THE TEACHING IS NEVER OVER
Abandon yourself to God as you understand God. Admit your
faults to Him and to your fellows. Clear away the
wreckage of your past. Give freely of what you find and
join us. We shall be with you in the Fellowship of the
Spirit, and you will surely meet some of us as you trudge
the Road of Happy Destiny. May God bless you and keep you
-- until then.
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS, p. 164
These words put a lump in my throat each time I read them.
In the beginning it was because I felt, "Oh no! The
teaching is over. Now I'm on my own. It will never be
this new again." Today I feel deep affection for the A.A.
pioneers when I read this passage, realizing that it sums
up all of what I believe in, and strive for, and that
-- with God's blessing -- the teaching is never over, I'm
never on my own, and every day is brand new.
***********************************************************
Twenty-Four Hours A Day
A.A. Thought For The Day
Strength comes also from working with other alcoholics.
When you are trying to help a new prospect with the program,
you are building up your own strength at the same
time. You see the other person in the condition you might
be in yourself and it makes your resolve to stay sober
stronger than ever. Often, you help yourself more than
the other person, but if you do succeed in helping the
prospect to get sober, you are stronger from the experience
of having helped another person. Am I receiving strength
from helping others?
Meditation For The Day
Faith is the bridge between you and God. It is the bridge
which God had ordained. If all were seen and known, there
would be no merit in doing right. Therefore God has
ordained that we do not see or know directly. But we can
experience the power of His spirit through our faith. It
is the bridge between us and Him, which we can take or
not, as we will. There could be no morality without free
will. We must make the choice ourselves. We must make the
venture of belief.
Prayer For The Day
I pray that I may choose and decide to cross the bridge of
faith. I pray that by crossing this bridge I may receive
the spiritual power I need.
***********************************************************
As Bill Sees It
Life Is Not A
Dead End, p. 85
When a man or a woman has a spiritual awakening, the most important
meaning of it is that he has now become able to do, feel, and believe
that which he could not do before on his unaided strength and
resources alone. He has been granted a gift which amounts to a new
state of consciousness and being.
He has been set on a path which tells him he is really going
somewhere, that life is not a dead end, not something to be endured or
mastered. In a very real sense he has been transformed, because he
has laid hold of a source of strength which he had hitherto denied
himself.
12 & 12, pp. 106-107
***********************************************************
Walk in Dry Places
I can't.... God can.... I think I'll let God
Guidance
One of the delusions that keep alcoholics in bondage is the belief in
the power of the personal will. "I still think I'm
strong enough to whip it," alcoholics have
declared defiantly, just before heading out for another debacle.
Willpower has a role in recovery, but only in making a decision to turn
the problem over to Higher Power. This sets in motion powerful
forces that come to our assistance. We don't know how and why
this process works as it does. We do know that it has worked
repeatedly for those who sincerely apply it in their lives.
What's needed to start the process is an admission of defeat, a
willingness to seek a Higher Power, and at least enough
open-minded-ness to give it all a fair chance. The outcome can be
very surprising.
There's also no need to be apologetic about our Higher Power after
we've found sobriety. Nobody had a better plan, and we can
remember that other severe problems can be handled in the same
way.
I'll do my best today to solve every problem and meet every
responsibility. If something is too much for me, I'll turn it over in
the same way I did my drinking problem.
***********************************************************
Keep It Simple
We are here to add what we can to, not to get what we can get from,
Life. Sir William Osler
Service is a word we hear in our recovery program. Service means work
we do for others. It's the backbone of our program. The reason is
simple. Service to our Higher Power and to others breaks down our
wanting to be self-centered. Service brings us back into the world. We
really are part of the group when we pitch in to make coffee, set up
chairs, or talk in meetings. We really feel like part of the family
when we run errands and help with meals and housework. We really
connect with our Higher Power when we pray, "Use me today to help
others." Service breaks down the feeling of being alone that being self
-centered brings.
Prayer for the Day: Higher Power, help me to be of service to You
and others. Show me what is needed.
Action for the Day: Today will be a service day. I'll see how
valued I am. I'll give to others, knowing that I, too, will receive.
***********************************************************
Each Day a New Beginning
To believe in something not yet proved and to underwrite it with our
lives; it is the only way we can leave the future open.
--Lillian Smith
Today stands before us, ready for our involvement. And it will offer us
opportunities for personal growth and occasions to help another make
progress on her path to the future. Challenges are to be expected. They
further our purpose. They foster our maturity.
