A DAILY TUNE-UP
Every day is a day when we must carry the vision of God's will
into all of our activities.
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS, p. 85
How do I maintain my spiritual condition? For me it's quite simple:
on a daily basis I ask my Higher Power to grant me the gift of
sobriety for that day! I have talked to many alcoholics who have
gone back to drinking and I always ask them: "Did you pray for
sobriety the day you took your first drink?" Not one of them said
yes. As I practice Step Ten and try to keep my house in order on
a daily basis, I have the knowledge that if I ask for a daily
reprieve, it will be granted.
***********************************************************
Twenty-Four Hours A Day
A.A. Thought For The Day
What am I going to do today for A.A.? Is there someone I should
call up on the telephone or someone I should go to see? Is there
a letter I should write? Is there an opportunity somewhere to
advance the work of A.A. which I have been putting off or
neglecting? If so, will I do it today? Will I be done with
procrastination and do what I have to do today? Tomorrow may
be too late. How do I know there will be a tomorrow for me?
How about getting out of my easy chair and getting going? Do I
feel that A.A. depends partly on me today?
Meditation For The Day
Today look upward toward God, not downward toward yourself. Look
away from unpleasant surroundings, from lack of beauty, from the
imperfections in yourself and in those around you. In your
unrest, behold God's calmness; in your impatience, God's
patience; in your limitations, God's perfection. Looking upward
toward God, your spirit will begin to grow. Then others will
see something in you that they also want. As you grow in the
spiritual life, you will be enabled to do many things that seemed too
hard for you before.
Prayer For The Day
I pray that I may keep my eyes trained above the horizon of
myself. I pray that I may see infinite possibilities for spiritual
growth.
***********************************************************
As Bill Sees It
EMOTIONAL
SOBRIETY, p. 288
If we examine every disturbance we have, great or small, we will
find at the root of it some unhealthy dependency and its
consequent unhealthy demand. Let us, with God's help,
continually surrender these hobbling liabilities.
Then we can be set free to live and love; we may then be able to
twelfth-step ourselves, as well as others, into emotional sobriety.
GRAPEVINE, JANUARY 1958
***********************************************************
Walk In Dry Places
Driven
by
Fear
Finding courage.
During any group discussion of fear, someone usually points out that it
serves a protective purpose by keeping us out of harm's way.
With the type of fear that drove us, however, we more often fled into
further harm while trying to avoid the threats at hand. No person whose
fear reaches a panic stage can effectively control his or her actions.
We cannot expect sobriety alone to make us exempt from fear. What
it can do is give us an ability to handle our fear constructively.
There are steps to doing this. FIRST, we should not be too prideful to
admit that fear can come to us. SECOND, we should admit it when
we do feel fear. THIRD, we can discuss our fear with others while
turning it over to our Higher Power.
It would be wonderful if these steps then lifted us above any sense of
fear. Even if this doesn't happen completely, we've succeeded in
mastering our problems if we don't let fear drives us to work against
ourselves. If I am afraid to give a presentation for work or go
for a job interview, for example, I am being driven into inaction. This
must no be allowed to happen.
I can find courage today in the Twelve Step program. This will
enable me to act properly and responsibly, even if I'm a bit queasy
with fear.
***********************************************************
Keep It Simple
Every child is an artist. The problem is remain an artist once your
grow
up.---Pablo Picasso
We each have colorful ideas waiting to be shared. We’re alive inside.
But
do we let this side of us show? Our disease stole much of the child
like
openness. Many of us were taught that growing up meant denying the
child
within us. Many of us grew up in homes where it wasn’t safe to act
alive
and creative. Whatever the reason, it’s time to claim the child, the
artist, in each of us. Each of our programs is different, and each has
its artistic touch. When we tell our stories, we share our life. And
our
lives are unique and alive. The more alive we become, the more color we
bring to others and ourselves. Let’s not be afraid to add color to our
lives.
Prayer for the Day: Higher Power, help me claim the child inside
of me. Joy is choice. Help
me choose it.
Action for the Day: Today, I’ll work at not hiding myself from
others. I’ll be alive, and
I’ll greet everyone I meet with the openness of a child.
***********************************************************
Each Day a New Beginning
Pride, we are told, my children, "goeth before a fall" and oh, the
pride was there, and so the fall was not far away.
