Feb 12: When God Has Been There for You

When God Has Been There for You

Ladies of GROW, this is such a wonderful time for me, I am staying at the home of my online sponsor and she and her husband are spoiling me rotten! We are having great chats about AA and life is so totally different than it was 15 years ago. The Promises have all come true for this alcoholic, how blessed I am. Next Saturday, God willing, I will celebrate 15 years sobriety and that is a gift and a miracle that my gratitude knows no bounds for.

When I think back on my drinking years there were so many times that God was there for me and of course I did not realize it at the time.

One incident comes quickly to mind, I had prepared a meal of Corned Beef and Cabbage, put it on the stove to cook, had another drink and passed out. My husband came home for his supper and saw smoke billowing out the window, the meal had burned dry, the pot had melted down to a single piece of metal on the burner but … the kitchen and the house and me had not burned. God had to have been there, how the whole house had not burned was a miracle. I still have that piece of metal and it reminds me of one of the many times God was there for me.

There is a poem by Mary Stephens called “Footprints in the Sand” I unsuccessfully tried to copy it here (I’m using an unfamiliar email program while away!!) but I’m sure you have all read this beautiful poem.When there was just one set of prints in the sand was when God was carrying us.

My daughter-in-law did a needlepoint of this poem and gave it to me my first sober Christmas, a very treasured gift.

I’d love to see you shares on your times when God was there for you. Thank you for allowing me to chair this week.

Feb 05: Every Dark Cranny

Every Dark Cranny

Pg. 75, paragraph 2 of the Big Book: 
“We pocket our pride and go to it, illuminating every twist of character, every dark cranny of the past. Once we have taken this step, withholding nothing, we are delighted. We can look the world in the eye. We can be alone at perfect peace and ease. Our fears fall from us.”

This excerpt is full of golden nuggets. Let’s look at it bit by bit.

If we DON’T put away our pride we will never be able to sort through the mess we’ve made of our lives and ourselves. We just can’t. So, we take every ounce of it and pocket it away to begin our work.

We have to shine the light on every slice of our lives, character, attitudes, behaviorsthe whole pie! This will allow us to go into “every dark cranny” and clear out the rubbish. This will leave a clean slate on which to build our new lives/selves. If we don’t keep any part of it back in the end we WILL be joyous, thrilled, and finally, after so many years of embarrassment, be able to “look the world in the eye.” It is a great joy for me to be able to look at myself in the mirror each day. I no longer look away, cringe, or glare. My shoulders are back, my head held high, and a look of pride on my face.

I am at peace.

I no longer feel uncomfortable in my own skin.

I am no longer afraid.

*********

What about you? Have you searched every dark cranny? Are you at peace? Are you still afraid?

Jan 29: Ego & Self Pity

Ego & Self Pity

Carol D., alcoholic, and thank you ladies for allowing me to be of service and chair this week’s meeting. I decided to put out a topic that I have had some issues and feelings on.

I can remember when I came into the program and was doing my 4th step with my sponsor and she said something to the affect that whatever the issue was it was my ego. I absolutely could not believe she could think I had an ego. Not Carol, the people pleaser, no way. In my mind a person with ego was a person that walked and acted with arrogance and thought they were better than anyone else. Well just recently it has come up again and the bottom line was I just plain do not understand what ego is. I have been doing a lot of reading on ego and the only thing I have really understood is that “ego” can be good or bad. It is a defect when I am right and the rest of you out there don’t know what you are talking about. Life will always be a struggle with our “ego”, but we can keep it manageable , if we ask ourselves the question, is it to make me look good, or will it benefit others more.

I guess I thought when I got sober that my daughter’s would want to spend more time with me and I was so looking forward to it. Now understand I did not spend much time with them when I was drinking because I knew they did not want me drinking and I did not want them to know I was drinking as much as I was. My oldest daughter lived with me from Dec. 2010 until Sept. 2011 as she was going through a divorce than she got a job and moved out. I do hear from her more frequently than when she was married to her ex. Now my younger daughter I have always been very close too and hardly ever hear from her anymore. So here I sit on the pity pot, which I also believe is “ego” because she has not called me in a few days. I have to stop myself and realize that she has a family and a job and a life and she is busy. Here again is not just “self-pity” but also “ego”.

On the 18th of this month I celebrated 6 years sober and what a blessing for me, have not had to go back out for any reason, and what I love about this program is I am continually learning about myself and who I really am and that I can use the tools to make the changes that I need to make. When I first came in I wanted 10 years sober right from the get go, lol, but today I understand why this is a lifelong program. God is revealing to me in steps he know that I can accept and work on.

Jan 22: Traditions & Slogans

Traditions & Slogans

My name is Gigi and I am an alcoholic. Today, by the grace of a Power greater than myself, and with the help of you and all my other A.A. comrades, I celebrate 23 years of continuous sobriety. I like the vein that we have been pursuing in the past weeks, because it is literature based. My recovery depended upon the literature early in my recovery, when I was too sick to go out for several months at a time and did not yet have a computer. I was given a list of the Steps and Traditions and the underlying principles. When I read the list of principles for the Traditions, I was surprised to see that many of them are our slogans.

Usually when I am in a f2f meeting and it is announced that the topic will be a Tradition, there is a round of groans around the room. 🙂 Nevertheless! reading the Foreword to the Second Edition, we see that it states on page xix: “As we discovered the principles by which the individual alcoholic could live, so we had to evolve principles by which the AA groups and AA as a whole could survive and function effectively.” These I have found to be helpful to me in living with and functioning effectively at home, at work, and in any group of which I am a member. If I am having difficulty with others, it often comes back to one of these.

