LIVING OUR
AMENDS
"Years of living with an alcoholic is almost sure to make any
wife or child neurotic. The entire family is to some extent,
ill."
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS, p. 122
It is important for me to realize that, as an alcoholic, I not
only hurt myself, but also those around me. Making amends to
my family, and to the families of alcoholics still suffering,
will always be important. Understanding the havoc I created
and trying to repair the destruction, will be a lifelong
endeavor. The example of my sobriety may give others hope,
and faith to help themselves.
***********************************************************
Twenty-Four Hours A Day
A.A. Thought For The Day
In A.A. we have to reeducate our minds. We have to learn to
think differently. We have to take a long view of drinking
instead of a short view. We have to look through the glass
to what lies beyond it. We have to look through the night
before to the morning after. No matter how good liquor looks
from the short view, we must realize that in the long run it
is poison to us. Have I learned to look through the bottle
to the better life that lies ahead?
Meditation For The Day
If you are honestly trying to live the way you believe God
wants you to live, you can get guidance from God in times of
quiet communion with Him, provided your thoughts are directed
toward God's will and all good things. The attitude of
"Thy will, not mine, be done' leads to clear guidance. Act on
this guidance and you will be led to better things. Your
impulses seem to become less your own and more the leading of
God's spirit acting through your thoughts. Obeyed, they will
bring you the answers to your prayers.
Prayer For The Day
I pray that I may try to think God's thoughts after Him. I
pray that my thoughts may be guided by His thoughts.
***********************************************************
As Bill Sees It
A Saving
Principle, p. 164
The practice of admitting one's defects to another person is, of
course, very ancient.
It has been validated in every century, and it characterizes the lives
of all spiritually
centered and truly religious people.
But today religion is by no means the sole advocate of this saving
principle.
Psychiatrists and psychologists point out the deep need every human
being has for
practical insight and knowledge of his own personal flaws and a
discussion of them with
an understanding and trustworthy person.
So far as alcoholics are concerned, A.A. would go even further. Most of
us would
declare that without a fearless admission of our defects to another
human being, we
could not stay sober. It seems plain that the grace of God will not
enter to expel our
destructive obsessions until we are willing to try this.
12 & 12, pp. 56-57
***********************************************************
Walk in Dry Places
The Boredom Battle
Acceptance and Patience.
All of us have times when we don=t enjoy our sobriety as much as we
feel we should. Thought we're still grateful, we sometimes feel bored
and depressed.
What we have to remember at such times is our bleak history of using
alcohol as a quick fix for boredom. However ruinous and false it
proved to be, alcohol did temporarily bring the miraculous change we
sought.
We thought of alcohol as a means of uplifting our mood. We were
very surprised to learn that it's a really a depressant. Maybe it
lifted us up by depressing our self-doubt and self-criticism.
Whatever the nature of our drinking, we need to stay sober while
fighting our battles with boredom. We can do that by accepting a
bit of boredom without succumbing to it. Meanwhile, we can look
for ways of easing boredom that don=t get us into trouble or lead back
to the
bottle.
I'll not feel guilty or unworthy if boredom strikes me now and
then. Today I'll help manage my long-term boredom tendencies by
practicing acceptance and patience for twenty-four hours.
***********************************************************
Keep It Simple
The reason why worry kills more people than work is that more people
worry than work. ---Robert Frost
Worry---it's a lonely activity. It puts distance between us and others.
Our program is full of ideas about what to do with worry. On Step
Three,
we turn our will and our lives over to God. This includes worry.
Our slogans also suggest what to do with worry. One Day at a Time. Live
and Let Live. Easy Does It. Let Go and Let God. Their main message is
stop worrying. Trust the program. Trust your Higher Power. Everything
will be okay.
Prayer for the Day: Higher Power, I give You my worries. Teach me
how to trust again. I want
to trust in You, my program, and myself.
Action for the Day: I'll write the program slogans listed above
on a piece of paper, and I'll
read them over today. I'll let myself live them today.
***********************************************************
Each Day a New Beginning
Everyday . . . life confronts us with new problems to be solved which
force us to adjust our old programs accordingly.
