REACHING OUT
Never talk down to an alcoholic from any moral or spiritual
hilltop; simply lay out the kit of spiritual tools for his
inspection. Show him how they worked with you.
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS, p. 95
When I come into contact with a newcomer, do I have a
tendency to look at him from my perceived angle of success
in A.A.? Do I compare him with the large number of
acquaintances I have made in the Fellowship? Do I point out
to him in a magisterial way the voice of A.A.? What is my
real attitude toward him? I must examine myself whenever I
meet a newcomer to make sure that I am carrying the message
with simplicity, humility and generosity. The one who still
suffers from the terrible disease of alcoholism must find
in me a friend who will allow him to get to know the A.A.
way, because I had such a friend when I arrived in A.A. Today
it is my turn to hold out my hand, with love, to my sister or
brother alcoholic, and to show her or him the way to
happiness.
***********************************************************
Twenty-Four Hours A Day
A.A. Thought For The Day
The way of A.A. is the way of service. Without that, it would
not work. We have been "on the wagon" and hated it. We have
taken the pledge and waited for the time to be up with
impatience. We have tried in all manner of ways to help
ourselves. But not until we begin to help other people do we
get full relief. It is an axiom that the A.A. program has
to be given away in order to be kept. A river flows into the
Dead Sea and stops. A river flows into a clear pool and flows
out again. We get and then we give. If we do not give, we do
not keep. Have I given up all ideas of holding A.A. for myself
alone?
Meditation For The Day
Try to see the life of the spirit as a calm place, shut away
from the turmoil of the world. Think of your spiritual home
as a place full of peace, serenity, and contentment. Go to
this quiet, meditative place for the strength to carry you
through today's duties and problems. Keep coming back here
for refreshment when you are weary of the hubbub of the
outside world. From this quietness and communion comes our
strength.
Prayer For The Day
I pray that I may keep this resting place where I can commune
with God. I pray that I may find refreshment in meditation on
the Eternal.
***********************************************************
As Bill Sees It
After
the
"Honeymoon", p. 216
"For most of us, the first years of A.A. are something like a
honeymoon. There is a new and potent reason to stay alive, joyful
activity aplenty. For a time, we are diverted from the main life
problems. That is all to the good.
"But when the honeymoon has worn off, we are obliged to take
our lumps, like other people. This is where the testing starts.
Maybe the group has pushed us onto the side lines. Maybe
difficulties have intensified at home, or in the world outside.
Then
the old behavior patterns reappear. How well we recognize and
deal with them reveals the extent of our progress."
********************************
The wise have always known that no one can make much of his
life until self-searching becomes a regular habit, until he is able to
admit and accept what he finds, and until he patiently and
persistently tries to correct what is wrong.
1. Letter, 1954
2. 12 & 12, p. 88
***********************************************************
Walk In Dry Places
The
best
of
the
Past
Living today.
We're told that we should forget the past when we come into AA. Since
we can't change it, we should not waste time and energy reliving it.
Let's be careful, however, not to take this advice too literally. There
was much in our past that was good, even when we were drinking. We have
a right and a need to treasure these important things.
The real dangers of living in the past come either from brooding about
its mistakes or from thinking that our best days are already behind us.
We can think of the past as a foundation for the good we expect today
and in all the days ahead.
I'll preserve the best in my memories of the past, knowing that these
helped bring me to my present state of recovery.
***********************************************************
Keep It Simple
Hold
fast
to
dreams
for
if dreams die, life is broken winged bird that
cannot fly.
--Langston Hughes
Many of our dreams died as our addiction got worse. We felt the loss
but
couldn't speak it. With recovery, we regain our ability to dream.
Dreams
of sharing our lives with family and friends return. They push out
thoughts of getting high. Dreams of pride and self-respect reappear.
They
replace the awful feeling of shame. Like the quote above says, "Hold
fast to dreams...." Our dreams are our wishes for the future.