(That page lists the Traditions, out of order and more as they are mentioned in our Preamble. I will send that as a separate post.)

So here they are, the Tradition and Slogans:

1. Our common welfare should come first; personal recovery depends upon A. A. unity. 
Principle: Unity

2. For our group purpose there is but one ultimate authority–a loving God as He may express Himself in our group conscience. Our leaders are but trusted servants; they do not govern.
Principle: Right Relationship to HP; Let Go and Let God

3. The only requirement for A. A. membership is a desire to stop drinking.Principle: 
Willingness

4. Each group should be autonomous except in matters affecting other groups or A. A. as a whole.
Principle: Live and Let Live

5. Each group has but one primary purpose — to carry its message to the alcoholic who still suffers.
Principle: First Things First

6. An A. A. group ought never endorse, finance or lend the A. A. name to any related facility or outside enterprise, lest problems of money, property and prestige divert us from our primary purpose.
Principle: Keep It Simple

7. Every A. A. group ought to be fully self-supporting, declining outside contributions.
Principle: Self-Support

8. Alcoholics Anonymous should remain forever nonprofessional, but our service centers may employ special workers.
Principle: Altruism / Selflessness

9. A. A., as such, ought never be organized; but we may create service boards or committees directly responsible to those they serve.
Principle: Service, Taking Responsibility

10. Alcoholics Anonymous has no opinion on outside issues; hence the A.A. name ought never be drawn into public controversy.
Principle: Harmony

11. Our public relations policy is based on attraction rather than promotion; we need always maintain personal anonymity at the level of press, radio and films.
Principle: Personal Humility

12. Anonymity is the spiritual foundation of all our Traditions, ever reminding us to place principles before personalities.
Principle: Tolerance

Please share with the group something about one of these principles or slogans. Which one is your personal favorite; which do you use the most right now? Do you aspire to one of these? Does one of them make you want to run the other way?

For me, First Things First is one I am using a lot right now. It’s interesting to me that it fits right in with the job I do in GROW. As Back Up Listkeeper, I’ve been helping new members get into the group. It’s a lovely service for me because I get to serve as one of the first contacts, along with my sister Listkeeper and the Greeters. We have a lot of newer members to AA lately, so it feels like First Things First is acting in my life. And our primary purpose of carrying the message is getting done (Tradition 5).

I have been struggling with my health the past year and a half, and staying in balance means that I have to prioritize my days well. First things have to come first or it all comes crashing down! It is a much simpler way to live than I would do on my own. 🙂 Which is probably really good for me, and why I am in this position. When I let my HP take charge, I have to have First Things First. It means that sometimes I have to put dinner on the table for my husband and me rather than snack on stuff and sew or read. Again, really good for me, keeping life in balance, and eating a good meal instead of junk food.

Jan 15: The Serenity Prayer

The Serenity Prayer

God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.

I would like to share what it means to me and how it has affected my life. Then, I would like to hear what it means to you ladies and how/if you use it on a daily basis. For those of you who may not have found your God, maybe you could just repeat it without “God” in front.

I originally wanted to chair today because today is the 22nd anniversary of my father’s death. Through God, The Serenity Prayer gave me courage and wisdom to accept his being gone.

Lately it has meant much more and helped much more. My mother passed away on Dec. 29 after many months of illness. She too was in the program and had 36 years of sobriety at the time of her passing. She would say the prayer often and I was able to see that it gave her much courage. She truly accepted that there was nothing she could change and that she was in God’s hands. She passed with courage and grace.

For the funeral, I arranged to have The Lord’s Prayer and The Serenity Prayer put on her prayer card. Many people there knew why. Some didn’t know why. Anonymity meant a lot to her and we honored that to the end.

My brothers and sister didn’t even know the prayer. But, by the end of her interment, I think they all knew it and found comfort in it.

Just repeating it over and over is calming. It helps me to stay positive and on track. I was familiar with it long before I came into A.A. I knew it because of my mom. I honor her each time I say it and I know it has to be the first thing I say in the morning to myself. If I ever have a desire to drink, I hope it will keep me on the right path of sobriety.

Jan 08: Your Favorite Story or Passage of the Big Book

Your Favorite Story or Passage of the Big Book

This topic came up recently in another recovery group I am a part of, I hope it wasn’t here also…smiles…I am kinda losing it. I loved seeing all the different passages and stories that folks related to. I love everything about the BB. The Promises which Laura lead us on last week (by the way, my fav. part of the promises and I always say it to myself when read at a mtg is: “We will intuitively know how to handle situations which baffled us”. However, the one story that I really relied on in early recovery…and still do til today is…can you guess?? It might have something to do with my screen name…it is from the 3rd Ed. of the BB –“Dr., Alcoholic, Addict” and it is Dr. Paul O’s story…which on page 449 in the 3rd Ed. and page 417 in the 4th Ed. starts by saying, “And acceptance is the key to all my problems today…”. I had to read that passage every AM before calling my sponsor when I first got sober…it has saved me many times….I even was blessed to have met and had Dr. Paul O sign my BB. His whole story was great. Many folks stop at 449 or 417..however, he has so much more to say after that famous passage. If you read on he goes on to say, “He goes on to say, “when I focus on what’s good today, I have a good day, and when I focus on what’s bad, I have a bad day. If I focus on problem, the problem increases; if I focus on the answer, the answer increases” (page 419 of the 4th Ed.).

