LOVE AND FEAR AS OPPOSITES
All these failings generate fear, a soul-sickness in its own right.
TWELVE STEPS AND TWELVE TRADITIONS, p. 49
"Fear knocked at the door; faith answered; no one was there." I
don't know to whom this quote should be attributed, but it certainly
indicates clearly that fear is an illusion. I create the illusion
myself.
I experienced fear early in my life and I mistakenly thought that the
mere presence of it made me a coward. I didn't know that one of the
definitions of "courage" is "the willingness to do the right thing in
spite of fear." Courage, then, is not necessarily the absence of fear.
During the times I didn't have love in my life I most assuredly had
fear. To fear God is to be afraid of joy. In looking back, I realize
that, during the times I feared God most, there was no joy in my life.
As I learned not to fear God, I also learned to experience joy.
***********************************************************
Twenty-Four Hours A Day
A.A. Thought For The Day
Every time we go to an A.A. meeting, every time we say the Lord's
Prayer, every time we have a quiet time before breakfast, we're
paying a premium on our insurance against taking that first drink. And
every time we help another alcoholic, we're making a large payment
on our drink insurance. We're making sure that our policy doesn't
lapse. Am I building up an endowment in serenity, peace, and
happiness that will put me on easy street for the rest of my life?
Meditation For The Day
I gain faith by my own experience of God's power in my life. The
constant, persistent recognition of God's spirit in all my personal
relationships, the ever accumulating weight of evidence in support of
God's guidance, the numberless instances in which seeming chance or
wonderful coincidence can be traced to God's purpose in my life. All
these things gradually engender a feeling of wonder, humility, and
gratitude to God. These in turn are followed by a more sure and
abiding faith in God and His purposes.
Prayer For The Day
I pray that my faith may be strengthened every day. I pray that I may
find confirmation of my life in the good things that have come into my
life.
***********************************************************
As Bill Sees It
Learn in
Quiet, p. 108
In 1941, a news clipping was called to our attention by a New York
member. In an obituary notice from a local paper, there appeared
these words: "God grant us the serenity to accept the things we
cannot change, the courage to change the things we can, and the
wisdom to know the difference."
Never had we seen so much A.A. in so few words. With amazing
speed the Serenity Prayer came into general use.
<< << << >> >> >>
In meditation, debate has no place. We rest quietly with the thoughts
or prayers of spiritually centered people who understand, so that we
may experience and learn. This is the state of being that so often
discovers and deepens a conscious contact with God.
1. A.A. Comes Of Age, p. 196
2. 12 & 12, pp. 101-100
***********************************************************
Walk in Dry Places
We can't go home again….
Living here and now.
Despite all evidence that we must live for today, some of us persist in
trying to recapture the past. We may be holding a few good
memories that we would like to bring alive today. More likely, we
may also be re-fighting old battles in the hope that this time we'll
come out winners.
But since change is taking place everywhere at every moment, we can
never return to any previous place or time. Time does march on,
and we are part of the parade. Whether we were winners or losers in the
past, we can live only in the here and now.
The good news is that we can retain any lessons from the past and put
them to use today. If we have scalding memories of twisted
relationships, we can remind ourselves that growth and understanding
now place us out of harm’s way. And if we remember the things that did
turn our right even in the confused past, we can reflect that even
greater good is possible today.
Our home is never in the past. It is in the time and place where we are
today. As we make the best of it, all of our future homes in place and
time will improve, for “in God’s house are many mansions.”
Accepting the value of all of its lessons, I will close the door firmly
on the past, knowing that I must devote all of my interest and energies
to the present moment.
***********************************************************
Keep It Simple
We create revolution by living it.---Jerry
Rubin
There’s a lot wrong in the world---Child abuse, homeless and hungry
people, pollution. Our old way of dealing with these troubles was to
break the rules or to “drop out” by using chemicals.
Now we have a new way to change the world. We’re changing ourselves.
One Day at a Time, we’re acting like the caring , responsible people we
want to be. We use the ideas of the program in our lives.
