WE BECOME WILLING. . . . .
At the moment we are trying to put our lives in order. But this is not
an end in itself.
ALCOHOLIC ANONYMOUS , p. 77
How easily I can become misdirected in approaching the Eighth Step! I
wish to be free, somehow transformed by my Sixth and Seventh Step
work. Now, more than ever, I am vulnerable to my own self-interest
and hidden agenda. I am careful to remember that self-satisfaction,
which sometimes comes through the spoken forgiveness of those
I have harmed, is not my true objective. I become willing to make
amends, knowing that through this process I am mended and made
fit to move forward, to know and desire God's will for me.
***********************************************************
Twenty-Four Hours A Day
A.A. Thought For The Day
Alcoholics Anonymous has no quarrel with medicine, psychiatry, or
religion. We have great respect for the methods of each. And we are
glad for any success they may have had with alcoholics. We are
desirous always of cooperating with them in every way. The more
doctors, the more psychiatrists, the more clergy and rabbis we can get
to work with us, the better we like it. We have many who take a real
interest in our program and we would like many more. Am I ready to
cooperate with those who take a sincere interest in A.A.?
Meditation For The Day
God is always ready to pour His blessings into our hearts in generous
measure. But like the seed-sowing, the ground must be prepared
before the seed is dropped in. It is our task to prepare the soil. It is
God's to drop the seed. This preparation of the soil means many days
of right living, choosing the right and avoiding the wrong. As you go
along, each day you are better prepared for God's planting, until
you reach the time of harvest. Then you share the harvest with
God -- the harvest of a useful and more abundant life.
Prayer For The Day
I pray that my way of living may be properly prepared day by day. I
pray that I may strive to make myself ready for the harvest which
God has planted in my heart.
***********************************************************
As Bill Sees It
Only Try, p.
214
In my teens, I had to be an athlete because I was not an athlete. I
had to be a musician because I could not carry a tune. I had to be
the president of my class in boarding school. I had to first in
everything because in my perverse heart I felt myself the least of
God's creatures. I could not accept my deep sense of inferiority,
and so I strove to become captain of the baseball team, and I did
learn to play the fiddle. Lead I must--or else. This was the "all or
nothing" kind of demand that later did me in.
********************************
"I'm glad you are going to try that new job. But make sure that
you are only going to 'try.' If you approach the project in the
attitude that "I must succeed, I must not fail, I cannot fail,' then you
practically guarantee the flop which in turn will guarantee a
drinking relapse. But if you look at the venture as a constructive
experiment only, then all should go well."
1. A.A. Comes Of Age, p. 53
2. Letter, 1958
***********************************************************
Walk In Dry Places
"That's the way I am"
Getter Better
Bad behavior is sometimes justified as a form of self-expression:
"That's the way I am." Others are supposed to
tolerate this or risk losing a friendship.
In our program, we should modify any behavior that offends or hurts
others. If we have been too brutally frank in our comments, for
example, maybe we're at fault. What we call honesty is really a form of
cruelty.
If we persist in "being the way we are" even when it doesn't work, we
have nobody to blame but ourselves when things go wrong. Other people
are entitled to be treated fairly and decently. Just as we
want to be. Perhaps "the way I am" is something that can be changed for
the good of all, ourselves included.
If I have habits and traits that cause friction with others, I'll take
a new look at them. It's possible that this is something I can
and should change.
***********************************************************
Keep It Simple
. . . and because willing to make amends to them all.---Second half of
Step
Eight.
We have made our list of persons we've harmed. Now we look at how
willing
we are to make amends. We might find that we aren't ready and
willing to
make amends to everyone. Maybe they have wronged us more than we
have
wronged them. Maybe we're afraid they'll get angry with us. Maybe
we're
afraid they'll put us in jail.
We get ready to make amends by listening and talking to others in
our
group---and to our sponsor. We pray for help to be willing to make
amends.
Becoming willing does not just happen.
We have to work at it. We need to be willing to let go of the past.
Prayer for the Day: Higher Power, help me become willing. Help me
see my part. I know
"my part"
is the only part I can change.
Action for the Day: I will take time to go over my list. To whom
am I not ready to make
amends?
I will take time to read the Serenity Prayer.
