Web Development
Web Development
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Our amazing team is always hard at work
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What our clients say about us
“My name is Ernesto Murillo, I was serving a 110 years to life sentence. My recovery started in 2015 in Soledad State Prison however it felt something missing. Like someone I can relate too. In 2016, I transferred to the California Institute for Men and met Jesse C. and Tod C. They invited me to a group called Friends in Recovery Standing Together (F.I.R.S.T), a 12 step group.
In 2017 , I joined the group F.IR.S.T. It was an amazing experience, with fellow incarcerated men that I could relate to and had similar childhood traumas. I was able to work the 12 steps. The most impactful module was writing a forgiveness letter to myself. I gained understanding of my destructive life and poor choices I had made in order to gain acceptance and validation.
After completing this group, these two men motivated me to be a facilitator so that FIRST could also help the Spanish speaking community. I’m grateful for this opportunity. I gained insight and was able to share my testimony. On November 23, 2024, I was released from prison, largely due to the work I did in FIRST.“
Ernesto Murillo
“F.I.R.S.T. is a peer-to-peer group founded by inmates on the yard who were actively involved in recovery and wanted to create a program that not only worked the 12 Steps, but also provided an environment where participants could grow close and be open and honest with one another.
It’s a 12-month program that is hard to explain because it covers so much—12 Steps, anger, shame and guilt, grief, domestic violence, effective communication, assertiveness, self-esteem, insight, forgiveness, public speaking, and more. We had open and raw discussions about our addictions and the behaviors that stemmed from them. We examined the cycles of trauma and victimology, discussed triggers, character defects, and contributing factors.
Accountability partners/sponsors and mandatory participation were key elements. Through this experience, I took away three major lessons:
Criminal Thinking
I had criminal reservations, believing that as long as I wasn’t engaging in major criminal activity, I was no longer a criminal. I was wrong, and I have a 115 to prove it. Before F.I.R.S.T., I didn’t even know what a reservation in my belief system was, let alone a criminal one. Working through the steps and modules, I realized I hadn’t fully resolved my old way of thinking. Depending on my feelings or circumstances, I was still willing to revert to old behaviors. That was a hard truth to face, but it helped me step out of denial and confront my reality. I thought I had gone off track, but I learned that I had never fully gotten on the right track in the first place.
Self-Esteem
For the longest time, I tied my self-worth and value to my talents rather than who I am in God’s eyes. I cared too much about what others thought, relying on external validation. That was unhealthy. Once I started to accept how God sees me, the shame no longer clouded my view. My self-worth is now anchored in my relationship with God—something stable and unchanging. God loves me for me just as I am.
These lessons, along with many others, dramatically changed my life. I started feeling better about myself, which led to hope and optimism for my future. My perspective became healthier, and I found myself smiling more, walking lighter, and worrying less about things beyond my control.”
Frederick Griffin
“Friends In Recovery Standing Together. When I first came to this group, I was early in my recovery journey. I had always been a secretive person. I had constructed so many masks to fit the character I needed in whatever situation I found myself in. I thought for sure Prison was no place to start taking them off. Heck, some of those masks I came to believe were actually me. How was I going to recover when I needed honesty, open-mindedness, and willingness? How was I going to recover if I had to start peeling away masks? I was a broken and hurt child inside. If I had to start peeling away masks, everyone would see that. I could become a victim. I could become the center of everyone’s joke. Heck, I had an ego to protect. The same one that kept me sick all of those years.
When we started our first meeting it took a while for us all to build the trust with each other. We were told that group confidentiality was key, and that what was shared in group had to stay in group, for this thing to work. What I found, was that we all had masks. We all had stories, and we all deep down inside wanted something different. Through the different modules and homework, and through coming to the group and sharing it with my peers I started to build confidence. I learned to trust them more and more because they were sharing too. The longer we were in group sharing with each other, the more everyone built trust and confidence with each other. The sharing got deeper and deeper. The modules were set up in a perfect way. Some modules were very deep and personal and took a lot out of me emotionally. But then this would be followed by a speech or something that would lighten up all that was stirred up after riding that emotional rollercoaster. The trust and confidence in my peers grew more and more. Confidentiality was never broken in that group, and it allowed us all to get honest. I learned that if there was no honesty, there was no change. I saw that others understood that too. I learned that we need our peers to recover. I learned that I needed to let out my demons. I learned that I needed to do that with others to recover, to get feedback, and to understand that my story wasn’t unique. We all held each other up, and we all supported each other. I learned that recovery could not be done by myself. Heck, I’d been listening to my own advice for years to my own demise. In FIRST I learned how to trust someone, I learned that it’s okay to need help. I learned that it’s okay not to know the answer. I learned it was okay to be hurt and broken. But most importantly, I learned that it was okay to heal. I learned tools that helped build a better life. I learned how to practice principles like honesty, integrity, accountability and brotherly love. I was worth a better life than what I’d been giving myself, and I started getting it with the help of this group. I couldn’t have learned and accepted this without this thing called FIRST, Friends In Recovery Standing Together.”
Alberto S.
“My name is James, I was a part of the first group of individuals to participate in F.I.R.S.T. (Friends In Recovery Standing Together). My experience in the group proved for me, to be life changing. Prior to FIRST I had no concept of OCP (Obsessive Compulsive Progression), character defects, shortcomings, or how to process my overall journey. By trusting the process of FIRST, and its many self-help components, I was released from a life sentence and have been home five years now. It is my belief that anyone in society could benefit from F.I.R.S.T”
James
Hello! We are a group of skilled developers and programmers.
Hello! We are a group of skilled developers and programmers.
We have experience in working with different platforms, systems, and devices to create products that are compatible and accessible.




