ATTRACTION,
NOT PROMOTION
Through many painful experiences, we think we have arrived
at what that policy ought to be. It is the opposite in many
ways of usual promotional practice. We found that we had to
rely upon the principle of attraction rather than promotion.
TWELVE STEPS AND TWELVE TRADITIONS, pp. 180-81
While I was drinking I reacted with anger, self-pity and
defiance against anyone who wanted to change me. All I wanted
then was to be accepted by another human simply as I was and,
curiously, that is what I found in A.A. I became the custodian
of this concept of attraction, which is the principle of our
Fellowship's public relations. It is by attraction that I can
best reach the alcoholic who still suffers. I thank God for
having given me the attraction of a well-planned and
established program of Steps and Traditions. Through humility
and the support of my fellow sober members, I have been able
to practice the A.A. way of life through attraction, not
promotion.
***********************************************************
Twenty-Four Hours A Day
A.A. Thought For The Day
The A.A. way is the way of sobriety. A.A. is known everywhere
as a method that has been successful with alcoholics. Doctors,
psychiatrists and clergymen have had some success. Some men
and women have got sober all by themselves. We believe that A.A.
is the most successful and happiest way to sobriety. And yet
A.A. is not wholly successful. Some are unable to achieve
sobriety and some slip back into alcoholism after they have had
some measure of sobriety. Am I deeply grateful to have found A.A.?
Meditation For The Day
Gratitude to God is the theme of Thanksgiving Day. The pilgrims
gathered to give thanks to God for their harvest, which was
pitifully small. When we look around us at all the things we
have today, how can we help being grateful to God? Our families,
our homes, our friends, our A.A. fellowship; all these things
are free gifts of God to us. "But for the grace of God," we would
not have them.
Prayer For The Day
I pray that I may be very grateful today. I pray that I may
not forget where I might be but for the grace of God.
***********************************************************
As Bill Sees It
To
Grow Up,
p. 330
Those adolescent urges that so many of us have for complete approval,
utter security, and perfect romance--urges quite appropriate to age
seventeen--prove to be an impossible way of life at forty-seven or
fifty-seven.
Since A.A. began, I've taken huge wallops in all these areas because of
my failure to grow up, emotionally and spiritually.
<< << << >> >> >>
As we grow spiritually, we find that our old attitudes toward
instinctual
drives need to undergo drastic revisions. Our demands for emotional
security and wealth, for personal prestige and power all have to be
tempered and redirected.
We learn that the full satisfaction of these demands cannot be the sole
end and aim of our lives. We cannot place the cart before the horse, or
we shall be pulled backward into disillusionment. But when we are
willing to place spiritual growth first--then and only then do we have a
real chance to grow in healthy awareness and mature love.
1. Grapevine, January 1958
2. 12 & 12, p. 114
***********************************************************
Walk In Dry Places
Spaces
in
Togetherness
Friendship
One of the beautiful aspects of AA is the bonding that develops among
members. We truly do achieve a closeness with some people that is
unlike anything we ever had before.
The danger in such friendships is that we may become too close in some
ways. Without realizing it, we may be making too many demands on
others' time. This can become suffocating to them and eventually
detrimental to the friendship.
In such situations, we need to remember the words of Kahlil Gibran;
"Let there be spaces in your togetherness." However,
close
we feel to others, we must allow them their space.
We should also remember to respect others' privacy as well as their
anonymity. AA should give us close friendships, but not to the
point of suffocation.
I'll remember today not to overstep my boundaries in any
friendship. There must be spaces in our togetherness.
***********************************************************
Keep It Simple
The
purpose
of
freedom
is
to
create it for others.---Bernard Malamud
Sobriety is freedom. With this freedom, we have a responsibility to
help
other addicts who still suffer. The program tells us this in Step
Twelve.
We do this by telling our stories and offering hope.
We must be ready to care, to give ourselves. This is what spirituality
is
about. When we help others, we prepare the road for those who enter the
program after us.
Tradition Five of the Twelve Traditions says, “Each group has but one
primary purpose---to carry its message to the alcoholic who still
suffers.” It means we get better by helping others.
