Sunday, June 25, 2023

 

I am currently reposting all 100 previously posted blogs that contain what I've learned about staying sober. Because AA has continued to work for a drunk like me since 1981, I know it can work for you. And I can promise you'll have some real adventures along the way!

Sunday, June 18, 2023

 




I am currently reposting all 100 previously posted blogs that contain what I've learned about staying sober. Because AA has continued to work for a drunk like me since 1981, I know it can work for you. And I can promise you'll have some real adventures along the way!


                                                                     Keep Coming Back!

                 If you wish to contact me personally with your comments, my email is: o.kay.dockside@gmail.com




First posted - April 2021


Made A Decision

(9)

              Some Bits and Pieces Today, includes some topic

                          suggestions for Meetings


           
About Prayer:   “Most people don't pray, they only beg.”

About Meditation: “There is no such thing as a bad meditation. There are just different experiences at different times.”


                                                                            * * * 


Let no alcoholic say he cannot recover unless he has his family back. His recovery is not dependent upon people. It is dependent upon his relationship with God, however he may define Him.
                                  
Big Book Quote

                                                  * * * 


Letter follows that was written to a sponsee in her early recovery:

Dear ________:

“God don't make no junk” and God made YOU.

So to think you are not good enough, or unworthy in any way, is putting yourself ahead of God's own opinion of you.

 Look in the mirror and say, out loud, "I love you."

Do it every day until you like what you see.

Do it every day until you believe it.

 And until you do love you, remember

God loves you.

We in AA love you.

I love you.

 Self-love comes over time when we stay on track in our recovery. I know that you listen to AA taped talks, so do more of them. They'll build you up, unlike so much of the negative stuff to be found online.

 Stay safe and well. Keep on doing-the-doing.
Keep sober!


                                          
                                                                        * * *

 
For Those who Still Want to Drink


 I have seen a lot of people come into AA and then leave and return to drinking.

Some of them have died drunk.

Some of them have suffered permanent brain damage from that trip back to the hell of alcoholic drinking.

 And some make it back “into the rooms” to continue their sober journey.

Of those older, battered, and now wiser who do return, I have never once heard any of them say:

 IT WAS GREAT!


 I LOVED DRINKiNG AGAIN!

 MY FAMILY WAS SO PROUD OF ME FOR PICKING UP A DRINK.

 Nope, not a single one of them I have known personally has ever said that - or anything remotely like it - once they got back in the AA lifeboat.


                                                                        * * * 

 
 I once posted the following on my Facebook Page under the heading -  
Some good questions to ask ourselves:

 What is trying to emerge in my life?

What is my gift to share?

What is my purpose?

Why am I here on the planet? 


 And I got back this response from a fellow AA member still very new in recovery:

“Been fucking asking this all my life. Screaming out to God who am I and what do you want from me?”

 My response, based entirely on knowing how we ALL have a disease of perception:

 Perhaps your answers COULD be:

What is trying to emerge in my life? 
 Good Balanced Recovery

My gift to share? ... Good Balanced Recovery.

 Purpose? 
... To learn to love myself, and teach others how to love themselves, and our planet.

 Why am I here? ... To love the planet, and all those on it, back to health by applying numbers 1,2, and 3, above.

 

                                                                                 * * * 

               If you think you have a problem with alcohol,

                                  you probably do.


    
                                                                            * * * 


When we are asked to chair on a topic it's always best to come up with our own ideas when we can,
but here are a few suggestions for when our brains draw a blank.

 1. Any of the 12 steps.

2. Gratitude

3. Service work forAA - and how it keeps us sober.

4. Sponsorship

5. Any one of the slogans ... one day at a time; first things first; keep it simple; let go and let God; etc.

6. Helping others in recovery. Reaching out to those in need.

7. What to do when we feel "stuck" in our recovery.

8. How do we greet newcomers and make them feel welcome and needed. (Especially important in these times of zoom!)

9. AA Literature. Why we need to read it.

10. Our favorites among the AA selection of books and brochures.

11. The many benefits of forming AA friendships.

12. Relapse. Alcohol is cunning, baffling, powerful - and patient!

13. Dealing with grief and staying sober.

14. The healing power of laughter - especially learning to laugh at ourselves.

15. Morbid reflection, how it leads to depression and how to avoid it. (Gratitude! Trust God. Help others.)

 ... and so on.


