REDOUBLING OUR EFFORTS
To a degree, he has already done this when taking moral
inventory, but now the time has come when he ought to
redouble his efforts to see how many people he had hurt,
and in what ways.
TWELVE STEPS AND TWELVE TRADITIONS , p. 77
As I continue to grow in sobriety, I become more aware
of myself as a person of worth. In the process, I am
better able to see others as persons, and with this comes
the realization that these were people whom I had hurt in
my drinking days. I didn't just lie, I lied about Tom. I
didn't just cheat, I cheated Joe. What were seemingly
impersonal acts, were really personal affronts, because
it was people - people of worth - whom I had harmed. I
need to do something about the people I have hurt so that
I may enjoy a peaceful sobriety.
***********************************************************
Twenty-Four Hours A Day
A.A. Thought For The Day
"The tremendous fact for every one of us is that we have
discovered a common solution. We who have found this
solution to our alcoholic problem, we who are properly armed
with the facts about ourselves, can generally win the
entire confidence of another alcoholic. We who are making
the approach to new prospects have had the same difficulty
they have had. We obviously know what we are talking about.
Our whole deportment shouts at new prospects that we are
people with a real answer." Am I a person with the real
answer to the alcoholic problems of others?
Meditation For The Day
For straying from the right way there is no cure except to
keep so close to the thought of God that nothing, no other
interest, can seriously come between you and God. Sure of
that, you can stay on God's side. Knowing the way, nothing
can prevent your staying in the way and nothing can cause
you to seriously stray from it. God has promised peace if
you stay close to Him, but not leisure. You still have to
carry on in the world. He has promised heart-rest and
comfort, but not pleasure in the ordinary sense. Peace and
comfort bring real inward happiness.
Prayer For The Day
I pray that I may keep my feet on the way. I pray that I
may stay on God's side.
***********************************************************
As Bill Sees It
Who Is To
Blame?, p. 222
At Step Four we resolutely looked for our own mistakes. Where
had we been selfish, dishonest, self-seeking, and frightened?
Though a given situation had not been entirely our fault, we often
tried to cast the whole blame on the other person involved.
We finally saw that the inventory should be ours, not the other
man's. So we admitted our wrongs honestly and became willing to
set these matters straight.
Alcoholics Anonymous, p. 67
***********************************************************
Walk In Dry Places
Am
I
getting
too
busy?
Time Management.
It's always risky when a recovering person gets too busy for meetings.
It's also dangerous when business and personal concerns crowd out
interest in the program.
We should never deceive ourselves by thinking that we're somehow safe
just because our time is filled with useful and interesting work. Many
of us have a tendency to become addicted to "busy-ness". Though
less destructive than drinking, this serves as an escape, just as
alcohol did.
The danger is that when the work no longer satisfies us, we'll find our
lives becoming empty again. We could then be very vulnerable to
taking a drink.
We should never be too busy for the wonderful, constructive work of the
program. Far from taking time away from our other actives, work in the
program will enhance everything we do.
I'll try to balance my activities today, making sure that I have time
for the program.
***********************************************************
Keep It Simple
There are time we must grab God's and walk forward.--- Anonymous
Sometimes we struggle with being part of the problem, instead of being
part of the solution.
Inside we know this, but somehow we can't Let Go and Let God.
To let go takes faith that the outcome will be okay. When we have
faith,
we know our Higher Power believes in us and will guide us. When we have
faith, we believe in ourselves.
When we let go, we let go of our need to always be right. Letting go
first takes place on the inside. Letting go allows us to change how we
view what's happening. Often, all we really need is this change of
attitude. This is the beauty of faith: it allows us to see the same
thing
in different
Ways.
Prayer for the Day: Higher Power, permit me to let go. Let me see
that believing in You must
also mean believing in myself.
Action for the Day: I will review my life since entering the
Twelve Step program. I will work
at seeing what good partners my Higher Power and I make.
***********************************************************
Each Day a New Beginning
...the growth of understanding follows an ascending spiral rather than
a straight line. --Joanna Field
We each are traveling our own, very special path in this life. At times
our paths run parallel to each other. On occasion they may intersect.