Prayer for the Day: Higher Power, help me create more freedom.
Bring me to where I’m needed.
Help me carry the message well.
Action for the Day: Today, I’ll think of ways I can help the
addict who still suffers. Then
I’ll chose one way I can be of help. I’ll talk with my sponsor about
it,
and I’ll follow through with my plan.
***********************************************************
Each Day a New Beginning
The idea of God is different in every person. The joy of my recovery
was to find God within me. --Angela L. Wozniak
The program promises peace. Day by day, step by step, we move closer to
it. Each time we clearly are touched by someone else, and each time we
touch another, carries us closer to a realization of God's presence, in
others, in ourselves, in all experiences. The search for God is over,
just as soon as we realize the Spirit is as close as our thoughts, our
breath.
Coming to believe in a greater power brings such relief to us in our
daily struggles. And on occasion we still fight for control to be
all-powerful ourselves, only to realize that the barriers we confront
are of our own making. We are on easy street, just as soon as we choose
to let God be our guide in all decisions, large and small.
The program's greatest gift to us is relief from anxiety, the anxiety
that so often turned us to booze, or pills, or candy. Relief is felt
every time we let go of the problem that's entrapped us and wait for
the comfort and guidance God guarantees.
God's help is mine just as quickly as I fully avail myself of it. I
will let go of today's problems.
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition
BILL'S STORY
Renewing my resolve, I tried again. Some time passed, and confidence
began to be replaced by cocksureness. I could laugh at the gin mills.
Now I had what it takes! One day I walked into a cafe to telephone. In
no time I was beating on the bar asking myself how it happened. As the
whisky rose to my head I told myself I would manage better next time,
but I might as well get good and drunk then. And I did.
pp. 5-6
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition Stories
Gratitude In Action
Crossing The River
Of Denial
She finally realized that when she enjoyed her drinking, she
couldn't control it, and when she controlled it, she couldn't enjoy it.
I stayed in the abusive marriage for nearly seven years and continued
to focus on his problems. Toward the end of the marriage, in my
misguided attempts to set a good example for him (plus he was drinking
too much of my vodka), I mandated no booze in the house. Still, why
should I be denied a cocktail after returning home from a stressful day
at the office just because he had a problem? So, I began hiding my
vodka in the bedroom--and still did not see anything wrong with this
behavior. He was my problem.
p. 331
***********************************************************
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
Step Three -
"Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God
as we understood Him."
Therefore, we who are alcoholics 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 be
willing to look for something better. So it is by circumstance rather
than by any virtue that we have been driven to A.A., have admitted
defeat, have acquired the rudiments of faith, and now want to make a
decision to turn our will and our lives over to a Higher Power.
pp. 37-38
***********************************************************
Resentment
is
like
drinking
poison
and
waiting for the other person to
die.
--Cindy Clabough
"It's what you learn after you know it all that counts."
--Jean Rostand
"The first step to knowledge is to know that we are ignorant."
--Lord David Cecil
Correction does much, but encouragement does more.
--Goethe
He who knows the precepts by heart, but fails to practice them,
Is like unto one who lights a lamp and then shuts his eyes.
--Nagarjuna
The best remedy for a short temper is a long walk.
--Joseph Joubert
***********************************************************
Father Leo's Daily Meditation
CERTAINTY
"The certainties of one age are
the problems of next."
-- R. H. Tawney
I was a religious bigot. I did not know that I was a bigot, but now I
see how closed and
narrow my thinking was. I craved for certainty because I felt it would
give me security
and happiness but it never did. I argued dogmas that I did not believe;
the plight of the
unhappy hypocrite!
Today I live only in the certainty of the day. Today I know that what
worked for me
yesterday will work for me today if I am open to love, truth, honesty
and change.
Change is not necessarily "difference" if I see it as part of a process
rather than an
event. Yesterday is linked to today, and together they forge tomorrow.
The one thing
of which I can be certain is change. The God of Truth is revealed in
the change;
the acceptance of this fact is spirituality.
May I continue to grow in the spiritual life by my continued desire to
change and be
tolerant.