That is what I try to live my life with today….focusing on solutions…its not always easy, esp when everything is crumbling around you…I usually, with the help of talking to my sponsor and others…can get myself there….

So, what is your favorite story or passage and how has it helped your sobriety today?

Jan 01: The 9th Step Promises

The 9th Step Promises

When I first arrived in the rooms and when the promises were read, it was just as though people stopped reading in English and started reading in Chinese, or ancient Greek, or Basque, or Egyptian – some language that wasn’t even from western Europe. Then, when they were done with the promises, they switched back to English.

For those who aren’t sure of them, these are the 9th step promises (they are repeated also after this part of our meeting) (I am going to space them, not as they are printed, but as I “hear” them):

  • 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 upon 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.

It wasn’t as though I couldn’t understand the individual words – it was that I did not comprehend – I did not in any way understand how the 9th step promises were possible or even relevant to my life.

But slowly, I began to hold on to “we will comprehend the word serenity and we will know peace.”

That particular promise (or two promises, I suppose) began to be something for me to grasp, as a drowning person grabs onto anything in the water that is floating. I so wanted that lack of drama. It began to be the touchstone through which I could surrender to HP – because I began to *know* that HP would help me comprehend “serenity” and to know peace. Lack of internal drama. Quiet acceptance. Knowledge that I’m doing HP’s will – that I am choosing to live a truly sober life.

I began to realize that they don’t make sense trying to find them before doing the 9th step – they make total sense coming at the amends phase of the Program of AA. And the promise that “they will always materialize if we work for them” is also so true, I’ve found.

I think during the rather dramatic and chaotic years of my early sobriety, this promise was the one that kept me praying. Not for serenity (I prayed a lot more often for the willingness to be willing to be willing…) but to know that it would come, as long as I kept doing the next right thing. It may have been – now that I write this – one of my early understandings that HP works in HP’s time – and that it’s not part of Laura B.’s job description to try to get HP to do things faster.

Anyway, I would love to hear what you think of one or all of the 9th step promises. They aren’t, by any means, the only promises of AA, so if you’d rather write about a different AA promise, please do. And please, don’t worry about it if you haven’t gotten to Step 9, I’d still like to know about your experiences and thoughts around the promises.

2011 – Group Conscience Decisions

2011 Group Conscience Decisions

This is a summary of the group conscience decisions made in 2011.

April 2011

  • Approved new job description for "Temporary Mentor."
  • Modified job description of "Weekly Leader Listkeeper from a 6-month to a one-year term.
  • Modified the Job Description of the Greeter by adding: “Sends copy of current Weekly Topic to new members as they join.”
  • Agreed to table discussion about new back-up positions. Rather, our present Rotating Back-up Trusted Servant will get in touch privately with the other Trusted Servants, for whom she is providing back-up, to exchange contact information to ease the transition if the need arises to call upon her to assist with one of the Lists. We can revisit this topic in the October Business meeting.
  • Agreed to add a Back-up Greeter (2nd Greeter) position to share the workload with the Greeter. The Job Description would be the same as for Greeter.

October 2011

  • Approved minor changes in our monthly letter that goes out to the membership and the letter that goes out to members upon joining the business list to make these letters more accurate and to “streamline” the process.
  • Approved modifications to Greeter Letter #2 sent to new members to: simplify the letters, correct grammatical errors, and provide instruction for access to their personal web pages and / or retrieve their passwords. Change the wording in Letter # 2 to read: "If you would prefer to receive the Digest version, please contact our Listkeeper at grow-owner@oso-aa.org and she will make the change for you."
  • Approved modifications to the current letter that the Greeters send to the group, to introduce a new member by including the new member name and email address at the beginning of the letter rather than at the end.
  • Approved modifications to the Listkeeper’s Job Description to clarify how to manage former members who wish to re-join the group and to eliminate a listed task which is outdated.
  • Approved modifications to the Treasurer’s Job Description to clarify that the incoming Treasurer will be responsible to set up a PayPal and checking account dedicated to GROW collections and activity.
  • Approved change to the wording in our “12 Step Opportunity Letter” to make it consistent with the wording in that letter (i.e. change “12” to “12th”).
  • Approved posting on the GROW website a listing of prior topics and the lead shares.
  • Approved modifications to the Job Description of the Weekly Leader Listkeeper (WLL) to discontinue the mid-week re-posting of the topic by the WLL and to discontinue re-posting the Step & Tradition letters in the middle of the month. It was also suggested that the Weekly Chairperson may re-post the topic/meeting if she chooses to do so.
  • Approved changes to the Job Description for the Rotating Back-up to offer back-up assistance to the following Trusted Servant positions: Weekly Leader Listkeeper, Birthday Listkeeper, Temporary Mentor, 12th Step Chair and Sponsor Listkeeper.

Dec 25: How are you putting your sobriety first?

How are you putting your sobriety first?

In three days, I will celebrate 25 years of sobriety, and for that I am deeply grateful. I can officially say that I have now been sober longer than I drank and drugged. I’d like to say that, because of this many years of sobriety, I am no longer at risk for taking a drink, however, that would be a lie.

Though it is true that my life today is so much better than I could have even dreamed when I was drinking ~ I’ve enjoyed all of the Promises, and I would generally describe myself as happy, peaceful and most times reasonably serene. And it is also true that I would never want to go back to that drinking and drugging life because it is a hard way to live. (For me, sober recovery is the “easier softer way”.) However, three weeks ago, my 66 year old husband had a stroke and is now paralyzed on one side and is unable to speak, except for a few words. I was also told that he has two major blockages in his coronary arteries that will need to be treated because he is at risk for a heart attack.