They hold a picture of who we want to be. In our dreams, we let our
spirits soar. Often, we fell close to God, others and ourselves. Thanks
God, we can dream again.
Prayer for the Day: Higher Power, thanks to you, my wings have
been mended. Guide me as I
fly.
Action for the Day: Today, I'll take time out to dream and share
my dream with those I
love.
***********************************************************
Each Day a New Beginning
A theme may seem to have been put aside, but it keeps returning--the
same thing modulated, somewhat changed in form. --Muriel Rukeyser
No struggle we have is really new. It's another shade of the struggle
that plagued us last week or perhaps last year. And we'll stumble again
and again until we learn to quit struggling. The trying situations at
work, or the personality type that irritates us, will always exist. But
when we've come to accept as good and growth-enhancing all situations
and all persons, we'll sense the subtle absence of struggle. We'll
realize that the person we couldn't tolerate has become a friend. The
situation we couldn't handle is resolved, forever.
The lessons we need to learn keep presenting themselves, until we've
finished the homework. If we sense a struggle today, we can look at it
as an assignment, one that is meant for our growth. We can remember
that our struggles represent our opportunities to grow. Fortunately,
the program has given us a tutor. We have a willing teacher to help us.
We need to move on, to be open to other assignments. No problem will be
too much for us to handle.
I will enjoy my role as student today. I will be grateful for all
opportunities to grow. They make possible my very special contribution
in this life.
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition
BILL'S STORY
To Christ I conceded the certainty of a great man, not to closely
followed by those who claimed Him. His moral teaching--most excellent.
For myself, I had adopted those parts which seemed convenient and not
too difficult; the rest I disregarded.
p. 11
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition Stories
Because I'm An
Alcoholic
This drinker finally found the answer to her nagging question, "Why?"
Behind the facade, my real life seemed just out of reach. I wanted to
consider myself grown up, but inside I felt small and helpless, hardly
there at all. I would look at my friends--delightful, interesting, good
people--and try to define myself through them. If they saw something in
me that made them want to be with me, I must have something to offer.
But their love for me was not a substitute for loving myself; it didn't
fill the emptiness.
p. 339
***********************************************************
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
Step Four -
"Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves."
If temperamentally we are on the depressive side, we are apt to be
swamped with guilt and self-loathing. We wallow in this messy bog,
often getting a misshapen and painful pleasure out of it. As we
morbidly pursue this melancholy activity, we may sink to such a point
of despair that nothing but oblivion looks possible as a solution.
Here, of course, we have lost all perspective, and therefore all
genuine humility. For this is pride in reverse. This is not a moral
inventory at all; it is the very process by which the depressive has so
often been led to the bottle and extinction.
p. 45
***********************************************************
In
order to keep a true perspective of
one's importance, everyone
should have a dog
that will worship him and a cat that will ignore him.
--Dereke Bruce
"Life is short, and we have never too much time for gladdening the
hearts of those who
are traveling the dark journey with us. Oh, be swift to love, make
haste to be kind."
--Henri Frederic Amiel
"The human spirit rings with hope at the sound of an encouraging word.
--unknown
"Many a good man has failed because he had his wishbone where his
backbone should
have been."
--Unknown
The first step identifies the problem, the remaining eleven steps are
the solution.
The first tradition identifies the problem, the remaining eleven
traditions are how we do that.
--unknown
"Every situation can be a positive situation if you look upon it as an
opportunity for
growth and self-improvement."
--Brian Tracy
"Step into a new you each day. Reach out to greater health, happiness,
fitness,
friendship, love and greater pride in yourself."
--Mark Victor Hansen
Every recovery from alcoholism began with one sober hour.
Life didn't end when I got sober -- it started.
H E A L = Helping Every Alcoholic Live.
Take a walk with God. He will meet you at the Steps.
***********************************************************
Father Leo's Daily Meditation
GOD
"My God, my God, why hast
thou forsaken me."
