RECOVERY,
UNITY, SERVICE
Our Twelfth Step - carrying the message - is the basic
service that AA's Fellowship gives; this is our
principal aim and the main reason for our existence.
THE LANGUAGE OF THE HEART, p. 160
I thank God for those who came before me, those who told
me not to forget the Three Legacies: Recovery, Unity and
Service. In my home group, the Three Legacies were
described on a sign which said: "You take a three-legged
stool, try to balance it on only one leg, or two. Our
Three Legacies must be kept intact. In Recovery, we get
sober together; in Unity, we work together for the good
of our Steps and Traditions; and through Service - we
give away freely what has been given to us." One of the
chief gifts of my life has been to know that I will have
no message to give, unless I recover in unity with A.A.
principles.
***********************************************************
Twenty-Four Hours A Day
A.A. Thought For The Day
We have definitely left that dream world behind. It was
only a sham. It was a world of our own making and it was
not the real world. We are sorry for the past, yes, but we
learned a lot from it. We can put it down to experience, as
we see it now, because it has given us the knowledge necessary
to face the world as it really is. We had to become alcoholics
in order to find the A.A. program. We would not have got
it any other way. In a way, it was worth it. Do I look at my
past as valuable experience?
Meditation For The Day
Shed peace, not discord, wherever you go. Try to be part
of the cure of every situation, not part of the problem.
Try to ignore evil, rather than to actively combat it.
Always try to build up, never to tear down. Show others
by your example that happiness comes from living the
right way. The power of your example is greater than the
power of what you say.
Prayer For The Day
I pray that I may try to bring something good into every
situation today. I pray that I may be constructive in the
way I think and speak and act today.
***********************************************************
As Bill Sees It
Fear
And
Faith, p.263
The achievement of freedom from fear is a lifetime undertaking, one
that can never be wholly completed.
When under heavy attack, acute illness, or in other conditions of
serious insecurity, we shall all react to this emotion--well or badly,
as
the case may be. Only the self-deceived will claim perfect freedom
from fear.
********************************
We finally saw that faith in some kind of God was a part of our
make-up. Sometimes we had to search persistently, but He was
there. He was as much a fact as we were. We found the Great
Reality deep down within us.
1. Grapevine, January 1962
2. Alcoholics Anonymous, p.55
***********************************************************
Walk In Dry Places
AA
goes
the
Distance
Fortitude
Few societies or organizations have better ways of measuring success
than AA. Since we are friends as well as recovering people, some of us
get to know others fairly well over long periods of time. Even in a
large city, we meet people again and again, year after year.
We've come to think it very commonplace that some individuals have been
sober ten years or more, and that some members have been in the
fellowship more than forty years.
The AA program does have staying power; it goes the distance for those
who continue to follow it.
We should remind ourselves of this when we hear of new, faddish
theories about alcoholism and recovery. Most of the time, the results
reported are very short-term. What we really need is recovery with
staying power, which we can find in the AA program.
Today's sobriety can be another link in an endless chain of sobriety.
AA will go the distance for me if I take care of each day as it comes.
***********************************************************
Keep It Simple
We
not
only
need
to
be
willing to give, but also to be open to
receiving
from others.---from On Hope
Many of us took so much from others during our addiction that now we
may
not want to ask for anything.
We may be afraid to ask for help, so our needs go unmet. In fact, many
of
us would rather give than receive. In recovery, we need to understand
the
difference between taking and receiving. Giving to others is important.
So is receiving from others. As we grow spiritually, we learn to accept
gifts. The gift of sobriety teaches us this. We need to accept the
gifts
the world gives us without shame. We are entitled.
God loves us and will give us much if we're willing to receive it.
Prayer for the Day: Higher Power, help me be receptive to Your
gifts.
Help me see and believe
that I'm entitled to all the happiness of the world.
Action for the Day: I'll think of what a friend has given me.
I'll
thank this friend.