***********************************************************
Each Day a New Beginning
Though we be sick and tired and faint and worn--Lo, all things can be
borne! --Elizabeth Chase Akers
What bothered us most a year ago? A month ago? Even a week ago? It's
probably that whatever it was, we were obsessed with it, certain that
our futures were ruined, that there was no reasonable solution. It's
also probable that we feared we simply couldn't survive the complexity
of the situation. But we did. And we always will be able to survive any
and all difficulties. We are never, absolutely never, given more than
we can handle. In fact, we are given exactly what we need, at any given
time.
We have many lessons to learn. Fortunately, we have the structure of
the Twelve Steps to guide us through the lessons. We need mainly to
remember what we are powerless over, that there is a power greater than
ourselves, and that life will become simple; we'll need no extra
homework when we've turned it over to the care of God.
Whatever my problem today, I will let God have it. A solution is in the
making. I'll see it just as quickly as I can let go of the problem.
***********************************************************
Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth
Edition
Chapter 7 - WORKING WITH OTHERS
He may be broke and homeless. If he is, you might try to help him about
getting a job, or give him a little financial assistance. But you
should not deprive your family or creditors of money they should have.
Perhaps you will want to take the man into your home for a few days.
But be sure you use discretion. Be certain he will be welcomed by your
family, and that he is not trying to impose upon you for money,
connections, or shelter. Permit that and you only harm him. You will be
making it possible for him to be insincere. You may be aiding in his
destruction rather than his recovery.
pp. 96-97
***********************************************************
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.
Eventually the psychiatrist
discharged me from the hospital, and Max and I began to go to meetings
ourselves. Right from the start, I felt that they weren't doing
anything for me, but they sure were helping Max. We sat in the
back and talked only to each other. It was precisely a year
before I spoke at an A.A. meeting. Although we enjoyed the
laughter in the early days, I heard a lot of things that I thought were
stupid. I interpreted "sober" as meaning "drinking but not being
drunk." When a big, healthy-looking young fellow stood up there
and said, "I'm a success today if I don't drink today," I thought,
"Man, I've got a thousand things to do today before I can brag about
not taking a drink, for God's sake!" Of course, I was still
drinking at the time. (Today there is absolutely nothing in the
world more important to me than my keeping this alcoholic sober; not
taking a drink is far by the most important thing I do each day.)
p. 415
***********************************************************
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
Tradition Four - "Each
group should be autonomous except in matters affecting other groups or
A.A. as a whole."
This meant, of course, that we had been given the courage to declare
each A.A. group an individual entity, strictly reliant on its own
conscience as a guide to action. In charting this enormous expanse of
freedom, we found it necessary to post only two storm signals: A group
ought not do anything which would greatly injure A.A. as a whole, nor
ought it affiliate itself with anything or anybody else. There would be
real danger should we commence to call some groups "wet," others "dry,"
still others "Republican" or "Communist," and yet others "Catholic" or
"Protestant." The A.A. group would have to stick to its course or be
hopelessly lost. Sobriety had to be its sole objective. In all other
respects there was perfect freedom of will and action. Every group had
the right to be wrong.
p. 147
***********************************************************
Today...well
lived
makes
every
yesterday
a
dream
of happiness, and
every tomorrow a vision of hope.
--unknown
"Treat People The Way You Want To Be Treated."
"To Thine Own Self Be True!"
"This Is The Real Thing IT'S No Dress Rehearsal."
"Silence is the element in which great things fashion themselves."
--Thomas Carlyle
"In any situation, no matter how painful, we have two choices: Hold
onto anger, resentment, hurt, and fear, or open our hearts and look at
the other person with understanding, empathy, & forgiveness."
--Melody Beattie
"Look back and be grateful, look ahead and be hopeful, look around
and be helpful."
--unknown
The first step identifies the problem.
The second step identifies the solution.
The third step identifies the action.
--unknown
When I came into AA all I could say was, "I know" and "yeah but..."
Then I got a sponsor who said, "You don't know, and there are no
buts!"
--unknown
***********************************************
Father Leo's Daily Meditation
LAUGHTER
"Nobody ever died of laughter."
-- Max Beerbohm
I knew that I was growing in self-esteem and confidence when I was
able to laugh, express that "belly" laugh that proclaims that I am glad
to be alive.
So many religious people are too serious. They seem to think that God
disapproves of laughter and yet it seems the most natural emotion in
the world. Sobriety is a statement that the pain is being overcome and
the hope that is experienced will necessarily release laughter.
Laughter also stops us from treating ourselves and the world too
seriously. I remember a professor telling me, "God created the world
for fun. Find the key to life and enjoy it." Spirituality is that key.