--Wilhelmina Kemp Johnstone
Requesting help. Admitting we are wrong. Owning our mistake in either a
big or small matter. Asking for another chance or someone's love. All
very difficult to do, and yet necessary if we are to grow. The
difficulty is our pride, the big ego. We think, "We need to always be
right. If we're wrong, then others may think less of us, look down on
us, and question our worth." Perfectionism versus worthlessness.
If we are not perfect (and of course we never are), then we must be
worthless. In between these two points on the scale is "being human."
Our emotional growth, as women, is equal to how readily we accept our
humanness, how able we are to be wrong. With humility comes a softness
that smoothes our every experience, our every relationship. Pride makes
us hard, keeps us hard, keeps others away, and sets us up for the fall.
I will let myself be human today. It will soften my vision of life.
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition
Foreword To Second Edition
Figures given in this foreword describe the Fellowship as it was in
1955.
At present, our membership is pyramiding at the rate of about twenty
per cent a year. So far, upon the total problem of several million
actual and potential alcoholics in the world, we have made only a
scratch. In all probability, we shall never be able to touch more than
a fair fraction of the alcohol problem in all its ramifications. Upon
therapy for the alcoholic himself, we surely have no monopoly. Yet it
is our great hope that all those who have as yet found no answer may
begin to find one in the pages of this book and will presently join us
on the high road to a new freedom.
pp. xx-xxi
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition Stories
My Chance To Live
A.A. gave this teenager the tools
to climb out of her dark abyss of despair.
When I am willing to do the right thing, I am
rewarded with an inner peace no amount of liquor could ever
provide. When I am unwilling to do the right thing, I become
restless, irritable, and discontent. It is always my
choice. Through the Twelve Steps, I have been granted the gift of
choice. I am no longer at the mercy of a disease that tells me
the only answer is to drink. If willingness is the key to unlock
the gates of hell, it is action that opens those doors so that we may
walk freely among the living.
p. 317
***********************************************************
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
Foreword
Nevertheless, the infant Society determined to set down its experience
in a book which finally reached the public in April 1939. At this time
the recoveries numbered about one hundred. The book was called
"Alcoholics Anonymous," and from it the Fellowship took its name. In it
alcoholism was described from the alcoholic's point of view, the
spiritual ideas of the Society were codified for the first time in the
Twelve Steps, and the application of these Steps to the alcoholic's
dilemma was made clear. The remainder of the book was devoted to thirty
stories or case histories in which the alcoholics described their
drinking experiences and recoveries. This established identification
with alcoholic readers and proved to them that the virtually impossible
had now become possible. The book "Alcoholics Anonymous" became the
basic text of the Fellowship, and it still is. This present volume
proposes to broaden and deepen the understanding of the Twelve Steps as
first was written in the earlier work.
p. 17
***********************************************************
Acceptance
does
not
mean
that
I
have to agree, I don't have to approve, I don't
even
have to like it. I just have to accept.
--unknown
"I can forgive, but I can not forget" is only another way of saying, "I
will not forgive."
Forgiveness ought to be like a cancel note - torn in two and burned up
so that it never
can be shown against one.
--Henry Ward Beecher
To carry a grudge is like being stung to death by one bee.
--William H. Walton
Life is not always what one wants it to be, but to make the best of it
as it is, is the only
way of being happy.
--Jennie Jerome Churchill
Until you make peace with who you are, you'll never be content with
what you have.
--Doris Mortman
Ask not that events should happen as you will, but let your will be
that events should
happen as they do, and you shall have peace.
--Epicetus
God's word refreshes our minds; God's spirit renews our strength.
--unknown
God is all-knowing, righteous, longsuffering, all powerful, and good."
--unknown
***********************************************
Father Leo's Daily Meditation
PROGRESS
You've got to be a fool to want to stop the march of time."
--Pierre Renoir
My fear of the future gave me a fear of change. My need to control made
me avoid
any new or confusing ideas. My alcoholism wanted me to escape and hide
in the
past--tomorrow was too fearful to be contemplated. At other times--and
this is why
alcohol is cunning, baffling and powerful--I would want to escape into
tomorrow
and avoid the reality of today.
Time and reality were to be "played with" rather than experienced. But
time moves
on, it progresses just like the disease, and if I am to be a winner in
this world, I need to
move with it. God is to be experienced in the march of time and today I
want to be in
a relationship with God.
Teach me to respect time as an opportunity for growth.
***********************************************************
Then
they cried to the Lord in their trouble, and He saved them from their
distress.