***********************************************************
Each Day a New Beginning
. . . The present enshrines the past. --Simone de Beauvoir
Each of our lives is a multitude of interconnecting pieces, not unlike
a mosaic. What has gone before, what will come today, are at once and
always entwined. The past has done its part, never to be erased. The
present is always a composite.
In months and years gone by, perhaps we anticipated the days with
dread. Fearing the worst, often we found it; we generally find that
which we fear. But we can influence the mosaic our experiences create.
The contribution today makes to our mosaic can lighten its shade, can
heighten its contrast, and can make bold its design.
What faces us today? A job we enjoy or one we fear? Growing pains of
our children? Loneliness? How we move through the minutes, the hours,
influences our perception of future minutes and hours.
No moment is inviolate. Every moment is part of the whole that we are
creating. We are artists. We create our present from influences of our
past.
I will go forth today; I will anticipate goodness. I will create the
kind of moments that will add beauty to my mosaic.
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition
Chapter 6 - INTO ACTION
This is perhaps difficult--especially discussing our defects with
another person. We think we have done well enough in admitting these
things to ourselves. There is doubt about that. In actual practice, we
usually find a solitary self-appraisal insufficient. Many of us thought
it necessary to go much further. We will be more reconciled to
discussing ourselves with another person when we see good reasons why
we should do so. The best reason first: If we skip this vital step, we
may not overcome drinking. Time after time newcomers have tried to keep
to themselves certain facts about their lives. Trying to avoid this
humbling experience, they have turned to easier methods. Almost
invariably they got drunk. Having persevered with the rest of the
program, they wondered why they fell. We think the reason is that they
never completed their housecleaning. They took inventory all right, but
hung on to some of the worst items in stock. They only thought they had
lost their egoism and fear; they only thought they had humbled
themselves. But they had not learned enough of humility, fearlessness
and honesty, in the sense we find it necessary, until they told someone
else all their life story.
pp. 72-73
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition Stories
Women Suffer Too
Despite great opportunities, alcohol
nearly ended her life. Early member, she spread the word among women in
our pioneering period.
My family had money—I had never known
denial of any material desire. The best boarding schools and a
finishing school in Europe had fitted me for the conventional role of
debutante and young matron. The times in which I grew up (the
Prohibition era immortalized by Scott Fitzgerald and John Held Jr.) had
taught me to be gay with the gayest; my own inner urges led me to outdo
them all. The year after coming out, I married. So far, so good—all
according to plan, like thousands of others. But then the story became
my own. My husband was an alcoholic—I had only contempt for those
without my own amazing capacity—the outcome was inevitable. My divorce
coincided with my father's bankruptcy, and I went to work, casting off
all allegiances and responsibilites to any other than myself. For me,
work was only a different means to the same end, to be able to do
exactly what I wanted to do.
p. 203
***********************************************************
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
Step Five -
"Admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human being the exact
nature of our wrongs."
Yet if A.A.'s experience means anything at all, this is not only
unwise, but is actually a perilous resolve. Few muddled attitudes have
caused us more trouble than holding back on Step Five. Some people are
unable to stay sober at all; others will relapse periodically until
they really clean house. Even A.A. old timers, sober for years, often
pay dearly for skimping this Step. They will tell how they tried to
carry the load alone; how much they suffered of irritability, anxiety,
remorse, and depression; and how, unconsciously seeking relief, they
would sometimes accuse even their best friends of the very character
defects they themselves were trying to conceal. They always discovered
that relief never came by confessing the sins of other people.
Everybody had to confess his own.
p. 56
***********************************************************
"The
tree in which the sap is stagnant
remains fruitless."
--Hosea Ballou
Speaking without thinking is shooting without aiming.
--French Proverb
Don't let your tongue cut your throat.
--Irish Proverb
As long as a man stands in his own way, everything seems to be in his
way.
--Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you find you are upset over a situation, stop and ask yourself one
very important
question. "Is this something I can change?" Whether it is or not, turn
your negative
energy in to productive energy. You can either change the situation, or
change your
perspective of the situation.
--unknown
***********************************************************
Father Leo's Daily Meditation
LANGUAGE
"If thought corrupts language,
language can also corrupt
thought."