Sometimes, Lord, in the silence of my car, my joy is so great and my
gratitude so overwhelming, I can do nothing but laugh. Thank You for
the gift of laughter.
***********************************************************
"For
you are my lamp, O Lord; the Lord shall enlighten my darkness."
II Samuel 22;29
Enter his gates with thanksgiving and his courts with praise; give
thanks to him and praise his name.
Psalm 100:4
***********************************************************
Daily Inspiration
Whether the friendships we have last a lifetime or only a brief period,
they bring joy and make life a little better. Lord, may I be genuine
and honest with the people in my life so that each relationship is a
blessing.
As we help those in need or comfort those in trouble, God's great love
and divine glory is revealed to the world. Lord, I am Your servant. May
others know more of You through me.
***********************************************************
NA Just For Today
Practicing Honesty
"When we feel trapped or pressured, it
takes great spiritual and emotional strength to be honest."
Basic Text, p.81
Many of us try to wiggle out of a
difficult spot by being dishonest, only to have to humble ourselves
later and tell the truth. Some of us twist our stories as a matter of
course, even when we could just as easily tell the plain truth. Every
time we try to avoid being honest, it backfires on us. Honesty may be
uncomfortable, but the trouble we have to endure when we are dishonest
is usually far worse than the discomfort of telling the truth.
Honesty is one of the fundamental
principles of recovery. We apply this principle right from the
beginning of our recovery when we finally admit our powerlessness and
unmanageability. We continue to apply the principle of honesty each
time we are faced with the option of either living in fantasy or living
life on its own terms. Learning to be honest isn't always easy,
especially after the covering up and deception so many of us practiced
in our addiction. Our voices may shake as we test our newfound honesty.
But before long, the sound of the truth coming from our own mouths
settles any doubts: Honesty feels good! It's easier living the truth
than living a lie.
Just for today: I will honestly
embrace life, with all its pressures and demands. I will practice
honesty, even when it is awkward to do so. Honesty will help, not hurt,
my efforts to live clean and recover.
pg. 224
***********************************************************
You are reading from the book Today's Gift.
Happiness is a mental habit, a mental
attitude, and if it is not learned and practiced in the present it is
never experienced.
--Maxwell Maltz
If only I had a new bike, then I'd be
happy. If only my family were more understanding, then I'd be happy. If
only my hair were styled better. If only I had more friends. If only...
Sometimes we begin to sound like a broken record when things go wrong,
so certain that if the events and conditions of our lives were
different, we'd be happy.
It's an old and unfortunate habit that
we look around outside ourselves for happiness. We can never be sure of
it if we count on certain conditions to guarantee it. However, we can
always be sure of happiness if we carry it with us wherever we go. The
happiness habit can be developed, with practice, just as surely as good
piano playing or accurate pitching. We can control our own thoughts.
The decision to make them happy ones is ours to make.
Am I carrying my happiness within me
right now?
You are reading from the book
Touchstones.
Every closed eye is not sleeping, and
every open eye is not seeing. --Bill Cosby
Things are not always as they seem,
even with us. Sometimes we get settled into a routine in our program.
We are beyond the early struggles with detachment and sobriety. We have
encountered many of the benefits of recovery. We attend our meetings
and we know the words and ideas of the program. Although it all looks
good on the outside, when we're honest with ourselves, we know our
spirit has gone flat. This is a serious situation and needs our
attention.
When the inside feeling does not match
our outside appearance, we need to become vulnerable again. We need to
talk about how we really feel. Maybe little secrets we have been
holding have deadened our program. Perhaps we haven't admitted a pain
in our life. Maybe we have been seduced by the power of looking good
and have traded away the genuineness of being known by our friends. The
renewal of this program is something we feel from within, and we can
continue to be renewed.
I pray my eyes will be open to see and
my program will stay alive and genuine.
You are reading from the book Each Day
a New Beginning.
Though we be sick and tired and faint
and worn--Lo, all things can be borne! --Elizabeth Chase Akers
What bothered us most a year ago? A
month ago? Even a week ago? It's probably that whatever it was, we were
obsessed with it, certain that our futures were ruined, that there was
no reasonable solution. It's also probable that we feared we simply
couldn't survive the complexity of the situation. But we did. And we
always will be able to survive any and all difficulties. We are never,
absolutely never, given more than we can handle. In fact, we are given
exactly what we need, at any given time.
We have many lessons to learn.
