Josh Drouin looked out over the cold Kennebec River, brown and roaring as it flowed under the train trestle Tuesday off Front Street in Waterville.
āIsnāt it beautiful down here, and peaceful?ā he said. āListen to that river.ā
Drouin, 32, was sitting on a square, concrete slab in a grove of leafless trees littered with paper cups, plastic bags and other debris.
āWe just clean it up,ā Drouin said. āWe try to keep it somewhat clean. Itās still messy but itās a lot better than it was.ā
With Drouin were Mack Emery, 51, and Robert Riopel Jr., 56, both of whom live at the Mid-Maine Homeless Shelter just north of Head of Falls.
The three met only recently at the concrete slab they refer to as the āflat rock.ā They typically spend warm days there, talking and enjoying the view.
āTo be honest with you, it gets me out of the shelter for a while,ā Emery said.
Drouin is homeless, too, but a friend lets him sleep in his apartment at night until he finds a place.
āI got my voucher for an apartment,ā he said. āIāve called every landlord in this town, day after day after day, but thereās no housing anywhere.ā
Drouin kept asking Emery what time it was because he just got a new job cooking in a restaurant and didnāt want to be late for his 4 p.m. start time.
āI grew up in Lewiston,ā Drouin said. āIām in recovery four months now. Iāve been homeless three years and dealing with addiction the last 10. I lost my dad when I was 18. Thatās kind of when it started. I got in a car accident and started with pain meds and one thing led to another.ā
Drouin got married and had two children who are now 14 and 6, but the marriage didnāt last. He was trained in the culinary arts and cooked in restaurants all over the country, he said, and even did a stint as a lobsterman in Phippsburg. But the addiction got the better of him and he kept losing jobs.
āIām on the right path now,ā he said. āWhen you go so far down, thereās only one way to go and thatās up. Iām four months clean. I donāt wake up every morning worrying about where Iām going to find heroin. You put your head down and go forward. My kids need me. My kids mean everything to me.ā
He stubbed out a cigarette on the concrete while listening to Emery tell stories about growing up in Rockland, dropping out of school at 16, working as a dishwasher and later as a fisherman, lobsterman and laborer. But like Drouin, life didnāt go as planned. He suffered from bipolar disorder and struggled. Disabled because of his illness, he has been homeless a few years. He is doing better though, he said. He has a case worker now and says the Waterville homeless shelter has been excellent.
āIām waiting for a (housing) voucher,ā Emery said. āItās really hard to get a place around here ā it really is.ā
Riopel was quieter, mostly speaking only when spoken to, but said he just passed a year living at the homeless shelter. He recited aloud a poem he wrote that begins: āBrainwaves / Left on the streets to defend yourself / you do what you can to get by. This time, I think Iāll go it alone / Iām going to do good on my own ā¦ā
āI wrote it in 1984 in Florida,ā Riopel said.
As Drouin prepared to head to his first day on the new job, he reflected on what it has been like being homeless. Last winter, he lived in his truck.
āItās alright in the summer,ā he said. āItās rough in the winter. Itās rough and itās cold. Itās Maine.ā
Amy Calder has been a Morning Sentinel reporter 34 years. Her columns appear here Saturdays. She may be reached at acalder@centralmaine.com. For previous Reporting Aside columns, go to centralmaine.com.
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