How different it is, for many of us, to look forward today with secure
anticipation, to trust in what the future holds! We can still remember,
all too vividly perhaps, the darker periods in our lives, periods that
seemed to hold no promise; a time when we dreaded the future, fearing
it would only compound those awful times.
The fear and the dread are not gone completely. They hover about us, on
occasion. They no longer need to darken all of a day, however. We can
recognize their presence as parts of our whole, not all of it. How free
we are, today! Our choices are many.
I can step toward today with assurance, reaching out to others along
the way, trusting that my accumulated steps add stability to my future.
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition
Chapter 8 - TO WIVES
We have traveled a rocky road, there is no mistake about that. We have
had long rendezvous with hurt pride, frustration, self-pity,
misunderstanding and fear. These are not pleasant companions. We have
been driven to maudlin sympathy, to bitter resentment. Some of us
veered from extreme to extreme, ever hoping that one day our loved ones
would be themselves once more.
pp. 104-105
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition Stories
The Man
Who Mastered Fear
He spent eighteen years in running away, and then found he didn't have
to run. So he started A.A. in Detroit.
For eighteen years, from the time I was twenty-one, fear governed my
life. By the time I was thirty, I had found that alcohol
dissolved fear---for a little while. In the end I had tow
problems instead of one: fear and alcohol.
p. 246
***********************************************************
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
Step Ten - "Continued to take
personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly admitted it."
We can try to stop making unreasonable demands upon those we love. We
can show kindness where we had shown none. With those we dislike we can
begin to practice justice and courtesy, perhaps going out of our way to
understand and help them.
Whenever we fail any of these people, we can promptly admit it--to
ourselves always, and to them also, when the admission would be
helpful. Courtesy, kindness, justice, and love are the keynotes by
which we may come into harmony with practically anybody. When in doubt
we can always pause, saying, "Not my will, but Thine, be done." And we
can often ask ourselves, "Am I doing to others as I would have them do
to me--today?"
p. 93
***********************************************************
Like
a
tree
blowing
in
the wind, friendships can bend and waver, yet
they will both remain standing if they have strong roots.
--Suzanne Long
To the world you're just one person but to one person you could mean
the world.
--Anon
There is light within a person of light, And it shines on the whole
world.
--The gospel of Thomas
". . . I saw people willing to compromise themselves, or change
themselves, to acquire what they thought was important. I don't judge
what other people do, many choices that may be right for others are
definitely not right for me."
--Kathy Ireland
God is singing and Creation is the melody.
--David Palmer
Forgiveness restores us and our relationships.
--J. Keith Brown
***********************************************************
Father Leo's Daily Meditation
TEACHING
"The art of teaching is the art of
assisting discovery."
-- Mark Van Doren
I have a need of a "sponsor" in my life. Somebody I turn to when I have
problems, when I am confused or in pain, when I simply need to talk,
when I feel lonely or when I am about to make a major change in my
life. Every addict needs a sponsor; somebody to bounce ideas off,
especially ideas that affect the living of my life because I truly
understand that the disease of alcoholism lives in my life!
My sponsor guides, suggests and gently leads me to where I need to go;
he does not demand or dictate. My sponsor is a friend whom I can trust,
and he makes a point of not being a "fixer" in my life. He will not
allow
me to escape into his life. He will not allow me to become addicted to
him.
O God, let me always be free enough to discover You in my life.
***********************************************************
Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication,
with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God; and the
peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts
and minds through Christ Jesus.
Phil. 4:6-7
"You, dear children, are from God and have overcome them, because
the one who is in you is greater than the one who is in the world."
I John 4:4
A generous man will prosper; he who refreshes others will himself be
refreshed."
Proverbs 11:25
Blessed is the man who finds wisdom, the man who gains understanding.
Proverbs 3:13
"The world and its desires pass away, but the man who does the
will of God lives forever."
1 John 2:17
***********************************************************
Daily Inspiration
Trouble comes to everyone, but feeling miserable is no reason to make
others miserable. Lord, may I never destroy another's happiness.
With our blessings come responsibilities. Much is required of those to
whom much has been given. Lord, may I use my blessings to be a blessing
to others.
***********************************************************
NA Just For Today
Trusting A Sponsor-Worth The Risk
"In seeking a sponsor, most members
look for someone they feel they can learn to trust, someone who seems
compassionate…"
IP No. 11, "Sponsorship, Revised"
The idea of sponsorship may be new to
us. We have spent many years without direction, relying only on
self-interest, suspecting everyone, trusting no one. Now that we are
learning to live in recovery, we find we need help. We can't do it
alone anymore; we must take the risk of trusting another human being.