Fortunately, we have the structure of the Twelve Steps to guide us
through the lessons. We need mainly to remember what we are powerless
over, that there is a power greater than ourselves, and that life will
become simple; we'll need no extra homework when we've turned it over
to the care of God.
Whatever my problem today, I will let
God have it. A solution is in the making. I'll see it just as quickly
as I can let go of the problem.
You are reading from the book The
Language of Letting Go.
In Between
Sometimes, to get from where we are to
where we are going, we have to be willing to be in between.
One of the hardest parts of recovery
is the concept of letting go of what is old and familiar, but what we
don't want, and being willing to stand with our hands empty while we
wait for God to fill them.
This may apply to feelings. We may
have been full of hurt and anger. In some ways, these feelings may have
become comfortably familiar. When we finally face and relinquish our
grief, we may feel empty for a time. We are in between pain and the joy
of serenity and acceptance.
Being in between can apply to
relationships. To prepare ourselves for the new, we need to first let
go of the old. This can be frightening. We may feel empty and lost for
a time. We may feel all alone, wondering what is wrong with us for
letting go of the proverbial bird in hand, when there is nothing in the
bush.
Being in between can apply to many
areas of life and recovery. We can be in between jobs, careers, homes,
or goals. We can be in between behaviors as we let go of the old and
are not certain what we will replace it with. This can apply to
behaviors that have protected and served us well all of our life, such
as caretaking and controlling.
We may have many feelings going on
when we're in between: spurts of grief about what we have let go of or
lost, and feelings of anxiety, fear, and apprehension about what's
ahead. These are normal feelings for the in between place. Accept them.
Feel them. Release them.
Being in between isn't fun, but it's
necessary. It will not last forever. It may feel like we're standing
still, but we're not. We're standing at the in between place. it's how
we get from here to there. It is not the destination.
We are moving forward, even when we're
in between.
Today, I will accept where I am as the
ideal place for me to be. If I am in between, I will strive for the
faith that this place is not without purpose, that it is moving me
toward something good.
Today I know I'm just wasting my
energy to try to change people, places and things. By looking within I
can really discover what needs to be changed and then turn it over to
my Higher Power to be released. --Ruth Fishel
*****
Enjoying a Snail’s Pace
Doing Things Slowly by Madisyn Taylor
Take time to slow down, rushing never
gets you anywhere but on to the next activity or goal.
Life can often feel like it’s zipping
by in fast forward. We feel obliged to accelerate our own speed along
with it, until our productivity turns into frenzied accomplishment. We
find ourselves cramming as much activity as possible into the shortest
periods of time. We disregard our natural rhythms because it seems we
have to just to keep up. In truth, rushing never gets you anywhere but
on to the next activity or goal.
Slowing down allows you to not only
savor your experiences, but also it allows you to fully focus your
attention and energy on the task at hand. Moving at a slower place lets
you get things done more efficiently, while rushing diminishes the
quality of your work and your relationships. Slowing down also lets you
be more mindful, deliberate, and fully present. When we slow down, we
are giving ourselves the opportunity to reacquaint ourselves to our
natural rhythms. We let go of the “fast forward” stress, and allow our
bodies to remain centered and grounded. Slowing down is inherent to
fully savoring anything in life. Rushing to take a bath can feel like
an uncomfortable dunk in hot water, while taking a slow hot bath can be
luxuriant and relaxing. A student cramming for a test will often feel
tired and unsure, whereas someone who really absorbs the information
will be more confident and relaxed. Cooking, eating, reading, and
writing can become pleasurable when done slowly. ! Slowing down lets
you become more absorbed in whatever it is you are doing. The food you
eat tastes better, and the stories you read become more alive.
Slowing down allows you to disconnect
from the frenzied pace buzzing around you so you can begin moving at
your own pace. The moments we choose to live in fast forward motion
then become a conscious choice rather than an involuntary action.
Learning to slow down in our fast-moving world can take practice, but
if you slow down long enough to try it, you may surprise yourself with
how natural and organic living at this pace can be. Published with
permission from Daily OM
*****
Journey to the Heart
What Do We Do When People Resent Us
Even with our best efforts to detach,
we may still have moments when the resentments and harsh feelings of
another interfere with our peace. We react much as if someone was
throwing darts or rocks at us. All the efforts in the world to ignore
resentment may not help if we're feeling the impact of each harsh
feeling thrown at us.
These are some ideas that might help.