But we do all have a common destination: knowledge of life's meaning.
And we'll arrive at knowledge when we've arrived at the mountain's
summit, separately and yet together.
We do not go straight up the side of the mountain on this trip. We
circle it, slowly, carefully, sometimes losing our footing, sometimes
back-tracking because we've reached an impasse. Many times we have
stumbled, but as we grow in understanding, as we rely more and more on
our inner strength, available for the taking, we become more
sure-footed.
We have never needed to take any step alone on this trip. Our troubles
in the past were complicated because we did not know this; but now we
do. Our lifeline is to our higher power. If we hang onto it, every step
of the way will feel secure. The ground will be stable under us.
I am on a path to full understanding. I am learning to trust the
lifeline offered by the program and God and my friends. As I learn, my
footing is less tentative, and it supports me more securely.
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition
Chapter 7 - WORKING WITH OTHERS
After they have seen tangible results, the family will perhaps want to
go along. These things will come to pass naturally and in good time
provided, however, the alcoholic continues to demonstrate that he can
be sober, considerate, and helpful, regardless of what anyone says or
does. Of course, we all fall much below this standard many times. But
we must try to repair the damage immediately lest we pay the penalty by
a spree.
p. 99
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition Stories
ACCEPTANCE WAS THE ANSWER
- The physician wasn't hooked, he thought--he just prescribed drugs
medically indicated for his many ailments. Acceptance was his key
to liberation.
Acceptance has been the answer to my
marital problems. It's as though A.A. had given me a new pair of
glasses. Max and I have been married now for thiry-five
years. Prior to our marriage, when she was a shy, scrawny
adolescent, I was able to see things in her that others couldn't
necessarily see--things like beauty, charm, gaiety, a gift for being
easy to talk to, a sense of humor, and many other fine qualities.
It was as if I had, rather than a Midas touch which turned everything
to gold, a magnifying mind that magnified whatever it focused on.
Over the years as I thought about Max, her good qualities grew and
grew, and we were married, and all these qualities became more and more
apparent to me, and we were happier and happier.
p. 418
***********************************************************
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
Tradition Five - "Each
group has but one primary purpose - to carry it's message to the
alcoholic who still suffers."
Alcoholics Anonymous can be likened to a group of physicians who might
find a cure for cancer, and upon whose concerted work would depend the
answer for sufferers of this disease. True, each physician in such a
group might have his own specialty. Every doctor concerned would at
times wish he could devote himself to his chosen field rather than work
only with the group. But once these men had hit upon c cure, once it
became apparent that only by their united effort could this be
accomplished, then all of them would feel bound to devote themselves
solely to the relief of cancer. In the radiance of such a miraculous
discovery, any doctor would set his other ambitions aside, at whatever
personal cost.
p. 150
***********************************************************
Joy
is
the
echo
of
God’s
life
in us.
--Abbot Columba Mormion
"It is only possible to live happily ever after on a day to day basis."
--Margaret Bonnano
Your vision will become clear only when you look into your heart ...
Who looks outside, dreams. Who looks inside, awakens.
--Carl Jung
"We generally change ourselves for one of two reasons: inspiration or
desperation."
--Jim Rohn
"The time is always right to do what is right."
--Martin Luther King, Jr.
"What the caterpillar calls the end, the rest of the world calls a
butterfly."
--Lao Tsu
***********************************************
Father Leo's Daily Meditation
FAITH
"Faith must trample underfoot
all reason, sense and
understanding."
-- Martin Luther
An obstacle to my understanding the spiritual life was my
intellectualization; my head was forever getting in the way of my
heart. It was much easier to me to think rather than to feel; my faith
was smothered by logic. My manipulating and controlling mind was
stopping me experiencing the adventure of faith.
The poet in me grew as I began to trust others. God became alive in
my confusion. The answer was in not having to have the answers.
Today spirituality involves all the varied confusions and paradoxes of
life that I have discovered in me and in others --- and it's okay.
Today the love I give and receive is beyond my wildest dreams, and I
smile at the joy of my confusion.
May my head unite with my heart in the daily maze of life.
***********************************************************
"Seek
the Lord and His strength; seek His face evermore!"