-- Jesus (Matthew 27:46)
In my sickness I was often angry at God. Angry that He did not do what
I wanted
Him to do when I wanted Him to do it. I was a spoiled child. I refused
to understand
that suffering could be an important part of my spiritual growth. Today
I know this to
be true.
The biggest part of my suffering, then and today, is the feeling of
isolation. Not
knowing for certain that He hears me. Not understanding completely what
His will is
for me. Not getting clear answers to my daily confusion.
The doubt is part of the faith. The "not knowing" is the answer.
Lord, may the daily doubts lead to a creative faith.
***********************************************************
"All
things work together for good to them that love God."
Romans 8:28
"Have I not commanded you? Be strong and of good courage; do not be
afraid, nor be
dismayed, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go."
Joshua 1:9
"Seek the LORD and live."
Amos 5:6a
***********************************************************
Daily Inspiration
Laughter is a speedy way to bring people together, build friendships
and reduce stresses. Lord, help me participate in the many
opportunities to feel the calming effect of laughter.
It is good to know where you are, but better to know where you are
going. Lord, may I use every day to grow closer to You.
***********************************************************
NA Just For Today
Addiction, Drugs, And Recovery
"Addiction is a physical, mental, and
spiritual disease that affects every area of our lives."
Basic Text pg. 20
Before we started using, most of us
had a stereotype, a mental image of what addicts were supposed to look
like. Some of us pictured a junkie robbing convenience markets for drug
money. Others imagined a paranoid recluse peering at life from behind
perpetually drawn drapes and locked doors. As long as we didn't fit any
of the stereotypes, we thought, we couldn't be addicts.
As our using progressed, we discarded
those misconceptions about addiction, only to come up with another: the
idea that addiction was about drugs. We may have thought addiction
meant a physical habit, believing any drug that didn't produce physical
habituation was not "addictive." Or we thought the drugs we took were
causing all our problems. We thought that merely getting rid of the
drugs would restore sanity to our lives.
One of the most important lessons we
learn in Narcotics Anonymous is that addiction is much more than the
drugs we used. Addiction is a part of us; it's an illness that involves
every area of our lives, with or without drugs. We can see its effects
on our thoughts, our feelings, and our behavior, even after we stop
using. Because of this, we need a solution that works to repair every
area of our lives: the Twelve Steps.
Just for today: Addiction is not a
simple disease, but it has a simple solution. Today, I will live in
that solution: the Twelve Steps of recovery.
***********************************************************
You are reading from the book Today's
Gift.
Each day comes bearing its gifts.
Untie the ribbons. --Ann Ruth Schabacker
Today will be filled with surprises,
big ones and small ones, like the gifts at a birthday party. Maybe
we'll see a friend we haven't seen for a while. Or we'll find something
we thought was lost. Whatever happens today will be special, and is
meant to help us grow in just the right way.
Growing up doesn't always feel easy.
We're expected to be more responsible and thoughtful of others. We're
expected to be honest about our feelings and needs. If we're angry or
scared, we need to tell someone. Sharing our secret about being afraid
relieves us of the fear, and we feel lighter, happier, like after
opening a special gift.
When I receive today's gifts, will I
stop to appreciate them?
You are reading from the book
Touchstones.
No matter how old you get, if you can
keep the desire to be creative, you're keeping the man-child alive.
--John Cassavetes
Creation is the work of God. It is not
given to most of us to be famous artists. But the spiritual experience
of being creative is open to us when we take on a creative attitude
toward what we are doing. We might do this on the job when we determine
to do more than just get the job done. We may decide to have fun while
we do what needs to be done, or we may decide to put our best spirit
into the work before us. Some men find creativity in working with wood,
others in coaching sports with children, someone else in cooking, and
another in community service.
Being creative moves us toward
wholeness as people. As we create on the outside, we are being created
on the inside. The way in which we live every aspect of our lives is a
creative, growing process and a partnership with God.
As I approach this day, I will have an
attitude of creativity that will nurture the wondering child within me.
You are reading from the book Each Day
a New Beginning.
