AN OPEN MIND
True humility and an open mind can lead us to faith . . .
TWELVE STEPS AND TWELVE TRADITIONS, p. 33
My alcoholic thinking led me to believe that I could control my
drinking, but I couldn't.
When I came to A.A., I realized that God was speaking to me through my
group. My mind
was open just enough to know that I needed His help. A real, honest
acceptance of A.A.
took more time, but with it came humility. I know how insane I was, and
I am extremely grateful
to have my sanity restored to me and to be a sober alcoholic. The new,
sober me is a much
better person than I ever could have been without A.A.
***********************************************************
Twenty-Four Hours A Day
A.A. Thought For The Day
Have I got over most of my sensitiveness, my feelings which are too
easily hurt, and my
just plain laziness and self-satisfaction? Am I willing to go all out
for A.A. at no matter what
cost to my precious self? Is my own comfort more important to me than
doing the things
that need to be done? Have I got to the point where what happens to me
is not so
important? Can I face up to things that are embarrassing or
uncomfortable if they are
the right things to do for the good of A.A.? Have I given A.A. just a
small piece of myself?
Am I willing to give all of myself whenever necessary?
Meditation For The Day
Not until you have failed can you learn true humility. Humility arises
from a deep sense of
gratitude to God for giving you the strength to rise above past
failures. Humility is not
inconsistent with self-respect. The true person has self-respect and
the respect of others
and yet is humble. The humble person is tolerant of other's failings,
and does not have a
critical attitude toward the foibles of others. Humble people are hard
on themselves and
easy on others.
Prayer For The Day
I pray that I may be truly humble and yet have self-respect. I pray
that I may see the good
in myself as well as the bad.
***********************************************************
As Bill Sees It
WHEN
CONFLICTS MOUNT, p. 289
Sometimes I would be forced to look at situations where I was
doing badly. Right away, the search for excuses would become
frantic.
"These," I would exclaim, "are really a good man's faults." When
that pet gadget broke apart, I would think, "Well, if those people
would only treat me right, I wouldn't have to behave the way I
do." Next was this: "God well knows that I do have awful
compulsions. I just can't get over this one. So He will have to
release me." At last came the time when I would shout, "This, I
positively will not do! I won't even try."
Of course, my conflicts went right on mounting, because I was
simply loaded with excuses, refusals, and outright rebellion.
***********************************************************
Walk In Dry Places
Those
who
want
it,
Not
those
who need it.
Honest Desire
In the first bloom of sobriety, many recovering people confront
drinking companions who also "need" the program. They're often
surprised and disillusion when efforts to help their friends are
rejected... sometimes curtly.
We're truly limited to helping those who desire recovery, not those who
we think need it. Though intervention methods
can be effective, we're still largely helpless to assist those who
don't desire recovery.
We regret that we really have no answers for the millions who perish
from alcoholism, unaware of their problem. We also can hold out little
hope that any future recovery attempts will succeed without the
individual alcoholic's cooperation.
Desire..... a personal determination and decision.... is
necessary for almost any kind of change. We have the freedom to choose
in many areas of our lives, and alcoholics must eventually choose
recovery in order to find and maintain it.
Though I'd love to see others recover, I must accept the fact that
their personal desire and choice is necessary. I'll remember this
if any opportunities arise today to carry the message.
***********************************************************
Keep It Simple
When people bother you
in any way, it is because their souls are trying to get your divine
attention and your blessing.
--Catherine Ponder
We are in constant communication with one another and with God in the
spiritual realm. No matter how singular our particular course may
appear, our path is running parallel to many paths. And all paths will
intersect when the need is present. The point of intersection is the
moment when another soul seeks our attention. We can be attentive and
loving to the people seeking our attention. Their growth and ours is at
stake,
We can be grateful for our involvement with other lives. We can be
mindful that our particular blessing is like no one else's and that we
all need input from the many significant persons in our lives. There is
no insignificant encounter in our passage through life. Each juncture
with someone else is part of the destiny of both participants.
I will look carefully and lovingly at the people around me today and
bless them, one and all. They are in my life because they need to be.