1. Talk to the person. Reason things
out. If that's not possible, send them a box of blessings through
prayer or thought.
2. Protect yourself emotionally and
spiritually. One healing professional recommends these techniques,
which have helped me. You may have your own. Take some quiet time,
close your eyes, and envision yourself encased in a large cube of
mirrors. Totally protected, you can see out, but others can't see in.
All they see when they look at you is themselves. Spiritually protect
yourself by envisioning a flaming circle of fire around you, around the
mirrors,too.
3. Look deep within yourself and find
the emotional block, the unresolved issue, or the old belief that makes
you vulnerable to that energy, to that person. Then release it. Heal it
by acknowledging it, feeling it, and letting go.
4. Tale a closer look. The pressure
and resentment you're feeling may be your own. Release them. Heal
yourself.
Now thank that person for helping you
heal, grow, and move along your path.
*****
more language of letting go
Gratitude is larger than life
One day, a friend called me on the
phone. He was going through a difficult time and wondering if and when
things would ever turn around and improve. I knew he was in a lot of
pain; I didn't know that he was considering suicide.
"If you could give a person only one
thing to help them," he said, "what would it be?"
I thought carefully about his
question; then I replied, "It's not one thing. It's two: gratitude and
letting go." Gratitude for everything, not just the things we consider
good or a blessing. And letting go of everything we can't change.
A few years have passed since that
day my friend called me on the phone. His life has turned around. His
financial problems have sorted themselves out. His career has shifted.
The two very large problems he was facing at that time have both sorted
themselves out. The actual process of facing and working through these
problems became an important part of redirecting the course of his life.
Someone once asked the artist Georgia
O'Keefe why her paintings magnified the size of small objects-- like
the petals on a flower-- making them appear larger than life, and
reduced the size of large objects-- like mountains-- making them
smaller than life.
"Everyone sees the big things," she
said. "But these smaller things are so beautiful and people might not
notice them if I didn't emphasize them."
That's the way it is with gratitude
and letting go. It's easy to see the problems in our lives. They're
like mountains. But sometimes we overlook the smaller things; we don't
notice how truly beautiful they are.
Identify problems. Feel feelings.
But if you're going to make anything
bigger than life, let it be the power and simplicity of these two
tools: gratitude and letting go.
God, teach me to use gratitude and
letting go to reduce the size of my problems.
*******************************************
A Day At A Time
August 2
Reflection For The Day
When I begin to compare my life with
the lives of others, I’ve begun to move toward the edge of the murky
swamp of self-pity. On the other hand, if I feel that what I’m doing is
right and good, I won’t be so dependent on the admiration or approval
of others. Applause is well and good, but it’s not essential to my
inner contentment. I’m in The Program to get rid of self-pity, not to
increase its power to destroy me. Am I learning how others have dealt
with their problems so I can apply these lessons to my own life?
Today I Pray
God, make me ever mindful of where I
came from and the new goals I have been encouraged to set. May I stop
playing to an audience for their approval, since I am fully capable of
admiring or applauding myself if I feel I have earned it. Help me make
myself attractive from the inside, so it will show through, rather than
adorning the outside for effect. I am tired of stage make-up and
costumes, God; help me be myself.
Today I Will Remember
Has anyone seen ME?
*******************************************
One More Day
August 2
No man is good for anything who has
not some particle of obstinacy to use upon occasion.
– Henry Ward Beecher
The word obstinate is quite often used
to describe children who refuse to let go of an idea or behavior.
Although we may not want others to label us obstinate, it might be that
obstinacy is a needed quality for us in the right situations.
Sometimes it is healthy for us to be
stubborn, to hold steadfastly to what we want and who we are and where
we want to be. Faith in ourselves and obstinacy can be just what we
need to survive a hard day. And we do get by, not because we’re
foolish, but because our maturity tells us to hold on to our sense of
direction.
I will keep as much independence as I
can.
**************************************************
***************
In God’s Care
He always lets people do what they
want.
~~Frank N.D. Buchman
We are born into the world with free
will, and we can do whatever we please. But there are civil laws and,
if we disobey them, we are at risk of losing our freedom.
The spiritual world also has laws; if
we disregard them, we suffer consequences. The difference is that we
are our own judges, and our consequences are personal. We frequently
bump into these spiritual boundaries. God lets us over-step them at
will, but what we do always catches up with us.
If we break spiritual laws, no one
knows it better than we do because unhappiness surely follows.