We’re kinder. We’re more honest. We stand up for ourselves and for
others who need our help. What if the whole world started working the
Steps? What a wonderful world this would be!
Prayer for the Day: Higher Power, please work through me today.
Help me make the world a little better place.
Action for the Day: I’ll list one thing that brothers me about
the world today. How can using the ideas of the program help solve that
problem? Remember, the program tells us to look at our own behavior.
***********************************************************
Each Day a New Beginning
I can stand what I know. It's what I don't know that frightens
me. --Frances Newton
Fear of the unknown, often referred to as free-floating anxiety,
catches up to us on occasion. But it needn't. The program offers us
strength whenever we need it, and faith diminishes all fear. It is said
that fear cannot exist where there is faith.
We have many days when we feel strong, in touch with our higher power,
able to meet all situations. On those days, we are seldom conscious of
how our faith is guiding us. But the hours of fear that we experience
on other days make us aware of faith's absence. There is a simple
solution: We can reach out to a friend. We can be attentive to her
needs, and the connection to God will be made.
Shifting our focus, from self-centered fears to another person's needs,
offers us a perspective on our own life. It also offers us a chance to
let God work through us. Our own faith is strengthened each time we
offer our services to God and to a friend in need. What may frighten us
seems less important the closer we are to the people in our lives.
When I touch someone else, God touches me in return.
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition
Chapter 8 - TO WIVES
He probably has several alcoholics among his own acquaintances. You
might suggest that you both take an interest in them. Drinkers like to
help other drinkers. Your husband may be willing to talk to one of them.
p. 112
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition Stories
The Man Who
Mastered Fear
He spent eighteen years in running away, and then found he didn't have
to run. So he started A.A. in Detroit.
It would be wonderful were I able to tell you that my confidence in God
and my application of the Twelve Steps to my daily living have utterly
banished fear. But this would not be the truth. The most
accurate answer I can give you is this: Fear has never again
ruled my life since that day In September 1938, when I found that a
Power greater than myself could not only restore me to sanity but could
keep me both sober and sane. Never in sixteen years have I dodged
anything because I was afraid of it. I have faced life instead of
running away from it.
pp. 255-256
***********************************************************
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
Step Eleven - "Sought
through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God
as we understood Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for us and
the power to carry that out."
In A.A. we have found that the actual good results of prayer are beyond
question. They are matters of knowledge and experience. All those who
have persisted have found strength not ordinarily their own. They have
found wisdom beyond their usual capability. And they have increasingly
found a peace of mind which can stand firm in the face of difficult
circumstances.
p. 104
***********************************************************
See
with
your
heart
not
with
your
eyes for beauty lies everywhere.
The mind reasons. The heart knows.
Take the first step in faith. You don't have to see the whole staircase,
just take the first step.
--Martin Luther King Jr.
God, help me take guided action, then surrender to your will. Help me
remember that true power comes from aligning my will, intentions, and
desires with you.
--Melody Beattie
God, help me learn to take care of myself and live with passion,
compassion, and an open heart.
--Melody Beattie
Before you criticize a man, walk a mile in his shoes. That way, when
you do criticize him, you'll be a mile away and have his shoes.
--Unknown
Compromise often leads to the solution to a problem, so keep your
heart open to it.
God is with us through all the changes in our lives.
--Greg Faggart
***********************************************************
Father Leo's Daily
Meditation
POWER
"Power does not corrupt. Fear
corrupts, perhaps the fear of loss
of power."
--John Steinbeck
In my recovery I am beginning to understand that so much "power" in
the world is really fear. The power that seeks to attack first in order
to feel secure is really fear. The power that always has to have an
answer is really fear. The power that arrogantly refuses to listen is
really fear. So much power is "fear" dressed in illusion!
Spiritual power has the ability to be vulnerable. It can live with
confusion. It can stand alone. It allows others to walk away to pursue
their happiness. Spiritual power can exist in suffering and loneliness,
and it does not expect perfection.
My recovery is teaching me to live and let others live, too. My
freedom must respect the freedom of others; respect is a two-way
street!
Give me the power that can rest in imperfection.