I, likewise, need them.
***********************************************************
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 Third Edition
BY March 1976, when this edition went to the printer, the total
worldwide membership of Alcoholics Anonymous was conservatively
estimated at more than 1,000,000, with almost 28,000 groups meeting in
over 90 countries.
p. xxii
***********************************************************
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.
Over the course of my sobriety I have experienced
many opportunities to grow. I have had struggles and
achievements. Through it all I have not had to take a drink, nor
have I ever been alone. Willingness and action have seen me
through it all, with the guidance of a loving Higher Power and the
fellowship of the program. When I'm in doubt, I have faith that
things will turn out as they should. When I'm afraid, I reach for
the hand of another alcoholic to steady me.
pp. 317-318
***********************************************************
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
Foreword
With the publication of the book "Alcoholics Anonymous" in 1939, the
pioneering period ended and a prodigious chain reaction set in as the
recovered alcoholics carried their message to still others. In the next
years alcoholics flocked to A.A. by tens of thousands, largely as the
result of excellent and continuous publicity freely given by magazines
and newspapers throughout the world. Clergymen and doctors alike
rallied to the new movement, giving it unstinted support and
endorsement.
p. 17
***********************************************************
"To
make
mistakes
is
human;
to
stumble
is commonplace; to be able to laugh at
yourself is maturity."
--William A. Ward
To remain young while growing old is the highest blessing.
--German Proverb
"Make rest a necessity, not an objective."
--Jim Rohn
"Action may not always bring happiness; but there is no happiness
without action."
--Benjamin Disraeli
"The past is a guidepost, not a hitching post."
--L. Thomas Holdcroft
"Once you say you are going to settle for second, that's what happens
to you."
--John F. Kennedy
Friends are the sunshine of life.
--John Hay
***********************************************
Father Leo's Daily Meditation
WORSHIP
"Our concern is not how to
worship in the catacombs but
how to remain human in the
skyscrapers."
-- Abraham Heschel
Worship requires the discovery of "true worth" in my own life. True
worship is not only
historical and traditional but also contemporary. I need to discover
not only the God of
yesterday, but also the God of the modern city.
My past addiction to fantasy often made me place God in an unreal
world. I was happy
talking about the Jews, Roman and Philistines but I missed God in Las
Vegas, on
freeways and in local politics.
God is alive in His world, and it is tragic to make Him a prisoner of
history.
Let me find You in the place where I live.
***********************************************************
He
stilled the storm to a whisper; the waves of the sea were hushed.
They were glad when it grew calm and He guided them to their desired
haven.
Psalm 107:29-30
"You shall not be afraid of the terror by night, Nor of the arrow that
flies by day, Nor of
the pestilence that walks in darkness, Nor of the destruction that lays
waste at noonday."
Psalm 91:5-6
"Don't copy the behavior and customs of this world, but let God
transform you into a new
person by changing the way you think. Then you will know what God wants
you to do,
and you will know how good and pleasing and perfect His will really is."
Romans 12:2
***********************************************************
Daily Inspiration
It is hard to be upset with yourself when you are being nice to someone
else. Lord, bless me with a giving spirit be I know that all I give
comes back to shine on me in many different ways.
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
We All Belong
"Although 'politics makes strange
bedfellows,' as the old saying goes, addiction makes us one of a kind."
Basic Text, p.84
What a mixture of folks we have in
Narcotics Anonymous! In any given meeting on any given night, we'll
find a variety of people that probably never would have sat down in a
room together if it weren't for the disease of addiction.
A member who is a physician described
his unwillingness to identify at his first meeting by refusing to go
into "that room full of junkies." Another member with an extensive
background in jails and institutions shared a similar story, except
that her shock and surprise stemmed from the realization that "there
were nice people there - wearing suits, yet!" These two friends
recently celebrated their seventh wedding anniversary.
The most unlikely people form
friendships, sponsor each other, and do service work together. We meet
in the rooms of recovery together, sharing the bonds of past suffering
and hope for the future. We meet on mutual ground with our focus on the
two things we all have in common - addiction and recovery.