Psalm 107:19
Therefore we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away,
yet inwardly we
are being renewed day by day. For our light and momentary troubles are
achieving for us
an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on
what is seen, but
on what is unseen. For what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is
eternal.
2 Corinthians 4:16-18
Your principles have been the music of my life throughout the years of
my pilgrimage. I
reflect at night on who you are, O LORD, and I obey your law because of
this. This is my
happy way of life: obeying your commandments.
Psalm 119:54-56
***********************************************************
Daily Inspiration
Mistakes are often a great source of learning. Lord, may I treat myself
kindly when I appear to fall short of my expectations and anticipate
the goodness that often is not very obvious.
The source of courage is having a deep sense of God's presence and
hearing Him say, "I am with you always.". Lord, You are my solution.
You are with me always giving me all that I need.
***********************************************************
NA Just For Today
"The Truth"
"Everything we know is subject to
revision, especially what we know about the truth."
Basic Text, p.91
Many of us thought we could recognize
"The Truth." We believed the truth was one thing, certain and
unchanging, which we could grasp easily and without question. The real
truth, however, was that we often couldn't see the truth if it hit us
square in the face. Our disease colored everything in our lives,
especially our perception of the truth - in fact, what we "knew" about
the truth nearly killed us. Before we could begin to recognize truth,
we had to switch our allegiance from our addiction to a Higher Power
the source of all that is good and true.
The truth has changed as our faith in
a Higher Power has grown. As we've worked the steps, our entire lives
have begun to change through the healing power of the principles of
recovery. In order to open the door for that change, we have had to
surrender our attachment to an unchanging and rigid truth.
The truth becomes purer and simpler
each time we encounter it. And just as the steps work in our lives
every day - if we allow them - our understanding of the truth may
change each day as we grow.
Just for today: I will open my eyes
and my heart to changes brought about by the steps. With an open mind,
I can understand the truth in my life today.
pg. 303
***********************************************************
You are reading from the book Today's
Gift.
Fear makes strangers of people who
should be friends. --Shirley MacLaine
No one is brave every moment; each of
us feels awkward, shy, perhaps even ugly or dumb part of the time. If
we could understand that about each other, it would make it easier for
us to be friendly and willing to talk to someone new. Instead, we often
sit back, waiting to be noticed; waiting for someone to invite us to
join in an activity.
We are all so much alike, yet we are
so certain we're different. Being self-conscious is normal. Even those
who are the most popular suffer the same fears as the rest of us. The
better we understand the ways we are the same, the easier it will be to
make friends with someone new. And it's through friends that we grow
and are strengthened for whatever lies ahead.
What new person can I offer friendship
to today?
You are reading from the book
Touchstones.
I never suspected that I would have to
learn how to live - that there were specific disciplines and ways of
seeing the world I had to master before I could awaken to a simple
happy, uncomplicated life. --Dan Millman
Wisdom begins in seeing how much we do
not know. Sometimes it's a painful blow to our egos to face what we
still have to learn. Many of us have believed we know how to live. Yet,
when we look at our lives, we see something has been missing. When we
continue to have great stress, when we haven't made progress in
simplifying our lives, when our lives seem full of crises - perhaps
then it is time to open ourselves to some new learning.
We can talk to sponsors and get ideas
from group members. Perhaps they have noticed our blind spots and will
tell us if asked. Expressing our problems in specific ways may point us
to new learning. Our program teaches us twelve specific disciplines for
our growth. We need to return to them again and again. We can always
ask ourselves, "What Step am I working on at this time?" We may need to
learn new ways to work on a specific Step.
I will turn to my fellow group members
and focus on one Step for my growth today.
You are reading from the book Each Day
a New Beginning.
Pride, we are told, my children,
"goeth before a fall" and oh, the pride was there, and so the fall was
not far away.
--Wilhelmina Kemp Johnstone
Requesting help. Admitting we are
wrong. Owning our mistake in either a big or small matter. Asking for
another chance or someone's love. All very difficult to do, and yet
necessary if we are to grow. The difficulty is our pride, the big ego.
We think, "We need to always be right. If we're wrong, then others may
think less of us, look down on us, and question our worth."
Perfectionism versus worthlessness.
If we are not perfect (and of course
we never are), then we must be worthless. In between these two points
on the scale is "being human." Our emotional growth, as women, is equal
to how readily we accept our humanness, how able we are to be wrong.