***********************************************************
"My child, do not forget my teaching, but let your heart keep my
commandments; for length of days and years of life and abundant
welfare they will give you."
Proverbs 3:1
***********************************************************
Daily Inspiration
It's very possible that our problems may not be as big as they seem and
could sometimes actually be a blessing. Lord, I place my trust in You
to see me through my trials and help me to become a stronger and wiser
person because of them.
Enthusiasm will be yours if you love God, love people, and love life.
Lord, the nearer I follow Your way, the happier I become.
***********************************************************
NA Just For Today
Priority: Meetings
"I initially felt that it would be
impossible to attend more than one or two meetings a week. It just
wouldn't fit in with my busy schedule. I later learned that my
priorities were [180] degrees reversed. It was the everything else that
would have to fit into my meeting schedule."
Basic Text p. 204
Some of us attended meetings
infrequently when we first came to Narcotics Anonymous, then wondered
why we couldn't stay clean. What we soon learned was that if we wanted
to stay clean, we had to make meeting attendance our priority.
So we began again. Following our
sponsor's suggestion, we made a commitment to attend ninety meetings in
ninety days. We identified ourselves as newcomers for our first thirty
days so that others could get to know us. At our sponsor's direction,
we stopped talking long enough to learn to listen. We soon began to
look forward to meetings. And we began to stay clean.
Today, we attend meetings for a
variety of reasons. Sometimes we go to meetings to share our
experience, strength, and hope with newer members. Sometimes we go to
see our friends. And sometimes we go just because we need a hug.
Occasionally we leave a meeting and realize that we haven't really
heard a word that's been said—but we still feel better The atmosphere
of love and joy that fills our meetings has kept us clean another day.
No matter how hectic our schedule, we make meeting attendance our
priority.
Just for today: In my heart, I know
that meetings benefit me in all kinds of ways. Today, I want what's
good for me. I will attend a meeting.
pg. 111
***********************************************************
You are reading from the book Today's
Gift.
If your heart catches in your throat
ask a bird how she sings. --Cooper Edens
The idea of your heart getting caught
in your throat and then asking a bird how she sings may seem silly. It
is, but being silly is sometimes exactly what we need. Instead of
always trying to figure out the lumps in our throats, we can learn how
to sing with them.
Birds sing all day. Their songs are
lighthearted and playful. And they bring us color along with their
songs. We have all stopped to notice a special bird outside the window.
A bird song can be a lullaby. It can be laughter. We need these things
in our lives, too. By playing and laughing, we change the lumps in our
throats to songs.
What sadness can I turn into song
today?
You are reading from the book
Touchstones.
It is extraordinary how extraordinary
the ordinary person is. --George F. Will
At our meetings, we often hear stories
of the courage of ordinary people and their triumph against great odds.
When we hear of a person's life being restored, we are witnesses to
miracles. Our friends are heroes and so are we. As a man describes his
passage from insanity to recovery, we are moved. Whenever we are truly
open to knowing the people around us, whether at a meeting or in
getting to know a neighbor, we will see heroism. It is amazing that
when we get to know most people, and hear what their lives have been
like, we find so much to admire and respect. It is a privilege to have
such friends. It is amazing that they are so abundant when we open
ourselves to them. God truly does speak to us through others.
I am grateful when I think about the
extraordinary people around me and the courage in each of them. I am
grateful to be among them.
You are reading from the book Each Day
a New Beginning.
I can stand what I know. It's what I
don't know that frightens me. --Frances Newton
Fear of the unknown, often referred to
as free-floating anxiety, catches up to us on occasion. But it needn't.
The program offers us strength whenever we need it, and faith
diminishes all fear. It is said that fear cannot exist where there is
faith.
We have many days when we feel strong,
in touch with our higher power, able to meet all situations. On those
days, we are seldom conscious of how our faith is guiding us. But the
hours of fear that we experience on other days make us aware of faith's
absence. There is a simple solution: We can reach out to a friend. We
can be attentive to her needs, and the connection to God will be made.