1 Chronicles 16:11
"For all of God's promises have been fulfilled in him. That is why we
say "Amen" when we give glory to God through Christ."
2 Corinthians 1:20
***********************************************************
Daily Inspiration
Whatever the problem, stressing over it will not solve it. Lord, I turn
to You for solutions because I believe that You care for all of my
needs. Bless me with the ability to remain level headed and calm as we
work our way through my day.
Never forget that home is Heaven and life on earth is only temporary.
Lord, may I live with deep awareness of my spiritual nature and live a
life of truth.
***********************************************************
NA Just For Today
Regular Prayer And Meditation
"Most of us pray when we are hurting.
We learn that if we pray regularly, we won't be hurting as often or as
intensely."
Basic Text, p.44
Regular prayer and meditation are two
more key elements in our new pattern of living. Our active addiction
was more than just a bad habit waiting to be broken by force of will.
Our addiction was a negative, draining dependence that stole all our
positive energy. That dependence was so total, it prevented us from
developing any kind of reliance on a Higher Power.
From the very beginning of our
recovery, our Higher Power has been the force that's brought us
freedom. First, it relieved us of our compulsion to keep taking drugs,
even when we knew they were killing us. Then, it gave us freedom from
the more deeply ingrained aspects of our disease. Our Higher Power gave
us the direction, the strength, and the courage to inventory ourselves;
to admit out loud to another person what our lives had been like,
perhaps for the first time; to begin seeking release from the chronic
defects of character underlying our troubles; and, at last, to make
amends for the wrongs we'd done.
That first contact with a Higher
Power, and that first freedom, has grown into a life full of freedom.
We maintain that freedom by maintaining and improving our conscious
contact with our Higher Power through regular prayer and meditation.
Just for today: I will make a
commitment to include regular prayer and meditation in my new pattern
of living.
pg. 232
***********************************************************
You are reading from the book Today's Gift.
It may be those who do most dream
most. --Stephen Leacock
Where would we be without the dreamers
of the world--the ones who took the time to balance on the edge of
wonder? Amazing connections, powerful images, and creative ideas come
to us in daydreams. They creep in when we least expect them, like sleek
cats, then make their presence known to us with a gentle pounce.
When we give ourselves permission to
daydream--to sit for a while and do nothing but be quiet with our
thoughts, we give ourselves a precious gift. And who knows, we just
might be giving the world a priceless gift, too! Out of the seeds of
some of our dreams, great ideas will blossom.
What first step can I take today to
make a dream come true?
You are reading from the book
Touchstones.
According to the teachers, there is
only one thing that all people possess equally. This is their
loneliness. --Hyemeyohsts Storm
Many of us have tried to find a way to
outwit our loneliness, or to escape its truth. We have learned that we
cannot. As fathers looking at our children we may wish to spare them
this pain. As men with our mates, we have dreamed of an ideal
connection where all loneliness was dispelled.
We can't obliterate loneliness. But we
can learn to accept and deal with it. There is no need to compulsively
cover all traces and all reminders that we are alone. We can accept
this universal truth. We are alone, but so is everybody. We can make
true contact with each other out of our aloneness. True intimacy with
another man or woman comes out of first seeing our separateness, and
then bridging the gap.
Today, I accept the feeling of
loneliness as part of life. I can make contact with my brothers and
sisters, knowing we are all in the same condition.
You are reading from the book Each Day
a New Beginning.
...the growth of understanding follows
an ascending spiral rather than a straight line. --Joanna Field
We each are traveling our own, very
special path in this life. At times our paths run parallel to each
other. On occasion they may intersect. But we do all have a common
destination: knowledge of life's meaning. And we'll arrive at knowledge
when we've arrived at the mountain's summit, separately and yet
together.
We do not go straight up the side of
the mountain on this trip. We circle it, slowly, carefully, sometimes
losing our footing, sometimes back-tracking because we've reached an
impasse. Many times we have stumbled, but as we grow in understanding,
as we rely more and more on our inner strength, available for the
taking, we become more sure-footed.