***********************************************************
"But
because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us
alive with
Christ even when we were dead in transgressions--it is by grace
you
have been
saved."
Ephesians 2:4-5
"Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you
rest. Take my
yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart,
and you will find
rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light."
Matthew 11:28-30
***********************************************************
Daily Inspiration
Tranquility lies in self-improvement. Lord, help me to worry less about
the faults of others and use my energy to enhance my own strengths and
eliminate my weaknesses.
If you have more than you need, but still feel it isn't enough, then
you are poor. Lord, may I take time to recognize and enjoy my blessings.
***********************************************************
NA Just For Today
Being Ourselves
"To be truly humble is to accept and
honestly try to be ourselves."
Basic Text pg. 35
Humility is a puzzling concept. We
know a lot about humiliation, but humility is a new idea. It sounds
suspiciously like groveling, bowing, and scraping. But that's not what
humility is at all. True humility is, simply, acceptance of who we are.
By the time we reach a step that uses
the word "humbly;" we have already started to put this principle into
practice. The Fourth Step gives us an opportunity to examine who we
really are, and the Fifth Step helps us accept that knowledge.
The practice of humility involves
accepting our true nature, honestly being ourselves. We don't have to
grovel or abase ourselves, nor must we try to appear smarter,
wealthier, or happier than we really are. Humility simply means we drop
all pretense and live as honestly as we can.
Just for today: I will allow knowledge
of my true nature to guide my actions. Today, I will face the world as
myself.
***********************************************************
You are reading from the book Today's
Gift.
for most this amazing day . . .
. . . for everything
which is natural which is infinite
which is yes.
--e. e. cummings
Let us be thankful today for all
simple obvious things: for the sun's
rising this morning without our having to awaken it; for another good
turn the earth makes today without expecting anything in return; for
our ability to know right and wrong by heart. Let us give thanks for
all small things that mean the world to us; for bread and cheese and
clean running water; for our ability to call our enemies our friends,
to forgive even ourselves; for our own bodies, however sagging and
worn, which insist on continuing for at least another day.
How much ordinary daily good do I take
for granted?
You are reading from the book
Touchstones.
Our job gives most of us a clear
role.... Although we may feel
relatively lost at home, we know who we are and what to do at work.
--Pierre Mornell
Most men have become well adapted to
the workaday world. Even if our
jobs seem like drudgery, they provide us with a place and a routine,
which define us. Many of us have welcomed the end of a weekend or a
vacation because we could go back to our jobs and definite roles. This
situation has many drawbacks. For one thing, if we are out of work, we
may feel adrift. Furthermore, if we have defined ourselves only as
breadwinners, we have probably missed the benefits of closeness in our
families. Some of us have even said, "I feel like I'm nothing but a
meal ticket."
A good job does have value, but we can
also grow by giving more of
ourselves in our less clear roles at home. It is healing to just "hang
around" with our families and friends and to simply let relationships
develop. The personal, familiar relationships that don't depend on jobs
and roles let us be comfortably human.
I am thankful for the humanizing
effect of my relationships at home.
You are reading from the book Each Day
a New Beginning.
The idea of God is different in every
person. The joy of my recovery
was to find God within me. --Angela L. Wozniak
The program promises peace. Day by
day, step by step, we move closer to
it. Each time we clearly are touched by someone else, and each time we
touch another, carries us closer to a realization of God's presence, in
others, in ourselves, in all experiences. The search for God is over,
just as soon as we realize the Spirit is as close as our thoughts, our
breath.
Coming to believe in a greater power
brings such relief to us in our
daily struggles. And on occasion we still fight for control to be
all-powerful ourselves, only to realize that the barriers we confront
are of our own making. We are on easy street, just as soon as we choose
to let God be our guide in all decisions, large and small.
The program's greatest gift to us is
relief from anxiety, the anxiety
that so often turned us to booze, or pills, or candy. Relief is felt
every time we let go of the problem that's entrapped us and wait for
the comfort and guidance God guarantees.
God's help is mine just as quickly as
I fully avail myself of it. I
will let go of today's problems.
You are reading from the book The
Language of Letting Go.