Often, the first person we take that risk with is our sponsor-someone
we respect, someone we identify with, someone we have reason to trust.
As we open up to our sponsor, a bond
develops between us. We disclose our secrets and develop confidence in
our sponsor's discretion. We share our concerns and learn to value our
sponsor's experience. We share our pain and are met with empathy. We
get to know one another, respect one another, love one another. The
more we trust our sponsor, the more we trust ourselves.
Trust helps us to move away from a
life of fear, confusion, suspicion, and indirection. In the beginning,
it feels risky to trust another addict. But that trust is the same
principle as apply in our relationship with a Higher Power-risky or
not, our experience tells us we can't do without it. And the more we
take the risk of trusting our sponsor, the more open we will feel about
our lives.
Just for today: I want to grow and
change. I will risk trusting my sponsor and find the rewards of
sharing.
***********************************************************
You are reading from the book Today's Gift.
There is a proper balance between not
asking enough of oneself and asking or expecting too much. --May Sarton
The boy's mother baked pies that
morning before he was up. She left them on the back porch to cool,
their warm aroma curling up through his bedroom window. His mouth was
full of the smell when he woke.
Before she left for work, she said,
"You may do anything you want today, anything at all. Except for one
thing--don't step in those pies."
All day the boy could not get the pies
out of his mind; his feet itched just thinking about them.
Don't step in those pies. He heard her
voice inside his head. By late afternoon he could control it no longer.
One, two, three, four, five, six--his foot fell squarely into the
middle of each pie.
When we expect the worst from others,
we often get just that. The same goes for our expectations of
ourselves. And when we trust others, it too is returned.
Do I expect the best of others--and
myself--today?
You are reading from the book
Touchstones.
As long as I am constantly concerned
about what I "ought" to say, think, do, or feel, I am still the victim
of my surroundings and am not liberated. ... But when I can accept my
identity from God and allow him to be the center of my life, I am
liberated from compulsion and can move without restraints. --Henri J.
M. Nouwen
As we get more settled in our
recovery, we are more vulnerable to becoming rigidly ruled by ideas of
behavior, which should serve as guidelines, not moral edicts. If we
find ourselves saying we should pass the message of recovery to others,
perhaps the spirit of the program is missing. If we are telling
ourselves we should go to meetings but don't feel the benefit, perhaps
we have lost the spiritual path.
Our powerlessness is the source of
vitality in our relationship with God. In the painful awareness that
our will and our own devices get us nowhere, we can put aside the
shoulds and again accept our identity from God.
Today, I will set aside my shoulds and
return to trust in my Higher Power.
You are reading from the book Each Day
a New Beginning.
To believe in something not yet proved
and to underwrite it with our lives; it is the only way we can leave
the future open.
--Lillian Smith
Today stands before us, ready for our
involvement. And it will offer us opportunities for personal growth and
occasions to help another make progress on her path to the future.
Challenges are to be expected. They further our purpose. They foster
our maturity.
How different it is, for many of us,
to look forward today with secure anticipation, to trust in what the
future holds! We can still remember, all too vividly perhaps, the
darker periods in our lives, periods that seemed to hold no promise; a
time when we dreaded the future, fearing it would only compound those
awful times.
The fear and the dread are not gone
completely. They hover about us, on occasion. They no longer need to
darken all of a day, however. We can recognize their presence as parts
of our whole, not all of it. How free we are, today! Our choices are
many.
I can step toward today with
assurance, reaching out to others along the way, trusting that my
accumulated steps add stability to my future.
You are reading from the book The
Language of Letting Go.
Gifts, Not Burdens
Children are gifts, if we accept them.
--Kathleen Turner Crilly
Children are gifts. Our children, if
we have children, are a gift to us. We, as children, were gifts to our
parents.
Sadly, many of us did not receive the
message from our parents that we were gifts to them and to the
Universe. Maybe our parents were in pain themselves; maybe our parents
were looking to us to be their caretakers; maybe we came at a difficult
time in their lives; maybe they had their own issues and simply were
not able to enjoy, accept, and appreciate us for the gifts we are.
Many of us have a deep, sometimes
subconscious, belief that we were, and are, a burden to the world and
the people around us. This belief can block our ability to enjoy life
and our relationships with others. This belief can even impair our
relationship with a Higher Power: we may feel we are a burden to God.
If were have that belief, it is time
to let it go.