-- George Orwell
Sobriety for me means much more than "not drinking" or "not using" ---
it means the
daily decision to be a positive and creative human being in all areas
of my life: How I
treat people. What I eat. The books I read and how I speak! Not even my
worst
enemy would call me a "prude" but I think that bad language used on a
regular basis
is unacceptable in sobriety. Why? Because it hurts the listener and
does not show
respect for self or the God-given gift of communication.
If you have no respect for language, you will ultimately not grow as a
spiritual person.
May Your "words of love" be reflected in my speech and writings.
***********************************************************
To
you, O LORD, I lift up my soul; in you I trust, O my God. Do not let me
be put to
shame, nor let my enemies triumph over me.
Psalms 25:1-2
Show me your ways, O LORD, teach me your paths; guide me in your truth
and teach
me, for you are God my Savior, and my hope is in you all day long.
Psalms 25:4-5
***********************************************************
Daily Inspiration
Each time you have a kind thought, say a kind word or
do a kind deed you are living your love. Lord, as I see the world
through loving eyes, I experience heaven on earth.
Get and keep a good humored attitude toward life. This will bring you
support rather than opposition. Lord, may I always be a peacemaker.
***********************************************************
NA Just For Today
New Ideas
"We reevaluate our ideas so we can
become acquainted with the new ideas that lead to a new way of life."
Basic Text, pg. 91
Learning to live a new way of life can
be difficult. Sometimes, when the going gets especially hard, we're
tempted to follow the path of least resistance and live by our old
ideas again. We forget that our old ideas were killing us. To live a
new way of life, we need to open our minds to new ideas.
Working the steps, attending meetings,
sharing with others, trusting a sponsor - these suggestions may meet
our resistance, even our rebellion. The NA program requires effort, but
each step in the program brings us closer to becoming the kinds of
people we truly want to be. We want to change, to grow to become
something more than we are today. To do that, we open our mind, try on
the new ideas we've found in NA, and learn to live a new way of life.
Just for today: I will open my mind to
new ideas and learn to live my life in a new way.
***********************************************************
You are reading from the book Today's
Gift.
There are no riches above a sound
body, and no joy above the joy of the heart.
--Anonymous
Holidays are a wonderful and exciting
time of year--a time to enjoy snowflakes falling, company coming, and
presents. Sometimes we find ourselves concentrating solely on the
wrapped presents and forgetting about the presents of the heart. With
God's help, we can begin to notice such things as the hug from a
brother or sister, the laugh of a grandparent or the hand-drawn card
given to us by a friend. All of these wonderful presents and more are
ours for the taking; we need only to see beyond the wrapped packages.
It is then we will fully experience the joys of the heart.
How many gifts do I see around me
right now?
You are reading from the book
Touchstones.
Loneliness is the way by which destiny
endeavors to lead man to himself.
--Hermann Hissed
We have an epidemic of loneliness
among men in our world. Everywhere, men are walking around as though in
plastic bubbles that prevent contact with others. We are cut off from
closeness with our brothers and sisters, our own children, our mates,
coworkers, and neighbors. We have learned to play the role, be
efficient, and look good. Do we dare let others know how we feel? Will
they look down on us? Will they think we're strange?
All this has made us ripe for the
diseases of addiction and codependency. Some of us have romanticized
the pain of loneliness and glorified it. We sought some comfort for our
pain, but we only perpetuated it. Breaking through the barrier to let
someone know us can be incredibly difficult. Yet, just to say "I feel
lonely" to another person makes us slightly less alone. Going to
meetings and working this program provide a way out. The greatest
benefits of the program for many of us have been recovery from
loneliness and the genuine relationships we have developed.
Today, I will reveal some of my
feelings to another person.
You are reading from the book Each Day
a New Beginning.
. . . The present enshrines the past.
--Simone de Beauvoir
Each of our lives is a multitude of
interconnecting pieces, not unlike a mosaic. What has gone before, what
will come today, are at once and always entwined. The past has done its
part, never to be erased. The present is always a composite.