Back to the Steps
Go back to the Steps. Go back to a Step
When we don't know what to do next,
when we feel confused, upset,
distraught, at the end of our rope, overwhelmed, full of self will,
rage, or despair, go back to the Steps.
No matter what situation we are
facing, working a Step will help. Focus
on one, trust your instincts, and work it.
What does it mean to work a Step?
Think about it. Meditate on it.
Instead of focusing on the confusion, the problems, or the situation
causing our despair or rage, focus on the Step.
Think about how that Step might apply.
Hold on to it. Hang on as
tightly as we hang on to our confusion or the problem.
The Steps are a solution. They work.
We can trust them to work.
We can trust where the Steps will lead
us.
When we don't know what step to take
next, take one of the Twelve.
Today, I will concentrate on using the
Twelve Steps to solve problems
and keep me in balance and harmony. I will work a Step to the best of
my ability. I will learn to trust the Steps, and rely on them instead
of on my protective, codependent behaviors.
Today I know that I am nothing alone.
I am willing to let go of any
struggle that keeps me on a path of doing things my way. I know that
all I have to do is ask for help and it is there for me. --Ruth Fishel
*************************************
Journey to the Heart
Bask in Self-Love
The commitment to love ourselves may
be a decision we only need to make
once, but we may need to take frequent action to implement that choice.
It’s so easy to fall into that place of not loving and accepting
ourselves. But it can become just as easy to decide to return to the
place. We may need to do it daily, weekly, or whenever we begin a new
part of our journey, especially a part that frightens or challenges us.
What would feel good? What would bring
healing? What would energize or
comfort you? And what purpose is to be fulfilled by depriving yourself
of that?
However often we need to do it, we can
return to that place of
self-love. Each time we do it, it becomes easier. Each time we do it,
we see the rewards of self-love, enhanced creativity, clearer
decisions, a stronger connection to the Divine, and a more fulfilling
connection to the world around us.
When we love ourselves, it becomes
easier to correct our mistakes,
admit our wrongs, share our deepest feelings, and love others. Our
spirit dances, thrives. Self-love energizes us. It attracts more love.
The universe responds directly and immediately to our choice to love
ourselves.
Accept yourself. Love yourself just as
you are. Your finest work, your
best moments, your joy, peace, and healing come when you love yourself.
You give a great gift to the world when you do that. You give others
permission to do the same to love themselves.
Revel in self-love. Roll in it. Bask
in it, as you would the sunshine.
*************************************
More Language Of Letting Go
It’s an opportunity
In order to develop a strong sense of
the preciousness of human life,
it must connect to one’s belief system. The belief system doesn’t need
to be the Buddhist karmic system, but it has to be one that is
critically aware of the uniqueness and special nature of this life form.
–Robert Thurman, Circling the Sacred
Mountain
Do you see it? Do you see what a
special, precious opportunity each day
of your life is.
Look more closely. See all the lessons
you can learn. See how you can
participate in your growth. See how carefully God holds your hand,
guides you down the right path, offers just the right words and
opportunities at the right moments, sends just the right people your
way.
You can feel. You can touch. You can
agoniize in despair and giggle
with glee. You can make jokes. You can cry at movies. You can weep in
bed at night. Then get up the next day refreshed.
You can taste an orange, a lemon, a
mango– and describe in detail the
difference in each of those tastes. You can smell a forest of pine
tree. You can hold a friend’s hand and feel how he trembles because
he’s afraid.
You can stumble and fall and feel
abandoned, then get up and suddenly,
in one moment, understand that lesson you’ve been trying to learn. You
can jump out of airplanes, feel the smoothness of your lover’s back,
and hold your child to your breast.
You can wait and thank God later.
But you might as well thank God now.
Maybe the best way to thank God is by
living your life fully today.
God, help me to use this opportunity,
this life that I have been given
to the best of my ability every day.
*************************************
The Understanding Underneath
Experiences with Multiple Meanings by
Madisyn Taylor
The refined impression you glean from
your experiences after
contemplating their significance can add a new richness and texture to
your life.