Suddenly, my world shifted and nothing seems secure anymore. I don’t know what the future holds regarding his health, what function he will be able to recover, his ability to work, or our finances. I had worked while my husband attended school and received various degrees and, our plan had been for me to finally be able to retire soon, while he continued working (he is an electrical contractor and we own our own company). I could go on and on about what life was “supposed to look like”. But, all that has changed.

As I found myself reeling from the changes his medical condition caused in our lives, one evening as I was leaving the hospital after a long and stressful day, I felt so weary, afraid, angry and alone. Then, from out of nowhere, a thought and visual image “floated” into my head ~ it was an image of me sipping a glass of wine and savoring that warm, relaxed feeling ~ it felt like the most natural thing in the world I actually stopped walking and shook my head. The image was so vivid, it startled me. I immediately thanked God for my sobriety and asked His protection and care as I continue to make my way through these changes in my life.

That vivid thought/ visual image made me realize that, no matter how many years of sobriety I have, this disease is cunning, baffling and powerful and I have only a daily reprieve from that slippery-slope-spiral down to the black hole I was in before I got sober.

My sobriety is dependant on my spiritual condition and, I was reminded that I must do my inner (spiritual) work to address the outer challenges in my life. For me, that inner work involves talking to God (a lot), staying out of the way so God can do His work, talking and sharing with sober alcoholics, striving to live by the principles / Steps of this Program, and attending meetings. What this means for me is that, no matter what is happening in my life (good or bad), my sobriety must come first.

Please share about what you do ~ or don’t do ~ to put your sobriety first, regardless of what is happening in your life. Or, if you have a burning desire to share about something else that is going on in your life, please do so.

Dec 18: Road to Recovery

Road to Recovery

“Autobiography in Five Short Chapters” by Portia Nelson

Chapter 1: I walk down the street. There is a deep hole in the sidewalk. I fall in. I am lost. I am helpless. It isn’t my fault. It takes forever to find a way out.
Chapter 2: I walk down the same street. There is a deep hole in the sidewalk. I PRETEND I don’t see it. I fall in again. I can’t believe I am in this same place, But it isn’t my fault. It still takes a long time to get out.
Chapter 3: I walk down the same street. There is a deep hole in the sidewalk. It see it is there. I still fall in. It’s a habit, but my eyes are open. I know where I am. It is my fault. I get out immediately.
Chapter 4: I walk down the same street. There is a deep hole in the sidewalk. I walk around it.
Chapter 5: I walk down a different street.

This reading reminds me of the definition of Insanity by Albert Einstein: “Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results”. Like – how many times did I tell myself after a day/night of heavy drinking and subsequent horrible hangover that I would never do that again? How many times did I make a promise to my God that if He got me out of the mess I had gotten myself into that I would never get drunk again? Too numerous to mention and I couldn’t keep the promises I made. I would justify my drinking by telling myself that if s/he hadn’t said or done that, or if you had my problems, you’d drink too, etc.

I would berate myself for doing this repeatedly and wondered why I couldn’t get off the treadmill of doing the same things over and over again. That hole in the sidewalk (alcohol) removed my feelings of self-worth and self-esteem and left me feeling useless, worthless, less than and a person who even I wouldn’t want to be around. When I became sick and tired of doing this, I prayed and cried out for help to my God to show me a better way to live my life.

My prayer was answered when a co-worker friend of mine with 9 years of sobriety saw the pain I was in and took me to my first meeting. I was relieved to learn that I wasn’t a bad person trying to be good, but a sick person trying to get well. This made so much sense to me that I admitted I was an alcoholic and that my life was unmanageable. At first, I choked on the word, alcoholic, until I learned about your struggle with this disease and it was pretty much the same as mine. For the first time in my life, I finally fit in with a group – a group of alcoholics who got sober and helped others to get sober by sharing their ESH.

What havoc is/was that ‘hole in the sidewalk’ playing in your life? What or who helped to get you onto the Road to Recovery?

I’ll be interested in reading your shares on this subject or on anything else that is happening in your life that you’d like to share with us.

Dec 11: Patience and Tolerance

Patience and Tolerance

As the holiday approaches I find myself getting impatient much easier than any other time of the year. Driving seems so much more difficult as more people hit the road to go shopping and visiting. I have to call up all my patience to get through the aisles at the grocery store or a department store as people seem to walk around in a daze, staring at products or socializing with neighbors they haven’t spoken to all year. My grandkids seem overly rambunctious and my kids seem a bit testier.

I thank my HP for this program for I have tools to not create wreckage for myself and others. In the 12 and 12, on page 141 it says: Could we then foresee that troublesome people were to become our principal teachers of patience and tolerance? I see it every day. Now I ask if I can help someone find something they are looking for, I let people get in front of me on the road, and I hug my grandkids and children much tighter whispering to them I love you.

St. Francis de Sales said: Have patience with all things, but chiefly have patience with yourself. Do not lose courage in considering our own imperfection, but instantly set about remedying them – every day begin the task anew.

Dec 04: The Power of the Pause

The Power of the Pause

I spent all of my conscious life considering myself a tenacious woman. I created myself as the person who rushes in and makes things happen. I was the go-to-gal if you needed something done at work or with my friends and family. I did not fail in this even in my heaviest drinking days, I always seemed to be able to power-through. But with my risky alcoholic behavior, this tenacious woman often rushed headlong into disaster as well.