 
                                                                       * * * 

 

 
How do I know if my spiritual experience is real?

 “... it is certain that all recipients of spiritual experiences declare for their reality. The best evidence of that reality
is in the subsequent fruits. Those who receive these gifts of grace are very much changed people, almost invariably
for the better. This can scarcely be said of those who hallucinate."

                  (From an AA talk by Dr. Bob  in 1960)
 

 
                                                                          * * * 

 
We alcoholics are sensitive people. It takes some of us a long time to outgrow that serious handicap.

                 Big Book, 4th Editionpg. 125


                                                                                                     * * * 

 Let us resist the proud assumption that since God has enabled us to do well in one area we are destined to be a channel of saving grace for everybody.

           A.A. COMES OF AGE, pg. 232


  
                                                                               * * * 

                                        To help each other, is to help ourselves.


                                                                               * * * 

 And one final thought for today:


             It's easier to stay out of trouble than to                      get out of trouble.
                                                * * * 

 

Sunday, June 11, 2023

 




I am currently reposting all 100 previously posted blogs that contain what I've learned about staying sober. Because AA has continued to work for a drunk like me since 1981, I know it can work for you. And I can promise you'll have some real adventures along the way!


                                                Keep Coming Back!


             If you wish to contact me personally with your comments, my email is: o.kay.dockside@gmail.com


First posted on Sunday, April 18, 2021


 Made a Decision


(8)

                             Women in the “Fellowship.”


Women in AA should always remember “The Big Book” of Alcoholics Anonymous was written in an earlier time, penned by white men for white men.  The Founding Fathers of AA initially weren't even sure women could get and stay sober in the AA program. 


"... In the beginning we could not sober up women. They were different, they said ..." From the book "Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age".


I was working as a journalist when I got sober. During my first year or two in recovery I wanted to rewrite the Big Book. I thought the language in the Big Book was dated at best and sexist at worst.


But I’m glad I left the book alone, because over time I have learned everything a woman needs to stay sober really is already right there in the Big Book of “Alcoholics Anonymous” just as it was written. We just have to become open enough to receive it.

(And the book Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions is well worth our study, too).

 I’m pleased, however, that other women have in recent decades written books aimed more at reaching women in recovery.

Among them, the book A Woman’ Way Through the 12 Steps, by Stephanie S. Covington, is now a recovery classic that has helped scores of women. 

I also think the most important thing a woman in recovery can do for herself is to join an all women’s group - or start one if necessary.

 (I’ve helped start two of them, one in the USA and one in the UK. The UK group faded away, but the other is still going strong more than 35 years on). 

Women’s groups themselves have been around since the 1950s, so if you are trying to get one started in your own area don’t let anyone bully you into thinking they are something “new.”

 I'm not man-bashiing here. I adore the men in AA. Nearly all of the people around me in my early recovery were men. Without them I would never have stayed sober. Their courage, direction, compassion and humour propped me up in my weakest moments.

But many men in AA still sometimes get all huffy when women decide to form a group just for them. They'll give all kinds of reasons why a women's group isn't necessary, too. I've heard them all.

The men will say a woman alcoholic is no different from a man alcoholic, that women think they're special (dangerously "unique") for thinking they need their own group, and some men will even bluntly say, "What's so private you women can't talk about it in a regular meeting?"

I suspect men fear we want our own meeting just so we can talk about them! (FYI, guys - We don't.)

I'm going to digress here (as I often do) to leave AA for a moment and tell you about a study of men and women I once read. It follows:

Each person in the study was asked what they most feared regarding the other sex when involved in an intimate relationship.

Most of the men questioned said they feared, if they let themselves be vulnerable, the woman might laugh at them.

The women said their biggest fear was their partner might become angry enough to kill them.

(And then there's this actual fact, making one wonder why young single women still want to find a husband, because - statistically - he is the one most likely to one day murder her.)

Given that information, we can return now to recovery:

While it is obviously true both men and women can become alcoholics, the results of "our" disease - and our fears - impact our lives in very different ways.

All drunks are shamed by the society they live in, but until they’ve reached the lowest point in their drinking, men are perceived as “someone who just doesn’t know when to quit.” 

Women at that stage (or even before) are perceived as bad women. Period.

A man staggering along the street drunk is still often seen as a figure of fun. A woman in that condition is seen as disgusting, or in some cases, as a target for sexual assault. 

