VINT - Veterans In Need Together
Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from VINT - Veterans In Need Together, Mental Health Service, Leeds.
13/06/2026
❤️🖤 What better way to start the weekend than eating breakfast with friends.
We hope you have a loverly weekend and remember our inbox is always open if any veterans need a chat.
12/06/2026
We are incredibly proud to announce that we are now signatories to the Armed Forces Covenant.
It is an honour to be trusted by veterans to hear their stories, understand their struggles, and stand beside them as they face the battles that often continue beyond military service.
This commitment reinforces our dedication to supporting the Armed Forces community and ensuring that those who have served know they never have to face those challenges alone.
Thank you to every veteran who has placed their trust in us. We are proud to stand with you. 🇬🇧
10/06/2026
❤️🖤 good morning all.
Just a reminder all 3 of our groups will be open tonight, so if it’s for a chat, a bit of banter or you just want to come for a cuppa you will welcomed with open arms.
See you tonight
07/06/2026
This week, take a lesson from a dog.
Wake up excited for the day. Enjoy the simple things. Spend time with people who make you smile. Get outside, stay curious, and don’t waste energy on things you can’t control.
Chase what brings you joy, rest when you need to, and celebrate the little wins.
Life doesn’t have to be complicated. Sometimes happiness is just doing more of what makes your tail wag.
New week. New start. Make it a good one.
04/06/2026
We often talk about supporting younger veterans, and there is a very important reason why.
According to data from the Office for National Statistics, male veterans aged 25–34 are twice as likely to die by su***de as male civilians in the same age group. At the same time, more than half of all veterans report experiencing mental health difficulties.
These are not just statistics. They represent real people, real struggles, and real lives.
If you know a veteran, please tell them about what we do.
While there are other excellent mental health support groups operating locally, we are the only group specifically for veterans. That matters.
We would never suggest that one person’s problems are more important than another’s. Everyone’s challenges are significant to them, and everyone deserves support. But imagine sitting in a room where people are discussing the stresses and strains of everyday life while you’re carrying memories of conflict, loss, trauma, or experiences from a war zone that replay in your mind every single day.
Sometimes, the people who understand best are those who have walked a similar path.
A veteran-only space provides understanding without explanation, support without judgement, and a community where experiences don’t need to be translated.
That is why veteran-specific groups are not just important — they are essential.
Please help us reach those who may be struggling in silence. A simple conversation or recommendation could make all the difference.
03/06/2026
❤️🖤 Tonight 19:00,
02/06/2026
Boy band or our amazing team? We’ll let you decide. 😎
Tomorrow night all three of our VINT groups will be open and ready to welcome you in. One of the team will be there to make sure you feel at home (except for the one currently skiving on holiday… but we’re not naming names 🙄).
Whether you fancy a brew, a chat, or just getting out of the house for an hour or two, why not come along? You might even leave with a smile on your face—we’ll certainly do our best.
And before anyone asks… no, we’re not all sat in a circle crying. Firstly, that’s just not our style. Secondly, trying to organise a group of veterans into a neat circle would be like herding cats.
There’s absolutely no pressure at our groups. Come as you are, stay as long as you like, and get involved as much or as little as you want.
📍 Morley Fire Station
Please park at Morrisons and use the gate next to our banner. The gate will be locked, so just drop us a message and we’ll come and let you in.
📍 Stanningley Fire Station
Parking is available on site. There’ll be a phone number on the gate—give us a ring and we’ll come and let you in.
📍 St John St Barnabas Church, Belle Isle (LS10 3DN)
Plenty of parking is available in the rear car park—just follow the driveway round to the right as you drive in.
🕖 Wednesday | 7:00pm
If you’re unsure about anything, or not sure which group is right for you, just send us a message.
The kettle will be on. The welcome is guaranteed. ❤️
31/05/2026
As Mental Health Awareness Month comes to an end, you may have noticed that over the last 31 days we’ve been more visible, posted more often, and shared more of what we do.
Why?
Because one of the most important factors in improving mental health is consistency.
Throughout May, we wanted to demonstrate that positive things can happen when you show up consistently. This month alone, 98,800 people viewed our posts. That reach didn’t happen by chance—it happened because we put in the effort, stayed committed, and kept showing up.
As a result, we’ve reached more veterans, started more conversations, and raised greater awareness of the importance of veteran mental health.
So what does that have to do with Mental Health Awareness Month?
Everything.
We wanted to prove a simple point: real change comes through consistency.
One walk won’t change your life. One conversation won’t solve everything. One visit to a support group probably won’t transform how you feel overnight.
But consistently taking positive steps—getting out for a walk, talking to someone you trust, attending support groups, checking in with friends, asking for help when you need it—can make a real difference over time.
So as we close Mental Health Awareness Month, our message is simple:
Stay consistent.
Because without consistency, nothing changes.
Small steps. Repeated often. That’s where progress begins.
From all of us at VINT, thank you for supporting veteran mental health this month and every month.
28/05/2026
A stigma we’re trying to break 💔
When people hear the word “veteran”, many automatically picture someone aged 70+.
But a veteran is anyone who has served in the British Armed Forces — which means a veteran could be as young as 18.
Right now, British military personnel are still serving in places such as Syria and Iraq. Many leave the forces carrying experiences, trauma, and mental burdens that most people will never fully understand.
Around 46,000 UK personnel served in Iraq during Operation Telic, and more than 150,000 British troops served in Afghanistan during Operations Herrick and Toral — Britain’s longest military operation of the 21st century.
Why does this matter?
Because many of the people in our groups have lived through these conflicts. We know first-hand that today’s veterans are not just older generations.
They are young men and women still working jobs, raising children, trying to adjust to civilian life, and searching for their place in the world.
Being a veteran has nothing to do with age. It’s about service.
We need to break the outdated image of what a veteran “looks like” and make sure younger veterans get the same support, understanding, and access to help that older veterans deserve too.
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