My self-assured attitude proved to be a potential liability in AA too. I was thrilled to hear this was an action program. I immediately got busy and made coffee and drove women to meetings almost 7 days a week. I insisted that I do the 4th Step right away. Through sponsorship and reading (and writing in) my Big Book, I cobbled together what works as an instant fix for those moments when I feel compelled to rush in: Dont fight anything pause.

I have continued to find it important to my inner comfort (serenity) and my sobriety (physical and emotional) that I do not fight what comes my way. Instead I pause. If I am feeling or thinking negatively what I really need to do is dig deep and find some gratitude for what is working in my life in the big picture – deny the urge to allow the negative thoughts in and focus on the fact that I have indeed had a profound personality change sufficient enough to allow me to be sober today AND that serenity is possible if I do not pick up a drink. I need to remember that if I choose to take one drink I will be swept up in the phenomena of craving and will likely not be able to get back to this good place that I have seen can be a reality for me if I work, or pause, through rough moment.

Nov 27: 11th Step – Thy will (not mine) be done

11th Step – Thy will (not mine) be done

I read this reading in my morning meditation today (from As Bill Sees It) and felt like it hit home with me and decided to share with my GROW family.

Do It Our Way? p 329
In praying, our immediate temptation will be to ask for specific solutions to specific problems, and for the ability to help other people as we have already thought they should be helped. In that case, we are asking God to do it our way. Therefore, we ought to consider each request carefully to see what its real merit is. Even so, when making specific requests, it will be well to add to each one of them this qualification: “… if it be Thy will.”

TWELVE AND TWELVE, P. 102
The Big Book advises against praying for our needs, unless it would benefit others. I have a lot of experience in praying for selfish needs: “God please let me out of this speeding ticket” “please don’t let him know I spent this amount of money” (you get the idea, lol). My sponsor pointed out in the tenth step that the Big Book reads, “How can I best serve Thee. Thy will (not mine) be done.” It is my purpose to enter any situation as a trusted servant, opposed to my innate nature to seek for my own needs.

What is your experience, strength, and hope in practicing the eleventh step in your daily affairs, when praying for God’s help “selflessly”?

Nov 20: Things You are Grateful For

Things You are Grateful For

I feel blessed to be able to chair the meeting this week. I always like to chair around my anniversary because of the gratitude that I feel for this program and the life it has given me.

November is gratitude month and a good time around the upcoming holidays to feel and express the gratitude we have for our lives. I don’t know about you gals, but if you were anything like me at the end of your drinking you didn’t feel grateful for anything or anybody. My parents lived 3000 miles away, my children 1500 miles away and there was no one left in my life to put the blame on. If I could have left me I would have. I was drinking to die and it just wasn’t happening. The thought of living the way I was for the rest of my life was what finally brought me to my knees and gave me the gift of desperation.

It wasn’t easy. I fought against it and “yeah but” everything that was told to me. The pain of being dry was as bad as the pain brought on by my drinking and I finally had to surrender to the steps and to a God that I didn’t understand. I still cannot describe what God is, and I still don’t understand how He works, but I know that He is there. The longer I am here I can see more clearly where He has always taken care of me. I should not have lived through many of the things that happened in my life prior to and after coming into this program. I am truly blessed.

I was told that the gifts I would be given by staying sober and living this program daily would far exceed any dreams that I could have thought of back then and they were right. I would have sold myself short. Please share with us this Thanksgiving week the things that you are grateful for in your lives. Of course, feel free to share on whatever else is on your minds also. I encourage our new members to get their feet wet by sharing also.

Nov 13: Working It – Staying Sober Through the Party Season

Working It – Staying Sober Through the Party Season

I’ve had a whirlwind summer and fall this year. Travel was a huge part of my schedule. Plugged into the at time away from home was all the “regular” chaos of a multi-generational family was a few great things and a few disasters. “Hopefully” one of our Son’s Weddings last weekend signaled a bit of a break before the Holidays.

Why this long (probably boring) paragraph?

I’ve been sober for quite a few 24 hrs.. I have a long Gratitude list. I’ve not drank far longer than I did. I am an alcoholic. I was , I am, I always will be. As long as I remember this Truth and practice ALL the suggested life-saving behaviors, beliefs and admonitions the ladies of AA have taught me, I don’t have to drink one day at a time. I’ve learned that I’ve worked this Program so earnestly, the Program works me before I realize I’m in shaky emotional or spiritual ground.

Rather than fight myself about going up to the cash bar at John’s Wedding (who I got to Marry!!!!!), I was sitting back, rocking and humming the two youngest Grandloves to sleep (1 at a time) and praying for the few folks there who seem to be running toward this Fellowship, Jail or the Grave.

So, after my never-ending share, How are you working or not working this HP given Gift of LIFE. What needs tweaking to prepare for the Holidays so we stay sober through the party season of the year?

“It works IF you work it” is real.

Nov 05: Liberation and Strength

Liberation and Strength

From pg. 21, paragraph 3 of the 12 x 12:
“We perceive that only through utter defeat are we able to take our first steps toward liberation and strength. Our admissions of personal powerlessness finally turn out to be firm bedrock upon which happy and purposeful lives may be built.”

We all talk about the bad side of alcoholism. I thought we would look at what that “bad side” brought us. We have a lot of new members who are young in recovery. I know this will really help them.

So, it became obvious to me that until I was at my utter bottom with nothing left of my pride, ego, or life I would have no desire to go up. I just kept staying in misery – in fact wallowing in it. Yet, once at the bottom, the utter defeat, I can attest that I did indeed find freedom, a loosening of the bonds, and a strength I didn’t know I had. And as I gained another day of sobriety, and another, and another, and so on, the strength increased. As I worked the steps and started understanding why I had behaved as I did, within I found I had a strength I could be proud of and rely upon. I was truly liberated.