Shifting our focus, from self-centered
fears to another person's needs, offers us a perspective on our own
life. It also offers us a chance to let God work through us. Our own
faith is strengthened each time we offer our services to God and to a
friend in need. What may frighten us seems less important the closer we
are to the people in our lives.
When I touch someone else, God touches
me in return.
You are reading from the book The
Language of Letting Go.
Taking Care of Ourselves
We often refer to recovery from
codependency and adult child issues as self care. Self care is not, as
some may think, a spin off of the me generation. It isn't
self-indulgence. It isn't selfishness - in the negative interpretation
of that word.
Were learning to take care of
ourselves, instead of obsessively focusing on another person. Were
learning self-responsibility, instead of feeling excessively
responsible for others. Self care also means tending to our true
responsibilities to others; we do this better when were not feeling
overly responsible.
Self care sometimes means, me first,
but usually, me too. It means we are responsible for ourselves and can
choose to no longer be victims.
Self care means learning to love the
person were responsible for taking care of - ourselves. We do not do
this to hibernate in a cocoon of isolation and self indulgence; we do
it so we can better love others, and learn to let them love us.
Self-care isn't selfish; its
self-esteem.
Today, God, help me love myself. Help
me let go of feeling excessively responsible for those around me. Show
me what I need to do to take care of myself and be appropriately
responsible to others.
Today I choose to think positive and
loving thoughts. I know that if I do this I will feel loving and
positive and create a positive and loving world for those around me.
--Ruth Fishel
******************************************
Journey To The Heart
Listen to the Voice of Your Heart
Cultivate the art of listening to your
intuition, your inner voice. This is the guidance of your heart. It’s a
voice that speaks differently from the one in your head. The heart
whispers softly, the head prattles loudly.
The head has an agenda for our lives.
It chatters away boldly, but its vision is limited. It leaves no room
for the mysterious workings of the universe, nor does it take into
account the side trips we need to get where we’re going, where our
souls need to go. It’s the voice that says, This is the way it’s going
to be.
The heart, the inner voice, speaks
differently. Sometimes it whispers. Sometimes it pulls. Sometimes it
pushes. It’s spontaneous, in the present moment, and often a surprise.
The heart takes into account what has to be done and the best way to do
that. The heart takes emotions into account– the way things feel, the
way you feel, the wisdom of your soul. The heart leads us into and
through the lessons we’re here to learn.
Cultivate your inner voice. Practice
listening to the whispers of your heart. Practice trusting your
intuition, what you really feel, what you really know. Practice until
that voice is the one that you hear.
Be patient. Be gentle. Let yourself
learn to hear the gentle and trustworthy words of your heart.
******************************************
More Language Of Letting Go
Keep your balance
Sometimes, our legitimate needs and
wants run amuck.
We want something so badly– for
instance our spouse sobering up, or that job, or that woman or that
man– that we begin to obsess and dwell. We take ourselves out of that
place of balance and end up in a no-win tailspin.
It’s not that what we want and need is
bad for us. It’s just that right now, what we want isn’t, obviously,
taking place. Don’t take it out on yourself by judging yourself wrong.
Don’t take it out on your needs by telling yourself you shouldn’t have
any.
Relax. Come back to center, to that
clear, balanced place.
Don’t let your needs and desires run
away with you. Yes, passion is great stuff. Identify what you want.
Then let it go. And ask God what your lesson is.
Today, I will come back to balance
with any need or want that seems to be controlling my life. Instead of
dwelling on it, I’ll give it to God and focus on taking care of myself.
******************************************
In God’s Care
Example is not the main thing in
influencing others. It is the only thing.
~~Albert Schweitzer
Throughout our life we’ve been
influenced by other people’s behavior and opinions. Many of us were
influenced by very poor examples in earlier years. And we may have to
pray for help rather than continuing to follow those poor examples now.
But all around us are people who are healthy, loving, and honest. We
are invited to emulate their behavior.