With humility comes a softness that smoothes our every experience, our
every relationship. Pride makes us hard, keeps us hard, keeps others
away, and sets us up for the fall.
I will let myself be human today. It
will soften my vision of life.
You are reading from the book The
Language of Letting Go.
Feelings and Surrender
Surrendering is a highly personal and
spiritual experience.
Surrender is not something we can do
in our heads. It is not something we can force or control by willpower.
It is something we experience.
Acceptance, or surrender, is not a
tidy package. Often, it is a package full of hard feelings - anger,
rage, and sadness, followed by release and relief. As we surrender, we
experience our frustration and anger at God, at other people, at
ourselves, and at life. Then we come to the core of the pain and
sadness, the heavy emotional burden inside that must come out before we
can feel good. Often, these emotions are connected to healing and
release at a deep level.
Surrender sets the wheels in motion.
Our fear and anxiety about the future are released when we surrender.
We are protected. We are guided. Good
things have been planned. The next step is now being taken. Surrender
is the process that allows us to move forward. It is how our Higher
Power moves us forward. Trust in the rightness of timing, and the
freedom at the other end, as you struggle humanly through this
spiritual experience.
I will be open to the process of
surrender in my life. I will allow myself all the awkward and potent
emotions that must be released.
Today I look to my Higher Power for
strength, courage and direction. I gather my own strength and
confidence from all possible resources and follow my own inner voice.
--Ruth Fishel
************************************
Journey To The Heart
October 17
Feeling Overwhelmed Is a Trap
Feeling overwhelmed is a trap, a
tricky one at that. When we’re overwhelmed, we see all that needs to be
done and say, That’s too much. I can’t do it. So instead, I shall do
nothing. Feeling overwhelmed occurs when we say, I am already too busy
so I can’t do that and now all is pressing in on me and I can’t do
anything. And the acts that are ours to do keep piling up and pulling
on us. And we keep resisting. And stress and pressure build up.
Feeling overwhelmed leads to feeling
stuck, and both are an illusion. How simple those things that overwhelm
us actually become when we release the feeling and return to the rhythm
of our lives. When we say, Yes, I need to make that phone call, do that
task. How simple the task becomes, how simple life becomes.
What’s bothering you that needs to be
done? What’s pulling on you? What’s causing you to feel overwhelmed and
maybe stuck, too? Make a list. Put your list aside, and begin by taking
one simple action. Then watch as life unfolds. One act at a time, one
thing at a time, all that needs to be done will get done. The stress
will disappear, and you’ll feel back on track.
You’ll be given the ability, power,
and guidance to do all that is on your path to do. Begin simply,
quietly, by acknowledging feeling overwhelmed. Denying the pull of life
and its tasks doesn’t remove stress, it compounds it.
Surrendering to the simple truths,
even the simple truth of what we’re really feeling, will always set us
free.
*****
more language of letting go
The beauty is easy to see
It is good to have an end to journey
toward; but it is the journey that matters, in the end.
--Ursula K. Le Guin
One lesson road trips have taught me
is that while it's good to have a destination, it's good to see what
the trip has to offer rather than waiting for it to bring us what we
expected.
Recently, a friend and I made a trip
to Santuario de Chimayo to visit the church and bring home some of the
healing dust from the sacred place. Along the way, we planned to pass
through other beautiful places in the Southwest, a spiritual pilgrimage
we thought. We left the house ready to be enlightened. But something
happened. In the hot Arizona air, we stopped letting the trip happen
and started looking for a specific experience. The Indian ruins were
overrun with tourist groups, and the beautiful red rock vortex center
had been reduced to strip malls and time-share condos. Or spiritual
quest had yielded nothing but disappointment so far. We felt antsy,
irritable, and let down.
Then we saw the sign Meteor Crater
road next right. We turned down that road, giving in to the cheesy
kitsch of the trip. A mile wide and over five hundred feet deep the
crater was left over fifty thousand years ago in the middle of what is
now the Arizona desert. A man bought the land and he and his family
became meteor experts-- marketing experts as well since they now charge
ten dollars to see a big hole in the ground. Nice enough folks though,
and we smiled for the first time on the trip.
I'd always wanted to see the Petrified
Forest, Though I feared that once again the hype would overpower the
reality of what it was. It didn't. The giant log-turned-to-stone were
scarce but the place had a powerful timelessness to it. The sky was
pastel blue. I lay on a giant wave of sand while Chip ran around taking
pictures that would end up overexposed.