A theme may seem to have been put
aside, but it keeps returning--the same thing modulated, somewhat
changed in form. --Muriel Rukeyser
No struggle we have is really new.
It's another shade of the struggle that plagued us last week or perhaps
last year. And we'll stumble again and again until we learn to quit
struggling. The trying situations at work, or the personality type that
irritates us, will always exist. But when we've come to accept as good
and growth-enhancing all situations and all persons, we'll sense the
subtle absence of struggle. We'll realize that the person we couldn't
tolerate has become a friend. The situation we couldn't handle is
resolved, forever.
The lessons we need to learn keep
presenting themselves, until we've finished the homework. If we sense a
struggle today, we can look at it as an assignment, one that is meant
for our growth. We can remember that our struggles represent our
opportunities to grow. Fortunately, the program has given us a tutor.
We have a willing teacher to help us. We need to move on, to be open to
other assignments. No problem will be too much for us to handle.
I will enjoy my role as student today.
I will be grateful for all opportunities to grow. They make possible my
very special contribution in this life.
You are reading from the book The
Language Of Letting Go.
Clear Thinking
Strive for clear thinking. Many of us
have had our thinking clouded by denial. Some of us have even lost
faith in ourselves because we've spent a degree of time in denial. But
losing faith in our thinking isn't going to help us. What we need to
lose faith in is denial.
We didn't resort to denial - either of
someone else's problem or our own - because we were deficient. Denial,
the shock absorber for the soul, protects us until we are equipped to
cope with reality.
Clear thinking and recovery don't mean
we will never resort to denial. Denial is the first step toward
acceptance, and for most of our life, we will be striving to accept
something.
Clear thinking means we don't allow
ourselves to become immersed in negativity or unrealistic expectations.
We stay connected to other recovering people. We go to our meetings,
where peace of mind and realistic support are available. We work the
Steps, pray, and meditate.
We keep our thinking on track by
asking our Higher Power to help us think clearly - not by expecting
Him, or someone else, to do our thinking for us.
Today, I will strive for balanced,
clear thought in all areas of my life.
Today I can look back with love in my
heart, knowing that every moment, every experience of my life has been
necessary, valuable and significant. --Ruth Fishel
***************************************
Journey To The Heart
Open Your Heart to Universal Love
We live in a magical, living, vital,
and personal universe, a world where universal love is real.
We don’t just live in it, we’re part
of it, visibly and tangibly connected to it. The phone call that comes
at the right time. A book that teaches us what we need to know. A movie
that has the message we need to guide us and open our hearts. An
opportunity that arises, at just the right moment. An idea triggered by
something someone says or an object we didn’t notice before.
The more we open to universal love,
the more it will be there for us, embracing, loving, holding, guiding
us. The more we learn to see it, the more it will be there– until we
wonder why we never saw it before.
Open your heart to universal love.
It’s more than merely there. It’s there for you. Jump into the arms of
a living, magical world and you leap into the arms of universal love.
See how real it can be.
***************************************
More Language Of Letting Go
You’re not a survivor anymore
Many years ago, I asked a fellow
therapist what the one thing was that hallmarked the unhappy state of
being many of us have come to label as codependency.
“It’s the Karpman Drama Triangle,” he
said. “People rescue someone by doing something they don’t want to do,
or it’s not their business to do. Then they get angry and persecute the
person. Then they walk away, feeling like a victim. Again.”
A light when on in that moment. Like a
gerbil on a wheel, I could see myself spinning around this triangle. I
was regularly rescuing somebody, then getting angry, and ultimately
feeling victimized by it all.
I was creating the pain and the drama
in my life.
Over the years, I stopped rescuing
alcoholics. Many of us have gotten off that painful wheel. We know we
can’t control another person’s chemical dependency, depression,
problems, or life. But we may have stepped off that wheel and gotten
ourselves into another more subtle drama spin.
A friend recently cleaned our his
entire house– closets, garage, drawers. He had to hire a truck to come
and take everything away.