We have never needed to take any step
alone on this trip. Our troubles in the past were complicated because
we did not know this; but now we do. Our lifeline is to our higher
power. If we hang onto it, every step of the way will feel secure. The
ground will be stable under us.
I am on a path to full understanding.
I am learning to trust the lifeline offered by the program and God and
my friends. As I learn, my footing is less tentative, and it supports
me more securely.
You are reading from the book The
Language of Letting Go.
Letting Go of Perfection
As I journey through recovery, more
and more I learn that accepting myself and my idiosyncrasies - laughing
at myself for my ways - gets me a lot further than picking on myself
and trying to make myself perfect. Maybe that's really what it's all
about - absolute loving, joyous, nurturing self-acceptance. --Anonymous
Stop expecting perfection from
yourself and those around you.
We do a terrible, annoying thing to
others and ourselves when we expect perfection. We set up a situation
where others, including ourselves, do not feel comfortable with us.
Sometimes, expecting perfection makes people so uptight that they and
we make more mistakes than normal because we are so nervous and focused
on mistakes.
That does not mean we allow
inappropriate behaviors with the excuse "nobody's perfect." That
doesn't mean we don't have boundaries and reasonable expectations of
people and ourselves.
But our expectations need to be
reasonable. Expecting perfection is not reasonable.
People make mistakes. The less
anxious, intimidated, and repressed they are by expectations of being
perfect, the better they will do.
Striving for excellence, purity in
creativity, a harmonious performance, and the best we have to offer
does not happen in the stymied, negative, fear-producing atmosphere of
expecting perfection.
Have and set boundaries. Have
reasonable expectations. Strive to do your best. Encourage others to do
the same. But know that others and we will make mistakes. Know that
others and we will have learning experiences, things we go through.
Sometimes, the flaws and imperfections
in ourselves determine our uniqueness, the way they do in a piece of
art. Relish them. Laugh at them. Embrace them, and ourselves.
Encourage others and ourselves to do
the best we can. Love and nurture others and ourselves for being who we
are. Then realize we are not merely human - we were intended and
created to be human.
Today, God, help me let go of my need
to be perfect and to unreasonably insist that others are perfect. I
will not use this to tolerate abuse or mistreatment, but to achieve
appropriate, balanced expectations. I am creating a healthy atmosphere
of love, acceptance, and nurturing around and within me. I trust that
this attitude will bring out the best in other people and in me.
Today I know my Higher Power is
guiding me through the changes I choose to make in my life. I have all
the energy I need today to make these changes as easily and effortless
as I wish. --Ruth Fishel
*****
Journey to the Heart
Find Places of Healing
Find places of healing. Discover
people, things, and places that nourish your soul, bring you back to
center, help you heal.
Life is not an endurance contest. Not
anymore. We are not in a race to see how long we can go without, how
much we can go without, how much pain we can stay in. Although
sometimes we go through dry spells and droughts, we are not cactuses.
There is a place in each of us that
wants to heal, that can heal, that will heal. It's a peaceful place,
one of nourishment, replenishment, peace, safety, comfort, and joy.
It's a place of love and acceptance. It's a place of forgiveness,
honesty, openness, nurturing, and kindness. You can find it quickly, if
that's what you're seeking. You will recognize it instantly because of
how it feels. It will bring you back to center. It will bring you back
to calm. It will bring you back to joy.
Find places of healing. Then go there
often. They are yours for the asking, yours for the seeking. Healing
places are an important part of the journey.
*****
more language of letting go
It's all a gift
Men are not angered by mere misfortune
but by misfortune conceived as injury. And the sense of injury depends
on the feeling that a legitimate claim has been denied.
--C.S. Lewis, The Screwtape Letters
Oh, the grousing about we do,
especially when we feel denied of one thing or another-- some reward,
or achievement, or position that we felt belonged to us.
How enraged we may become when a
wish, a hope, a dream, or a want is blatantly denied.
How easy it is to be jealous of the
success or happiness of another, even convincing ourselves that the
person has laid claim to something that rightfully belonged, instead,
to us.
The lesson here is simple.
Remember to be grateful. God doesn't
owe us anything. All of it is a gift.
God, thanks for everything, jusr as it
is.