Later that evening we crossed the
border into New Mexico. Chelle's-- a nice place to eat read the sign on
the side of a building in Gallup. And it was nice, just like the sign
said.
We can search for joy and
enlightenment so frantically that we don't see the brilliance at our
own feet. Sometimes in the search for enlightenment, it helps to
remember to lighten up. To paraphrase Winnie the Pooh, if you're
looking for enlightenment and only find the ordinary, then try looking
at the ordinary and let it be what it is. You might then find something
you weren't looking for, which might be just what you were looking for
when you began.
Don't let your hopes and expectations
be so high that you miss the beauty in what is. Joy and enlightenment,
after all, aren't that hard to see.
God, help me let go of my expectations
and delight in what is.
*****
Apologies
Empowered Forgiveness by Madisyn Taylor
If we can remember that our response
to others is important, we can realize that trust and forgiveness go
hand in hand.
In life there will always be times
when we are affected by the actions of another person. When this
happens, we often receive an apology. More often than not we say, “It’s
alright,” or “ It’s okay,” and by saying this we are allowing,
accepting, and giving permission for the behavior to happen again. When
we say “thank you,” or “I accept your apology,” we are forced to sit in
our feelings rather than ignore them.
There are many of us who feel that it
is easier to brush off how we really feel than to express our
discomfort with something that has happened to us. While this may
initially seem like the best thing to do, what it really does is put us
into an unending pattern of behavior; since we are not honest with
another person, we continue the cycle of letting them overstep our
emotional limits time and time again. By doing this we place ourselves
in the position of victim. We can put an end to this karmic chain by
first acknowledging to the other person that we accept their request
for forgiveness; often a simple “thank you” is enough. To truly create
a greater sense of harmony in our relationship, however, we need to
gently, and with compassion, express our innermost concerns about what
has transpired. By taking a deep breath and calling upon the deepest
parts of our spirit, we can usually find the right words to say and
verbalize them in a way that lets the other person recognize the
consequences of what they have done.
If we can remember that our response
to others is important, we can begin to realize that trust and
forgiveness go hand in hand. And when we react in a way that engenders
a greater amount of honesty and candor, we will establish a more
positive and empowering way of being and interacting others. Published
with permission from Daily OM
************************************
A Day At A Time
Reflection For The Day
Now that we’re sober and living in
reality, it’s sometimes difficult to see ourselves as others see us
and, in the process, determine how much progress we’ve made in
recovery. In the old days, the back-of-the-bar mirror presented us with
a distorted and illusory view of ourselves; the way we imagined
ourselves to be and the way we imagined ourselves to appear in the eyes
of others. A good way for me to measure my progress today is imply to
look about me at my friends in The Program. As I witness the miracle of
their recoveries, I realize that I’m part of the same miracle — and
will remain so as long as I’m willing. Am I grateful for reality and
the Divine miracle of my recovery?
Today I Pray
May god keep my eyes open for miracles
— those marvelous changes that have taken place in my own life and in
the lives of my friends in the group. May I ask no other measurement of
progress than a smile I can honestly mean and a clear eye and a mind
that can, at last, touch reality. May my own joy be my answer to my
question. “How am I doing?”
today I Will Remember
Miracles measure our progress: Who
needs more?
************************************
One More Day
Maturity: among other things — not to
hide one’s strength out of fear and consequently live below one’s best.
– Dag Hammarskjold
The fear of being different is a
powerful force in our lives, especially in the early times after a
chronic illness is diagnosed. We fear being recognized as a victim of
an illness, and we become afraid of any recognition at all.
We don’t want to live with this
unreasonable fear, and we begin to understand that healthy thinking
requires us to develop and use our many strengths. We stop denying and
start accepting. The voice of our individuality begins to speak, loudly
and clearly, and we answer with definitive action. We start to face our
problems, to accept the ways in which we differ from others, and to
rejoice in our strengths.
I won’t hid my strengths, for they are
the means to life at its best.
************************************
Food For Thought
Seeking the Best
We will never be satisfied with less than the best. When we were
overeating, we may have settled for less than we were capable of being
and achieving, but we were not happy about it. There is something in
each of us that hungers for maximum growth and development.
When we stop drugging ourselves with food, we become aware of new
possibilities and areas of growth. By controlling our disease, we
release potential that had been buried under our obsession. As we come
to know our Higher Power through this program, our appetite for the
best is reawakened. Though we realize we will never achieve perfection,
we are challenged to be and do the best that we can, just for today.