--Dr. Ann Faraday
Facing the day straight on is occasionally difficult to do. There are
those days we feel like crawling under the covers and staying there,
certain that we can't handle whatever might be asked of us. Maybe today
is one of those days. Perhaps we feel 12 years old, instead of 42. To
consciously behave like a responsible 42-year-old is out of the
question. Acting "as if" is the next best thing, the program tells us,
and it is.
Acting "as if" also comes in handy when only a minor kink interferes
with the day's progression. Most problems don't fit an easy solution or
a familiar one. However, most problems are dispensed with by seeing
them as opportunities for creative response, calmly seeking guidance
and then moving ahead slowly, being aware of the effects of our actions.
Today, and every day, I will have an opportunity to think creatively
and to rely on my inner guide. Instead of dreading the unfamiliar, I
will be glad for it. It's moving me ever closer to understanding life's
mysteries.
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition
Chapter 9 - The Family Afterward
At the very beginning, the couple ought to frankly face the fact that
each will have to yield here and there if the family is going to play
an effective part in the new life. Father will necessarily spend much
time with other alcoholics, but this activity should be balanced. New
acquaintances who know nothing of alcoholism might be made and
thoughtful considerations given their needs. The problems of the
community might engage attention. Though the family has no religious
connections, they may wish to make contact with or take membership in a
religious body.
p. 131
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition Stories
The Keys Of The
Kingdom
This worldly lady helped to develop
A.A. in Chicago and thus passed her keys to many.
By this time, with the doctor's
explanation, the revelations contained in the book, and the
hope-inspiring interview with Mr. T, I was ready and willing to go to
the ends of the earth, if that was what it took, for me to find what
these people had.
pp. 273-274
***********************************************************
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
Tradition Two - "For our
group purpose, there is but one ultimate authority - a loving God as He
may express Himself in our group conscience."
Being the founder, he is at first the boss. Who else could be? Very
soon, though, his assumed authority to run everything begins to be
shared with the first alcoholics he has helped. At this moment, the
benign dictator becomes the chairman of a committee composed of his
friends. These are the growing group's hierarchy of service -
self-appointed, of course, because there is no other way. In a matter
of months, A.A. booms in Middletown.
p. 133
***********************************************************
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
--unknown
The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of
comfort, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.
--Martin Luther King, Jr.
Character cannot be developed in ease and quiet. Only through
experience of trial and suffering can the soul be strengthened, vision
cleared, ambition inspired, and success achieved.
--Helen Keller
Laughter is God's sunshine.
--Anonymous
"A fear faced is a fear erased."
--unknown
When we step off the path it is up to us to step back on it.
--SweetyZee
Faith can take us to a place beyond time and space where God dwells.
--SweetyZee
Faith relieves worry and cares, brings peace and harmony, gives us all
the strength we need.
--SweetyZee
***********************************************
Father Leo's Daily Meditation
WORLD
"We are citizens of the
world; and
the tragedy of our time
is that we
do not know this."
--Woodrow Wilson
In recovery I have learned to "go home" to who I am - and part of this
involves my understanding my place in this vast universe. I am a child
of God and my "family" is not just my immediate blood relatives, but
also the millions of other people that inhabit this planet.
God did not just make me. God does not just love me. God is
concerned for all His children. As an alcoholic I did not have this
attitude and I was always feeling lost and different. I became selfish
and narrow in my lifestyle. Other people were tolerated.
Today I have a "big" God and He has enabled me to grow not only in
my acceptance of self but also in my acceptance of others. Today I am
a citizen of the world and it feels good.
Lord, today I know what it is to belong to the human family. And with
this awareness comes responsibility.
***********************************************************
"Thy
word is a lamp to my feet and a lamp to my path. I have sworn
an oath and confirmed it, to observe thy righteous ordinances."
Psalm 119:105-106
For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to
be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us.
Romans 8:18
If we walk in the light as He Himself is in the light, we have
fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus, His Son,
cleanses us from all sin.
