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What happens to a man’s identity when he’s reduced to a number? In this episode, Big Anthony sits down inside Sister Hearts Thrift Store & Boutique — part of a decarceration program designed to help formerly incarcerated men rebuild their lives — and speaks with honesty about what prison really takes from a person. Not just time. Not just freedom. But name, identity, confidence… and sometimes fatherhood. Anthony shares what it felt like to memorize his prison number — and how hard it was to let it go. He talks about the shock of making everyday decisions again after years of having every choice made for him. The hidden pressure of “adulting” after incarceration. The quiet blow to a man’s self-esteem when autonomy disappears. And the overwhelming responsibility of coming home to a daughter who barely knows you. For women in midlife — mothers, grandmothers, partners, community members — this conversation offers something important: a window into the emotional reality of men coming home from prison. Not the headlines. Not the stereotypes. The human side. You’ll hear: Why prison can be easier to adapt to than freedom How institutional habits follow people home The link between overwhelm and recidivism What actually builds confidence after incarceration Why community acceptance matters more than we realize The impact of incarceration on children — especially daughters What decarceration means beyond re-entry housing and jobs Anthony speaks candidly about shame, self-worth, masculinity, and the courage it takes to say, “I was incarcerated” without lowering your head. This episode isn’t about excusing crime. It’s about understanding consequences — and what it really takes for someone to rebuild. If you’ve ever wondered: Can people truly change? What does accountability look like after punishment ends? How can a community help break the cycle? This conversation will stay with you. Because punishment has a limit. Consequences do not. And restoration requires more than release papers. Listen in. http://sisterhearts.org