In months and years gone by, perhaps
we anticipated the days with dread. Fearing the worst, often we found
it; we generally find that which we fear. But we can influence the
mosaic our experiences create. The contribution today makes to our
mosaic can lighten its shade, can heighten its contrast, and can make
bold its design.
What faces us today? A job we enjoy or
one we fear? Growing pains of our children? Loneliness? How we move
through the minutes, the hours, influences our perception of future
minutes and hours.
No moment is inviolate. Every moment
is part of the whole that we are creating. We are artists. We create
our present from influences of our past.
I will go forth today; I will
anticipate goodness. I will create the kind of moments that will add
beauty to my mosaic.
You are reading from the book The
Language Of Letting Go.
Holiday Triggers
One year, when I was a child, my
father got drunk and violent at Christmas. I had just unwrapped a
present, a bottle of hand lotion, when he exploded in an alcoholic
rage. Our Christmas was disrupted. It was terrible. It was frightening
for the whole family. Now, thirty-five years later, whenever I smell
hand lotion, I immediately feel all the feelings I did that Christmas:
the fear, the disappointment, the heartache, the helplessness, and an
instinctive desire to control. --Anonymous
There are many positive triggers that
remind us of Christmas: snow, decorations, "Silent Night," "Jingle
Bells," wrapped packages, a nativity scene, stockings hung on a
fireplace. These "triggers" can evoke in us the warm, nostalgic
feelings of the Christmas celebration.
There are other kinds of triggers,
though, that may be less apparent and evoke different feelings and
memories.
Our mind is like a powerful computer.
It links sight, sound, smell, touch, and taste with feelings, thoughts,
and memories. It links our senses - and we remember.
Sometimes the smallest, most innocuous
incident can trigger memories. Not all our memories are pleasant,
especially if we grew up in an alcoholic, dysfunctional setting.
We may not understand why we suddenly
feel afraid, depressed, and anxious. We may not understand what has
triggered our codependent coping behaviors - the low self worth, the
need to control, the need to neglect ourselves. When that happens, we
need to understand that some innocuous event may be triggering memories
recorded deep within us.
If something, even something we don't
understand, triggers painful memories, we can pull ourselves back into
the present by self care: acknowledging our feelings, detaching,
working the Steps, and affirming ourselves. We can take action to feel
good. We can help ourselves feel better each Christmas. No matter what
the past held, we can put it in perspective, and create a more pleasant
holiday today.
Today, I will gently work through my
memories of this holiday season. I will accept my feelings, even if I
consider them different than what others are feeling this holiday. God,
help me let go, heal from, and release the painful memories surrounding
the holidays. Help me finish my business from the past, so I can create
the holiday of my choice.
As I start this day with quiet
meditation, I feel myself becoming still and at peace. At anytime
during the day I can bring my mind back to this moment. I can bring my
attention and awareness back to the peace that I have when I am with my
breath and I know that my breath is with me at all times, whether I
remember it or not. --Ruth Fishel
***************************************
Journey To The Heart
Bring Your Healing Gifts to Others
Let your healing gifts to the world
spring naturally from who you really are.
You want to be a healer. You want to
be a force for good in this world. Many of us believe deeply in
healing, service, and love. But until you know what heals and helps
you, what the truth is for you, you won’t know what heals and helps
others.
True service, healing that touches the
hearts and souls of men and women, doesn’t happen when we ignore who we
are. It doesn’t happen when we try to be who we think we should be or
when we pretend, out of fear, that we’re someone we’re not. The ability
to bring healing to others can only come when we genuinely accept and
love ourselves, past and present, and are vulnerable enough to be
honest about what heals and helps us.
When we love and accept ourselves, we
will love and accept others. And only from that place of acceptance can
true healing spring.
Love yourself. Accept yourself. Be
honest about what heals and helps you. Then you’ll bring your healing
gifts to others. Your life will be a gift to the world.
