you need to prove yourself to yourself over and over again and this
Social comparison engagement makes you less happy. You need to prove yourself to yourself
Over and over again.
In other words, it's not enough for many of us to know we're having a good time. It's
not enough to take a beautiful photo, filter it, post it, see how our friends react. We
also want our lives to be better, or at least as good, as the lives of our friends.
Comparing yourself to others doesn't just steal happiness because you discover that other
people seem happier than you are.
Comparing yourself to others steals happiness because the very act of comparison takes you
out of the life you're living.
It takes you out of the moment.
The fear that others are leading happier lives than you are has a common nickname.
Phomo, the fear of missing out.
This particular thing of Phomo for me came from my daughter, my daughters in her late 20s,
and I just observed her friends and she experiencing Phomo and just driving themselves crazy from
it.
Barbara Khan is a researcher at the University of Pennsylvania
who studies perception and decision making.
She became interested in studying formal
after observing a situation
with one of her daughter's friends.
One of her friends chose to go to a wedding
in a beautiful locale,
instead of going to a beach weekend
where the other friends were gonna be.
And instead of enjoying the wedding that she was at,
she was looking at Facebook and looking at the activities
of her friends at this beach weekend,
which was a routine thing.
It wasn't a special occasion at all.
Here's the crucial part.
The friend who went to the exotic locale for the wedding
didn't think the beach was a better option.
She chose to go to the wedding
because she felt it was the better choice. Seeing her friends back at the beach didn't make her question her
decision, but it did take her mind away from the beautiful spot she was in.
I think people make decisions and then formal undermines their enjoyment of the
decisions that they've made. Now, as Barbara can't points out, formal means a lot
of different things to different people.
It's entirely possible, for example, that the friends who went to the beach vacation
were looking at photos from the beautiful destination wedding and feeling like they were
the ones who were missing out.
But Barbara says the type of FOMO she ended up focusing on through a series of experiments
is a very specific feeling.
What we found out from a lot of experiments that we ran, the thing that was generating
the fomo, the feelings of fear of missing out, it isn't really a fear, it's like a social
anxiety and it's really more about what are your friends doing in building up their social
group history that you're missing out on.
So it's not really about the experience per se.
In all of our experiments, we found that it was really more
a function of an anxiety that something might happen
in a group experience that will shape the group history
in the future, that you may not be part of,
and that will undermine your group belongingness.
And in fact, when we went back and said, okay, if you could make this decision again, would
you choose to go to the beach weekend or to the wedding, although we didn't use that example
in our studies, but that kind of thing, would you choose to go to the clearly better experience
or would you go to the routine thing your friends were doing
on a regular basis?
Almost every time, people said, oh no, I'd go to the exotic event.
It wasn't that they didn't think that the exotic event
was better and the smarter decision.
They had no regret about making that decision.
What they were anxious about, and we're using the word anxiety,
was that maybe something would happen in the group
that would forever change the dynamics of the group and they wouldn't have been there when it happened.
To be sure, envy and social anxiety were not invented by Facebook and Instagram and Snapchat.
But Bobber Khan says, these platforms make us much more aware of all the things that are happening without us.
She's run a series of experiments, each with a couple hundred undergraduates,
testing the hypothesis that FOMO undermines our happiness with the decisions we've made.
What I think social media does is it allows you to see these routine things your friends are doing
that you really never paid much attention to before. But when you see it on your phone or, you know, if you're looking on the tablet
or online and you're just observing that your friends are doing something and you're not
there, that's something you didn't get to see before. And suddenly you have this
pang, oh, I wonder what they're talking about or what's happening. I'm not there.
So even if you spend the day zip lining through the Costa Rican rainforest,
when you get back to your hotel that night and check Facebook,
knowing your friends are having a barbecue and poxy,
diminishes some of the pleasure of the zip lining adventure.
After seeing the photos of your friends in poxy,
Costa Rica now seems a little less magical.