*****
Worthiness
Accepting Our Calling by Madisyn Taylor
Our worth of being on the planet at
this time cannot be judged as we are all worthy and essential to being
here now.
The issue of worthiness may come up in
many areas of our lives, as we ask, often unconsciously, whether we are
worthy of success, love, happiness, and countless other things, from
supportive relationships to a beautiful home. In the end, though, it
all comes down to one thing: our willingness to claim our space in this
life as humans on this planet at this time. When we accept our
divinity, we no longer question whether we are worthy, because we know
that we are meant to be here to fulfill a particular purpose, a purpose
that no one other than us can fulfill.
There are no replacements who can take
over and live our lives for us, no other person who has had the
experiences we have had, who has access to the same resources and
relationships, who carries the same message to share with the world.
Our purpose may be large or small, and in most cases it is
multi-leveled, with important actions taking place on the interpersonal
level, as well as in terms of the work we do in the world. Small acts
of kindness share the stage with large acts of sacrifice, and only
through accepting and honoring our divinity can we know what we are
called to do and when.
Ultimately, we are all equally,
exactly, completely worthy of being here in this life. Moreover, we are
all essential to the unfolding plan of which we are each one small, but
important, part. If we suffer from low self worth, it is because we
have lost track of understanding this truth, and allowing it to guide
our actions in the world. Seeing ourselves as part of something larger,
as beings called to serve, is the ultimate cure for feelings of
unworthiness. In the end, it’s not about evaluating ourselves as worthy
or unworthy, so much as it’s about accepting that we have been called
here to serve and taking the steps required to listen and respond to
what our lives are asking us to do. Published with permission from
Daily OM
******************************************
One More Day
Few men are so miserable as not to
like to talk of their misfortunes…. – Maria Edgeworth
“Don’t get stuck in a conversation
with Harry. He’ll bore you to death telling you his problems.” We have
all had the experience of being warned away from a certain person.
There have probably even been times when we were the “Harry” others
tried to avoid. It’s normal to dwell on our troubles, and we all like
to talk about them. There is an added responsibility on our shoulders
now that there is a medical problem present.
We can minimize that problem by
becoming aware of what we are doing and by saving our long medical
conversations for the people who really care and need to know.
Otherwise, we will find that our friends will slip away, uncertain of
how to bear the burden of our changed health.
Caution will become my watchword as I
learn to live with my altered health problems.
*********************************************
A Day At A Time
Reflection For The Day
We’ve been our own worst enemies most
of our lives, and we’ve often injured ourselves seriously as a result
of a “justified” resentment over a slight wrong. Doubtless there are
many causes for resentment in the world, all of them providing
“justification.” But we can never begin to settle all the world’s
grievances or even arrange things so as to please everybody. If we’ve
been treated unjustly by others or simply by life itself, we can avoid
compounding the difficulty by completely forgiving the persons involved
and abandoning the destructive habit of reviewing our hurts and
humiliations. Can i believe that yesterday’s hurt is today’s
understanding, rewoven into tomorrow’s love?
Today I Pray
Whether I am unjustly treated or just
think I am, may I try not to be a resentful person, stewing over past
injuries. Once I have identified the root emotion behind my resentment,
may I be big enough to forgive the person involved and wise enough to
forget the whole thing.
**************************************************
****************
In God’s Care
August 10, 2013God has an exasperating
habit of laying his hands on the wrong man.
~~Joseph D. Blinco
At times it seems grossly unfair that
we are in the position we find ourselves. Either we aren’t ready to
deal with the circumstances we encounter, or the people we find
ourselves with don’t understand our problems. We feel we’re with the
wrong people in the wrong place at the wrong time. But is this true?
How many times have we heard a nugget
of wisdom from an unlikely source? Each of us can remember the comfort
of a smile, a kind word, or a piece of sound advice from someone whom
we least expected it from. Perhaps this was God’s way of reminding us
that we all have value to each other and to God. We are never in the
wrong place or in the wrong hands.
I will try to remember that there is
a purpose for everything in my life.
**************************************************
*****************
Day By Day
Adapting to the world“Live only in
today; don’t worry about tomorrow.” That’s a fine ambition, we may
think, but what does it mean? “Living in today” means dealing only with
what is at hand now and the available courses of action.
