Written by Dan Rodericks
(Reposted from the Baltimore Sun)
A REPORT from the weekly house meeting at Earl’s Place, a transitional home for 17 formerly homeless drug addicts and alcoholics in two renovated rowhouses at Eden and Lombard streets in East Baltimore:
Greg, a graduate of Earl’s Place and now its resident manager, led the meeting in a prayer that all the men knew: “God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.”
Sheila Helgerson, executive director, thanked everyone for helping with the Dec. 9 dinner celebrating the third anniversary of Earl’s Place. Helgerson explained that Earl’s Place is named after Earl Johnson, a homeless man who fell into the harbor in 1993 and drowned. Four years later, an ecumenical group called Cornerstone Community Housing created the transition house to help men like Earl.

Greg, who once lived in an abandoned house – an “abandominium” – in East Baltimore, said he had had a “blessed week,” though it was difficult with final exams at Baltimore City Community College, where he’s studying to be an addictions counselor. He went Christmas shopping with his daughters. “Just seeing life on life’s terms,” he called it.
Neal said he had a good week and likes both his jobs. He loads ships and works at the Baltimore Convention Center. He visits his parents on weekends.
Mel, whose nickname is Sparky, said his first week at Earl’s Place had been good. “Everyone has been real nice.” He said he was an alcoholic who once had – and lost – his truck-repair business. He said his son, who lives with the boy’s mother, has brain cancer.
Chris, also new to Earl’s Place, said, “My family life has not been all peaches and cream.” He said he used to have a good job in the emergency room of a Baltimore hospital. He also had an apartment. He lost both with a deep dive into drugs, “set off by small things that you might be able to cope with, but that I couldn’t.” Chris, who got addictions treatment and came into Earl’s Place “clean,” as all residents must, said he is still learning that he has a disease from which “I’ll be in recovery the rest of my life.” Chris said he was anxious to return to work, maybe even the hospital job he had before. For now, he said, he was thinking of volunteering one day a week at a downtown lunch program for the poor. Chris was asked if he was “happy” to be in Earl’s Place. He said “relieved” was a better word.
Dwayne announced that he planned on getting married next year, after he leaves Earl’s Place. He said he has two jobs – as a prep man for a car rental agency and as a courier for a messenger service. He sleeps at Earl’s Place between jobs and attends a 12-step program on Sundays to keep his heroin and cocaine addictions in check.
Sam, perhaps the oldest man in the group, said he had been ill, but went to work anyway. He has a job as a custodian at the Social Security Administration. He stopped drinking after a seizure on the street that led to a frightening experience in a hospital. As doctors worked on him, he said, he felt he was “being buried alive.” Sam was asked what he saw himself doing in another few months, after he leaves Earl’s Place. “Sitting in a rocking chair and playing with my grandchildren.”