NEW YORK -- As soon as Lil Wayne knew he was going to jail for gun possession, he mapped out his plan to survive.
"There was, 'OK, let's get a plan together ... from when you go in ... and when you get out,'" the rapper said of his eight-month stint in New York City's Rikers Island in 2010.
What wasn't intended was his book detailing his experience. "Gone 'Til November" is based on his time inside prison. He writes about disillusionment, disputes between inmates and when he officiated at a gay marriage.
Lil Wayne sat down to talk about his experience.
AP: How did you get through it?
Lil Wayne: It was due to the people around (me). When I say the people around me, I mean the prisoners, the guards. ... They took all the cliche (out) of whatever I thought it was gonna be, they took that and threw it right out the window. They made me feel like, for lack of a better word, to say like I was at home. And it was everybody. ... Nobody wants to be there, not even the guards. So when you come through there, for everybody to treat you the same. ... Whatever it was, it worked.
AP: How did you keep your seizures under control? (He suffers from epilepsy.)
Lil Wayne: I was on my medicine. I had to take my medicine every single day, not that I don't take my medicine. I guess I was just praying, and I guess God was with me; I don't know.
AP: What did it feel like to perform again after you were released?
Wayne: I'd say it was like, uh, being in an accident and losing ... feeling in your legs and they're telling you (that) you'll never walk again. And coming back eight months and running up. ... That's how that felt.
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