1 John 1:7
"And if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in
you, he who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your
mortal bodies through his Spirit, who lives in you."
Romans 8:11
***********************************************************
Daily Inspiration
The phrase "Never Again" is too large a commitment
and too easily discarded when we stumble. Lord, help me to work on
being a better person today, so that in time, my good habits will
require little or no effort.
Tragedy and suffering often opens the soul to the heights of spiritual
growth. Lord, let the hardships of my life be my prayer and work to
draw You closer and closer.
***********************************************************
NA Just For Today
A Full Life
"The program works a miracle in our
lives....We become free to live."
Basic Text, p. 11
Most of us-if we've been in recovery
for any length of time at all-have heard some member complaining in a
meeting about being terribly overworked, too busy for meetings or
sponsorship or other activities. In fact, we may have been the
complaining member. The days seem so full: job, family and friends,
meetings, activities, sponsorship, step work. "There just aren't enough
hours in the day;" the member complains, "to get everything done and
meet everyone's demands on my time!"
When this happens, usually there's
soft laughter from some of the other members-probably members who had
planned to grumble about the same sort of thing. The laughter stems
from our recognition that we are complaining about the miracle of the
life that is ours today. Not so long ago, few of us were capable of
having any of these "problems" in our life. We devoted all of our
energy to maintaining our active addiction. Today we have full lives,
complete with all the feelings and problems that go with living in
reality.
Just for today: I will remember that
my life is a miracle. Instead of resenting how busy I am, I will be
thankful my life is so full.
***********************************************************
You are reading from the book Today's
Gift.
Let the gentle bush dig its root deep
and spread upward to split one boulder. --Carl Sandburg
There is a fable about the sun and
wind having a contest to see who can get the old man to take his coat
off first. The wind blows fiercely, but the old man just pulls his coat
tighter around him. Finally, the wind gives up and the sun comes out.
The sun shines a steady warm light down on the old man, who soon takes
his coat off.
More and better things are
accomplished in this world by kindness and gentleness than by force.
When we find ourselves most frustrated, it is often because we are
trying to force certain things to happen. Our own patient and steady
desire to grow, fed by the love and kindness of others, will not be
stopped by anything or anyone. Our own gentleness is a powerful force
in our lives. It is like the gentle bush that grows through granite.
What can I gain by gentleness today?
You are reading from the book
Touchstones.
You must fight off a "bad luck" way of
thinking as if you were dealing with an invasion of hostile forces for
that is precisely what you are dealing with. --Maxwell Maltz
Life is an ongoing experience with two
opposing forces. One force is constantly building up, and the other is
constantly tearing down. We have successes and accomplishments, and we
have failures and defeats. We finally get our house in order, and it
immediately begins to become disordered again.
There are forces supporting our
self-esteem and forces tearing us down. Friends who wish us well,
goodwill and generosity among people, and the momentum of our healthy
actions are constructive forces in our lives. Destructive forces are
the pull of old habits, bad luck, accidents, and negative thoughts. We
must choose on which side we will put our energies. Are we men who hate
ourselves, believe in bad luck and despair, and thereby join the forces
that would tear us down? Or will we choose to be on the side that
builds us up?
Today, by the grace of God, I will
join the forces that are on my side. I will stand up for myself and my
worth.
You are reading from the book Each Day
a New Beginning.
Everyday . . . life confronts us with
new problems to be solved which force us to adjust our old programs
accordingly.
--Dr. Ann Faraday
Facing the day straight on is
occasionally difficult to do. There are those days we feel like
crawling under the covers and staying there, certain that we can't
handle whatever might be asked of us. Maybe today is one of those days.
Perhaps we feel 12 years old, instead of 42. To consciously behave like
a responsible 42-year-old is out of the question. Acting "as if" is the
next best thing, the program tells us, and it is.
Acting "as if" also comes in handy
when only a minor kink interferes with the day's progression. Most
problems don't fit an easy solution or a familiar one. However, most
problems are dispensed with by seeing them as opportunities for
creative response, calmly seeking guidance and then moving ahead
slowly, being aware of the effects of our actions.