Fomo, the fear of missing out, leads to actually missing out.
Assume you have an opportunity to go to a concert of a musician you love and you never get
to see or you get to go to an exotic vacation and you choose to do that rather than go to
routine barbecue with your friends.
It's exactly set up like that.
So we say, assume you do that.
Then the experiment is, in one condition, we say,
now assume while you're on vacation,
you pick up your phone and you see your friends
enjoying themselves at the barbecue.
And in the other condition, which is the control condition,
you pick up your phone and you scroll
and you look at something, but it's not pictures
of your friends.
And then what we do is we, before we ask you to look at those pictures, before that manipulation,
we measure how much you're enjoying your Hawaii vacation or the exotic concert or whatever.
We have you either look at the pictures of your friends or not, and then we measure again
how much are you enjoying where you are now.
And what we find is a significant decrease in enjoyment when you've looked at the pictures
then when you haven't.
Bob Rakan and her team are doing more experiments, but if their findings hold, they say something
really sad about our use of social media.
The fictional worlds we construct there can make our friends feel their lives are inadequate and
the fictional worlds our friends construct can make our lives feel dollar than they actually
are. As for Rachel, she's in a new relationship now and she says she's happy. She has a new
job and she and her son are doing well. But she doesn't feel the need to publicize any
of this on Facebook.
I don't take a lot of pictures anymore.
If I'm there in a moment and I'm having that moment, who's the picture for?
Is it for me to remember or is it, I am trying to live more presently for myself and for
my son and just for my own mental well-being.
She has asked her new boyfriend not to post about their relationship on social media either.
This time, the good with friends and acquaintances,
some of us have too little contact with fellow human beings.
Alright, and next up we have Diana shouting out to the Polonski unit. Um, Hito, it's Mamadi.
I know it sounds kind of different.
I'm very sick right now.
I got diagnosed with pneumonia and sick already for quite some time now.
This is the voice of a woman calling into a radio show on the Texas Station KPFA.
She has a personal message for a prison in me.
Anyway, I want to tell you Hito that Mamadi loves you. KPI. She has a personal message for a prison in me.
Anyway, I want to tell you that Mama delves you. I always think of you.
And it's getting harder and harder. I know I'm not supposed to crack it.
You're gonna get mad at me, but I can't help but feel so much love for you.
Calling into a program like this is one of the few ways for spouses and parents and children to communicate with prisoners,
especially inmates in solitary confinement.
In recent years, both liberals and conservatives
worried about the psychological and financial costs
of long-term solitary confinement have raised questions about the practice.
In the second half of our show, we explore what happens inside the prison cells that few people ever see
and the psychological effects of being alone for long periods of time.
That's coming up in just a moment.
I'm Shankar Vedantam and you're listening to Hidden Brain from NPR.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanthan.
Social contact is a fundamental aspect of human life.
So what's it like to spend vast stretches of time
in solitary confinement, to live without the hundreds of
interactions that most of us have with people around us every day?
Caramette writer has spent more than a decade researching the
effects of loneliness on these inmates.
She's a professor of criminology at the University of
California Irvine and the author of the book, 237.
Pelican Bay Prison and the rise of long-term solitary confinement.
Besides being a researcher, she has also been a prisoner's rights activist at Human Rights Watch.
Karameth, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thanks for having me, Shankar.
You can't tell the story of solitary confinement without understanding the story of a man named George Jackson.
He was sent to prison in the early 1960s after pleading guilty to armed robbery,
and he was sentenced to a term of one year to life.
What was the thinking behind this kind of indeterminate sentence?
So the idea for someone like George Jackson was that he would go to prison and he'd have to prove
that he'd been rehabilitated before he could get out of prison.
Around the time Jackson went to prison, however,
people started to look at these indeterminate sentences
and realize that they were having truly disproportionate
impacts depending on the race of the person with the sentence.