Just for today: No matter what my
personal circumstances, I belong.
pg. 304
***********************************************************
You are reading from the book Today's
Gift.
One will rarely err if extreme actions
be ascribed to vanity, ordinary actions to habit, and mean actions to
fear. --Friedrich Nietzsche
Sometimes we begin to believe someone
close to us is being mean deliberately. This may happen when a good
friend suddenly stops inviting us to her house. She may be scared to
have others over because her parents are having problems, or for some
other reason that has nothing to do with us.
But we often fear that it is because
of something we said or did. We find ourselves becoming scared and
pulling away. If we ask for God's help in turning our fear around, we
can overcome it and ask our friend why she stopped inviting us over.
Most times we will find that our friend had no idea her actions
affected us the way they did. We can then laugh at ourselves for our
fears and applaud ourselves for overcoming them.
What treasure might I find beneath my
fear today?
You are reading from the book
Touchstones.
Thou art everywhere, but I worship you
here;
Thou art without form, but I worship
you in these forms;
Thou neediest no praise, yet I offer
you these prayers and salutations.
--Hindu prayer
The history of the Twelve Steps tells
us that in the first small A.A. group there was controversy about the
word God. For some of the men, God was known in traditional religious
ways; other members were agnostic. This first group followed their
group conscience. The resolution they achieved has inspired many new
Twelve Step members ever since. They were guided through their
disagreement to a new expression of their spiritual relationship. They
began to speak of a "Power greater than ourselves" and of "God, as we
understood Him."
Today we turn to God as we understand
God, because our definitions are restricted by human limitations. We
know from our own experiences and from the stories of thousands of men
and women who have preceded us, that this spiritual program is very
practical and simple. It works. It restores our lives.
To a Power greater than myself, I am
filled with gratitude.
You are reading from the book Each Day
a New Beginning.
When people bother you in any way, it
is because their souls are trying to get your divine attention and your
blessing.
--Catherine Ponder
We are in constant communication with
one another and with God in the spiritual realm. No matter how singular
our particular course may appear, our path is running parallel to many
paths. And all paths will intersect when the need is present. The point
of intersection is the moment when another soul seeks our attention. We
can be attentive and loving to the people seeking our attention. Their
growth and ours is at stake,
We can be grateful for our involvement
with other lives. We can be mindful that our particular blessing is
like no one else's and that we all need input from the many significant
persons in our lives. There is no insignificant encounter in our
passage through life. Each juncture with someone else is part of the
destiny of both participants.
I will look carefully and lovingly at
the people around me today and bless them, one and all. They are in my
life because they need to be. I, likewise, need them.
You are reading from the book The
Language of Letting Go.
Throwing Out the Rule Book
Many of us feel like we need a
rulebook, a microscope, and a warranty to get through life. We feel
uncertain, frightened. We want the security of knowing what's going to
happen, and how we shall act.
We don't trust life or ourselves.
We don't trust the Plan.
We want to be in control.
"I've made terrible mistakes about my
choices, mistakes that nearly destroyed me. Life has really shocked me.
How can I trust myself? How can I trust life, and my instincts, after
where I've been?" asked one woman.
It is understandable that we fear
being crushed again, considering the way many of us were when we
bottomed out on our codependency. We don't have to be fearful. We can
trust our self, our path, and our instincts.
Yes, we want to avoid making the same
mistakes again. We are not the same people we were yesterday or last
year. We've learned, grown, changed. We did what we needed to do then.
If we made a mistake, we cannot let that stop us from living and fully
experiencing today.
We have arrived at the understanding
that we needed our experiences - even our mistakes - to get to where we
are today. Do we know that we needed our life to unfold exactly as it
did to find ourselves, our Higher Power, and this new way of life? Or
is part of us still calling our past a mistake?
We can let go of our past and trust
ourselves now. We do not have to punish ourselves with our past. We
don't need a rulebook, a microscope, a warranty. All we really need is
a mirror. We can look into the mirror and say, "I trust you. No matter
what happens, you can take care of yourself. And what happens will
continue to be good, better than you think."