Today, and every day, I will have an
opportunity to think creatively and to rely on my inner guide. Instead
of dreading the unfamiliar, I will be glad for it. It's moving me ever
closer to understanding life's mysteries.
You are reading from the book The
Language of Letting Go.
Hanging on to Old Relationships
We want to travel baggage free on this
journey. It makes the trip easier.
Some of the baggage we can let go of
is lingering feelings and unfinished business with past relationships:
anger, resentments; feelings of victimization, hurt, or longing.
If we have not put closure on a
relationship, if we cannot walk away in peace, we have not yet learned
our lesson. That may mean we will have to have another go around with
that lesson before we are ready to move on.
We may want to do a Fourth Step (a
written inventory of our relationships) and a Fifth Step (an admission
of our wrongs). What feelings did we leave with in a particular
relationship? Are we still carrying those feelings around? Do we want
the heaviness and impact of that baggage on our behavior today?
Are we still feeling victimized,
rejected, or bitter about something that happened two, five, ten, or
even twenty years ago?
It may be time to let it go. It may be
time to open ourselves to the true lesson from that experience. It may
be time to put past relationships to rest, so we are free to go on to
new, more rewarding experiences.
We can choose to live in the past, or
we can choose to finish our old business from the past and open
ourselves to the beauty of today.
Let go of your baggage from past
relationships.
Today, I will open myself to the
cleansing and healing process that will put closure on yesterday and
open me to the best today, and tomorrow, has to offer in my
relationships.
I am open to experience my connection
with God and all the people I meet on my path today. There is new joy
each time I realize our sameness rather than our separateness. --Ruth
Fishel
**************************************************
Journey to the Heart
Trust the Process of Growth
Be patient with yourself. It takes
time to work out issues, to work through things. It takes time to learn
lessons. The more important the lesson, the longer the cycle to work it
out and work it through.
We may live in a technical age, but
our souls aren’t technical. They’re still connected to nature. We grow
and change as nature does. Learn her ways. Study her seasons and
cycles, and know those same seasons and cycles are in each of us. The
process of change is like planting a seed and watching it grow and
bloom into a flower.
What are you trying to develop? A
project? A change in yourself? Is there something new you’re learning,
trying to do? Are you trying to adjust to a major change in your life?
Is there an old habit you’re struggling to let go of? A love
relationship or friendship you’re hoping to begin or attempting to end?
Each stage of the process of growth
and change is important. From those first moments when we see the idea,
or the change begins, to those long moments of nurturing and nourishing
the idea, each stage counts. Is there a change in your life that’s
begun, one you’ve started to notice? Are you thinking about it a lot,
talking about it a lot, but not quite ready to take action? That stage
is important too. You’re nurturing and nourishing the seeds of change.
It takes time for nature to change
things into what they’re becoming. It takes time for things to develop.
Be patient with yourself and life. Trust the process of growth.
**************************************************
More Language Of Letting Go
Relax and flow
I visited the Hoover Dam in Nevada
some time ago and marveled at its construction and purpose. Here was a
huge structure that had been built into a canyon to harness the power
of thousands of tons of moving water.
The water flows through the machinery,
and the energy of the moving water is transformed into electricity that
powers thousands of homes and businesses. But it wouldn’t work if you
dammed up a lake, because the water has to be moving for it to have
power.
The secret to the power is in the
flowing.
How often we try to stifle the flow of
events in our lives with control. We think that if we could only get
things to go the way we want, then everything would be all right. We
take the energy of the universe and bottle it up. And we kill its
energy.
Let go of control.
Let the energy of life flow through
and around you. You can learn to direct the flow, but you don’t need to
control it. Become open to the energy that is flowing around you, and
rather than trying to bottle it up, let it flow. Energy is useful only
when it is flowing.
Relax and go with the flow of the
universe. You’ll be better able to harness its power.
God, help me let go of my need to
control. Help me let go of my fear.