So white people had a much easier time convincing prison
officials that they had been reformed
and should be let out at prison
than African-American men like George Jackson happen to be.
So George Jackson found himself essentially stuck in prison,
years went by when he was denied parole,
and he became radicalized in this process.
He wrote a book of best-selling letters that achieved national and international
acclaim letters to his family and to his lawyers,
articulating his revolutionary politics and the problems
with things like this indeterminate sentence.
This brought him to the attention of prison officials, and he was accused of murdering
a prison guard in the early 1970s, and he was preemptively sent to death row at San
Quentin while he awaited a death penalty trial for that murder he was accused of.
And while on death row at San Quentin in an isolation unit interestingly, one day his
lawyer came in to visit him.
And the story that prison officials tell and that's been repeated many times is that his
lawyer snuck a 9 millimeter gun into him inside of a tape recorder and that Jackson then
used that gun to try to escape
from this isolation unit.
All we actually know is that he was shot to death
on the San Quentin Prison Yard
as he ran out of the isolation unit.
And when staff ran into the unit to see what had happened,
they found three officers and two more prisoners
who'd been stabbed to death.
So this was the most violent day in California's prison
history ever, six deaths total on August 21, 1971.
And this moment is a moment that people point to,
in California, as incredibly important in understanding
why the state needed long-term solitary confinement units.
And similar things happened across the US
and prison officials in other states
point to those moments.
So, two weeks after George Jackson died, the revolted Attica happened.
Similarly, following that, prisoners were locked into their cells, and that became a moment
people pointed to as a justification for really long-term solitary confinement.
You also tell the story of a prison administrator, Carl Larson, who began his career the same
year that George Jackson went to prison.
I understand you interviewed Carl Larson, and his view gives us a glimpse into the other
side of the story, how prison guards and prison officials see the need for solitary confinement.
So, Carl Larson was one of the earlier people I interviewed in doing this work, and to
my surprise, we got to be friends.
I came at this work from a perspective of a prisoner's
rights advocate, very critical of the system.
But as I got to know Carl Larson,
I saw that he had a really interesting perspective
on the system.
And he was one of the first people to point me
to the story of George Jackson, and to explain how scary
it was to be a guard working
in the California prisons in the 1970s
when these deaths were happening.
And to make that fear real for me
in a way that helped me to understand why
he thought a long-term solitary confinement
facility made sense.
So Carl Larson is particularly interesting
because as you said, he started out as an officer
in the 1970s in California prisons,
actually even earlier.
And then he worked his way up through the system,
becoming a warden, and then becoming
head of the prison construction projects
that California engaged in in the 1980s,
when the state built one of these long-term solitary confinement
supermax facilities.
And he takes credit for designing one
of the first of these institutions.
And that's really interesting,
because he's a prison administrator. He's not an architect, he's not an expert in exactly what kinds of punishments work.
He didn't have a law degree, he had just worked in prisons, and he designed this completely new facility.
I understand that there was some interesting architectural features of this facility, Pelican Bay.
The cement for the facility was poured in one large block,
and so that the cells were not built in individual units.
So, one of the things that's striking about the places that's made of these
poured concrete cells, so they're incredibly easy to hose down,
which is the fact that they can stay clean is important,
because quartz earlier had criticized isolation units for being really dirty.
And they're grouped together into these pods of eight.
And then the pods of eight are grouped together again into these tessellated T structures,
so that one officer can look out over six pods of cells at a time.
So it's a modern panopticon.
And that also, that allows the fact that there are no windows makes it really easy to just fit all these blocks together if you can imagine that structure.
I'm wondering, Karamad, if you can actually just describe what one of these cells looks like.
Give me a sense of what's in the cell, how big it is. What does it actually feel like to be in one of
these units? So the cells in these units are generally about 8x10 feet. So imagine a wheelchair accessible bathroom
stall or a generous parking space. Pretty small. You can almost reach from one end of the
cell to the other. And they're fairly self-contained. So they contain a poor concrete ledge
with a very thin piece of foam over it and that's the bed. And then there's another sort of concrete bit protruding
that is a desk and seat combination.