Though we humans are self-aware, we
nonetheless cannot distance
ourselves from the world around us and have a natural tendency to
ascribe meaning to all that we experience. The significance we perceive
in our experiences is rooted in our observation of patterns as they
relate to ourselves. One situation has the power to teach us about life
because it exposes us to something unfamiliar. Another touches our
emotions deeply by enabling us to see how fortunate we are. Yet our
initial impressions of an experience may not wholly reveal the true
significance of that occurrence because our full response to an
experience is like an onion with many layers that all have disparate
meanings. Consider that a sunrise may stun us visually while
simultaneously evoking memories of childhood and reminding us that each
new day is a rebirth.
If you take the time to examine your
experiences closely, you will
discover that your original impressions may only be a part of a larger
story of significance. Peeling away the layers of an event or incident
can be a fun and interesting process if you allow it. To begin, relive
your experience in your mind’s eye and from multiple perspectives if
possible. Your interpretation of any situation is based not only on
facts but also on feelings, beliefs, and your values. As you ruminate
upon your experience, spend a few moments contemplating how you felt
when it began and how your feelings had changed by its end. Ask
yourself what abstractions, if any, it awakened in your mind. If an
experience stirs up questions within your soul, it may be that in
striving to answer them a new layer of meaning may reveal itself to you.
The significance of an experience may
remain hidden to you for some
time. The meaning of an event can change when viewed from another
context or may only become apparent after intense meditation. An
incident that seemed superficial may unexpectedly touch us deeply later
in our lives. If you take a truly open-minded approach to your
examination of each new level and do not shy away from revelations that
could prove painful, you will learn much about your relationship to the
world around you. And the refined impression you glean from your
experiences after contemplating their significance can add a new
richness and texture to your life. Published with permission from Daily
OM
*************************************
A Day At A Time
Reflection For The Day
Our faith in god’s power — at work in
us and in our lives — doesn’t
relieve us of responsibility. Instead, our faith strengthens our
efforts, makes us confident and assured, and enables us to act
decisively and wisely. We’re no longer afraid to make decisions; we’re
not afraid to take the steps that seem called for in the proper
handling of given situations. Do I believe that God is at work beyond
my human efforts, and that my faith and trust in Him will bring forth
results for exceeding my expectations?
Today I Pray
May my trust in my Higher Power never
falter. May my my faith in that
Power continue to shore up my optimism, my confidence, my belief in my
own decision-making. May I never shut my eyes to the wonder of God’s
work or discount the wisdom of His solutions.
Today I Will Remember
Our hope is ages past, our help for
years to come.
*************************************
One More Day
Time deals gently only with those who
take it gently.
–Anatole France
There have been times when we’ve taken
our lives too seriously. For
whatever reasons — family problems, money problems, health problems, —
we’ve let those concerns distort all the events of the day into sad or
personally threatening experiences. When we’ve been preoccupied with
negative thoughts, it’s probably been difficult to see good
possibilities.
Life magically becomes better, easier,
when we take it gently in
manageable segments. Problems may seem insurmountable if we insist on
seeing them stretch into the coming months or years. But when we
challenge ourselves to live in this day, the time treats us more
gently by giving us a clearer picture of what we must deal with in this
smaller segment of time.
Today, I will concentrate only on the
things that must be dealt with in
these twenty-four hours.
************************************
Food For Thought
A Strong Father
Many of us understand God in terms of a father, one on whom we can rely
no matter what the situation. Our biological father may have been a
tyrant or a pal, remote or accessible, firm or weak. However much we
loved him and depended on him, he was only a person and not infallible.
For recovery from compulsive overeating, we need a source of strength
to which we may turn in any emergency. We require a Power to lean on
through the minor ups and downs of every day. Though our families and
friends support us, their assistance is not enough. They can provide
neither the control nor the sustenance, which we need in order to
recover from our illness.
The firm, unfailing guidance which we require comes from our Higher
Power. If we are willing to again become as children and cast ourselves
on God without reservation, we shall receive His support. It is His
Power that frees us from our false dependency on food.
Be for us a strong Father, we pray.
*****************************************
One Day At A Time
~ GOODNESS ~
Above all, let us never forget that an
act of goodness
is in itself an act of happiness.