**************************************************
In God’s Care
Who can control his fate? ~~William Shakespeare
We often think we are in control when
we’re not. For instance, the place we live, our friends, our
co-workers, the amount of money we have, our spare time – how much can
we really control these? How many people are in our life as a result of
our own control? Were we able to control the outcome of situations we
cared about?
Why, then, should we be reluctant to
relinquish our questionable control to a Higher Power who knows far
better how to handle our life? Questions about our work, how to spend
our money, who our friends are, where we go, and what we do – these are
not decisions we have to make alone. Even when we think we’re in
control, we’re getting guidance from God. Acknowledging God’s presence
is the surest way to accept who really is in control of our life.
Today I will exercise the greatest
power I have – my decision to ask God for help.
*************************************
Coming Full Circle
A New Level of Mastery by Madisyn Taylor
Often the reappearance of an old
pattern is a sign that it has come full circle ready to be released.
Life is a circular journey through our
issues and processes, and this is why things that are technically new
often seem very familiar. It is also why, whenever we work to release a
habit, change a pattern, or overcome a fear, we often encounter that
issue one last time, even after we thought we had conquered it. Often,
when this happens, we feel defeated or frustrated that after all our
hard work we are still dealing with the same problem. However, the
reappearance of a pattern, habit, or fear, is often a sign that we have
come full circle, and that if we can maintain our resolve through one
last test, we will achieve a new level of mastery in our lives.
When we come full circle, there is
often the feeling that we have arrived in a familiar place, but that we
ourselves are somehow different. We know that we can handle challenges
that seemed insurmountable when we began our journey, and there is the
feeling that we might be ready to take on a new problem, or some new
aspect of the old problem. We feel empowered and courageous to have
taken on the challenge of stopping a pattern, releasing a habit, or
overcoming a fear, and to have succeeded. At times like these, we
deserve a moment of rest and self-congratulation before we move on to
the next challenge.
Coming full circle is like stepping
into a clearing where, for a moment, we can see where we came from and
where we are standing at the same time. Remembering that we will be
tested again is important, but it’s also important to pause and take a
look at the ground we’ve covered, honoring our courage, our
persistence, and our achievement. Then we can begin the next leg of our
circular journey with a fuller understanding of where we are coming
from. Published with permission from Daily OM
**************************************************
A Day At A Time
Reflection For The Day
I don’t believe that The Program and
Twelve Steps work because I read it in a book, or because I hear other
people say so. I believe it because I see other people recovering and
because I know that I, too, am recovering. No longer do I believe that
I am “helpless and hopeless.” When I see the change in other people and
in myself, I know that The Program works. When a television reporter
once asked the philosopher Jung if he believed in God, Jung replied
slowly, “I don’t believe — I know” Do I know that The Program works?
Today I Pray
Show me the happy endings, the mended
lives, the reconstituted selves, the rebuilt bridges, so I will not
have to accept on faith the fact that The Program works. May I see it
working — for others and for me. May I be grateful for the documented
reality of The Program’s success. May this certainty help me find the
faith I need to follow the Twelve Steps.
Today I Will Remember
The Program works.
**************************************************
One More Day
A desperate disease requires a
dangerous remedy.
– Guy Fawkes
Safety is important to all of us, but
sometimes it is so important that we refuse to take risks. We may stay
in unhealthy relationships or ignore our own or others’ bizarre
behavior because we’re afraid of leaving the safety of our routine.
We become more willing, however, to
take risks when things become desperate. The we might take desperate
measures. We might seek counseling or file for divorce in order to
rescue or end a hurting relationship. If we feel emotionally upset, we
might as for professional help. That, too, involves taking a risk.
These decisions don’t come lightly. There is much soul-searching
involved but we’re able to make the decision when we realize that
safety is sometimes more dangerous than risk.
I can make choices that are good for
me, even if they threaten my safe routine.
************************************
Food For Thought
Research
In OA meetings, we sometimes hear reports of "research" done by a
member who breaks abstinence in order to find out whether he or she is
still a compulsive overeater. The experiment invariably proves that
once a compulsive overeater, always a compulsive overeater. Among the
results are remorse, regained weight, and weakened control.