So it's just like a concrete block
that a prisoner could sit on and write there.
And then there's in another corner,
there's a steel usually toilet sink combination.
So it's just, you know, one smooth steel object
that has running water and plumbing for the prisoner. Sometimes there's just, you know, one smooth steel object that has running water
and plumbing for the prisoner. Sometimes there are showers in these cells, but generally
it's just a sink and a toilet. And again, if the prisoner is lucky, and they can afford
it, and the system therein allows it, they might have a TV or radio. And usually they're
allowed maybe a few books at a time, and a little bit of paper for writing letters
or doing legal paperwork.
To be clear, many prisoners in solitary
have been found guilty of heinous crimes,
including murder, rape, and terrorism.
But here's something you might not know.
Some are there because they're difficult to manage or because of bureaucratic inertia.
While judges and juries decide whether someone should go to prison, a decision that can
be appealed in court, typically it's prison officials who decide whether someone should
be in solitary confinement.
I ask Caramette to describe the kind of prisoner who ends up in solitary.
There's been shockingly little research over time on who ends up in solitary confinement
and how, and it's very hard to track across states.
But as people have paid more attention to this and through the work I've done, I've started
to see some patterns.
There's a disproportionate racial impact of solitary confinement, so we know that in our prisons
in general, African Americans and Latinos are more likely to be in prison
than in the general prison population, they're doubly likely, again, to be in solitary confinement
than even the general prison population.
That's often because gang members are being targeted for long-term isolation, especially
in states like California prison systems are not putting people there based on some act
or rule that they broke, but based on their
status as dangerous. So, prisoners get labeled dangerous gang members and they get sent to
isolation indefinitely. In general, I think one way to think about people who end up in isolation
is that it's often the people who are really difficult for the system to manage,
so that might include seriously mentally ill prisoners. There's recent research showing that
transgender prisoners
are really likely to end up in isolation,
that pregnant women end up there.
So people who the system just isn't equipped
to provide resources to can end up there also.
Caramet Rider is a professor of criminology
at the University of California Irvine
and the author of 23-7, Pelican Bay Prison
and the rise of long-term solitary confinement.
So the rise of these institutions coincided in some ways with decline or closing down
of various institutions for the mentally ill, which speaks, of course, to the point that
you are just making, but I also understand that this is reflected in the number of suicides
we see in solitary confinement compared to the general prison population.
Mm-hmm.
There is a very close relationship between solitary confinement and mental illness.
One way to understand that is that in the 1970s and early 80s when mental institutions
closed was the same time that mass incarceration and rates of incarceration were increasing
across the United States.
And that meant that some mentally ill people
unsurprisingly ended up in prisons.
And one of the arguments I make is that as those people
ended up in prison, they tended to be put into solitary confinement.
And that's one explanation for the fact
that rates of suicide and solitary confinement
can be twice as high as in the general prison population
or even higher.
And that rates of mental illness
and isolation can be high.
And often there's a real chicken and egg problem of, you know, did a person get sent to
isolation because they were mentally ill and states have tried to limit that, or do
people in isolation develop mental illnesses?
Most of us are never going to see the inside of a supermax, but we often do see scenes
of solitary confinement described in pop culture.
One of those examples is the TV show Orange is the new black.
We have a bit of tape.
The character Piper is put into a security housing unit and starts speaking to a voice,
she hears through the grate of her cell.
How long have you been down here?
I lost track.
I know.
Nine months.
A year? How long have you been down here? I lost track. I know.
Nine months? A year?
A year?
That's insane.
I keep the lights on.
See, it was all sensitive.
It's not living.
I mean, yeah, you're breathing.
You're taking up the personal moral.
It's bad.