If we are worrying about matters in
the past or future, or out of our realm, we can disengage ourselves
from them. We cannot bend the world to our will.
Am I learning to fit myself to the
world?
Higher Power, help me remember to
conquer myself, not the world.
Today I will practice adapting myself
to whatever happens by
**************************************************
****************
Food For Thought
No Compromises
Where abstinence is concerned, there
can be no compromising. In order to control our illness, we are willing
to go to any lengths to maintain abstinence. Nothing else is as
important to us.
If we are eating in a restaurant where
the right kind of vegetable is not available, we can order two salads
or do without a vegetable for one meal, rather than substitute a starch
which will activate our disease. We learn what we can handle and what
is not for us, and then we act on that knowledge in every situation. To
compromise “just this once” is an invitation to trouble.
Just as we have a certain way of
eating for the maintenance of our recovery, so we have a way of living
based on the principle of rigorous honesty. Honesty in all of our
activities is what makes us strong and effective. Where the core
principles of our program are concerned, we do not compromise.
By Your grace, may I maintain my
integrity in all situations.
*****************************************
One Day At A Time
LOSS
“The act of giving something up is
painful.
But as we negotiate the curves and
corners of our lives,
we must continually give up parts of
ourselves.
The only alternative is not to travel
at all on the journey of life.”
M. Scott Peck
As I look back over my life, I can
remember many losses. Some came about by death, some by the
circumstances of life, and others by choices I made. All of my losses
were painful, but only three were traumatic. Whenever I gave something
up there was a period afterwards when my life wasn’t the same as it had
been before. The amount of pain I experienced and the length of its
duration were not contingent upon the seeming “severity” of the loss.
Death was final, but not the most traumatic for me. Letting go of
something takes many forms.
Though my most traumatic losses were
those I experienced at the end of a relationship, there were other
losses, too. I lost my youth and I mourned that. I lost a part of my
life when a decades-long career gave way to retirement. I lost my role
as mother when my children grew up and I found myself with an empty
nest. I lost my identity when the disease I have had for a lifetime
caused me to reach bottom and, in the process, took the “me who was”
along with it. And I lost another part of myself when I accepted the
reality of my marriage and let go of the storybook dreams I once had.
My Twelve Step program has enabled me
to go through a mourning process for each loss I experienced. I have
allowed myself to grieve and feel the feelings. And when all this was
done, God’s grace allowed me to heal.
One day at a time ... I will learn
from those things I had to give up ...
and I will continue my journey in
serenity and peace.
~ Mari
*****************************************
AA 'Big Book' - Quote
Alcoholics who have derided religious
people will be helped by such contacts. Being possessed of a spiritual
experience, the alcoholic will find he has much in common with these
people, though he may differ with them on many matters. If he does not
argue about religion, he will make new friends and is sure to find new
avenues of usefulness and pleasure. He and his family can be a bright
spot in such congregations. He may bring new hope and new courage to
many a priest, minister, or rabbi, who gives his all to minister to our
troubled world. We intend the foregoing as a helpful suggestion only.
So far as we are concerned, there is nothing obligatory about it. As
non-demominational people, we cannot make up others' mind for them.
Each individual should consult his own conscience. - Pgs. 131-132 - The
Family Afterward
Self Importance
I will get my mind off of the
treadmill. There is more to life than my worries and obsessions. Just
for today I won't give every little thing more importance than it
deserves. In the scheme of things, all of my petty annoyances aren't
all that important. I don't have to take them so seriously that they
disturb my inner peace. When I am constantly preoccupies with all
that's wrong, I forget to remember all that's right. Self importance is
different from valuing myself. Self importance gets me tied up in
mental knots, valuing myself is nourishing and loving.
I will get out of my own way today
- Tian Dayton PhD
Pocket Sponsor - Book - Quote
We find that the smallest deed is
better than the grandest intention.
My actions speak louder than words.
What are my actions saying now?
"Walk Softly and Carry a Big Book" - Book
Keeping their secret keeps you sick.