It has been said that we are like someone who has lost a leg. We do not
grow a new one. We can, nevertheless, learn to live with our disability
if we are willing to abstain and follow the OA program. Most of us find
that we cannot go back to eating binge foods moderately, but we can
avoid them. We are like the alcoholic who can lead a normal, satisfying
life as long as he or she stays away from alcohol.
Further research is not necessary. By accepting our need for a
disciplined eating plan, we can benefit from the experience of those
who have been in the program longer than we.
May I remember that further research is unnecessary.
*****************************************
One Day At A Time
LONERS
"I never found a companion
that was so companionable as
solitude."
Henry David Thoreau
When I am physically, emotionally or
spiritually unfit, I find myself isolating. On the other hand, I also
find there are differences between solitude and isolation. Granted,
sometimes those differences are subtle; nevertheless, they are
different. It only takes abstinence to clearly see the difference and
unless one has experienced that state, I doubt if this can really be
understood.
Isolation shuts us off, not only from
other people, but from God Himself. We tuck in our tails and busy
ourselves with whatever comes to mind and our sole purpose is to avoid
human contact. Isolation is not good. When I am isolating, I feel shame
and I risk overeating. While I may not do this consciously, I run a
risk of depression. I also feel guilty and the negative thoughts run
amok.
Solitude is not hiding from others as
isolation can be. On the contrary, I can nourish myself by being in
solitude. Because I have a creative nature, solitude allows me the
freedom to explore and be as creative as God intends for me to be. If I
don't allow myself solitude on occasion, I am in essence damming up the
gifts God has given me. These gifts need the freedom of solitude to
make them materialize and be all they can be. Because I have
experienced the disease of compulsive eating and all the manifestations
of this disease, I can clearly see the differences between solitude and
isolation. I learned that I can be in a crowd of people and still be
isolating. I can also be in a crowd of people and be in solitude. If I
have spiritually and emotionally shut down, I would be going through
the motions but deep down in my soul I would know that I'm isolating.
When my spirit is free and I am working the program, one might glance
at me and see me drifting off to a room where there is a piano and
recapturing a moment of music ... or staring out a window at a view so
beautiful that it takes my breath away ... or sipping a cup of coffee
and observing those around me but not actively participating in their
small talk but wondering who they really are.
One day at a time... let me remove
myself from the pain of the seclusion of isolation and substitute the
wonderful state of solitude that brings me such great joy and peace of
mind.
~ Mari
*****************************************
AA 'Big Book' - Quote
This is the baffling feature of
alcoholism as we know it - this utter inability to leave it alone, no
matter how great the necessity or the wish. - Pg. 34 - More About
Alcoholism
Hour To Hour - Book - Quote
Today we begin the greatest journey of
our life. Before we lived to the dictates of that first fix, pill,
drink, smoke, or snort. Today we begin living to the dictates of
spiritual law. It is our most challenging task. This will take
everything we have and it will be worth a thousand times more then that.
Take my hand God, as I understand You,
and lead me in this most important task.
Resentment Incoherence
The incoherence that results from
holding onto resentments and unforgiving attitudes keeps you from being
aligned with your true self. It can block you from your next level of
quality life experience. Metaphorically, it's the curtain standing
between the room you're living in now and a new room, much larger and
full of beautiful objects. The act of forgiveness removes the curtain.
Clearing up your old accounts can free up so much energy that you jump
right into a whole new house. Forgiving releases you from the
punishment of a self-made prison where you are both the inmate and the
jailer.
- Doc Childre and Howard Martin
submitted by Tian Dayton PhD
Pocket Sponsor - Book - Quote
You don't have to eat, breathe, and
bathe in our fellowship, but you do need to eat, breathe, and bathe in
program. This is because you must practice these principles in all your
affairs. The only way to do it in all your affairs is to DO IT in all
your affairs.
If I'm working my program, I needn't
worry about others working theirs.
"Walk Softly and Carry a Big Book" - Book
In NA, there are no losers--just slow
winners.
Time for Joy - Book - Quote
I am open to experience my connection
with God and all the people I meet on my path today. There is new joy
each time I realize our sameness rather than our separateness.
