WithYou: Home Support

‘We don’t let people walk through darkness alone’: improving drug, alcohol and housing access across Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole.

Drugs controlled Bel’s life for 27 years. They were her escape from reality and took her to a place where she felt safe and comfortable – where she felt like she belonged. A self-described ‘functioning addict’, drugs were the only thing that got Bel through each day. But then the unthinkable happened and Bel’s world fell apart. 

Now, four years later, Bel’s life couldn’t be more different. Working at WithYou, a national drug and alcohol treatment charity, Bel leads a new team who are reaching some of Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole’s (BCP’s) most vulnerable communities. 

WITHYOU worker Bel
Bel says that her passion for supporting people with drugs and alcohol challenges is driven by her own experiences.

Bel’s team, which was created following the national housing support grant, works with local housing providers to identify people who are experiencing challenges with drugs or alcohol and are at risk of losing their homes. 

In collaboration with a number of different organisations, including social services, hospital care teams and other support services, WithYou’s new housing support team is preventing evictions, rough sleeping and homelessness. 

Explaining why it’s important to support people struggling with drugs and alcohol who face eviction, Bel added:

‘Preventing people from being evicted from their homes plays a really important part in someone’s drug and alcohol recovery. We know that one of the main issues facing those sleeping rough is drug or alcohol misuse and that it’s much harder to address these challenges when they are homeless; the work we do enables us to better support people before it gets to that point.’

‘We build trust with vulnerable people, bring them into our service, and support them to feel empowered enough to begin their recovery journeys. We stand with people when they’re at rock bottom: we don’t let people walk through darkness alone.’

Bel says that her passion for supporting people with drugs and alcohol challenges is driven by her own experiences. 

‘Because of how much I was using, I couldn’t see my kids, and I felt like I didn’t have anything to live for anymore. I’d always used drugs to numb the pain, but all of a sudden, I had so much pain and the drugs stopped working. My world became nothing but sadness and darkness. I had absolutely nothing left and I felt like I didn’t deserve a second chance.

‘But then I was introduced to this amazing recovery worker at a drug and alcohol service. Her belief in me gave me the confidence to believe in myself, and I started to think that maybe I did have a right to be okay. With a lot of support from my recovery worker, I started to address my trauma, build my self-esteem, and rebuild my relationship with my children. It didn’t happen overnight and it was a lot of work, but I finally started to feel self-worth.

‘Somewhere along the way, I decided that I wanted to work for a drug and alcohol charity. I’ve been at WithYou for two years now – I feel like my life has gone full circle. A recovery worker saved my life, and now I have the opportunity to support people who are going through similar things that I experienced.

‘I’m proud to be a survivor of the traumas I’ve experienced in my life. I’m proud to be a recovering addict. But most of all? I’m so proud of the team we’ve built here and the difference that we’re making to people’s lives. So if you, or someone you know, needs us, we’re WithYou – and if you don’t feel able to come to us, know that we’re always ready to come to you.’


DDN magazine is a free publication self-funded through advertising.

We are proud to work in partnership with many of the leading charities and treatment providers in the sector.

This content was created by WithYou

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