Treating the Whole Person:
A Conversation with Thin Line Community Support
Some organizations fill a gap. Others see a gap nobody else has named yet and build something entirely new to fill it.
That's one of the thoughts that stayed with me after a recent episode of A Little Birdie Told Me, when I sat down with Kirk Mickelson, fundraising and outreach coordinator for Thin Line Community Support. Kirk spent more than two decades in the United States Army, retiring as a lieutenant colonel, and has spent the years since building businesses and supporting nonprofits that serve veterans, first responders, and their families. Now he's doing that work right here in North Idaho, and the more he told me about what Thin Line is building, the more I wanted everyone in our community to know about it.
Thin Line Community Support was founded about a year ago by Donte Rumore, a former United States Marine who now works as a counselor for veterans in Sandpoint. While working with clients, Donte noticed something important: counseling is a critical piece of the puzzle, but it isn't the whole picture. True well-being involves so much more. It involves movement, community, purpose, and joy. It involves doing the things that make you feel like yourself again. So he built an organization to make those things possible.
As Kirk put it, we often tell someone with PTSD to go see a counselor, and that is absolutely part of it. But it's not everything. Everybody has something that makes them tick. For some veterans and first responders, that's mountain biking or jujitsu or working out. For others, it might be yoga, or fishing on the lake in December, or helping build a set for a local theater production. Thin Line exists to connect people with those experiences and to make sure cost and access aren't the things standing in the way.
The organization serves veterans at any stage — active duty, National Guard, Reserve, retired — as well as law enforcement, firefighters, and other first responders. The goal is to wrap around the whole person, not just one aspect of their life, and to do it alongside others who understand what service looks and feels like.
One of the things I found most compelling about this conversation was Kirk's vision for what Thin Line could become in this community. He talked about the number of well-intentioned, big-hearted people who have started small veteran-focused groups in North Idaho — a skiing group here, a mountain biking group there, a hunting program somewhere else. Each one born from genuine love for this population. But in a community our size, sustaining all of those separately is a challenge. Thin Line's hope is to become the umbrella that brings those groups together, so that when a new veteran moves to Bonner County and mentions they love to ski, there's one place to send them that can connect them with everything available.
That kind of network is already starting to take shape. Thin Line has a strong partnership with the VFW post here in Sandpoint — who recently voted to sponsor a scholarship so veterans who qualify but can't afford a jujitsu class can have it funded for them. They're working with the Bonner County Veteran Service Office, so that Tom and his team can refer veterans directly to Thin Line for the well-being piece. They've partnered with Panhandle Bike Ranch for veteran mountain bike afternoons, with Matchwood Brewing for community events, and with Honey Pearl Productions on the upcoming production of 1776, which includes a special pre-funk dinner on the 4th of July benefiting Thin Line directly.
Current programs include jujitsu, a fitness membership through UCAN Gym, and a yoga studio that is in its final stages of being set up just across the street from Utara Brewing in downtown Sandpoint. They're still looking for a yoga instructor or two willing to volunteer some time, so if that's you, please reach out.
Transportation for veterans in outlying areas is one of the biggest needs Kirk identified, and it's one that multiple organizations in our community are working on together. If you're a veteran who has struggled to get to community care appointments, there's a meeting at the VFW on July 16th from 10 to 2 specifically to address this. Your voice matters there.
Coming from a family with deep ties to law enforcement and the military, and having spent time myself as a probation officer, Kirk's story resonated with me personally. He talked about waking up after retirement and asking himself what his purpose was now. The answer he landed on was simple and clear: to serve other veterans and help them work through whatever they're going through. He quoted Bonner County's Veteran Service Officer, Thomas Lindley, who puts it this way — once you get your own life squared away, it's your responsibility to help somebody else get there. That philosophy is the backbone of everything Thin Line is doing.
That idea connects deeply with what we believe at the Community Resource EnVision Center. We are stronger together, and the work of building a healthy, connected community is never done by one organization alone. Thin Line is a wonderful example of what's possible when someone identifies a need and has the courage and commitment to do something about it.
If you'd like to support Thin Line Community Support, donate, sign up for a program, or just learn more, you can find them at www.thinlinecommunitysupport.org or on Facebook. And if you're a veteran or first responder who has been looking for your people here in North Idaho, I have a feeling they're already waiting for you.
This post is based on a recent episode of
A Little Birdie Told Me.
Listen to the full conversation to hear more from Kirk Mickelson.
"We often tell someone with PTSD to go see a counselor, and that is absolutely part of it. But it's not everything. Everybody has something that makes them tick."
— Kirk Mickelson, Thin Line
"As soon as you get retired and you get things in your life squared away, it's your responsibility to help somebody else get there."
— Thomas Lindley,
Bonner County Veteran Service Officer





















