Alkiespeak - Book - Quote
I was so full of fury and I loathed
people but I wanted everybody to like me ...which really creates
torque. - Charlie C.
*****************************************
AA Thought for the Day
June 13
A New Direction
Where my life had been full of mental
turmoil there is now an ever-increasing depth of calmness.
Where there was a hit or miss attitude
toward living there is now new direction and force.
- Experience, Strength and Hope, p. 134
Thought to Ponder . . .
In the depth of winter I finally
learned that within me there lay an invincible summer.
AA-related 'Alconym' . . .
A A = Attitude Adjustment.
~*~A.A. Thoughts For The Day~*~
Change
"How many of us would presume to
declare,
'Well, I'm sober and I'm happy.
What more can I want, or do? I'm fine
the way I am.'
We know that the price of such
self-satisfaction is
an inevitable backslide,
punctuated at some point by a very
rude awakening.
We have to grow or else deteriorate.
For us, the status quo can only be for
today,
never for tomorrow.
Change we must; we cannot stand still."
Bill W., Grapevine, February 1961
1967AAWS, As Bill Sees It, p. 25
Thought to Consider . . .
There are only two things an alcoholic
doesn't like -
the way things are, and change.
*~*~*AACRONYMS*~*~*
C H A N G E = Choosing Honesty Allows
New Growth Every day
*~*~*~*~*^Just For Today!^*~*~*~*~*
Future
>From "Heard at Meetings":
"'It is wise to pray for the future,
but not to worry about it, because we can't live it until it becomes
the present. The depth
of our anxiety measures the distance
we are from God.' - Sydney, Australia"
1973 AAWS, Inc.; Came to Believe, 30th
printing 2004, pg. 26
*~*~*~*~*^ Grapevine Quote ^*~*~*~*~*
"The compulsion among most of us to
survive and to grow soon becomes far stronger than the temptation to
drink, or
to misbehave. Literally, we must 'do
or die.' So we make the choice to live. This, in turn, means the choice
of AA
principles, practices and attitudes
that can salvage us from total disaster by insuring our sobriety."
AA Co-Founder, Bill W., May 1960
"What Is Freedom in AA?"
The Language of the Heart
~*~*~*~*^ Big Book & Twelve N' Twelve
Quotes of the Day ^*~*~*~*~*
"Actually we were fooling ourselves,
for deep down in every man,
woman, and child, is the fundamental
idea of God. It may be obscured
by calamity, by pomp, by worship of
other things, but in some form
or other it is there. For faith in a
Power greater than ourselves, and
miraculous demonstrations of that
power in human lives, are facts as
old as man himself."
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition, We
Agnostics, pg. 55~
"Cessation of drinking is but the
first step away from a highly
strained, abnormal condition."
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
The Family Afterward, pg. 122~
We have gained some understanding of
the ancient words ‘Freely ye have received, freely give.
-Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions,
p. 166
Misc. AA Literature - Quote
The practice of admitting one's
defects to another person is, of course, very ancient. It has been
validated in every
century, and it characterizes the
lives of all spiritually centered and truly religious people.
But today religion is by no means the
sole advocate of this saving principle. Psychiatrists and psychologists
point out
the deep need every human being has
for practical insight and knowledge of his own personality flaws and
for a
discussion of them with an
understanding and trustworthy person.
So far as alcoholics are concerned,
A.A. would go even further. Most of us would declare that without a
fearless
admission of our defects to another
human being, we could not stay sober. It seems plain that the grace of
God will not
enter to expel our destructive
obsessions until we are willing to try this.
Prayer For The Day: “A Prayer During Times Of Fear” - Father,
You want us to have peace instead of fear. Therefore You speak to our
hearts many times, “Fear not” and give us many reasons why we are not
to be fearful people. The most compelling reason that we need not fear
is that You promise never to leave us nor forsake us. You are our
refuge and strength, an ever present help in trouble. So we ask that
You embolden us and fill our hearts with courage in place of fear. As
someone once said, “Courage is fear that has said its prayers.”