Today, I will stop clinging to the
painful lessons of the past. I will open myself to the positive lessons
today and tomorrow hold for me. I trust that I can and will take care
of myself now. I trust that the Plan is good, even when I don't know
what it is.
Today I will be aware not to judge
myself when I feel less than perfect. I am beginning to love myself
just as I am and that feels so nice. --Ruth Fishel
************************************
Journey To The Heart
October 18
Trust the Morning
I arrived in Sedona late at night,
after ten o’clock. Motel offices were closed everywhere I went. The
signs flashed “No Vacancy.” I hung around the convenience store for a
while, trying to figure out what to do, having second thoughts about
spontaneity and trusting the universe. I regretted not having an
itinerary. I was too tired to drive much longer. I no longer cared if
my journey was magical; it was back to basics. I wanted to sleep in a
bed that night.
I bought the local paper and spotted
an ad for a lodge. I called the number, but no luck. I got in my car,
wondering what to do.
On the edge of town, I saw a motel
with lights in the office and a person behind the desk. I went inside
and pestered the girl behind the desk for help. She finally relented,
telling me of a little known hotel about an hour away. She lived close
by, she said. I could follow her there. An hour later, I gratefully
checked into a room. I couldn’t find the heat, but I did have a bed,
pillow, and blanket.
The next morning, I discovered I was
staying on the edge of a dry, dusty golf course. The area was
surrounded by low, barren hills barely covered with shrubs. I headed
the car to Sedona, still tired, still wondering why I was there.
My car rounded a curve. Suddenly I was
surrounded by spiraling red mesas shaped by nature into forms of bells,
cathedrals, and carved towers reaching to the sky. The sunlight danced
on the rusty red sculptures, lighting them with an orange-yellow glow.
I smiled at the breathtaking view, grateful the experience had unfolded
as it had.
Sometimes, the darkness and loneliness
of night make the color and beauty of the sunrise and the new day all
that much more beautiful. Contrast is an important part of creativity.
Our Creator knows that. So does our heart.
Things look different in the morning.
Trust that the morning will come.
*****
more language of letting go
Take another look
It's amazing the difference
A bit of sky can make.
--Shel Silverstein
We spend morning at the Blue Sky Lodge
drinking coffee on the back porch watching the world wake up. One
morning, after grabbing my cup, I walked out back to find Frank, a
skydiving friend staying at the Lodge while visiting from the United
Kingdom, busliy snapping pictures of the surrounding terrain.
"Frank, why are you taking pictures of
this?" I asked. "If you want, we can take you to some of the more
scenic areas around here."
"No way," he replied. "No one back
home will believe that I got to spend my time in a place with a view
like this."
I looked around and tried to see the
view through his eyes. The rolling hills of southern California were
bathed in golden early morning sunlight, while a light marine layer
curled over the ridgeline of the Ortega Mountains just three miles to
the west. San Jacinto rose high in the eastern sky, a pale silhouette
in the morning sun.
I smiled and for the first time in a
while took in the sheer beauty of the view. Lately all I had been
seeing were the piles of leaves and construction materials scattered
around the yard or the cars driving along the road in the valley below
us. I had been surrounded with beauty and yet had grown so accustomed
to it that I didn't even notice it anymore.
Many times what we need isn't a change
of scenery, but a renewed vision of what's already there. Take another
look at your life-- where you live, your friends, your work-- all your
gifts. Maybe the view in your life is better than you think.
God, renew my spirit. Help me look at
my life with a fresh vision. If I don't like what I see, help me look
again.
*****
Complementary Energies
Balancing Self with Family Life by
Madisyn Taylor
It is vital to the energy of your
spirit and the energy of your family unit that you take time for
yourself each day to balance and center.
Many of us have a hard time balancing
taking care of ourselves with taking care of our family
responsibilities. For people with young children, this can be
especially challenging, but even people without children have
obligations to care for extended family, partners, pets, and the home
in which they live. It’s easy to lose track of our own needs as we give
ourselves to the people, pets, and places we love. However, it is
essential to their well-being that we take care of ourselves, filling
our own wells with water so that we have something to offer when we
return home each day.