Selfishness, dishonesty, and an unloving attitude guarantee misery.
Letting love direct our thoughts and actions assures our ultimate
happiness.
Today I can do as I please, but I
choose to be happy – living within God’s spiritual boundaries.
**************************************************
*************
Day By Day
Developing Spritually
We read in the Big Book that no human
power could have relieved our addiction – not ourselves, our spouse,
the law, clergy, counselors, or friends. Through trial and error and
many failures, we come to know that another human being is not the way.
To recover, we need a spiritual program based on a power greater than
ourselves.
To recover, we need a spiritual life,
as developed by the fellowship and the Twelve Steps.
Am I growing spiritually?
Higher Power, help me to see the
importance of developing a spiritual life.
I will work on my spiritual program
today by…
**************************************************
***************
Food For Thought
Motivation
Most of us fight the temptation to be
lazy, to get by with doing the minimum instead of our best. When we
were children, we had parents and teachers who urged us on to greater
efforts. As adults, we have to depend more on internal motivation and
less on the exhortations of others.
Working for strictly material goods is
not enough to provide the impetus and enthusiasm we need. It is our
Higher Power who gives us our talents and abilities, and it is His plan
for their use, which we seek to follow.
Doing less than the best we can is
short-changing ourselves. We miss the satisfaction that comes from
stretching as far as we can. We also miss the opportunity to exceed
former limits. The more we do, the more we are able to do.
Motivation comes from our Higher Power
and can only be received, as we are willing to act. Thinking and
planning have their place, but it is action, which generates fresh
enthusiasm.
May I live up to the maximum of my
abilities today.
*****************************************
One Day At A Time
CONTROL
"I know God will not give me anything
I cannot handle.
I just wish He didn't trust me so
much."
Mother Teresa
There was a time when I asked God to
handle only the impossible. How dare I ask someone as busy and
important as God to help me with a simple thing like food? After all,
this was just a matter of using a little will-power ... of pushing
myself back from the table. Or so I had been told.
As I began to trust my Twelve Step
program more and more, I found myself turning over to God the issues
which triggered my compulsive eating. It was with great relief that I
began to surrender my food and other problems to Him. It was with
enormous gratitude that I realized what a gift it is to finally be able
to give up control and put my life in my Higher Power's hands.
One Day at a Time . . .
I relinquish control of my food.
I relinquish control of people.
I relinquish control of my life.
~ Mari
*****************************************
AA 'Big Book' - Quote
If we are painstaking about this phase
of our development, we will be amazed before we are half way through.
We are going to know a new freedom and a new happiness. We will not
regret the past nor wish to shut the door on it. We will comprehend the
word serenity and we will know peace. No matter how far down the scale
we have gone, we will see how our experience can benefit others. That
feeling of uselessness and self-pity will disappear. We will lose
interest in selfish things and gain interest in our fellows.
Self-seeking will slip away. Our whole attitude and outlook on life
will change. Fear of people and of economic insecurity will leave us.
We will intuitively know how to handle situations which used to baffle
us. We will suddenly realize that God is doing for us what we could not
do for ourselves.
Are these extravagant promises? We
think not. They are being fulfilled among us - sometimes quickly,
sometimes slowly. They will always materialize if we work for them. -
Pg. 84 - Into Action
Hour To Hour - Book - Quote
We hear so much about spiritual
principles. What are they? A spiritual principle is a standard of
conduct by which we remain right with the world. Some of these are:
honesty, integrity, kindness, accountability, service to others, and
good humor.
May I pick one of the spiritual
principles and apply it to my conduct in this next hour.
The Power is in the Now
There is magic in this moment. All of
the creative power in this radiant universe is in the present, in the
here and now. The present is alive and vibrant. If I align myself with
the present, if I allow myself to fully experience this moment, I will
find all that I need in it. And I will be contemplating what I
experience next. Quantum physics tells me that all is alive and issues
from the same source. What I experience now, creates my future. I am
part of God's plan, part of the one, creative mind.
There is nothing like the present
- Tian Dayton PhD
Pocket Sponsor - Book - Quote
Do you have so many skeletons in the
closet that you had to build a walk-in? Share the load. The AA Big Book
says that, we 'should be willing to bring former mistakes, no matter
how grievous, out of their hiding places.' (P 124) Not to do so is
being self-centered and selfish.
I am only as sick as my secrets.
"Walk Softly and Carry a Big Book" - Book
Keep coming back, it works-don't go
away; it works even better!
