Jarred Preston experienced the depths of despair through homelessness, fentanyl addiction, the loss of a college sports scholarship, and multiple jail and prison stints, but ultimately made a remarkable comeback.
Today, the same man who once had nothing now owns JP Construction, coaches kids in three sports seasons every single year, plays competitive golf, supports an entire family by choice, and wakes up every morning determined to be a better version of himself.
His story isn’t just inspiring; it’s proof that no matter how far you fall, the climb back is always possible.
It started like so many stories do: talent, opportunity, and then a string of bad decisions.
Jarred grew up in northern Illinois, attended Harlem High School, and earned a sports scholarship that took him to Rock Valley College and later Lakeland Community College.
For a moment, everything looked bright. Then the wheels came off. Drugs took over, the scholarship vanished, and the consequences piled up fast: jail, depression, street life, full-blown fentanyl addiction, and finally a prison sentence.
When he walked out of prison, he had nothing but a resolve never to go back. Broke and starting from zero, he enrolled in barber school at Mario Tricoci, determined to learn a trade.
COVID hit right in the middle of that journey, shutting down half the world, but Jarred kept pushing. He became a licensed barber, then pivoted back to construction, the one thing he already knew how to do well.
In 2022, he leapt into founding JP Construction. Today, the company specializes in high-end residential renovations, custom decks, painting, finish carpentry, and commercial flooring projects across Illinois.
The kid who used to sleep on the streets now signs the paychecks.
But money and stability were only part of the comeback. Jarred wanted his life to mean something bigger. That’s when he started coaching youth sports; three seasons a year, no excuses.
Football in the fall, basketball in the winter, baseball or track in the spring; he’s on the sideline for all of it, pouring the same grit and second-chance belief into the kids that someone once needed to pour into him.
On top of that, he’s out on the golf course playing competitive tournaments, proving to himself (and everyone watching) that joy and ambition can coexist with responsibility.
When people online called him a troll or told him to stop posting motivational content, Jarred decided to drop the whole unfiltered story on Facebook. In his own words:
“You guys ready for the full story? Since trolls think I’m wasting time with what I post… I’ve been homeless and addicted to fentanyl, and I’ve lived middle upper class. I’ve gone up and down for real… Then I got great at sports, then I ruined my scholarship and went to jail… then I got fully addicted. Then I went to prison for drugs. Then I got out and went to barber school, broke as could be… Then I became a barber. Then I went back to construction and made my own company… Now I’m basically whatever I perceive I can do. It might take time, but it will come into existence if God allows.
Via Facebook
Now my bills are paid, I coach 3 seasons a year for kids… I take care of a whole family by choice, and I’m genuinely trying to help people… I hope I can help a few people while I’m here. Life can get better!”
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The post blew up as family and friends flooded the comments with pride and tears.
His aunt Mary Klein wrote,
“I may have only been 16 when you were born but I knew the moment I held you you were going to be so much more than anyone could imagine… I have never once doubted that you were going to do amazing things and there is still no doubt that you are going to change the world!!! One day at a time!”
Via Facebook
Carrie Becker added,
“I’m blown away by your strength and perseverance… You continue to show up for the kids and it matters! I love you, keep it up!!!!”
Via Facebook
Jarred calls himself “the example of examples,” and it’s hard to argue. He’s living proof that redemption isn’t a fairy tale; it’s a daily choice.
From the streets of Illinois to coaching three seasons a year and running a thriving construction company, Jarred Preston has turned every scar into a lesson and every lesson into someone else’s hope.
Keep swinging. The comeback is always worth it.