It is easy to get caught up in the
demands of home life because they never stop. There is always one more
thing you can do, another dish in the sink, a counter that needs
wiping, or a person who needs a ride somewhere. If you don’t set some
boundaries, you will find yourself on an endless journey of housework
and doing for others. Eventually, you will probably feel drained and
out of touch with your inner life force. Instead of waiting for this to
happen, integrate self-care into your daily schedule. Even Buddha
insisted that he have one hour completely to himself every day. There
are times when even that will not be possible—for example, with a new
baby or a sick relative. At times like this, retreating inward
energetically can be a lifesaver. You can always find five minutes to
close your eyes and breathe consciously. You may even be able to
meditate.
Most of the time, though, it is
possible to set aside a full hour for yourself each day. In addition,
scheduling a longer interval of time, perhaps on a weekly basis, can
really help to restore your energy. Get a massage or go to a movie or
out with a friend. Taking time to experience the world outside of your
home makes returning home all the more wonderful. In the same way,
taking care of yourself is a natural complement to taking care of your
home and family. Published with permission from Daily OM
************************************
A Day At A Time
Reflection For The Day
Not in my wildest dreams could I have
imagined the rewards that would be mine when I first contemplated
turning my life and will over to the care of God as I understand Him.
Now I can rejoice in the blessing of my own recovery, as well as the
recoveries of countless others who have found hope and a new way of
life in The Program. After all the years of waste and terror, I realize
today that God has always been on my side and at my side. Isn’t my
clearer understanding of God’s will one of the best things that has
happened to me?
Today I Pray
May I be thankful for the blessed
contrast between the way my life used to be (Part 1) and the way it is
now (Part II). In Part I, I was the practicing addict, adrift among my
fears and delusions. In Part II, I am the recovering addict,
rediscovering my emotions, accepting my responsibilities, learning what
the real world has to offer, growing close to my Higher Power. Without
the contrast, I could never feel the joy I know today or sense the
peaceful nearness of my Higher Power.
Today I Will Remember
I am grateful for such contrast.
************************************
One More Day
Quote:He that can’t endure the bad,
will not live to see the good.
– Yiddish Proverb
Maturity means taking thee bitter with
the sweet. Wisdom is the realization that sometimes the two are
interrelated. An we might have been bitter because quality of our lives
was changed.
Now, with a clearer perspective and
greater maturity, we realize that many of the sweeter aspects of our
lives today have grown out of our learning to cope with chronic
illness. We live more in the moment, rather than always pursuing some
distant goal. Our values reflect a stronger sense of self; they
emphasize people over things. For many of us, the growth, the joy, and
the self-esteem that now sweeten our lives come from the bitter
experiences of chronic illness.
I accept that my life experiences will
be both good and bad. Although my illness is unwanted. I have been
strengthen by it.
************************************
Food For Thought
Relying on God
As compulsive overeaters, we relied on food to pick us up, calm us
down, console us, excite us, help us, and sustain us. Since food was
inadequate to do all of these things, we had to eat more and more until
we became physically and emotionally addicted.
Recovery from our disease requires that dependency on food be replaced
by dependency on a Higher Power. Only God, as each of us understands
Him, is capable of supporting us at all times and in all situations.
Food simply will not work. If we are not controlled by our Higher
Power, we will be controlled by our addiction to compulsive overeating.
At first, we find it difficult to rely on a Power we cannot see. Our
materialistic orientation makes us distrustful of the things that are
of the spirit. Gradually, we come to believe as we witness the work of
God through OA. We see evidence of His activity in our own lives, and
we sense the peace and security that He gives. Reliance on God is our
strength.
I depend on You for recovery.
*****************************************
One Day At A Time
Looking for Love
“The most important thing in life
is to learn how to give out love,
and to let it come in.”
Morrie Schwartz
As a compulsive overeater I was always
looking outside of myself for love, yet I was terrified of letting it
in. “What if it hurts me once I let it in?” I was just as afraid of
giving out love. “What if I lost myself or was taken advantage of?” My
life was ruled by fear, and at a very young age I discovered the false
security of food. I used food as a source of companionship and as a way
to numb out my pain. It became a substitute for love.