Time for Joy - Book - Quote
Today I know I'm just wasting my
energy to try to change people, places and things. By looking within I
can really discover what needs to be changed and then turn it over to
my Higher Power to be released.
Alkiespeak - Book - Quote
Explore daily the will of God. - Carl
Jung.
*****************************************
AA Thought for the Day
August 2
Solution
The tremendous fact for every one of
us is that we have discovered a common solution.
We have a way out on which we can
absolutely agree,
and upon which we can join in
brotherly and harmonious action.
This is the great news this book
carries to those who suffer from alcoholism.
- Alcoholics Anonymous, p. 17
Thought to Ponder . . .
Walk softly and carry a Big Book.
AA-related 'Alconym' . . .
S T E P S = Solutions Through Each
Positive Step.
~*~A.A. Thoughts For The Day~*~
Responsibility
"Our spiritual way of life is safe
for future generations if,
as a Society, we resist the
temptation to receive money
from the outside world.
But this leaves us with a
responsibility -
one that every member ought to
understand.
We cannot skimp when the treasurer of
our group
passes the hat.
Our groups, our areas, and AA as a
whole
will not function unless our services
are sufficient
and their bills are paid.
When we meet and defeat the
temptation to take large gifts,
we are only being prudent.
But when we are generous with the hat
we give a token that we are grateful
for our blessings
and evidence that we are eager to
share what we have found with all those who
still suffer."
Bill W., November 1957
1988AAGrapevine, The Language of the
Heart, p. 221
Thought to Consider . . .
The manner of giving is worth more
than the gift.
*~*~*AACRONYMS*~*~*
H O P E = Happy Our Program Exists
*~*~*~*~*^Just For Today!^*~*~*~*~*
Name
From "The Three Legacies of
Alcoholics Anonymous":
"The Akron and New York groups had
been voting for months on possible titles [for the Big Book]. This had
become an after-the-meeting form of amusement and interest. The title
'Alcoholics Anonymous' had appeared very early in the discussion,
probably in October, 1938. We do not know who first used these words.
After we New Yorkers had left the Oxford Groups in 1937 we often
described ourselves as a 'nameless bunch of alcoholics.' From this
phrase it was only a step to the idea of 'Alcoholics Anonymous.' This
was its actual derivation."
2001 AAWS, Inc.; Alcoholics Anonymous
Comes of Age, pg. 165
*~*~*~*~*^ Grapevine Quote ^*~*~*~*~*
"The little things that happen, the
spoken word, the kind smile, the nod of encouragement -- the fellowship
that goes with the program -- these things I will never forget."
Benoni, January 1988
"A Special Kind of Peace,"
AA Grapevine
*~*~*~*~*^ Big Book & Twelve N'
Twelve Quotes of the Day ^*~*~*~*~*
"Once more: The alcoholic at certain
times has no effective mental
defense against the first drink.
Except in a few rare cases, neither
he nor any other human being can
provide such a defense. His defense must come from a Higher Power."
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
More About Alcoholism, pg. 43~
"When many hundreds of people are
able to say that the consciousness
of the Presence of God is today the
most important fact of their
lives, they present a powerful reason
why one should have faith."
~Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition,
We Agnostics, pg. 51~
"We, who have recovered from serious
drinking, are miracles of mental health."
-Alcoholics Anonymous p. 133 (The
Family Afterward)
"In 2003, it is estimated that over
two million have recovered through A.A."
-Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
p. 15 (Foreword)
Misc. AA Literature - Quote
In my teens, I had to be an athlete
because I was not an athlete. I had to be a musician because I could
not carry a tune. I had to be the president of my class in boarding
school. I had to be first in everything because m my perverse heart I
felt myself the least of God's creatures. I could not accept my deep
sense of inferiority, and so I strove to become captain of the baseball
team, and I did learn to play the fiddle. Lead I must - or else. This
was the 'all or nothing' kind of demand that later did me in.
'I'm glad you are going to try that
new job. But make sure that you are only going to 'try.' If you
approach the project in the attitude that 'I must succeed, I must not
fail, I cannot fail,' then you practically guarantee the flop which in
turn will guarantee a drinking relapse. But if you look at the venture
as a constructive experiment only, then all should go well.
Prayer for the Day: Higher Power, thank you for allowing me to
recover from a seemingly hopeless state of mind and body. Please give
me the compassion to carry my experience, strength, and hope to others
today.