***************************************
More Language Of Letting Go
How sweet and precious the moments
It had seemed like such an ordinary
time. He was staying at the house, helping me out. I had funeral
arrangements to make and to attend. My mother was coming into town. I
had a lot to do.
Then the busy days and nights settled
into the quiet rhythm of California winters– short days, fires in the
fireplace at night, a pot of spagetti sauce on the stove. January at
the beach was a time to stay in the house and be quiet and cozy.
Sometimes he cooked a wonderful
dinner– Philly steak sandwhiches with real melted cream cheese. Other
times, we ordered pizza and just ate in. Sometimes I read. Other times
I talked on the phone or puttered around the house.
At night, right before sleep came,
bringing a gentle end to another day, he put a Sarah McLaughlin CD on
the stereo. She sang about being in the arms of angels as she gently
sang me to sleep.
Then the day came. He was ready to
leave. Our time together was done. So be it, I thought. What comes
around doesn’t come to stay. It always comes to pass.
As he walked out the door, I waved
good-bye. Then a wave of emotions rushed through me, flooding my heart.
It had seemed like such an ordinary time. And it was. But until it was
over, until he walked out that door, I didn’t know how rich and
beautiful the ordinary was.
“Hmm,” I thought, watching him leave.
Maybe the time hasn’t passed yet.
How sweet and precious are the moments
of our lives, especially the ordinary ones. Don’t let them pass
unnoticed or unexperienced. Those ordinary moments can easily become
the richest part of our lives.
God, help me remember that the way to
live a life filled with wonder and awe is to surrender to and live each
moment fully, expecting and allowing each one to simply be what it is.
***************************************
Five Actions
Panchakarma
"Panchakarma," a sanskrit word meaning
"five actions," describes a series of gentle, natural therapies that
boost the body’s ability to detoxify and rejuvenate. As an essential
part of Ayurveda, India’s ancient holistic system of medicine, it is
used to maintain the body’s balance to prevent illness or as the first
step in holistic treatment. Panchakarma’s incredible purification
improves healing throughout the body, mind, and spirit, clearing the
way for the body’s healing intelligence to flow freely.
Today, an oil massage, steam baths,
and a special diet prepare your body for several days of relaxing,
healing therapies at a spa-like medical clinic. A precise sequence of
soothing treatments is then applied in such a way that brainwaves are
stimulated and synchronized, creating deep relaxation and an expanded
state of consciousness. At the same time, herbal therapies help flush
toxins from the body’s systems and tissues while massage soothes the
body and balances its energy. Profoundly rejuvenating, Panchakarma can
increase energy and mental clarity. It has even been known to slow the
aging process and heal diseases previously thought to be incurable
according to Western medicine.
Depending on the needs of the
particular individual, a series of five basic therapies are used: Vaman
purges toxins from the sinuses, lungs, and stomach; Virechan flushes
toxins from the small intestine; Vasti removes toxins from the colon;
Nasyam is herbal therapy applied through the nose for head and sinus
conditions. The fifth therapy can be one of three methods: Rakta
Moksham removes the excess toxins in the bloodstream, while Shiro Dhara
uses a hot-oil head massage. A second form of Vasti can also be
applied. Along with a relief of symptoms and improvements in physical
disorders, many people, after experiencing Panchakarma, feel lighter,
more energized, and look younger. The body’s ability to heal itself is
deeply enhanced with the techniques of Panchakarma. By embracing its
methods, we eliminate obstacles to complete balance in our bodies and
allow the powerful flow of our healing energy to restore our health,
our natural glow, and our zest for life. Published with permission from
Daily OM
***************************************
A Day At A Time
Reflection For The Day
How can I tell if I have had a
spiritual awakening? For many of us in The Program, a spiritual
awakening manifest itself in simple rather than complicated evidences:
emotional maturity; an end to constant and soul churning resentments;
the ability to love and be loved in return; the belief, even without
understanding, that something lets the sun rise and set, brings forth
and ends life, and gives joy to human hearts. Am I now able to do, feel
and believe that which I could not previously do through my own unaided
strength and resources alone?