As the disease gained control, the
more I ate and the more shut down I became. I built huge walls around
myself. As the weight came on, I was convinced that this was the reason
people didn’t love me the way that I wanted to be loved. I believed
that “if only I was thin enough” I would get what I wanted. It never
occurred to me that I was already so full of the food that there was no
room inside to receive anything else.
When I came into program and began to
put down the food, I slowly discovered that this love that I was
searching for was within me all along. My Higher Power is love and
dwells within and all around me. In recovery I am graced with the
freedom to act out of love and therefore be with my Higher Power.
One day at a time...
I will choose to act out of love and
to keep my heart open to the love that my Higher Power brings into my
life. If I just open my eyes, my ears and my heart, it is everywhere.
~ Jessica M.
*****************************************
AA 'Big Book' - Quote
This world of ours has made more
material progress in the last century than in all the millenniums which
went before. Almost everyone knows the reason. Students of ancient
history tell us that the intellect of men in those days was equal to
the best of today. Yet in ancient times material progress was painfully
slow. The spirit of modern scientific inquiry, research and invention
was almost unknown. In the realm of the material, men's minds were
fettered by superstition, tradition, and all sorts of fixed ideas. Some
of the contemporaries of Columbus though a round earth preposterous.
Others came near putting Galileo to death for his astronomical heresies.
We asked ourselves this: Are not some
of us just as biased and unreasonable about the realm of the spirit as
were the ancients about the realm of the material? - Pg. 51 - We
Agnostics
Hour To Hour - Book - Quote
There is a certain universality to the
truths taught in our 12 step programs. They are nothing new. These
principles are derived from eons of experience and spirituality. What
is new is our personal understanding that living these principles gives
us a reprieve from our addiction.
Thank you God, as I understand You,
for my daily reprieve from addiction based on my sincere attempt to
practice these principles.
Owning My Own Anger Responsibly
Today, I am willing to take
responsibility for the anger that I carry within me. I am not a bad
person because I feel angry. No one wants to think of himself or
herself as an angry person, and I am no exception. But when I refuse to
acknowledge the anger and resentment that I have stored within me, (1)
I turn my back on me and refuse to accept a very important part of
myself, and (2) I ask the people close to me to hold my feelings for
me, to be the containers of my unconscious or the feelings inside me
that I do not wish to see. Because I deny my anger to myself does not
mean that it goes away. Today, I am willing to consider that there
might be something more to it, that I may be carrying feelings of anger
that I need to accept.
- Tian Dayton PhD
Pocket Sponsor - Book - Quote
Want to know about your Spiritual
Source? 'It is a simple procedure to calculate the number of seeds in
an apple. But who among us can ever say how many apples are in a seed?'
~Dr. Wayne Dyer, Everyday Wisdom
Even though I feel very small when the
stars come out at night, I remember that I, too, am made of stardust.
"Walk Softly and Carry a Big Book" - Book
Don't believe in miracles. Rely on
them.
Time for Joy - Book - Quote
I am full of joy in the discovery that
I am okay just the way I am. Today I can accept all of me today and
that is a miracle.
Alkiespeak - Book - Quote
I don't have to figure out God's will
for me anymore. God's will is defined for me by taking Steps 10 and 11.
Because it's all a process of weeding out everything which isn't God's
will. - Cindy F.
*****************************************
AA Thought for the Day
October 18
Hangovers
When a drunk has a terrific hangover
because he drank heavily yesterday, he cannot live well today.
But there is another kind of hangover
which we all experience whether we are drinking or not.
That is the emotional hangover, the
direct result of yesterday's and sometimes today's excesses of negative
emotion
--
anger, fear, jealousy, and the like.
If we would live serenely today and
tomorrow, we certainly need to eliminate these hangovers.
This doesn't mean we need to wander
morbidly around in the past.
It requires an admission and
correction of errors now.
- Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions,
pp. 88-89
Thought to Ponder . . .
Make a change, move a muscle.
AA-related 'Alconym' . . .
N O W = No Other Way.
~*~A.A. Thoughts For The Day~*~
Touchy
"Many of us have been so touchy
that even casual reference to
spiritual things
make us bristle with antagonism.
This sort of thinking had to be
abandoned.
Though some of us resisted,
we found no great difficulty in
casting aside such feelings.
Faced with alcoholic destruction,
we soon became as open minded on
spiritual matters
as we had tried to be on other
questions.
In this respect alcohol was a great
persuader.
It finally beat us into a state of
reasonableness.
Sometimes this was a tedious process;
we hope no one else will prejudiced
for as long as
some of us were."
c.1976AAWS, Alcoholics Anonymous, p.
48
Thought to Consider . . .
The solution is simple.
The solution is spiritual.
*~*~*AACRONYMS*~*~*
A A = Altered Attitudes
*~*~*~*~*^Just For Today!^*~*~*~*~*
Inspiration
>From "When A.A. Came of Age":
"There came next to the lectern [at
the 1955 Convention] a figure that not many A.A.'s had seen before, the
Episcopal clergyman Sam Shoemaker. It was from him that Dr. Bob and I
[Bill W.] in the beginning had absorbed most of the principles that
were afterward embodied in the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous,
steps that express the heart of A.A.'s way of life. Dr. Silkworth gave
us the needed knowledge of our illness, but Sam Shoemaker had given us
the concrete knowledge of what we could do about it. One showed us the
mysteries of the lock that held us in prison; the other passed on the
spiritual keys by which we were liberated."
2001 AAWS, Inc.; Alcoholics Anonymous
Comes of Age, pgs. 38-39
*~*~*~*~*^ Grapevine Quote ^*~*~*~*~*
"One day leads to the next, no matter
how unhappy I choose to be."
Sioux Rapids, IA, January 2004
"Adult Love,"
No Matter What: Dealing with
Adversity in Sobriety
*~*~*~*~*^ Big Book & Twelve N'
Twelve Quotes of the Day ^*~*~*~*~*
"Doubtless you are curious to
discover how and why, in the face of
expert opinion to the contrary, we
have recovered from a hopeless
condition of mind and body. If you
are an alcoholic who wants to get
over it, you may already be asking
What do I have to do?"
It is the purpose of this book to
answer such questions specifically.
We shall tell you what we have done.
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
There Is A Solution, Page 20~
' I realize that all I'm guaranteed
in life is today. The poorest person has no less and the wealthiest has
no more--each of us has but one day. What we do with it is our own
business; how we use it is up to us individually.
I feel that I have been restored to
health and sanity these past years not through my own efforts nor as a
result of anything I may have done, but because I've come to
believe--to really believe--that alone I can do nothing. That my own
innate selfishness and stubbornness are the evils which which, if left
unguarded, can drive me to alcohol.'
-Alcoholics Anonymous p.473
Some of us have tried to hold on to
our old ideas and the result was nil until we let go absolutely.
-Alcoholics Anonymous p.58
Already a willingness has been
achieved to cast out one's own will and one's own ideas about the
alcohol problem in favor of those suggested by A.A.
-Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
p.35
Misc. AA Literature - Quote
I believe that when we were active
alcoholics we drank mostly to kill pain of one kind or another -
physical or emotional or psychic. Of course, everybody has a cracking
point, and I suppose you reached yours - hence, the resort once more to
the bottle.
'If I were you, I wouldn't heap
devastating blame on myself for this; on the other hand, the experience
should redouble your conviction that alcohol has no permanent value as
a pain-killer?'
In every A.A. story, pain has been
the price of admission into a new life. But this admission price
purchased more than we expected. It led us to a measure of humility,
which we soon discovered to be a healer of pain. We began to fear pain
less, and desire humility more than ever.
Prayer for the Day: First Things First - Dear Higher Power,
remind me: To tidy up my own mind, To keep my sense of values straight,
To sort out the possible and the impossible, To turn the impossible
over to you, And get busy on the possible.