“I can’t believe everything I
collected and hung onto,” he said. “Most of it was junk that I didn’t
want in the first place. I guess that came from being poor and going
without for so long. I convinced myself that if it was free or cheap,
I’d better grab it and take it home.”
Many of us were survivors at one time.
We either genuinely didn’t have a choice or convinced ourselves we
didn’t. So we clung to whoever and whatever came along our path.
You may have survived what you went
through, but you’re not a survivor anymore. There is no need to
desperately cling to whatever comes along. You’re living now. You’re
living fully and freely.
Choose what you want.
God, help me give myself permission to
walk a path with heart.
***************************************
People in Need
Taking Our Turn to Give by Madisyn
Taylor
The greatest gift we can give to
somebody in need is giving awareness and without judgment.
When we see a person in need, we may
want to give them something as a way of helping them, but if we give
without taking the time to see who they really are, honoring that most
of all, our gift is nowhere near as powerful as it could be. We may
want to give a homeless person a sandwich, for example, but if we give
it without also taking a moment to look the person in the eye, making
authentic contact, we rob them of the experience of being human.
Being in a position of need leaves a
lot of people feeling vulnerable and full of self-doubt. The greatest
gift we can give is to meet people in need without judgment and with
the awareness that we are not superior to them simply because we are
not currently in their position. If we take the long view, we can see
that we all began life in need of a lot of care and attention, and many
of us end life in the same way. Giving and receiving are companion
energies that take turns throughout our lives, and we all get a chance
to be on both sides of the exchange from time to time.
It’s important to be aware of our own
tendency to give from a desire to feel good about ourselves, rather
than from an acknowledgement of our connection to all people. Letting
go of our self-importance allows us to see that, regardless of
appearances, we are all givers and receivers. When we are in the
position of the giver, we honor those we are helping when we remember
the many people who have helped us. Then we can look the person we are
helping in the eye, aware that we are making contact with a human being
who is our equal. Published with permission from Daily OM
***************************************
A Day At A Time
Reflection For The Day
Some of us in The Program are inclined
to make the mistake of thinking that the few moments we spend in prayer
and meditation — in “talking to God” — are all that count. The truth is
that the attitude we maintain throughou7t the entire day is just as
important. If we place ourselves in God’s hands in the morning, and
throughout the day hold ourselves ready to accept His will as it is
made known through the events of our daily life, our attitude of
acceptance becomes a constant prayer. Can I try to cultivate an
attitude of total acceptance each day?
Today I Pray
May I maintain contact with my Higher
Power all through my day, not just check in for a prayer now and then.
May my communion with God never become merely a casual aside. May I
come to know that every time I do something that is in accord with
God’s will I am living a prayer.
Today I Will Remember
Prayer is an attitude.
***************************************
One More Day
I am just a heartbeat away from
loneliness.
– Laura Palmer
The holiday season can be difficult
for anyone who has had a major life change. A person who has been
widowed, has moved, or has had to deal with new physical limitations
may become lonesome when each holiday, birthday, or anniversary rolls
around.
We sometimes cause ourselves pain by
isolating ourselves. We may feel that no one wants to share the holiday
with us or that we don’t wish to impose the inconvenience of illness
upodn friends.
By reminding ourselves of the meaning
of these special days, we often find that we can move out of our
isolation. Holidays and other occasions reaffirm the value of
tradition, love, and family. These days compel us to remember our place
within a welcoming circle of friends and family.
I can choose to reach out during the
holidays — or any day.
************************************
Food For Thought
Open Hands
If our hands are tightly clenched, we cannot receive anything with
them. In order to benefit from the OA program, we have to let go of
whatever we are hanging on to, open ourselves to the program, and be
willing to receive. We open our hands to the hands extended in
fellowship by our new friends. We open our minds and hearts to new
ideas, new truth, and new feelings.
We cannot receive the new way of life if we are closed and unwilling to
change. Much of what we hear at meetings may sound strange in the
beginning, but if we are receptive, it gradually makes sense. There is
nothing about this program, which is impossible for any one of us. All
that is required is the desire to stop eating compulsively and the
willingness to learn how.