God gives me all the willingness I
need today to sit quietly and listen. --Ruth Fishel
******************************************
Journey to the Heart
Make Each Moment Count
“A picture isn’t taken in a moment,”
stated the brochure for the Cottonwood Colorado hotel. “It’s taken of a
moment.”
It took me a long time to learn that
important truth. I spent years trying to get my life together and keep
it together, as though it were a solid chunk that could be arranged in
a certain place, then made to stay there. It took me a long time to
learn about moments.
In many ways, our lives are like a
movie reel, made up of individual frames and single moments each one
leading into the next. It is a waste of energy to try and hold on to
the moments of the past. By the time we begin reaching for them,
they’re gone. It is just as poor timing to try to jump into moments
that have not arrived yet– the future.
Stay in the present moment, the frame
you’re in now. That’s the only moment where happiness, joy, and love
can be found. And remember to make each moment count.
******************************************
More Language Of Letting Go
Say whatever with as much love as you
can
There’s an old story about compassion,
detachment, and Mohammed, the prophet of Islam.
Mohammed had a neighbor who had a
garbage problem. This neighbor was a cranky old man who let his garbage
pile up and spill out all around his yard. The mess was unsightly, but
Mohammed practiced tolerance and compassion. He didn’t say anything to
the annoying neighbor, for years.
One day, the unsightly mess from the
garbage disappeared.
Mohammed went over to his neighbor’s
house and knocked on the door. The neighbor answered the knock.
“I got worried when I didn’t see your
garbage,” Mohammed said. “I was just checking to make sure you were all
right.”
We need to set boundaries, be clear,
and stand up for ourselves. We need to check regularly to make sure
we’re taking care of ourselves. But once in a while, we also need to
check to see if we’re allowing ourselves to become irritated and upset
by nonessentials and forgetting the essential of love.
Learn to say whatever, but learn to
say it with as much compassion and love as you can.
God, help me learn to take care of
myself and live with passion, compassion, and an open heart.
******************************************
Unlimited Vision
Everything Is in Divine Order
by Madisyn Taylor
Often when things are not as they seem
to be, it is because we do not see the whole vision as we are asked to
take baby steps.
We can only see so much from where we
sit in our particular bodies, in the midst of our particular lives,
rooted as we are in the continuum of space and time. The divine, on the
other hand, is not limited to the constructs of either space or time,
and its wisdom and workings often elude us as we try to make sense of
what is happening in our lives. This is why things are not always what
they seem to be and even the best-laid plans are sometimes overturned.
Even when we feel we have been guided by our intuition every step of
the way, we may find ourselves facing unexpected loss and
disappointment. At times like these, we can find some solace in
trusting that no matter how bad or just plain inexplicable things look
from our perspective, they are, in fact, in divine order.
Even as we take our places in this
earthly realm, a part of us remains completely free of the confines we
face here. Regardless of what is happening in our lives, this part of
us remains infused with joy and gratitude, connected to the unbroken
source from which we come. Our small self, on the other hand, who is
caught up in our false identity as a being limited in space and time,
regards happiness as the result of things going the way it wants them
to go. It is this part of us that suffers the greatest confusion and
upset when the logic of events does not compute. And it is to this self
that we must extend unconditional love, forgiveness, and compassion. In
order to do this, we tap into our inner divinity, holding the space of
a tender authority, extending love and light to our ego as a mother
extends her love to a troubled child.
There are many ways to access our
inner divinity—meditation, prayer, chanting, channeling, and conscious
breathing, to name a few. It is helpful to develop a regular practice
that provides us access to this all-powerful, healing presence, as it
can be difficult to reach once we are in a stressful position, if we
have not already established a connection. The more connected we are
with this part of ourselves, the more we share its unlimited vision and
the secure, knowing that all the things of our life, no matter how they
appear, are in a state of divine and perfect order. Published with
permission from Daily OM
******************************************
A Day At A Time
Reflection For The Day
I know today that getting active means
trying to live the suggested Steps of The Program to the best of my
ability. It means striving for some degree of honesty, first with
myself, then with others. It means activity directed inward,m to enable
me to see myself and my relationship with my Higher Power more clearly.
As I get active, outside and inside myself, so shall I grow in The
Program. Do I let others do all the work at meetings? Do I carry my
share?
Today I Pray
May I realize that “letting go and
letting God” does not mean that I do not have to put any effort into
The Program. It is up to me to work the Twelve Steps, to learn what may
be an entirely new thing with me — honesty. May I differentiate between
activity for activity’s sake — busy-work to keep me from thinking – -
and the thoughtful activity which helps me to grow.