The other part was admitting I was utterly powerlessness and when I did I earned a foundation for the rest of my recovery. At the start did I think it was bedrock? Of course not! It took time to realize what I was building. At first you just feel lost, you aren’t catching everything that’s being said, you’re scared (white knuckling it), you have little faith in yourself. You certainly don’t realize that you are building a bedrock foundation for the rest of your recovery. But, you are. And in time you stand up and feel the firm rock under your feet. You start taking more steps and you feel that liberation and strength filling your soul.

This, my friends, is the joy of recovery. The joy of realizing you CAN do it. The joy of realizing the misery is behind you and hope is in front of you.

Liberation, strength, and bedrock. Three words to remember. The floor is now open for sharing.

Oct 30: What Spirituality Means to You

What Spirituality Means to You

Good day ladies….Nachelle: alcoholic. This week I would like to discuss spirituality, our higher powers. We say that AA is a spiritual program…what does that mean to you? How has spirituality changed for you?

As for me…I believe spirituality is different for each person. There are probably 7 billion different ideas about this in the World! I was raised with a very strict, dogmatic religion. I know my parents were doing what they thought was right but at 16 I rebelled hard. I struggled for many years to figure this out. I had a hard time making sense of it all. I explored and researched many different faiths and belief systems. I found it all fascinating historically and culturally but couldn’t see how it applied to my life. I got drunker and drunker.

I knew when I came back to AA I would have to keep step 2 and step 3 simple. I couldn’t complicate it. So I started with asking the “Universe” for help in the morning and thank you at night. My spiritual journey began. I have met many people in AA and with my job I have been to meetings in Canada, USA, Belize, Guatemala, Peru, Ecuador, Portugal, Thailand, India. All very diverse Countries and different belief systems and that’s the beauty of AA….it’s INCLUSIVE!!!!!! Any higher power or God/Goddess will do. Even atheists and agnostics. I know that when I came in, my perceptions and thinking was so messed up and I was so self absorbed. The concept of getting out of myself and being a part of this World was refreshing. No one told me what to believe in, I was told to find my own truth. That was very important to me. If I’d been told what to believe, I would have left….and probably not drawn another sober breath. Today I have come to peace with the religion of my childhood and see the positives in it, I respect a great many religions and philosophies. My journey has led me to some fascinating ideas and people. I know that it will continue as long as I keep an open mind.

My higher power is more what I don’t understand…and today that is ok. I try to be content to live in the question. As some call is “the great mystery”. I believe to keep AA a safe, inclusive place we need to continue to discuss our spirituality in a general way. Keeping our arguments for or against any religion out of our meetings. As step 2 says in the 12 & 12, we resigned from the debating society.

Today my HP speaks through life circumstances, trusted friends, AA meetings. spiritual books and the more I pray & meditate, the more inspiration comes to me in the quiet and my intuition. I am grateful today for my quiet times of prayer and meditation and all the interesting things I’ve learned and people I have met on this spiritual quest. AA is my foundation.

For many years alcohol (and other unhealthy stuff) was my higher power, my God. I knew when I was new I needed to replace this. If you’re new here…I encourage you to keep this matter simple. Find your own truth, pray and hang on.

It does work!

Feel free to share about what spirituality means in your sobriety or anything you need to.

Thanks for letting me chair!

Oct 23: Letting Up on Disciplines

Letting Up on Disciplines

Sorry for the lateness of the meeting but just got a message from Laura B. that she needed a substitute so I really did not have alot of time to think so I’m going with something that I have a tendency to struggle with. That is “Letting Up on Disciplines”. The one thing I have come to learn about the program of AA is that it is a program of action. It is up to me, Carol D, to take the action today to not drink one day at a time. Now I have been given a tool kit with all new tools in it to help me to do this. In my tool kit I have prayer, meditation, daily inventory, AA attendance, and service to the groups. My daily routine when I get up is of course to use the ladies room, get cleaned up and ready for work. I just recently realized that I have this extra time in the morning to say my prayers, and do my meditation for the day instead of flipping on the TV and watching HLN. So here I am on my way to work saying my prayers and trying to meditate while all these cars are zooming by me or the deer are running out in the road in front of me.

Just this past week I have been changing my routine a little to get my prayers in as soon as I sit down after getting ready for work instead of flipping on the TV. At night when I go to bed (you are gonna love this one but the truth) I read AA literature and seem to have to have some candy. I noticed that I was getting very tired (probably from the candy) and forgetting to take my daily inventory but I have always thanked God (my higher power) for my sobriety for that day. So now I am doing my prayers and daily inventory before I read and eat my candy.

Prior to my retirement and getting this parttime job I would go from work to an AA meeting as I usually worked late. Now I get home anywhere from 12:30 – 4:30 pm so I will get comfortable and than not want to get cleaned up to go to a meeting, plus I am getting to where I hate driving so far all the time. So Friday night my sponsor and I were going to go to a meeting and on Thurs. she had a root canal done so needless to say was not feeling up to it. So now the stinkin thinkin comes in my head that I really don’t have to go to a meeting and I really don’t want to go by myself. My head went back and forth until finally I just got up and decided to go. My trip was 93 miles round trip but an awesome women’s meeting up north. I was so glad I went and felt so much better after I left the meeting for the drive home. So I am committing myself to that meeting every other Fri night.

