After losing a loved one to addiction, our New Yorker of the Week is making sure other young adults have support and hope when they leave rehab. NY1's John Schiumo filed the following report.

On a bright day like this, Eve Goldberg is inspired to keep looking up. She's watching young adults in recovery face their fears.  

"I see them gaining confidence, a light in their eyes that I didn’t see before," Eve says. "It makes me very happy, it makes me really happy. You know what? I look at it and I think to myself, Isaac would have loved this." 

Isaac was Eve's son. He died from an accidental drug overdose in 2014.  

After rehab, Isaac struggled to stay committed to sobriety, finding few positive opportunities. He was 23 years old. 

"I think after two years, maybe I'm not going to get emotional, but I guess I always will. He was a very kind person. He was nonjudgmental," Eve says. "He was a gentle giant and he was really a beautiful person, and I really do feel like I am continuing his mission by helping people."

The Brooklyn native helps people ages 18 to 30 through her nonprofit, "Big Vision." Its mission is to provide a safe and sober environment. 

With events like sailing, rock climbing and trapeze, Big Vision is creating a connection for these New Yorkers. 

"Once you become sober, it's an all-day battle. It don't never stop," says member Haseem Winckler. "Doing all these outings and all these different events, it kind of take your mind away from all the pain and the misery for a couple of hours."

"One of the questions I had to face was, am I ever going to have fun again?" says member Alex Hamel. "It was definitely a lesson in how to conquer anxiety and fear and get up there and have fun, which was a whole different kind of rush." 

Eve's goal is to create a center, a clubhouse of sorts, where members can visit every day and night.

"I don't have to like pretend I'm something that I'm not, you know, because of what they do.  They make me feel really comfortable," says member Ayman Said.

"It’s a beautiful program.  You know, she has a big heart," says member John Espinal. "She's given us family. She's giving us hope." 

So, for pursuing a big vision for those in recovery, Eve Goldberg is the latest New Yorker of the Week.