9 September, 2024

A “˜Thirteenth Step” to Recovery

by | 14 April, 2017 | 0 comments

By Jennifer Johnson

Laura Setters“s brother has been an addict since he was 12 years old. When he finally celebrated a year of sobriety, she decided to mark the achievement””and ended up creating a new ministry.

“By the time Michael got sober in 2014, our family had been dealing with his addiction for 26 years,” Setters says. “My mom, Beth, passed away the year before, and she had been the only one who never lost hope in him. I wanted to do something to honor her life as well as Michael”s one-year sobriety anniversary, so I donated to a recovery facility called The Healing Place in downtown Louisville.”

Several months later, Setters received The Healing Place”s annual report and read about a woman who had lost her daughter to heroin and now donated backpacks of supplies to women completing the recovery program. Setters met with her and decided to start a similar program for the men.

“I attend Northeast Christian Church here in Louisville, and they had challenged us to “˜Love the “Ville” by serving our city in tangible ways,” she says. “I had been praying about what I could do to show love outside the church walls, and this seemed like a perfect opportunity.”

Setters”s small group donated the first round of backpacks, towels, pillows, blankets, and other supplies in August 2015, and she intended the project to be a one-time thing””until she saw the difference it made for the men who received the gifts.

“We give the backpacks to guys who have completed both detox and the two-week program on campus and who have made the decision to stay and do long-term recovery,” she says. “We include a handwritten note of encouragement with each pack, and some of the guys say earning their pack is like a “˜thirteenth step” in their recovery process.”

Today Backpacks from Beth is a nonprofit organization that donates 25 to 75 backpacks each month. The organization is funded by donations, and supporters have been so generous that Setters may begin delivering the packs to a second facility in town. In addition to donating supplies and money to the effort, a team of volunteers also writes the encouraging notes every month.

“Sadly, addiction is something most people can relate to in some way,” she says. “This is a way for people who have been affected by this struggle to give hope to someone else.”

www.backpacksfrombeth.org

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