Start to see the f***ing thing there.
Start to hear voices.
Oh my God.
Keep you here until they break.
I feel like I'm gonna throw up.
Karamit, I'm wondering how accurate that description is of what lives actually like in solitary confinement?
I do think that the disembodied voice that you hear talking to a paper is accurate on a number of levels.
The voice is kind of flattened and affect, and the prisoner was describing hearing voices, hallucinations.
That's a very common side effect of isolation.
And people talk about time, the way they perceive time-changing
because there is no way to mark time.
People talk about it exactly as that prisoner said,
it's not that it even feels long.
It's just that it's almost endless.
That days can kind of in a weird counterintuitive way fly by because
there's nothing marking anything about a day or a week.
So in that sense, it's accurate.
I would have spent a moment talking about your own role in looking at this.
On the one hand, you're a researcher who has spend time studying the question, but as
you yourself have said, you're also a prison rights advocate.
You've been an activist at Human Rights Watch and other organizations.
How do you preserve your ability to be analytical about the subject, while you also have what are very clearly strong views
about solitary confinement.
You know, when I went to interview Carl Larson,
he said, well, you're a Berkeley liberal.
So he asked me to do some background reading
and prove that I was serious and I would listen to him.
And so I actually think in the process of doing this work,
I have become more open-minded
and been criticized by advocates for talking so directly and so extensively to prison officials.
And so I've had the interesting experience of trying to keep the conversation open across
a really broad spectrum of perspectives on this process.
And I think in that way, I've been able to try to at least incorporate these different
perspectives and tease apart the arguments and the positions people are coming from. And I do think that in reform, prison officials have to walk into these institutions and engage with
these prisoners day in and day out, and they also need to be part of the reform conversation.
And through this process, you know, surprisingly, even though I came basically from the other side,
if you want to think of it in terms of sides, I've come to see that perspective.
Karamit, what sorts of things do people in solitary confinement say they miss?
What are the kind of things that you miss that the rest of us might not think about?
So people talk about not having seen the moon in years or decades and how much they miss
that.
And then people talk about missing just pure human
touch. And you know, I tell a story in the book about a prisoner who, his cell door and the
cell door of the prisoner next to him were accidentally opened at the same time and they were
rival gang members. But they had been talking to each other, shouting through the, through the cell
walls. And when the cell doors opened, they just reached around and grabbed each other's hands and held on,
because it had been so long since either of them had had a gentle human touch like that.
Prisoners often stay alone in their cells for 22 or 23 hours a day,
and you found that perhaps the only way to actually manage this psychologically
is to stick to
a series of very, very rigid routines.
Tell me about those routines.
The prisoners who I was able to interview in this research to understand their experiences
tended to be the prisoners who survived.
And so they did develop all kinds of coping mechanisms.
And one of the ones I heard about again and again was that they would wake up, you know,
first thing in the morning, 5 a.m., and they would do thousands of repetitive exercises,
often what prisoners call burpees, so a combination of jumping jacks, push-ups, and sit-ups.
And, you know, literally a few thousand in the morning to start out their day.
And then clean their cells, write letters,
work on legal cases.
And in general in these units, if prisoners
are following the rules and they have money
being sent in from family, they can buy either a TV or a radio.
And prisoners who develop these routines
talk about really limiting the time
they spent listening to media.
So maybe only an hour a day or two hours a day
or a special show they like to watch so that they were keeping both their bodies and their minds
really busy consciously over the course of a day. And interestingly, prisoners talk about having
trouble letting go of these routines once they got out of prison, that they would still do those
thousands of burpees every morning at 5am when they got up, and that their ability to control
everything in their space in that
8x10 cell they live in is also hard to let go of. That they could keep, you know,
President described to me how he could keep the cap of his toothpaste perfectly clean,
and it was really hard when he had a roommate when he got out of prison. The fact that he couldn't
control the cap of the toothpaste anymore. So, it kind of gives you a sense of how intense it is
to survive and then how long those coping mechanisms linger afterwards.