I have noticed that I have not been doing alot of volunteering in the past year and I realized it was because if I did I would have to keep that committment. Hello, not sure I wanted to do that. It just amazes me at myself what this program has taught me. I am going to start volunteering again to set up a meeting and chair more often in my other groups.

This is all the things that have got me this far in my sobriety and has kept me from a relapse. The things that I was very disciplined about in my first 4 yrs sober so today I know that letting up on my disciplines gets me to stinkin thinkin and that I don’t like.

Thank you gals for letting me chair and for being such a huge part of my journey in sobriety. I hope all of you take just a little bit of your time to share this week as that is also service work and also helps me alot. Have a great week to all of you.

Oct 16: It’s My Choice

It’s My Choice

When it came to the *choice* of topic for today, the whole cloud of themes, thoughts, feelings, and phrases from the Big Book started swarming in my head, and I could not make a decision! They all seemed equally pertinent and important. I often struggle with making choices, and waste my time running backwards and forwards in my head, until the opportunity is missed altogether.

I drank for 20 years – and, looking back, it feels like the choice was made for me. I am an alcoholic, and I was enslaved, imprisoned, incapacitated by alcohol. Many times did I feel desperate because my drinking took me to really dark places, and I was hurting people around me, including my husband, my parents, who were devastated, my two lovely children… However, even if I could stop for a short while, I would inevitably go back to drinking – I couldn’t imagine life without alcohol. I didn’t know it was possible. I didn’t know there was a choice.

Today I *choose* to stay away from the first swig of booze. It is so liberating! The word “choice” for me is full of hope. I know – and I have learnt it the hard way – that nothing will get better or easier, if I pick up a drink. Now, that I am sober, I have a clear head, and it is a beautiful gift! No matter how imperfect I am, indecisive, inefficient, irritable, forgetful, still selfish, often confused, I know that today I can choose to make progress, to learn, and to grow.

I have been sober for 1 year and 5 months, and I am still learning to live. It is hard at times, my reactions are often out of proportion, and I struggle badly with planning and fitting everything in. I agonise over making *choices*, deciding what is important and what isn’t in everyday life.

However, I have acquired faith today. It is indeed a miracle. Today I believe that, if I stay sober and work the programme, if I try to be honest, open-minded and helpful, if I try to listen and not to rush, if I pray and don’t jump to conclusions, then gradually everything will sort itself out. The right decisions will become evident. The solutions will be apparent. The *choices* be “made for me”, in such a way that I can be useful and self-realised.

Today, I can choose to pause, ‘when agitated or doubtful’, and start my day afresh… Sadly, I don’t do it as often as I should… More often than not, I choose not to beat myself up about it, and I mumble as a mantra “it’s progress not perfection”. Despite all my shortcomings, I choose to be happy today. There is a long ‘road of happy destiny’ lying ahead of me.

Oct 09: Detachment

Detachment

Just another aspect that I rather struggled with when I first came into the program. I don’t know about you gals but I find the longer I am in the program that so many different things I struggled with now comes so much easier for me. When I read the BB so many times things pop out at me that I know I have read many different times and now makes sense to me. It’s like the light bulb goes on for me.

Detaching myself from old habits, drinking friends and old hangouts was difficult. Now I have to admit that as far as the friends went most of them just disappeared and that was hard for me, I finally had to accept the fact that they were not friends but just drinking buddies. The ones that did still come around I had to lovingly detach myself from them if they were drinking but most willing to spend time with them if they were not. Did not go to showers, get-togethers or parties where there was drinking but thanked them for inviting me.

I had to do the same thing with my ole hangouts but just went, for instance, up the street to the bar for lunch with my grandchildren and daughter. When I went there, there was no one there but the owners and I did not even do that until I was 4 yrs sober and never went often.

Detaching from old habits was a toughie. When you do something for so long it is truly hard to break the pattern. My way of doing it, I finally realized, was I was isolating. I would go too work, go too meetings, come home get on my puter and than go to bed. This summer was the first time I even spent any time at all in my backyard, see I use to sit at my picnic table and drink in my backyard so I had a really hard time sitting in the backyard because I would think about drinking, this was all in my head before I would even do it. See for me detaching was similar to “letting go and letting God” and you all know how we like to take our wills back now and than. When things happen today that I feel I have to detach from I can do it with love and kindness.

Last week I went to (6) f2f meetings and it was really awesome as that is what I did for my first 3 yrs sober. I went to all different meetings and it just felt so good. I want to thank you gals for allowing me to chair this meeting and for being here with me helping me to stay sober. What does detachment in the program mean to you or feel free to share on any topic you wish.

Oct 02: Only for Today

Only for Today

Dear Ladies of Grow, I am choosing this topic because of our so many new members who have decided that they don’t want to drink today. This was given to me when I came into these rooms and it truly helped me to decide what was important and what wasn’t. If you would please share on one statement that rings true for you, or on any other literature that helped to shape you into the sober woman you are today, Please do so. Of course feel free to share on anything that is affecting your sobority. The meeting is yours, the floor is open…..

