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Friday, February 6, 2026

Limitless Foundation Announces Launch in January 2026 With a Focus on Supporting Amputee Children Beyond Mobility

Last updated Friday, February 6, 2026 09:48 ET , Source: Steve Chamberland

Launching in January 2026, Limitless Foundation will support young amputees through mentorship, training, and emotional well-being alongside existing mobility efforts.

Clearwater , Florida, 02/06/2026 / SubmitMyPR /

Limitless Foundation

Limitless Foundation announces its launch in January 2026 with a focus that extends beyond physical mobility to support the long-term development of young amputees. Founded by Steve Chamberland, the organization is designed to work alongside existing mobility efforts by addressing areas that often emerge after a child receives a prosthetic leg, including confidence, identity, emotional health, and access to opportunity.

According to Chamberland, the foundation grew out of years spent working closely with children and families through his earlier nonprofit work. From his perspective, restoring mobility is only one step in a longer journey. “I see these kids year after year,” he says. “I see their strength, but I also see the weight they carry when they don’t feel supported beyond the medical side of things.”

Steve Chamberland

The new foundation builds on work Chamberland has led for years through 50 Legs, a national nonprofit he founded in 2011 to help remove financial delays for amputees seeking prosthetic care. Through that work, he has remained closely connected to children and families across the country, observing how their needs often extend well beyond mobility alone. From his perspective, the Limitless Foundation emerged as a natural extension of those long-term relationships.

Limitless Foundation is intended to provide year-round resources for underprivileged and amputee children, including access to athletic training, mentorship, and emotional support. Chamberland explains that many children he meets want to participate in sports or structured activities but lack the means or guidance to do so. From his perspective, the goal is not performance or competition, but giving children a space to explore what they are capable of without feeling limited by circumstance.

Mental and emotional well-being form a central part of the foundation’s vision. Chamberland notes that limb loss at a young age can shape how children see themselves, especially during formative years when identity and self-worth are still developing. He explains that Limitless Foundation aims to connect children with mentors and trusted adults who can provide consistency, encouragement, and perspective. “Sometimes what a kid needs most is someone who believes in them before they believe in themselves,” he says.

Steve Chamberland

The foundation also places emphasis on community and connection. From Chamberland’s point of view, many children feel isolated after limb loss, particularly when they do not regularly see others who share similar experiences. By encouraging participation in group activities and adaptive sports environments, Limitless Foundation seeks to create spaces where children can feel understood rather than singled out. He explains that these moments often reshape how children see their own potential.

Chamberland describes the foundation’s mission as deeply personal. Many of the children he supports return year after year, allowing him to witness both setbacks and growth over time. According to him, those long-term relationships revealed a gap that mobility alone could not fill. “Giving a prosthetic leg helps someone stand,” he says. “But helping a child see a future for themselves is something else entirely.”

Limitless Foundation is expected to operate with a small, dedicated team committed to consistency rather than scale. Chamberland explains that the foundation’s approach prioritizes trust, continuity, and responsiveness to individual needs. From his perspective, success is measured less by visibility and more by whether a child feels supported long after the initial intervention.

As the January 2026 launch approaches, Chamberland says the foundation’s message remains simple. He explains that no child should feel defined by what they have lost or excluded from what lies ahead. “These kids are already strong,” he says. “What they need is someone to stand beside them long enough for them to realize it.”

Media Contact 

Name: Steve Chamberland

Email: [email protected]

Original Source of the original story >> Limitless Foundation Announces Launch in January 2026 With a Focus on Supporting Amputee Children Beyond Mobility