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» 12 step/ 2nd half in Alcoholics Anonymous text.
Henry Robert Kimball
Posted December 25, 2011 by Henry Robert Kimball in 12 Step Spirituality
"Assuming we are spiritually fit, we can do all sorts of things alcoholics are not supposed to do. People have said we must not go where liquor is served; we must not have it in our homes; we must shun friends who drink; we must avoid moving pictures which show drinking scenes; we must not go into bars; our friends must hide their bottles if we go to their houses; we mustn’t think or be reminded about alcohol at all. Our experience shows that this is not necessarily so.
We meet these conditions every day. An alcoholic who cannot meet them, still has an alcoholic mind; there is something the matter with his spiritual status. His only chance for sobriety would be some place like the Greenland Ice Cap, and even there an Eskimo might turn up with a bottle of scotch and ruin everything! Ask any woman who has sent her husband to distant places on the theory he would escape the alcohol problem.
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.
So our rule is not to avoid a place where there is drinking, if we have a legitimate reason for being there. That includes bars, nightclubs, dances, receptions, weddings, even plain ordinary whoopee parties. To a person who has had experience with an alcoholic, this may seem like tempting Providence, but it isn’t.
You will note that we made and important qualification. Therefore, ask yourself on each occasion, “Have I any good social, business, or personal reason for going to this place? Or am I expecting to steal a little vicarious pleasure from the atmosphere of such places?” If you answer these questions satisfactorily, you need have no apprehension. Go or stay away, whichever seems best. But be sure you are on solid spiritual ground before you start and that your motive in going is thoroughly good. do not think of what you will get out of the occasion. Think of what you can bring to it. But if you are shaky, you had better work with another alcoholic instead!
Why sit with a long face in places where there is drinking, sighing about the good old days. If it is a happy occasion, try to increase the pleasure of those there; if a business occasion, go and attend to your business enthusiastically. If you are with a person who wants to eat in a bar, by all means go along. Let your friends know they are not to change their habits on your account. At a proper time and place explain to all your friends why alcohol disagrees with you. If you do this thoroughly, few people will ask you to drink. While you were drinking, you were withdrawing from life little by little. Now you are getting back into the social life of this world. Don’t start to withdraw again just because your friends drink liquor.
Your job now is to be at the place where you may be of maximum helpfulness to others, so never hesitate to go anywhere if you can be helpful. You should not hesitate to visit the most sordid spot on earth on such an errand. Keep on the firing line of life with these motives and God will keep you unharmed.
Many of us keep liquor in our homes. We often need it to carry green recruits through a severe hangover. Some of us still serve it to our friends provided they are not alcoholic. But some of us think we should not serve liquor to anyone. We never argue this question. We feel that each family, in the light of their own circumstances, ought to decide for themselves.
We are careful never to show intolerance or hatred of drinking as an institution. Experience shows that such an attitude is not helpful to anyone. Every new alcoholic looks for this spirit among us and is immensely relieved when he finds we are not witch-burners. A spirit of intolerance might repel alcoholics whose lives could have been saved, had it not been for such stupidity. We would not even do the cause of temperate drinking any good, for not one drinker in a thousand likes to be told anything about alcohol by one who hates it.
Some day we hope that Alcoholics Anonymous will help the public to a better realization of the gravity of the alcoholic problem, but we shall be of little use if our attitude is one of bitterness or hostility. Drinkers will not stand for it.
After all, our problems were of our own making. Bottles were only a symbol. Besides, we have stopped fighting anybody or anything. We have to!" This blog started out exactly where my last blog had ended on the 1st part of step 12; which was taken precisely the way it is the text; and this concludes the 12th and final step of Alcoholics Anonymous; where the 12 steps were first written down, along with their instructions. As you can see; it is only the first 9 steps that become completed in the 12 step process. Steps 10, 11, and 12 are done on a daily basis. They become, soon enough, a natural part of living. This is what is meant by; "our way of living" in the preface to the book. The first 9 steps clean away the wreckage of our past; and brings us into the "NOW"- free from the guilt, shame and remorse that kept us spiritually sick. In step 9 the promise that "you will be amazed before you are half-way through"; is not talking about half the number of resentments; it is referring to being half-way through the past and into the present. For somewhere in 9 it happens; at the latest.It is at this stage of the recovery process that one realizes he or she has undergone a complete transformation in their reaction to life; and that this transformation could hardly have been accomplished on their own. Then you know, in fact, it IS God that has done this miracle.
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Ever Smith wrote at December 29, 2011
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place where you may be of maximum helpfulness to others but alcoholic tries to shield himself he may succeed for a time, but usually winds up with a bigger explosion than ever.Read more voodoo
Ever Smith
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Sheila Shuster wrote at December 27, 2011
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Well said! It is somewhat similar to people who say they cannot meditate in loud places or amongst those who do not share similar practices. There is always silence underneath sounds, and a sense of peace arises when you know that it is not the body or mind that matters.
Sheila Shuster
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