Time for Joy - Book - Quote
Today I know my Higher Power is
guiding me through the changes I choose to make in my life.
I have all the energy I need today to
make these changes as easily and effortless as I wish.
Alkiespeak - Book - Quote
No big shots in AA; One shot and we're
all shot. - Unknown origin. ( Aussie Version ); No seniority here. One
drink and back to the vomit, - Campsie Mick.
*****************************************
AA Thought for the Day
August 10
Friendships
Life will take on new meaning. To
watch people recover, to see them help others, to watch loneliness
vanish,
to see a fellowship grow up about
you, to have a host of friends -- this is an experience you must not
miss.
We know you will not want to miss it.
- Alcoholics Anonymous, p. 89
Thought to Ponder . . .
A friend is one who sees through you
and still enjoys the view.
AA-related 'Alconym' . . .
H E A R T = Healing, Enjoying, And
Recovering Together.
~*~A.A. Thoughts For The Day~*~
Higher Power
"My friend suggested what then seemed
a novel idea.
He said,
'Why don't you choose your own
conception of God?'
That statement hit me hard.
It melted the icy intellectual
mountain
in whose shadow I had lived and
shivered many years.
I stood in the sunlight at last.
It was only a matter of being willing
to believe
in a Power greater than myself.
Nothing more was required of me
to make my beginning."
- Bill W.
1976AAWS, Alcoholics Anonymous, p. 12
Thought to Consider . . .
Willpower ... our will-ingness to use
a Higher Power.
*~*~*AACRONYMS*~*~*
B I G B O O K = Believing In God
Beats Our Old Knowledge
*~*~*~*~*^Just For Today!^*~*~*~*~*
Solo
From "Source of Strength":
"I would tell a friend of mine, who
was having the same problems, that I prayed to God not to take a drink
today and not
to get married today. It was a sort
of pact. I was very serious about this. I couldn't seem to handle
romance and God
too well at the same time. And God
did start to give me the strength that I had always thought would come
from the
man in my life. "New York, New York,
USA"
1973 AAWS, Inc.; Came to Believe,
30th printing 2004, pgs. 102-03
*~*~*~*~*^ Grapevine Quote ^*~*~*~*~*
"AA recovery cannot be bought and
sold, but more than once I've wished I could just send a monthly check
instead of practicing those principles. Just making donations seems an
easier, softer way, doesn't it?"
New York, New York, August 1998
"AA Is Not for Sale,"
AA Grapevine
*~*~*~*~*^ Big Book & Twelve N'
Twelve Quotes of the Day ^*~*~*~*~*
We constantly remind ourselves we are
no longer running the show,
humbly saying to ourselves many times
each day "Thy will be done." We
are then in much less danger of
excitement, fear, anger, worry, self-
pity, or foolish decisions. We become
much more efficient. We do
not tire so easily, for we are not
burning up energy foolishly as we
did when we were trying to arrange
life to suit ourselves."
Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
Into Action, pg. 87
"In our belief any scheme of
combating alcoholism which proposes to
shield the sick man from temptation
is doomed to failure. If the
alcoholic tries to shield himself he
may succeed for a time, but
usually winds up with a bigger
explosion than ever. We have tried
these methods. These attempts to do
the impossible have always failed."
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
Working With Others, pg. 101~
“Though our decision was a vital and
crucial step, it could have little permanent effect unless at once
followed by a
strenuous effort to face, and to be
rid of, the things in ourselves which had been blocking us.”
-Alcoholics Anonymous p. 63
“Having so considered our day, not
omitting to take due note of things well done, and having searched our
hearts with
neither fear nor favor, we can truly
thank God for the blessings we have received and sleep in good
conscience.”
-Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
p. 95
Misc. AA Literature - Quote
At Step Four we resolutely looked for
our own mistakes. Where had we been selfish, dishonest, self-seeking,
and
frightened? Though a given situation
had not been entirely our fault, we often tried to cast the whole blame
on the other
person involved.
We finally saw that the inventory
should be ours, not the other man's. So we admitted our wrongs honestly
and
became willing to set these matters
straight.
Prayer for the Day: God, Take my will and my life. Guide me in
my recovery. Show me how to live. Amen.