Designed Conviction
designedconviction.bsky.social
Designed Conviction
@designedconviction.bsky.social
Every Sentence Has A Story
No Sentence Tells The Whole Truth
We hear this often: “I know their story — I just don’t know how to tell it.”

Especially when advocating for someone impacted by incarceration, the language can fall short. Context gets misunderstood. Growth gets dismissed. Humanity gets lost.

We created a free guide to help people share stories.
February 2, 2026 at 2:07 PM
Hope doesn’t excuse. Hope insists on change.

Hope can hold compassion and accountability at the same time.
It can honor the harm without throwing a whole human away.
It can believe in growth while still respecting consequences.

What does hope look like for you right now? ❓
February 2, 2026 at 1:08 AM
Harm is real. And growth can be real too.

Holding both truths doesn’t excuse anything—it simply refuses to reduce a human being to a single moment. That’s the heart of this campaign: accountability and the possibility of redemption.

Follow if you want advocacy without judgment.
January 31, 2026 at 5:23 AM
If you love someone who is incarcerated—what’s hardest to carry?

The waiting? The stigma? The silence? The fear of being judged for loving them?

You’re not alone. This space was created to hold the full story—with care, dignity, and respect.

We’re building this community week by week.
January 30, 2026 at 5:31 PM
Accountability is not a slogan. It’s a process.

When we talk about second chances and redemption, we’re not ignoring harm. We’re talking about what real accountability can look like over time—especially when someone is doing the work to change.

Context helps us understand how someone got there.
January 30, 2026 at 2:24 PM
Every sentence has a story.

And many stories include context that is rarely heard.

Advocacy begins when we allow room for complexity: accountability and growth, harm and humanity, consequences and the possibility of redemption.

This is the kind of storytelling we’re creating space for.
January 30, 2026 at 2:17 PM
Mitigating factors are not excuses.
They don’t erase harm, and they don’t remove accountability.

They help explain the fuller human picture—what was happening around a person’s choices, what shaped them, and what they were carrying long before a courtroom.

Because a sentence isn’t the whole story
January 22, 2026 at 1:25 AM
Every sentence has a story.
And no sentence tells the whole truth.

Behind every incarcerated person is a fuller story—one that includes context, mitigating factors, accountability, growth, and the possibility of redemption.

#mitigatingfactors #fullerstory #growth
January 21, 2026 at 1:20 PM