Acting As If can help us develop new
behaviors. We may not feel very comfortable reaching out to a program
newcomer or making conversation with someone we’ve just met, but we can
do it. And in time, with practice, we’ll discover we’ve added a
positive dimension to our character, one that influences the lives of
other people who struggle just like us. All of us, Acting As If in
positive ways, offer wonderful examples of behavior change. We
reinforce our own changes, and each others every time we are thoughtful
before we act.
With my Higher Power’s help, I will be
a good example for someone today.
******************************************
Raising Our Consciousness
Stepping out from Where We Were
by Madisyn Taylor
We cannot gain a sense of power in our
lives while identifying ourselves as a victim.
Albert Einstein said, “No problem can
be solved from the same consciousness that created it. We must learn to
see the world anew.” A Nobel Prize winner, Albert Einstein’s scientific
theories transformed the world’s understanding of the universe and its
workings, so we can believe that these words come from his personal
experience and helped him to explore both science and life itself. He
offered us an example of what can be learned by looking deeply into
nature to reach a deeper understanding of all life and by following our
ideas to their logical conclusions in our minds before acting upon them
in the world.
When we apply this quote to our lives,
we can see that we cannot create abundance by staying in a
consciousness of poverty, nor can we gain a sense of power in our lives
while identifying ourselves as a victim. Situations begun from anger or
fear can have little chance of reaching a state of peace and trust
unless someone involved can conceive of that possibility and act upon
it. We need to find ways to step outside of our limited understanding
in order to seek a bigger picture. One way to do this is to shift our
perspective to see the situation from another’s point of view and
ideally the perspective of all others involved. Even if we can’t truly
know another’s motivations, by imagining what they might be, we open
ourselves up to numerous possibilities and an expanded vision. This
alone can shift our feelings of anger to compassion and the desire for
a positive solution for all involved.
Once we have opened our mind to
greater possibilities, we can connect to our higher self for inspired
solutions. From the peace at our center, we gain distance from our
emotions to connect to intuitive wisdom that offers us understanding of
the underlying causes and the inspiration needed to guide our steps in
a new direction. Albert Einstein showed us the impact that can be made
when we raise our consciousness and allow ourselves to imagine the
possibilities. Published with permission from Daily OM
******************************************
A Day At A Time
Reflection For The Day
The Program teaches me to remain on
guard against impatience, lapses into self-pity, and resentments of the
words and deeds of others. Though I must never forget what it used to
be like, neither should I permit myself to take tormenting excursions
into the past — merely for the sake of self-indulgent morbidity. Now
that I’m alert to the danger signals, I know I’m improving day by day.
If a crisis arises, or any problem baffles me, do I hold it up to the
light of the Serenity Prayer?
Today I Pray
I pray for perspective as I review the
past. May I curb my impulses to upstage and outdo the members of my
group by regaling them with the horrors of my addiction. May I no
longer use the past to document my self-pity or submerge myself in
guilt. May memories of those miserable earlier days serve me only as
sentinels, guarding against hazardous situations or unhealthy sets of
mind.
Today I Will Remember
I cannot change the past.
******************************************
One More Day
The Great and glorious masterpiece of
man is to know how to live to purpose.
– Montaigne
When we undergo any crisis, it’s quite
common for self-esteem to take a plunge. If life seems to hand us one
crisis after another, our feelings of self-worth may vary from day to
day. Once we get used to the newest change (perhaps this time it is
diminished health) we begin to realize that only we are capable of
nurturing ourselves.
We can solve some of our problems by
setting new, more realistic goals, goals that we can reach
successfully. Then our damaged self-esteem can start to become whole
once again.
I am capable of taking better care of
myself by setting challenging goals and by doing things I love to do.
************************************
Food For Thought
Easy Does It
Strain and struggle abound when we try to do everything ourselves, our
way. We want positive change to occur immediately and expect miracles
to happen according to our personal timetable. We sometimes feel that
if our Higher Power is guiding us, we should be able to accomplish
great and marvelous things constantly.
To remember "easy does it" is to humbly realize that we are not all
powerful and that God does not expect us to be all things to all
people. Growth is slow, time belongs to God, and change will occur
according to His plan. If we do the jobs we have been given for this
24-hour period, our Higher Power will take care of tomorrow.