The best force there is directs lives that are committed to the care of
God. Only by dedication to knowing and doing His will is our search
satisfied.
We seek You, Lord.
*****************************************
One Day At A Time
Self-sabotage
“The truth is that our finest moments
are most likely to occur
when we are feeling deeply
uncomfortable, unhappy, or unfulfilled.
For it is only in such moments,
propelled by our discomfort, that we are
likely to step out of our ruts and
start searching for different ways or truer answers.”
M. Scott Peck
For the last fifteen years I have been
an avid and restless student of “self-help.” I read popular books,
spent years in therapy, and attended various support groups. Because I
didn’t see any improvement in my life, I was consumed with anger,
shame, bitterness, and a pervasive sense of injustice. I blamed my
Higher Power, my family, my partner, and my life circumstances. Only
since joining The Recovery Group have I discovered the source of my
toxic stagnation. It was myself. When doing a thorough examination of
my life, I was absolutely shocked to find that I had been repeatedly
practicing destructive acts of self-sabotage.
I was in love with my suffering. I was
addicted to my misery. Sometimes we cling to our illnesses and
weaknesses because they are so familiar to us. Though they hurt us, we
find them oddly comforting. It's what we're used to. And change is
scary. The unknown is scary. I found that my self-sabotage stemmed from
shame, anger, low self-esteem, my lust for being a Victim -- and even a
Fear of Being Well. I had to reach the profound darkness of depression
before I could admit that the damage I did to myself had become
unbearable.
Now I make a choice each day to not
sabotage myself. It's not easy. Rather than being my enemy, I choose to
be my friend and advocate. With the help of this program and my friends
in recovery, I have come to like myself and to truly want good things
for myself. The changes are gradual and require me to be patient and
gracious with myself. Now I can celebrate each baby step and forgive
myself when I fall back into old patterns. I now know that when I do
make a mistake, I can admit it, learn from it, and press forward with
my Recovery.
One day at a time...
I will choose to accept myself as a
person of worth. I will resist temptations to sabotage my recovery and
I will choose good things for my life.
~ Lisa
*****************************************
AA 'Big Book' - Quote
If any feel that as psychiatrists
directing a hospital for alcoholics we appear somewhat sentimental, let
them stand with us a while on the firing line, see the tragedies, the
despairing wives, the little children; let the solving of these
problems become part of their daily work, and even of their sleeping
moments, and the most cynical will not wonder that we have accepted and
encouraged this movement. we feel, after many years of experience, that
we have found nothing which has contributed more to the rehabilitation
of these men than the altruistic movement now growing up among them. -
Pg. xxvii - 4th. Edition - The Doctor's Opinion
Hour To Hour - Book - Quote
Let us speculate on another subtle
'trick' of our disease: It lies to us! 'It wasn't so bad; I'm not
really out of control; everyone drinks a little; these people are
stupid.' These are lies.
I pray that the subtle lies of
addiction go in one ear and out the other!
Amends
Today, I am willing for healing to
take place in ruptured relationships. I have been doing the best that I
can. My acknowledgment that I may have hurt someone else does not
diminish me. I have also been hurt, and I extend the same understanding
to myself that I do to others. We have all been doing the best that we
knew how with the awareness we had to work with. My willingness to make
amends speaks to my spiritual growth and desire for honesty. Making
amends to others sets things straight with myself. My self-respect is
growing to the extent that I am no longer comfortable with unfinished
business. I will finish up my side for my own self and allow the rest
to be where it is. It is for myself that I forgive; I do not need to
control the result.
- Tian Dayton PhD
Pocket Sponsor - Book - Quote
Before spiritual awakening...work
steps, make coffee, carry the message. After spiritual awakening...keep
working steps, keep making coffee, keep carrying the message. -Zen for
the 12 Steps-
Enlightenment is my ego's greatest
disappointment.
"Walk Softly and Carry a Big Book" - Book
Do not put the sole purpose of any
fellowship above the soul purpose.
Time for Joy - Book - Quote
Today I look to my Higher Power for
strength, courage and direction. I gather my own strength and
confidence from all possible resources and follow my own inner voice.
Alkiespeak - Book - Quote
It doesn't matter so much who is right
but what is right. I don't get indigestion from swallowing my pride.
Anon.
*****************************************
AA Thought for the Day
October 17
Burdens
But how often do we begin to fill our
newly emptied backpacks anew under fresh loads.