Today I Will Remember
“Letting God” means letting Him show
us how.
******************************************
One More Day
This confrontation, with death . . .
makes everything look so precious, so sacred, so beautiful, that I feel
more strongly than ever the impulse to live it, to embrace it, and let
myself be overwhelmed by it.
– Abraham Maslow
When we are ill, we are forced to face
our own mortality. A close brush with death is enough to put the fear
of dying into us, but with this fear a sense of spiritually may flow
through our lives. Problems, which once seemed overwhelming diminish in
size. The trees are greener, the sky is bluer. People are kinder and
more sharing than ever before.
We often don’t miss what we’ve taken
for granted until it’s nearly yanked away from us. All of a sudden,
every day is a gift. Every day is precious chance to live.
I am continuing the struggle to make
each day the best one because I rejoice in the gift of life.
************************************
Food For Thought
Cobwebs and Illusions
We compulsive overeaters react to refined sugar and starches as an
alcoholic reacts to alcohol. When we were overeating, our thinking was
foggy. The more we ate, the more confused we became. We often lived in
a world of cobwebs and illusions and were unable to separate fact from
fantasy.
This cloudy thinking caused all sorts of complications in our
relationships with others and lowered our general level of efficiency.
We found ourselves becoming very angry and irrational when events did
not go our way. We often made life miserable for our families, taking
out our anger on them. Sometimes we escaped into a world of fantasy
where we would be omnipotent and where our every whim would be indulged.
When we came to OA and began to practice rigorous honesty, we
discovered that in order to be honest we had to abstain from the kind
of eating which confused our thinking. It is amazing how abstinence can
clear away cobwebs and illusions!
Thank You, Lord, for sanity.
*****************************************
One Day At A Time
Victimization
"Within each of us lies the power of
our consent to health and to sickness,
to riches and to poverty, to freedom
and to slavery.
It is we who control these, and not
another.”
Richard Bach
I have lived most of my life believing
that I was a victim of circumstance. As a “victim” I believed I had no
power, no options, no choices, no hope and no control in my life. It’s
so tempting to be a victim. If I’m a victim, I am not responsible for
anything. Every pain, every dysfunction, every addiction, every problem
was not my “fault” and there was nothing I could do to improve my life.
Or so I thought.
One day a friend asked me if I
actually wanted to be well and I was shocked to find that the immediate
answer flooding from my heart was, “NO.” Wow! You would think that a
victim would give anything in order to be well, yet I found that I was
terrified of the responsibility of being well. If I were well, I would
be in charge of my own choices – particularly the most primal choices
of all: Life or Death, holding onto powerlessness, or reaching out to
grasp hope and health.
I am still tempted to return to the
false security of victim-hood. Yet I come to recovery, and keep coming
back. I work the program, I learn, I fail, I fall. I rise again and
begin again.
One day at a time...
I will remember that I have the power,
the freedom, and the responsibility to make choices which move me
towards health. I will resist the siren call of victimization.
Lisa V.
*****************************************
AA 'Big Book' - Quote
Your candidate may give reasons why he
need not follow all of the program. He may rebel at the thought of a
drastic housecleaning which requires discussion with other people. Do
not contradict such views. Tell him you once felt as he does, but you
doubt whether you would have made much progress had you not taken
action. - Pg. 94 - Working With Others
Hour To Hour - Book - Quote
Our anger often depicts the struggle
we face in withdrawal. It seems our anger explodes over nothing. But in
our hearts we know we want our DRUG and we're angry we can't have it.
We stay clean, go to meetings, talk to our sponsor or counselor, and
the anger passes.
May the Light of recovery outshine my
anger of withdrawal as I live from hour to hour in the first month.
Silver Linings
I search for silver linings, for the
deeper meaning of the events in my life. Life is my teacher if I can
learn to read the subtle messages that are laced into the circumstances
that I co-create around me. I will look for the lesson. When life
offers up its inevitable challenges, I will try to understand what I am
meant to see that I am not seeing, what I am meant to hear that I am
not hearing, what I am meant to know that I am not knowing. There is
always a silver lining if I look for it. Even if I don't see it
readily, I trust that it is there and that it will reveal itself to me
over time. Life isn't simple. One of the ways that I can grow from
life's adversities, is to see what is positive about a difficult
situation, to look for the silver lining. I can grow in joy and in
pain. It doesn't need to be one or the other because pain can transform
into joy. It can be the fire that clears the field for new and tender
growth.
There is always a silver lining.