How much more agreeable life is when we do not overextend ourselves but
admit our weakness and trust God to take care of us. We do not shirk
our share, but we do not try to carry the whole load. Only our Higher
Power is strong enough to do that.
Take from our lives the strain and stress.
*****************************************
One Day At A Time
~ FORGIVENESS
Forgiving is not forgetting; it's
letting go of the hurt.
Mary McCleod Bethune
When I first came into the program, I
was so fired up with anger and resentment that I had no space for any
other emotions. After all, I had the food which would anesthetize me
against any emotions I didn't want to feel. I was angry with God for
all the trauma and losses that had happened to me in my life. I blamed
my mother for not being the kind of mother I wanted, which was, of
course, why I ate. But the person towards whom I felt the most anger
and resentment was my ex-husband, who never financially supported my
children, making my financial burden and my present husband's very
heavy. What made it worse was that he was good to the children and they
thought he was great because they would have fun with him on a weekend,
while we had all the financial responsibilty and resulting worry.
But when I came to Step Eight, my
sponsor gently reminded me that I needed to forgive the people towards
whom I felt the most anger, namely my mother and my ex-husband. My
mother had passed away and so I had to write a long letter to her,
forgiving her for not being the person I wanted her to be and also
making amends to her for my part in it all. I realize now that she did
the best she knew how, just as I have done with my children, and I have
been able to forgive her with love. When it came to forgiving my
ex-husband, I knew that I wasn't able forgive him in person, but I was
able to write a letter to him which I never sent. In it, I forgave him
for being the irresponsible person that he is. It was like a weight had
been lifted from my shoulders. When my younger daughter had her 21st
birthday, I could be there for her and not spoil it as I had done
before, and in fact, I could be almost friendly to her father. As a
result, the relationship with all my children has improved a
hundredfold, but more importantly, I'm a much better person for it.
One day at a time...
I will forgive the people who have
harmed me, let them go with love, and entrust them to their Higher
Power.
~ Sharon ~
*****************************************
AA 'Big Book' - Quote
Follow the dictates of a Higher Power
and you will presently live in a new and wonderful world, no matter
what your present circumstances! - Pg. 100 - Working With Others
Hour To Hour - Book - Quote
My sponsor told me to listen to
people, that anyone (even people that I hate or have resentments
towards) are right over half the time. (Bryan C.)
Giving of Myself
I will not give things instead of
love. I will recognize that the people who need and depend on me for
that sustaining kind of love and attention will be hurt and confused if
I ignore their real need for me. I need to give those who are close to
me real love. They have cast their fate with mine and I owe them this.
They depend on me and I need to understand that and step up to the
plate and do what's necessary and right. I will also be appropriately
grateful, when those I need and depend upon give me the caring and
concern that nourishes my heart.
I give of my time and attention
- Tian Dayton PhD
Pocket Sponsor - Book - Quote
It is not unusual for people to say
something and then consider it done. They forget to actually do it. Do
not say 'I will go to more meetings; I will get a sponsor soon; I must
work with newcomers,' then consider it done. You must actually do these
things to have them work for you.
I let go of doing life in my head.
"Walk Softly and Carry a Big Book" - Book
When we dwell on the problem, the
problem gets bigger. When we dwell on the solution, the solution gets
bigger.
Time for Joy - Book - Quote
I will open myself up to all the
possibilities around me today, leaving my fear of change behind.
Alkiespeak - Book - Quote
The person I was drank. The person I
was will drink again. - Anon.
*****************************************
AA Thought for the Day
April 17
Fear
For all its usual destructiveness, we
have found that fear can be the starting point for better things.
Fear can be a stepping-stone to
prudence and to a decent respect for others.
It can point the path to justice, as
well as to hate.
And the more we have of respect and
justice, the more we shall begin to find the love
which can suffer much, and yet be
freely given. So fear need not always be destructive,
because the lessons of its
consequences can lead us to positive values.
The Language of the Heart, April 2014
Thought to Ponder . . .
Breathe in faith, breathe out fear.