It is as if we had to become
accustomed to carrying all that junk around, almost as if we had grown
fond of the burden.
So we need to take an occasional look
(every day?) into our backpacks to see if we haven't tossed in a stone
every now and then.
And when we discover some load of
guilt or shame, some wrong we may have committed, we can toss it out.
Otherwise, we spend all our lives
struggling to walk, burdened by these impediments.
- The Best Of The Grapevine [Vol. 3],
p. 215
Thought to Ponder . . .
The first step in overcoming mistakes
is to admit them.
AA-related 'Alconym' . . .
A A = Always Aware.
~*~A.A. Thoughts For The Day~*~
Debits
"As we glance down the debit side of
the day's ledger,
we should carefully examine our
motives
in each thought or act that appears
to be wrong.
In most cases our motives won't be
hard to see and understand.
When prideful, angry, jealous,
anxious, or fearful,
we acted accordingly, and that was
that.
Here we need only recognize that we
did act or think badly,
try to visualize how we might have
done better,
and resolve with God's help to carry
these lessons over into tomorrow,
making, of course, any amends still
neglected."
c.1952AAWS, Twelve Steps and Twelve
Traditions, p. 94
Thought to Consider . . .
Life is too short to be small.
*~*~*AACRONYMS*~*~*
H O W N O W = Honest, Open-minded,
Willing. No Other Way!
*~*~*~*~*^Just For Today!^*~*~*~*~*
Forgive Myself
From: "Those Other People"
Just like you, I have often thought
myself the victim of what other people say and do. Yet every time I
confessed the sins of such people, especially those whose sins did not
correspond exactly with my own, I found that I only increased the total
damage. My own resentment, my self-pity would often render me well-nigh
useless to anybody.
So, nowadays, if anyone talks of me
so as to hurt, I first ask myself if there is any truth at all in what
they say. If there is none, I try to remember that I too have had my
periods of speaking bitterly of others; that hurtful gossip is but a
symptom of our remaining emotional illness; and consequently that I
must never be angry at the unreasonableness of sick people.
Under very trying conditions I have
had, again and again, to forgive others - also myself. Have you
recently tried this?
Letter, 1946
1967, AAWS, Inc., As Bill Sees It,
page 268
*~*~*~*~*^ Grapevine Quote ^*~*~*~*~*
"A new spiritual awakening can come
at every meeting."
Hartsdale-Ardsley, N.Y., January 1957
"Twelve Steps to a Meeting,"
Into Action
*~*~*~*~*^ Big Book & Twelve N'
Twelve Quotes of the Day ^*~*~*~*~*
"Most of us have been unwilling to
admit we were real alcoholics. No person likes to think he is bodily
and mentally different from his fellows. Therefore, it is not
surprising that our drinking careers have been characterized by
countless vain attempts to prove we could drink like other people. The
idea that somehow, someday he will control and enjoy his drinking is
the great obsession of every abnormal drinker. The persistence of this
illusion is astonishing. Many pursue it into the gates of insanity or
death."
Alcoholics Anonymous 3rd Edition More
About Alcoholism Page 30
If we have been thorough about our
personal inventory, we have written down a lot.
-Alcoholics Anonymous p.70
Step Four is our vigorous and
painstaking effort to discover what these liabilities in each of us
have been, and are.
-Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
p.42
Misc. AA Literature - Quote
Our attitude toward the giving of
time when compared with our attitude toward giving money presents an
interesting contrast. We give a lot of our time to A.A. activities for
our own protection and growth, but also for the sake of our groups, our
areas, A.A. as a whole, and, above all, the newcomer. Translated into
terms of money, these collective sacrifices would add up to a huge sum.
But when it comes to the actual
spending of cash, particularly for A.A. service overhead, many of us
are apt to turn a bit reluctant. We think of the loss of all that
earning power in our drinking years, of those sums we might have laid
by for emergencies or for education of the kids.
In recent years, this attitude is
everywhere on the decline; it quickly disappears when the real need for
a given A.A. service becomes clear. Donors can seldom see what the
exact result has been. They well know, however, that countless
thousands of other alcoholics and their families are being helped.
Prayer for the Day: An Irish Blessing -
May the road rise up to meet you,
May the wind be always at your back,
May the sun shine warm upon your face,
The rain fall soft upon your fields,
And until we meet again,
May God hold you in the palm of His
hand.