If we are having trouble with abstinence, it may be because we are
hanging on to old ways and have closed our hands, refusing to take
certain parts of the program. Our Higher Power extends to us the tools
of recovery through the OA program. All we have to do is open our
hands, firmly grasp these tools, and use them.
I open my hands to receive Your gifts.
*****************************************
One Day At A Time
~CHANGE~
To keep our faces toward change and
behave like free spirits
in the presence of fate is strength
undefeatable.
Helen Keller
As far back as I can remember, I have
always been fearful of change. I preferred to stay in my comfort zone,
even when it became uncomfortable or painful. I suppose that was why I
stayed in the disease for so long; it was what I knew. It was safe and
predictable and I didn't have to deal with painful emotions such as
loss and rejection. This was also why I stayed so long in a bad
marriage; I was terrified of what was outside the walls of my
dysfunctional relationship. In truth, I didn't really live, because
fear of change prevented me from forming new relationships and doing
new and exciting things. Even the move from one city to another was
totally traumatic, because the old and familiar was what I knew, not
because it was better. Even then, I spent so long looking at the closed
door behind me that I failed to see the open door in front of me.
I know now that even when I fear
change, I need only put one foot in front of the other, and do what is
before me. Because I now have faith that my Higher Power will be with
me every step of the way, I need only ask for help, and the help comes.
Even though it still is not easy, I am aware of how many changes I have
been able to make with the help of my Higher Power. In the past, I
spent so much time obsessing about the outcome that I talked myself out
of the change I was thinking of making. The biggest change that has
happened for me is my newfound faith which enables me to take that leap
into the unknown.
There have been other miraculous
changes too. Now I have a more open and honest relationship with my
children and others because I am able to take more risks and set
boundaries, which I had never been able to do before. I have changed
careers, undertaken flying overseas on my own, and in general am not
the scared person I used to be. I also have a whole new family of
wonderful friends in this fellowship who understand me and love me
always.
One Day at a Time . . .
I continue to grow and change as God
wills me to do, and I will not be afraid because I know that He will
always be there to guide and help me.
Sharon S.
*****************************************
AA 'Big Book' - Quote
My friend had emphasized the absolute
necessity of demonstrating these principles in all my affairs.
Particularly was it imperative to work with others as he had worked
with me. Faith without works was dead, he said. And how appallingly
true for the alcoholic! For if an alcoholic failed to perfect and
enlarge his spiritual life through work and self-sacrifice for others,
he could not survive the certain trials and low spots ahead. If he did
not work, he would surely drink again, and if he drank, he would surely
die. Then faith would be dead indeed. With us it is just like that. -
Pgs. 14-15 - Bill's Story
Hour To Hour - Book - Quote
We can never get enough of what we
really do not want. We don't really want drugs, we want what we hope
they'll bring us, wholeness, satisfaction, escape from pain.
God, as I understand You, let me see
what I really want.
Spirit Calls
Spirit calls to me within and without.
In a still, small voice I sense spirit whispering in my inner ear. My
body feels an increasing sense of aliveness as I invite spirit to make
itself known to me. I do not even need to make room for spirit, because
spirit breathes in each pore within me. It fills the numbness with
energy. It fills the emptiness and causes my cup to overflow with its
presence. There are gifts in listening if I am willing to sense, hear
and see them, lessons I can learn. Little hints that help me to
appreciate what I already have and open myself to experiencing more.
I will look for evidence of spirit at
work in my life
- Tian Dayton PhD
Pocket Sponsor - Book - Quote
There is no completion for the circle
of recovery. A circle has no beginning and no end. It is suggested that
recovery begins when you have learned enough from those before you and
pass it along to those behind. Love is the process that keeps the
circle moving.
Standing hand in hand or arm in arm
after a meeting I absorb the love that travels our circle of recovery.