AA-related 'Alconym' . . .
O D A A T = One Day At A Time.
~*~A.A. Thoughts For The Day~*~
Rationalization
"We 'constructively criticized'
someone who needed it,
when our real motive was to win a
useless argument.
We were depressed and complained we
felt bad,
when in fact we were mainly asking for
sympathy and attention.
This odd trait of mind and emotion,
this perverse wish to hide a bad motive
underneath a good one,
permeates human affairs from top to
bottom.
Learning daily to spot, admit, and
correct these flaws
is the essence of character-building
and good living."
Bill W., Twelve Steps and Twelve
Traditions, pp. 94-5
Thought to Consider . . .
A victim is a spectator in his life.
*~*~*AACRONYMS*~*~*
FEAR
Face Everything And Recover!
*~*~*~*~*^Just For Today!^*~*~*~*~*
Anonymity
From "The Three Legacies of Alcoholics
Anonymous":
"The intense drive that most of us
alcoholics have for money, prestige, and power then crashed into the
open by way of
broken anonymity at the public level.
This development of the 1945-1950 period was made even more dangerous
by the
fact that most of the anonymity
breakers meant well. Sometimes these folks wanted to use the A.A. name
publicly in
order to help other good causes.
Sometimes they just wanted their names and pictures in the papers
always, of
course, to help A.A. [W]e saw that the
risk to A.A. would be appalling if all our power-drivers finally got
loose at the
public level. Scores of them were
already doing it.
"So A.A. Headquarters got to work. We
wrote remonstrances, kind ones, of course, to every breaker. We sent
letters to
nearly all press, radio, and
publishing outlets, explaining why A.A.'s should not break their
anonymity before the general
public. Group feeling, combined with
the Headquarters efforts, finally squeezed the anonymity breakers down
to a mere
handful within a few years. Had this
tendency not been checked, the whole character of our society could
have
changed, and its future could have
been fearfully compromised."
2001 AAWS, Inc.; Alcoholics Anonymous
Comes of Age, pg. 209
*~*~*~*~*^ Grapevine Quote ^*~*~*~*~*
"If we dwell on the past or the future
... we stop changing."
September 1974
"Awareness"
AA Grapevine
~*~*~*~*^ Big Book & Twelve N' Twelve
Quotes of the Day ^*~*~*~*~*
"It is easy to let up on the spiritual
program of action and rest on
our laurels. We are headed for trouble
if we do, for alcohol is a
subtle foe. We are not cured of
alcoholism. What we really have is
a daily reprieve contingent on the
maintenance of our spiritual condition."
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
Into Action, pg. 85~
"Our hope is that when this chip of a
book is launched on the world
tide of alcoholism, defeated drinkers
will seize upon it, to follow
its suggestions. Many, we are sure,
will rise to their feet and march
on. They will approach still other
sick ones and fellowships of
Alcoholics Anonymous may spring up in
each city and hamlet, havens
for those who must find a way out."
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition, A
Vision For You, Page 153~
The book ”Alcoholics Anonymous” became
the basic text of the Fellowship, and it still is.
-Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions p.
17
Misc. AA Literature - Quote
Two Kinds of Pride
The prideful righteousness of 'good
people' may often be just as destructive as the glaring sins of those
who are supposedly not so good.
We loved to shout the damaging fact
that millions of the 'good men of religion' were still killing one
another off in the
name of God. This all meant, of
course, that we had substituted negative for positive thinking.
After we came to A.A., we had to
recognize that this trait had been an ego-feeding proposition. In
belaboring the sins of
some religious people, we could feel
superior to all of them. Moreover, we could avoid looking at some of
our own shortcomings.
Self-righteousness, the very thing
that we had contemptuously condemned in others, was our own besetting
evil. This
phony form of respectability was our
undoing, so far as faith was concerned. But finally, driven to A.A., we
learned better.
1. GRAPEVINE, AUGUST 1961
2. TWELVE AND TWELVE, P. 30
Prayer For The Day: Dear Lord, I ask for your help as I face
today. Please help me and guide me so I may do the right things.