Today I Pray
May my spiritual confidence begin to
spread over my attitudes towards others — especially during holiday
times, when anticipations and anxieties are high. As an addictive
person, I have not handled holidays well — greeting those who gather at
home, missing those who are not here. I pray for serenity to cope with
the holiday brew of emotions.
Today I Will Remember
Spirit without “spirits.” Cheer
without “cheer.”
***************************************
One More Day
It is a great piece of skill to know
how to guide your luck even while waiting for it.
– Balstar Gracian
Manipulation sounds like such a harsh
word, but consider the hands of a surgeon, the moves of an artist, the
skill of an electrician. They manipulate their physical environment. In
doing so, they are creating. In some subtle way — perhaps we are not
even aware that we are doing it — we learn to manipulate our lives. We,
too, are very creative.
Some people are able to reach for
positive goals, even during seemingly negative times. These people are
capable of scooping out the very best of life. Those are the ones who
have learned to delicate art of helping themselves. They can create
their own luck.
Sometimes luck isn’t always caused by
a draw of the cards. I work hard in all areas to improve my lot, to
improve my relationships, to improve my life.
************************************
Food For Thought
Warning: Danger Ahead
After we have lived the OA program for
a time, it becomes a part of our deepest self. When a thought or
impulse arises which threatens our program, we often feel a twinge of
fear at the same time. This feeling of fear is a warning that whatever
we are contemplating may be hazardous to our health.
Not to heed these warning signals is
the height of folly. We have learned from sad experience that certain
thoughts and actions are not for us, if we want to maintain our
abstinence and our sanity. When confronted with a difficult choice, we
need to listen carefully for the small voice of conscience, which warns
us of disaster ahead if we choose foolishly.
Our Higher Power never allows us to be
tempted beyond our ability to withstand the temptation, provided we
recognize our need for His saving strength. By paying attention to the
small warning twinges of fear, we can avoid thoughts and actions, which
go against His, will for us.
May I heed the danger signals You send.
*****************************************
One Day At A Time
~ FEAR ~
When thinking won't cure fear, action
will.
W. Clement Stone
When I first came into the program, I
was told that I couldn't think my way into positive actions, but I
could act my way into positive thinking. I learned that this was a
simple program of action; that if I wanted what you had, I had to do
what you did. None of these clichés made any sense to me; I
would have to think these over. The nerve of these people telling me
that they would do my thinking for me, that all I had to do was follow
directions! They prodded and badgered me into working the Steps out of
real love and knowledge of truth. I realize now that my actions
demonstrated to God my desire to change, and He gave me the courage to
try living another way. Most importantly, though, He gave me you.
One Day at a Time . . .
Am I going to "keep on the firing
line" or rest on my laurels?
Jeremiah
*****************************************
AA 'Big Book' - Quote
We have seen the truth demonstrated
again and again: 'Once an alcoholic, always an alcoholic.' Commencing
to drink after a period of sobriety, we are in a short time as bad as
ever. If we are planning to stop drinking, there must be no reservation
of any kind, nor any lurking notion that someday we will be immune to
alcohol. - Pg. 33 - More About Alcholism
Hour To Hour - Book - Quote
The first few 24 hours are the hardest
task we will ever have to complete. The cravings are intensive, the
Babbler put-downs are overwhelming, our bodies feel like a dirty
sneaker. Sometimes we simply have to hold on.
God, as I understand You, be with me
now.
Always Here
Today I recover the spirit that has
always been there, vibrating just beneath the surface of my being, the
membrane of my life. I am whole and in tact. I call to that part of me
that has been waiting patiently for me to come to my senses and claim
it. That part of me that is eternal, that never dies. Spirit has been
with me even in my darkest hours. I turn and look, I quiet my mind and
see, I rest in awareness and experience. Spirit has never been far, but
I have been asleep. Today I wake up to spirit.
I am alive to life
- Tian Dayton PhD
Pocket Sponsor - Book - Quote
There is nothing about you that was
not intended to be. You have an incredibly sacred purpose.
I am on purpose.