- Tian Dayton PhD
Pocket Sponsor - Book - Quote
Many people think that the Twelve
Steps are the work. But they are not. The Twelve Steps are the
preparation for doing the real work. The real work is in reaching out
to the still suffering alcoholic and addict.'God has no hands but
yours.' (attributed to Mother Theresa).
I become the hands of my Higher Power.
"Walk Softly and Carry a Big Book" - Book
If you treat people badly today, you
get to reap the benefits tomorrow.
Time for Joy - Book - Quote
God gives me all the willingness I
need today to sit quietly and listen.
Alkiespeak - Book - Quote
Two things an alcoholic doesn't like;
The way things are...and change. - Anon.
*****************************************
AA Thought for the Day
March 26
Faith
To me, this means a belief in a
Creator who is all power, justice, and love;
a God who intends for me a purpose, a
meaning, and a destiny to grow,
however little and haltingly, toward
His own likeness and image.
Before the coming of faith
I had lived as an alien in a cosmos
that too often seemed both hostile and cruel.
In it, there could be no inner
security for me.
- As Bill Sees It, p. 51
Thought to Ponder . . .
People of faith have a logical idea of
what life is all about.
AA-related 'Alconym' . . .
F A I T H = Facing An Inner Truth
Heals.
~*~A.A. Thoughts For The Day~*~
"The philosophy of self-sufficiency
doesn't pay off.
Plainly enough, it is a bone-crushing
juggernaut
whose final achievement is ruin.
Therefore, we can consider ourselves
fortunate indeed.
Each of us has had his own near-fatal
encounter
with the juggernaut of self-will,
and has suffered enough under its
weight to
look for something better."
Bill W., Twelve Steps and Twelve
Traditions, pp. 37-8
Thought to Consider . . .
Attitudes are contagious--is yours
worth catching?
*~*~*AACRONYMS*~*~*
AA
Attitude Adjustment
*~*~*~*~*^Just For Today!^*~*~*~*~*
Blessings
From "My Chance to Live":
"Growing up in A.A., I have been
blessed with children who have never seen their mother drunk. I have a
husband who
loves me simply because I am, and I
have gained the respect of my family. What more could a broken-down
drunk ask
for? Lord knows it is more than I ever
thought possible, and ever so much more than I deserved. All because I
was
willing to believe A.A. just might
work for me too."
2001 AAWS, Inc., Fourth Edition;
Alcoholics Anonymous, pg. 318
*~*~*~*~*^ Grapevine Quote ^*~*~*~*~*
"As AA grows, it is impossible to know
everyone, but if I try to relate myself with just one other person,
something will
happen, something remarkable."
Marietta, Ohio, April 1993
"The Guy at the End of the Bar"
AA Grapevine
~*~*~*~*^ Big Book & Twelve N' Twelve
Quotes of the Day ^*~*~*~*~*
"Practical experience shows that
nothing will so much insure immunity
from drinking as intensive work with
other alcoholics."
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
Working With Others, pg. 89~
"In this book you read again and again
that faith did for us what we
could not do for ourselves. We hope
you are convinced now that God can
remove whatever self-will has blocked
you off from Him. If you have
already made a decision, and an
inventory of your grosser handicaps,
you have made a good beginning. That
being so you have swallowed and
digested some big chunks of truth
about yourself."
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
How It Works, pg. 70~
Could we then foresee that troublesome
people were to become our principal teachers of patienceand tolerance?
-Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions p.
141
Misc. AA Literature - Quote
Life Is Not a Dead End
When a man or a woman has a spiritual
awakening, the most important meaning of it is that he has now become
able to do, feel, and believe that which he could not do before on his
unaided strength and resources alone. He has been granted a gift which
amounts to a new state of consciousness and being.
He has been set on a path which tells
him he is really going somewhere, that life is not a dead end, not
something to be endured or mastered. In a very real sense he has been
transformed, because he has laid hold of a source of strength which he
had hitherto denied himself. TWELVE AND TWELVE, PP. 106-107
Prayer For The Day: Dear heavenly Father, thank you for Your
love and goodness to me. You have been very patient and merciful to me.
Lord, I need that same love and mercy towards others. Father, I ask You
to remove all deceit from my heart and cleanse me so that I might have
a pure heart before You. Lord, I also ask that You give me faith and an
overcoming spirit so that I will not walk in fear. Help me to trust
You, even when my circumstances cause me doubt at times. Deliver me
from doubt and unbelief in every area of my life. I ask this in the
name of Jesus. Amen.