Count Maurice Maeterlinck
While in the disease, most of the
goodness I tried to do was for ulterior motives. It was only in
recovery that I learned to give unselfishly and without strings to help
another. In doing so, I have found happiness beyond measure. I can
create my own happiness in the service of my Higher Power and other
compulsive overeaters. I can make the promise of a "new happiness and a
new freedom" come true.
One Day at a Time . . .
I will do acts of goodness.
~ Judy N. ~
*****************************************
AA 'Big Book' - Quote
There is the type of man who is
unwilling to admit that he cannot take a drink. He plans various ways
of drinking. He changes his brand or his environment. There is the type
who always believes that after being entirely free from alcohol for a
period of time he can take a drink without danger. There is the
manic-depressive type, who is, perhaps, the least understood by his
friends, and about whom a whole chapter could be written.
Then there are types entirely normal
in every respect except in the effect alcohol has upon them. They are
often able, intelligent, friendly people. - Pg. xxx - 4th. Edition -
The Doctor's Opinion
Hour To Hour - Book - Quote
We may be asked to make many difficult
decisions about our new life, facing divorce, jail time, loss of our
children. Not all of the results will be perfect. We gather the
information that we can, ask for advice from professionals, practice
principles as best we can and then trust in the process. We do our
best; no one expects perfection.
Not all my decisions will turn out the
way I expect and that doesn't make them wrong. I do the best I can and
trust in the process.
One Foot in Front of the Other
Today, all I have to do is live the
next hour as well as I can. I will not get ahead of myself. I cannot be
anywhere but right where I am. When I allow myself to be here now, to
live in the present fully and freely, the rest of life takes care of
itself. So few people live in the moment, that in itself will make me
rare. That will make me someone I feel good about being and others can
enjoy being around. When I am in the moment, the next right action
reveals itself. When I align my will with the will of my Higher Power,
I become one with diving purpose and I connect with the spirituality of
life.
I surrender to the path
- Tian Dayton PhD
Pocket Sponsor - Book - Quote
According to the martial arts, Aikido,
the best way to win a fight is not to be there in the first place.
Think of this the next time you are invited to a bar, to ride in
vehicle with a pot smoker, or to celebrate at the office party.
My best path to cease fighting anybody
or anything, is not to be in the ring in the first place.
"Walk Softly and Carry a Big Book" - Book
A sure way to set yourself up for a
'slip' is to be convinced that others will slip if they don't listen to
you.
Time for Joy - Book - Quote
Today I know that I am nothing alone.
I am willing to let go of any struggle that keeps me on a path of doing
things my way. I know that all I have to do is ask for help and it is
there for me.
Alkiespeak - Book - Quote
The measure of my anxiety is the
measure of my distance from God. - Unknown origin.
*****************************************
AA Thought for the Day
November 28
The Lesson
This, then, became the opening to the
spiritual world.
With the guidance of the program and
the encouragement and example within the Fellowship,
I could begin to find out about myself
and be prepared to accept what I found.
I learned in the Fellowship that if
others could accept me and love me as I was, then I should love myself
as I was
-- not for what I was, but for what I
could become.
So I have learned a little about my
mind and about my will and about my emotions and passions.
- Came To Believe . . ., p. 3
Thought to Ponder . . .
Learn to listen; listen to learn.
AA-related 'Alconym' . . .
A B C = Accept, Begin, Continue.
~*~A.A. Thoughts For The Day~*~
Promises
"We are going to know a new freedom
and a new happiness.
We will not regret the past
nor wish to shut the door on it.
We will comprehend the word serenity
and we will know peace.
No matter how far down the scale we
have gone,
we will see how our experience can
benefit others.
That feeling of uselessness and
self-pity
will disappear.
We will lose interest in selfish things
and gain interest in our fellows.
Self-seeking will slip away.
Our whole attitude and outlook upon
life will change.
Fear of people and of economic
insecurity
will leave us.
We will intuitively know how to handle
situations which used to baffle us.
We will suddenly realize that God is
doing for us
what we could not do for ourselves.
Are these extravagant promises? We
think not.