You talk in the book, Caramette, about inmates trying a number of different things to not just be physically active and mentally active, but emotionally expressive to try and find ways to do artistic things. Can you talk about that for a moment?
Prisoners do struggle to find ways to express themselves.
Sometimes that's becoming really good at the law and litigating cases,
but very often it's teaching themselves to draw,
sometimes teaching themselves to speak a new language,
sometimes teaching themselves to sew.
One of my favorite stories was a prisoner
who told me that he was in isolation for a number of months, and I'm not even sure how
he made himself a needle. I know that he pulled threads out of the jumpsuits they're given
in order to make thread, and then he started tailoring his clothes so that they fit better.
They're often given these very loose jumpsuits, and so he would add cuffs or shorten the sleeves.
And I think other prisoners found out about him doing this.
And in some cases, a friendly officer would pass a uniform back
and forth.
And he started tailoring other people's uniforms.
It's kind of not that anyone is even seeing them.
But it's this amazing kind of self-expression
and community that they're managing to create in this place.
I'm sure they're going to be people who say,
look, there are lots of people in these units
who really are the worst of the worst.
Maybe not all of them are,
but some of them probably are.
Some of them probably are really violent and really dangerous,
and ought to be there.
And I'm wondering, do you ever feel that they might be people
who need to be in solitary confinement?
So there are certainly people in isolation who are dangerous.
One of the really important points of analysis is the length of time people are spending
in isolation, the fact that people, we're not talking about weeks or months, we're talking
about years and decades often, and that even people who might have been fairly scary or dangerous in their 20s are unlikely to
be that way into their 40s and 50s.
And as we look at decades of these policies, we see that even some of the people who have
been held up as the scariest, the system didn't control them very well while they were in
it, and they're doing surprisingly well outside of isolation.
So it really does call the practice into question on all different levels.
So your book comes at a time when many liberals
and conservatives have joined hands to call for prison reform,
for one thing, keeping people in prison
and keeping someone in solitary confinement
is very, very expensive.
Give us a sense of how expensive it is
and whether these ideological pairings
are triggering any change in the system.
So, solitary confinement is astronomically expensive. In states like California, it costs about
$45,000 per prisoner per year to keep someone in the general prison population, and it costs
about $90,000 per prisoner per year to keep someone in isolation.
So the cost of running the facilities is really expensive
because these prisoners in isolation,
every need has to be met by someone working in the prison,
whether it's delivering mail or delivering legal documents
or getting them a meal.
And so that's how the costs go up.
And the cost of the facilities are also expensive
to build these kinds of technologically advanced facilities and that's not even wrapped into that
per-presenter per year cost. So I think that has been part of the reform
conversation as you suggest that perhaps there might be a less expensive way to
do this work. One other cost of isolation is that the vast majority of people
even from long-term solitary confinement, ultimately get out of prison.
It's 95 to 98 percent of all prisoners get out eventually, and that's surprisingly true
of people in isolation too, and so there's the question of what are the social impacts
of letting people out.
And I think in combination, those economic costs and the social costs, people are beginning
to think about alternatives, and that is a conversation that is cross- this political lines
and prison as I suggested in many states
legislators are initiating reforms
some litigation has happened but in many states prison officials within the system are looking at the
norms changing in the critiques of this practice and initiating their own reforms saying what can we do to reduce our reliance on this practice
and initiating their own reforms, saying what can we do to reduce our reliance on this practice? Karamad Rider is a professor at the University of California at Irvine.
She is the author of the book, 23-7, Pelican Bay Prison, and the rise of long-term solitary confinement.
Karamad, thank you for joining me on Hidden Brain today.
Thanks for having me.
This week's show was produced by Maggie Pennman and Parts Shah. It was edited by Tara Boyle.
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I'm Shankar Vedantum. See you next week.