today drug abuse counselor sam watson will honor his achievement with a special token. this coin is really a token of your ability to cope. it has no intrinsic value itself, but coping and completing this program in 90 days is a very difficult task. so the ability to get through it without getting written up and kicked out is important. i wish you all the best on your journey, and i hope that you put the same effort into discovery house that you did here. okay? thank you. thanks. you feel good to see somebody come in on day one and see the change in them. if we get too good at this, i ll be put out of a job, but that s okay. i ll find something else to do. prior to his release, he must complete one more task provide an orientation to the inmate who will take his spot in the drc, aaron sofield. grab two sets of blues and we ll change you up. leave the other two in there. you have your key, right? yes, sir.
serious, unfortunately, he blew his shot. parapar s friend aaron sofield is approaching his end in the program. after some trouble fitting his frame on the bunk and feeling bored with another program. a little boring, repetitive, same stuff. he s seen inmates like parapar drop out has renewed his commitment to it. i want to get that coin a the end. it might not mean a lot to a lot of people, but it s just a coin, but it shows that you worked the program, you deserved it. which means a lot to me. and it means a lot to the people that care. really i m ready to take the right steps but it will be hard. but i think i think i can do it. this is by far my favorite picture.
general population. this is my cell. i m really mad at myself because i only had three weeks left. so that s kind of a bummer. but i got to accept my consequences. michael parapar walked up to an inmate in the drc program and took all his commissary and decided to tell the guy he needed to beg for them to get them back. i thought we were a lot more cooler than we were and i thought it was all fun and games and somebody else thought it wasn t. i was aware of the incident, brought him into my office, i questioned him about the incident. at that point he admitted everything he did. i thought he was doing great. i mean, he was on his 68th day. the day before this incident i was telling my sergeant that i can t believe the growth that he s made. he was doing everything perfect. i wish i could go back to the program, but he s a guy i can t have back here. to me, what he did was that
stay clean and we will have a family within five years. i m going to complete what i m starting. i know i m going to. we lived his lifestyle. now we re going to live mine. but costa is not sure that change is on the horizon. it is not going to be any different than the recent past has been. unfortunately. that s just i m just being honest. i see me getting out of here, getting high, unfortunately. and if she s around me, whether she wants to or not, she ll probably go back to it too. i know he s going to complete this program for me, because he knows that i don t want to be away from him ever again after this. it doesn t matter if he wants to get high, he s not going to. coming up the prosecutor and the judge told me i could leave, and the time served, you know. basically, it s get out. aaron sofield asked to stay in jail, while thomas costa and alyssa schlossberg make important decisions about their futures as well.
probably get it around today. what i hear, it s a five-day blackout period. aaron sofield continues to deal with his addiction, and the jail s drug rehabilitation center. aaron sofield s growth was amazing. he came in with the attitude, maybe i ll do this program. from that day, just progressed into, wow, i do have a problem. i do have something in my life isn t going the right way. and i need to change it around. in fact, sofield who was in jail on a theft conviction recently turned down a chance of freedom in order to complete the program. he went to court, and he told the judge that he wanted to stay in this program, which i thought was important. a lot of people will not do that. i have court two weeks ago, i think. the prosecutor and judge told me i could leave. time served, you know. basically get out. my stomach told me, i couldn t leave. i was only here like 30 days. every other program i ve been to, 30 days, i was right back to the same thing. running the streets.