"Walk Softly and Carry a Big Book" - Book
If you don't remember what God did for
you yesterday, you'll have trouble trusting Him for today.
Time for Joy - Book - Quote
As I start this day with quiet
meditation, I feel myself becoming still and at peace. At anytime
during the day I can bring my mind back to this moment. I can bring my
attention and awareness back to the peace that I have when I am with my
breath and I know that my breath is with me at all times, whether I
remember it or not.
Alkiespeak - Book - Quote
If I point the finger at anyone, I
have three pointing right back at me. - Unknown origin.
*****************************************
AA Thought for the Day
December 23
The Blunt Truth
The blunt, psychological truth for us,
as of today, is that a drink surely means a drunk sooner or later, and
that spells
trouble.
Drinking for us no longer means music
and gay laughter and flirtations. It means sickness and sorrow.
- Living Sober, p. 52
Thought to Ponder . . .
If I don't drink today, I have the
hope of a tomorrow.
AA-related 'Alconym' . . .
A A = Always Alive.
~*~A.A. Thoughts For The Day~*~
Letting Go
Letting go of everything at once
was both painful and terrifying.
I could never have accomplished this
alone.
It took the help, understanding
and wonderful companionship
that was given so freely to me by my
ex-alkie friends.
This and the program of recovery
embodied in the Twelve Steps.
In learning to practice these steps in
my daily living,
I began to acquire faith and a
philosophy to live by.
Whole new vistas were opened up for me,
new avenues of experience to be
explored,
and life began to take on color and
interest.
c. 1976AAWS, Alcoholics Anonymous, p.
311
c. 2001AAWS, Alcoholics Anonymous, p.
275
Thought to Consider . . .
The peaks and valleys of my life
have become gentle rolling hills.
*~*~*AACRONYMS*~*~*
F A I T H = Finding Answers In The
Heart.
*~*~*~*~*^Just For Today!^*~*~*~*~*
Sharing
>From "Aspects of Spirituality:"
"Among A.A.'s there is still a vast
amount of
mix-up respecting what is material and
what
is spiritual. I prefer to believe that
it is
all a matter of motive. If we use our
worldly
possessions too selfishly, then we are
materialists.
But if we share these possessions in
helpfulness
to others, then the material aids the
spiritual."
c. 1967, As Bill Sees It, page 287
*~*~*~*~*^ Grapevine Quote ^*~*~*~*~*
"If faith without works is dead,
willingness without action is fantasy."
Cheverly, Md., February 1985
"Short Takes"
AA Grapevine
~*~*~*~*^ Big Book & Twelve N' Twelve
Quotes of the Day ^*~*~*~*~*
"...we were at Step Three, which is
that we decided to turn our will
and our life over to God as we
understood Him. Just what do we mean
by that, and just what do we do?
The first requirement is that we be
convinced that any life run on
self-will can hardly be a success. On
that basis we are almost
always in collision with something or
somebody, even though our
motives are good. Most people try to
live by self-propulsion."
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
How It Works, pg. 60~
"Follow the dictates of a Higher Power
and you will presently live in
a new and wonderful world, no matter
what your present circumstances!"
Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
Working With Others, pg. 100
At once, we commence to outgrow fear.
-Alcoholics Anonymous p.68
Then fear, in turn, generates more
character defects.
-Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
p.49
Misc. AA Literature - Quote
We can be grateful for every agency or
method that tries to solve the problem of alcoholism--whether of
medicine, religion, education, or research. We can be open-minded
toward all such efforts and we can be sympathetic when the ill-advised
ones fail. We can remember that A.A. itself ran for years on 'trial and
error.'
As individuals, we can and should work
with those that promise success - even a little success.
Every one of the pioneers in the total
field of alcoholism will generously say that had it not been for the
living proof of recovery in A.A., they could not have gone on. A.A. was
the lodestar of hope and help that kept them at it.
Prayer for the Day: Right Living -
From the cowardice that dare not face
new truth,
From the laziness that is contented
with half truth,
From the arrogance that thinks it
knows all truth,
Good Lord, deliver me.