 And women alcoholics who live with abuse in their homes often turn to the bottle for comfort, thereby inviting a whole new level of abuse, especially verbal abuse.

Being constantly told we are "terrible mothers, rotten housekeepers, lousy cooks, disgusting women, lazy bitches, whores, scum - or worse - is hardly the recipe for feeling good about oneself.

A woman who finds she can not stop drinking feels like a failure already, so the verbal abuse just fuels self-loathing like red hot coals stoke a fire.

I have been a member of groups in several countries and in every one of them there have been women who never spoke. They were always there, they listened, they stayed sober, but they never spoke aloud in a meeting. They couldn't.

These were women who had been abused as children and later, often when quite young, went on to marry abusive men. Their voices had been silenced all their lives.

It was only when those women became members in women's groups, and came to understand their thoughts and feelings had value, that they began to speak.

I have known such women. I have sponsored such women. So I am now, and always will be, a champion of women's AA groups.

And here's the best news of all for our entire program of recovery:

Once the silent women discover their self-worth they venture out into regular AA meetings where their wisdom and compassion enriches and benefits everyone.



Sunday, June 4, 2023

 


I am currently reposting all 100 previously posted blogs that contain what I've learned about staying sober. Because AA has continued to work for a drunk like me since 1981, I know it can work for you. And I can promise you'll have some real adventures along the way!


                                                Keep Coming Back!


             If you wish to contact me personally with your comments, my email is: o.kay.dockside@gmail.com


Made a Decision

(7)

                                Slip'n and Slid'n.


        There are two types of pain in the world.  
Pain that hurts you.
                               And pain that changes you.

 
In 1960, one of AA's founding members shared his thoughts about those who return to drinking after having been sober a while in AA. He wrote the following:

Slips can often be charged to rebellion; some of us are more rebellious than others. Slips may be due to the illusion that one can be 'cured' of alcoholism.

Slips can also be charged to carelessness and complacency. Many of us fail to ride out these periods sober. Things go fine for two or three years - then the member is seen no more.

Some of us suffer extreme guilt because of vices or practices that we can't or won't let go of. Too little self-forgiveness and too little prayer - well, this combination adds up to slips.

Then some of us are far more alcohol-damaged than others. Still others encounter a series of calamities and cannot seem to find the spiritual resources to meet them.

There are those of us who are physically ill. Others are subject to more or less continuous exhaustion, anxiety, and depression. These conditions often play a part in slips - sometimes they are utterly controlling.


 In my own case, and purely by the grace of God, I have not had a drink of alcohol since I attended my first meeting in Alcoholics Anonymous. That fact makes me blessed, not superior.

The thought of having a slip scares the hell out of me, because I have learned from the slips of others that our disease of alcoholism progresses whether we are drinking or not. We will never return to the happy early days of our drinking, we return almost immediately to an advanced stage of alcoholic hell.

Sadly, however, I have witnessed many AA members who have not been as fortunate as I have been.
 I have had dear friends in the program who picked up a drink to suffer another period of "research" on the horrible effects alcohol has on those like us. 
A few of them died from it, including a wonderful man who kept me from picking up a drink many times in those hard early days of my own recovery. 

Some of those who "slipped" did make it back to the rooms. None, however, returned to tell us how great it was to be back out there drinking again. All of them had just added more new horrors to their previous horror stories about our disease.

I, too, (like every recovering alcoholic) have been close to picking up a time or two during my recovery, but I'm so grateful I did not. Hearing those horror stories probably played a big part in that. It's one more reason to continue going to meetings, to hear - and see - that harsh reminder of what awaits us when we do not.

There's a recurring theme heard from those who have returned to AA after drinking again. They invariably say: "I slipped after I stopped going to meetings."

Never forget we in AA have a chronic terminal illness. Other chronic terminal illnesses (like many cancers, kidney diseases, diabetes) all require very painful treatments involving needles and horrific medical procedures. 
Our primary treatment for our deadly disease is to get our ass to a meeting!

And we can SEE the results of our treatments in the faces around us in meetings. 
Group members often arrive with frowning faces to share stories of their horrible day. But, by meeting's end, they are smiling and joking with other members about how their day now doesn't seem quite as bad after all.

There's an old AA saying we might want to write down; right up there on the wall in big letters will be fine!

                     
 "Meeting Makers Make It!"