They are being fulfilled among us --
sometimes quickly, sometimes slowly.
They will always materialize if we
work for them."
c. 1976AAWS, Alcoholics Anonymous, pp.
83-4
Thought to Consider . . .
The Promises are a result not a right.
*~*~*AACRONYMS*~*~*
P R O G R A M = People Relying On God
Relay A Message
*~*~*~*~*^Just For Today!^*~*~*~*~*
How To Live
From: "Stars Don't Fall"
AA taught me how not to drink. And
also, on the twenty-four hour plan, it taught me how to live. I know I
do not have to be queen of them all to salve a frightened ego. Through
going to meetings and listening, and occasionally speaking, through
doing Twelve Step work, whereby in helping others you are both the
teacher and the student, by making many wonderful AA friends, I have
been taught all the things in life that are worth having. I am no
longer interested in living in a palace, because palace living was not
the answer for me. Nor were those impossible dreams I used to have the
things I really wanted.
2003, AAWS, Inc., Experience, Strength
& Hope, pages 362-363
*~*~*~*~*^ Grapevine Quote ^*~*~*~*~*
"Recovery is giving it away. If you
don't give it away you can't have it ... Be part of the pipeline."
Greenwich Village, N.Y., December 1997
"Oh God, You Again?"
I Am Responsible: The Hand of AA
~*~*~*~*^ Big Book & Twelve N' Twelve
Quotes of the Day ^*~*~*~*~*
"We are careful never to show
intolerance or hatred of drinking as
an institution. Experience shows that
such an attitude is not
helpful to anyone. Every new alcoholic
looks for this spirit among
us and is immensely relieved when he
finds we are not witch-burners.
A spirit of intolerance might repel
alcoholics whose lives could
have been saved, had it not been for
such stupidity."
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
Working With Others, pg. 103~
We do not like to pronounce any
individual as alcoholic , but you can quickly diagnose yourself . Step
over to the nearest barroom and try some controlled drinking . Try to
drink and stop abruptly . Try it more than once . It will not take long
for you to decide , if you are honest with yourself about it . It may
be worth a bad case of jitters if you get a full knowledge of your
condition .
Alcoholics Anonymous , Page 31-32
The only requirement for membership is
an honest desire to stop drinking.
-Alcoholics Anonymous p.xiv
When we are honest with another
person, it confirms that we have been honest with ourselves and with
God.
-Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
p.60
Misc. AA Literature - Quote
When anyone, anywhere, reaches out for
help, I want the hand of A.A. always to be there. And for that: I am
responsible.
DEAR FRIENDS: Since 1938, the greatest
part of my A.A. life has been spent in helping to create, design,
manage, and insure the solvency and effectiveness of A.A.'s world
services - the office of which has enabled our Fellowship to function
all over the globe, and as a unified whole.
It is no exaggeration to say that,
under their trustees, these all important services have accounted for
much of our present size and over-all effectiveness.
The A.A. General Service Office is by
far the largest single carrier of the A.A. message. It has well related
A.A. to the troubled world in which we live. It has fostered the spread
of our Fellowship everywhere. A.A. World Services, Inc., stands ready
to serve the special needs of any group or isolated individual, no
matter the distance or language. Its many years of accumulated
experience are available to us all.
The members of our trusteeship - the
General Service Board of A.A .- will, in the future, be our primary
leaders in all of our world affairs. This high responsibility has long
since been delegated to them; they are the successors in world service
to Dr. Bob and to me, and they are directly accountable to A.A. as a
whole.
This is the legacy of world-service
responsibility that we vanishing oldtimers are leaving to you, the
A.A.'s of today and tomorrow. We know that you will guard, support, and
cherish this world legacy as the greatest collective responsibility
that A.A. has or ever can have.
Yours in trust, and in affection,
Bill W. died on January 24, 1971.
Prayer for the Day: Fourth Step Prayer - Dear God, It is I who
has made my life a mess. I have done it, but I cannot undo it. My
mistakes are mine and I will begin a searching & fearless moral
inventory. I will write down my wrongs, but I will also include that
which is good. I pray for the strength to complete the task.