The Big Issue – August 19, 2019

(Barry) #1

46 | BIGISSUE.COM 19-25 AUGUST 2019


I was put in care when I was six weeks old.
I had a difficult time at school so left at 16
and joined the fairground. They were my
guardians – I had the time of my life.
I’ve been on the streets and in and out of
prison for many years. I’ve married twice and
have children, but I haven’t seen my family for
years. I’ve just been coping on my own.
I used to sleep in the churchyard across from
the station. There were eight of us sleeping
there. We stuck together and we looked out for
each other – no one else will.
Back in 1992, a filmmaker made a
documentary about me called Praying for Paul.
I was out of control back then. He filmed me
living on the streets. I’m still in touch with
him now. It was a woman called Donna, from
Penge, who gave me a bed for the night off the
back of that. I ended up staying with her for
17 weeks. She was so kind – it came out of the
blue. She helped me get off the streets.
I have bipolar disorder that I take
medication for and I see a mentor. I got out of
prison a year ago and I was scared, but I gave
The Big Issue a try and it has changed me
completely. Selling the magazine and having
a good support network around me, like my
mental health worker, has got me back on track
in a way I never thought I could be.
I was born and bred round here, in a house
nearby. Nowhere is perfect, but there’s a happy

vibe here. I’m in a temporary place now, and
I’m bidding now for a council flat in Lambeth,
which I’m over the moon about. I could apply
for a job as a dustman once I have permanent
accommodation. All I want is a little job and
a place to sleep. It’s hard to get work with a
criminal record.
I was part of a poster series that went up
in the station telling local people’s stories.
Since that went up, it seems to me that a lot
of people in the community are talking to each
other instead of looking at their phones.
Some people have opened up to me about
their own mental health struggles, saying
they can relate.
The people around here are really kind to
me. There’s a local cafe that brings me coffee
every morning and sometimes kind people will
bring me warm food if I’m standing selling the
magazine on a cold day.
For many years I couldn’t talk about the
things that have happened to me, but I want
to share my story now, and help young kids.
I’ve come full circle, but I’m in a different place
now. The local people round here have given
me a chance and I’m not giving up. I don’t want
to be the old Paul anymore, I want to be the
PaulI amnow.

Interview: Hannah Westwater
Photo: Orlando Gili

Oval Underground
Station, Lambeth
7am-10am and 2pm-7pm daily

MY PITCH


PAUL


MILLWALL,


43


The local people


round here


have given me a


chance and I’m


not giving up


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