"Walk Softly and Carry a Big Book" - Book
To the desolate alcoholic, the act of
kindness can be the difference between getting 'better' or getting
'bitter.'
Time for Joy - Book - Quote
Today I can look back with love in my
heart, knowing that every moment, every experience of my life has been
necessary, valuable and significant.
Alkiespeak - Book - Quote
Using will power to control drinking
is about as effective as using will power on diarrhea. - Steve M.
*****************************************
AA Thought for the Day
December 14
Perspective
Where other people were concerned, we
had to drop the word "blame" from our speech and thought.
This required great willingness even
to begin.
But once over the first two or three
high hurdles, the course ahead began to look easier.
For we had started to get perspective
on ourselves,
which is another way of saying that we
were gaining in humility.
- Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions,
pp. 47-48
Thought to Ponder . . .
My perspective will change my
perception. My perception will change my experience.
My experience is my life.
AA-related 'Alconym' . . .
A A = Altered Attitudes.
~*~A.A. Thoughts For The Day~*~
Cordial Welcome
But life among Alcoholics Anonymous
is more than attending gatherings and
visiting hospitals.
Cleaning up old scrapes,
helping to settle family differences,
explaining the disinherited son to his
irate parents,
lending money and securing jobs for
each other,
when justified -- these are everyday
occurrences.
No one is too discredited or has sunk
too low
to be welcomed cordially -- if he
means business.
c. 2001AAWS, Alcoholics Anonymous, p.
161
Thought to Consider . . .
If you wish to travel far and fast,
travel light.
Take off all your envies, jealousies,
unforgiveness, selfishness, and fears.
*~*~*AACRONYMS*~*~*
H E A R T = Healing, Enjoying, And
Recovering, Together
*~*~*~*~*^Just For Today!^*~*~*~*~*
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>From "Changing Beliefs":
"Slowly and painfully, I became aware
of myself. I began to see it wasn't true that I didn't believe in
anything. Rather, I had
believed in the wrong things 'There is
good in all of us. Seek it out, nurture it, tend it, and it will
flourish.' So I began
searching for the positives within me."
1973 AAWS, Inc.; Came to Believe, 30th
printing 2004, pg. 103
*~*~*~*~*^ Grapevine Quote ^*~*~*~*~*
"My desire to drink became a desire
not to."
Nipawin, Saskatchewan, November 2003
"Nobody's Fault but Mine,"
Beginner's Book: Getting and Staying
Sober
~*~*~*~*^ Big Book & Twelve N' Twelve
Quotes of the Day ^*~*~*~*~*
"We, in our turn, sought the same
escape with all the desperation of
drowning men. What seemed at first a
flimsy reed, has proved to be
the loving and powerful hand of God. A
new life has been given us
or, if you prefer, "a design for
living" that really works."
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
There Is A Solution, pg. 28~
"An alcoholic in his cups is an
unlovely creature."
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
Bill's Story, pg. 16~
Counsel with persons is often
desirable, but we let God be the final judge.
-Alcoholics Anonymous p.70
One unkind tirade or one willful snap
judgment can ruin our relation with another person for a whole day, or
maybe a whole year.
-Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
p.91
Misc. AA Literature - Quote
'Not all large decisions can be well
made by simply listing the pros and cons of a given situation, helpful
and necessary
as this process is. We cannot always
depend on what seems to us to be logical. When there is doubt about our
logic,
we wait upon God and listen for the
voice of intuition. If, in meditation, that voice is persistent enough,
we may well gain
sufficient confidence to act upon
that, rather than upon logic. 'If, after an exercise of these two
disciplines, we are still
uncertain, then we should ask for
further guidance and, when possible, defer important decisions for a
time. By then,
with more knowledge of our situation,
logic and intuition may well agree upon a right course. 'But if the
decision must be
now, let us not evade it through fear.
Right or wrong, we can always profit from the experience.'
Prayer for the Day: Usefulness Prayer - God, Help me today to
find balance between my character defects and the principles of our
program so as, to be useful to myself, all other, and You, the God of
my understanding.