We’re on a Zoom call with Chris Young on a Wednesday afternoon. Our relationship with him started when he and his business partner and attorney Brittany Barnett turned to us. We knew Brittany from earlier on, where we did the Third Strike campaign and The Buried Alive Project.
Chris asked us to design a visual identity for his new project LikeYOU!, so he could raise money for what eventually will be an app and health tool. The more we worked with him, the more we became aware of his willpower and determination. We were astonished by his ability to use his own hardships in life as a motor to make a change in other peoples’ lives.
Losing his brother at a young age and being sentenced to two life sentences, the road there hasn’t been easy. But through it all, Chris has managed to remain positive and focus on the good things. His story is important and a source of inspiration worth sharing.
It all started in his childhood and adolescent years. Growing up was a challenge both mentally and physically. Lacking bare necessities such as running water and electricity while wanting certain material items, like other kids and teenagers, was stressful and depressing for Chris and his older brother.
The challenging circumstances led to the two seeking alternative ventures to accumulate enough money to get by. And to Chris and his brother, no job or business was as readily available as selling drugs.
"In my youth, I was stuck in a box, not seeing the world for what it really was."
"We began selling drugs as teenagers. That was the path that was available to us. A path that unfortunately led to a lot of destruction. It took away the experience of childhood and adolescence years. Instead of embracing my curiosity and my level of comprehension to learn vast topics and subjects, I used it to excel within things that were counterproductive to my and other peoples’ lives”, Chris tells us.
Selling drugs prevented Chris from traveling the world, going to university, and pursuing a career like many others at his age.
"I often feel like I wasn't there for him at his darkest hour"
Chris and his older brother had a close bond. Due to the many obstacles and tribulations in their childhood and youth, Chris’ brother often felt he had to take care of Chris. He was more than a brother to him – he was also like a mother and father figure.
In 2007 at the age of 18, Chris experienced the most traumatic incident in his life. His brother died by suicide only a couple of days before his 22nd birthday. The incident filled Chris with extreme guilt – a feeling that still haunts him today.
"Before he died by suicide, he texted me and two of his friends, but none of us answered him. I often feel like I wasn’t there for him at his darkest hour", Chris explains.
Chris tells how the death of his brother became a crucial factor within every decision of his life ever since.
It all started in his childhood and adolescent years. Growing up was a challenge both mentally and physically. Lacking bare necessities such as running water and electricity while wanting certain material items, like other kids and teenagers, was stressful and depressing for Chris and his older brother.
The challenging circumstances led to the two seeking alternative ventures to accumulate enough money to get by. And to Chris and his brother, no job or business was as readily available as selling drugs.
"In my youth, I was stuck in a box, not seeing the world for what it really was."
"We began selling drugs as teenagers. That was the path that was available to us. A path that unfortunately led to a lot of destruction. It took away the experience of childhood and adolescence years. Instead of embracing my curiosity and my level of comprehension to learn vast topics and subjects, I used it to excel within things that were counterproductive to my and other peoples’ lives”, Chris tells us.
Selling drugs prevented Chris from traveling the world, going to university, and pursuing a career like many others at his age.
"I often feel like I wasn't there for him at his darkest hour"
Chris and his older brother had a close bond. Due to the many obstacles and tribulations in their childhood and youth, Chris’ brother often felt he had to take care of Chris. He was more than a brother to him – he was also like a mother and father figure.
In 2007 at the age of 18, Chris experienced the most traumatic incident in his life. His brother died by suicide only a couple of days before his 22nd birthday. The incident filled Chris with extreme guilt – a feeling that still haunts him today.
"Before he died by suicide, he texted me and two of his friends, but none of us answered him. I often feel like I wasn’t there for him at his darkest hour", Chris explains.
Chris tells how the death of his brother became a crucial factor within every decision of his life ever since.
At 22, Chris was one of the dozens prosecuted in an investigation focusing on drug trafficking in Clarksville, Tennessee. With two minor drug convictions from his teenage years, he now had three drug-related offenses on his record. This was his "Third Strike", sentencing him to spend the rest of his life in prison under the federal three-strikes law.
Little did he know of the unlikely supporter that would later be a crucial factor in his life: the judge that sentenced him.
The first time Chris met judge Kevin Sharp was in 2014. Back then, Young wore an orange jumpsuit in Sharp’s courtroom. The day Chris got sentenced, Judge Sharp didn't have the authority to take the final decision about Young’s fate. Sharp later announced in the media that he would have handed Chris a five or six years sentence – not a life sentence, which eventually became Chris' fate.
To Sharp, Chris' case became the symbol of everything he thought was wrong with the criminal system. In 2017, Sharp chose to resign from his lifetime appointment as a US district court judge. Later in an interview about his retirement, Sharp criticized the outcome of Chris' case and destiny.
At 22, Chris was one of the dozens prosecuted in an investigation focusing on drug trafficking in Clarksville, Tennessee. With two minor drug convictions from his teenage years, he now had three drug-related offenses on his record. This was his "Third Strike", sentencing him to spend the rest of his life in prison under the federal three-strikes law.
Little did he know of the unlikely supporter that would later be a crucial factor in his life: the judge that sentenced him.
The first time Chris met judge Kevin Sharp was in 2014. Back then, Young wore an orange jumpsuit in Sharp’s courtroom. The day Chris got sentenced, Judge Sharp didn't have the authority to take the final decision about Young’s fate. Sharp later announced in the media that he would have handed Chris a five or six years sentence – not a life sentence, which eventually became Chris' fate.
To Sharp, Chris' case became the symbol of everything he thought was wrong with the criminal system. In 2017, Sharp chose to resign from his lifetime appointment as a US district court judge. Later in an interview about his retirement, Sharp criticized the outcome of Chris' case and destiny.