The daily decalogue of Pope John XXIII

  1. Only for today, I will seek to live the livelong day positively without wishing to solve the problems of my life all at once.
  2. Only for today, I will take the greatest care of my appearance: I will dress modestly; I will not raise my voice; I will be courteous in my behaviour; I will not criticize anyone; I will not claim to improve or to discipline anyone except myself.
  3. Only for today, I will be happy in the certainty that I was created to be happy, not only in the other world but also in this one.
  4. Only for today, I will adapt to circumstances, without requiring all circumstances to be adapted to my own wishes.
  5. Only for today, I will devote 10 minutes of my time to some good reading, remembering that just as food is necessary to the life of the body, so good reading is necessary to the life of the soul.
  6. Only for today, I will do one good deed and not tell anyone about it.
  7. Only for today, I will do at least one thing I do not like doing; and if my feelings are hurt, I will make sure that no one notices.
  8. Only for today, I will make a plan for myself: I may not follow it to the letter, but I will make it. And I will be on guard against two evils: hastiness and indecision.
  9. Only for today, I will firmly believe, despite appearances, that the good Providence of God cares for me as no one else who exists in this world.
  10. Only for today, I will have no fears. In particular, I will not be afraid to enjoy what is beautiful and to believe in goodness. Indeed, for 24 hours I can certainly do what might cause me consternation were I to believe I had to do it all my life.

Sep 25: Time: the Four Letter Word

Time: the Four Letter Word

Hi Ladies, Jennifer here, definitely and alkie and a grateful one despite the pain I am in today….was thinking about a topic and decided to read in one of my meditation books as this is a new assignment that my sponsor has suggested to me *winks* and it was perfect as usual…. the reading is not from an “AA approved” meditation book, not sure the protocol here so going to take a chance that I posting this is ok. If I have broken tradition, I apologize ahead of time:

This is from “A Women’s Spirit” published by Hazelden
September 25: 
“We can trust in the constancy of one thing—TIME will always move forward, taking us away from the old and gently guiding us to the new”–Amy E. Dean

“It’s human nature to want the pleasurable experiences to last forever and the painful ones to leave immediately. But we can’t move through anything faster then the hands of the clock will allow. A better response to our circumstances, regardless of their flavor, is acceptance that GOD/(HP) has put a lesson in them for us and we can’t adequately judge the long term value of any of our experiences. Nothing lasts forever. The slogan, “This too shall pass” promises us the emotional relief we need when times are hard. Time is our friend, always, even when we don’t like the lesson. We do get what we need, when we need it.


Wow, when I read that I was like….whew…. and it is true. For me and everything that I have endured, the happy, sad, good and bad…has to be to allow time to have its allowance…and to turn it over the HP and know that it will pass….maybe not when I want it to…but it will pass.

This passage is Timely (eh see how I got that in there….) as many of you know and recently read everything and that wasn’t even everything, that I have gone through in sobriety…. especially my recent emergency back surgery….which was sorta like 2 months in the working…it just wasn’t until my last fall and almost 2 weeks later of agony that I chose to accept I needed to see what was going on. I knew something didn’t feel right and entered the hospital on Aug 31st….surgery a week later, 20 hours after surgery, released out of the hospital to a nursing skilled facility where the average age was ppl in their 80’s smiles…but it was the best and cleanest in the area and I didn’t care… I thought my doc was drunk when he released me 20 hrs after surgery, however, it was a blessing…and I got on the road to recovery as I needed….not my timing…but what HP knew was best for me…

As I do believe in lessons also…this has been a lesson in accepting the things I can not change for quite some years now…haven’t been good about it….but things happen for a reason and I am blessed that these falls happened and I got a chance to have one of the best surgeons operate on a disc that has been deemed inoperable for 19 yrs. This fall was a lesson and a blessing. I am not angry at HP at all….this whole process of my body changing and my health and having to learn to change my way of living is an ongoing lesson and process. I have had to accept HP’s time not mine with everything that has happened in life.

NOW: With this surgery, I have nothing but time….I don’t have a choice, and if I do something that I am not ready for …believe me, I feel it, so I have one choice….to accept that my rehab from this surgery is going to take time…maybe even up to a year… that I can not bend lift or twist for the next 6 weeks and possibly no bending or twisting for life…lifting is going to be in time… TIME…time….. and I would be lying if I am making it look like things are peachy and rosey…trust me…I am going through depression, frustration, anger, frustration, screaming at times when something as simple as something dropping I can’t pick up…and I am reminded by my mom or others around me, “This too shall pass…in time…things will get better”…heck…I am only a little over 2 weeks out of major surgery and I am somewhat mobile…ppl say I am doing better then anticipated…and with that, I must be reminded to take it easy….

This did not happen overnight, acceptance, working this program…turning it over…however, it does happen, with time.. The promises are promised to us, in time….and if I am lucky…this thursday I will be celebrating 19 yrs of continuous recovery…ironically, 19 yrs ago when I walked into the program, I was recovered from my first back surgery (Jan, 92), same disc, same procedure, other side of the disc and it failed..this time it, so far, is deemed successful…how is that for time and full circle!!

Please share what TIME means to you…or anything else you might have gotten from the reading….again, apologies if I broke tradition and look forward to hearing your ESH!! Thanks for allowing me the honor to chair with that I pass…. Hugs

Sep 18: Dealing with Difficult Situations

Dealing with Difficult Situations

Hi everyone. I am a bit nervous writing because I am coming up on a year next week without a drink and with a sponsor – – both being a very special blessing. What makes me nervous is I am thinking “how do I sound like someone who almost has a year??” Crazy right?! Because what you are reading is what someone, like me, who almost has a year sounds like. I have been sober before and I have been in relapse before…..and I have been a dry drunk before. The first time I really got sober was special. I had a sponsor at that time too. My life was very different. I was younger, healthier, and with only myself to be responsible for. Ghetto girl went to college and opportunities were limit-less. Although I have been in and out since that time I have never lost site of what could be for me. This time around is very different. My life situation is very different. My goals are different. I have a wonderful partner and a beautiful daughter. I am different.

So…I have been struggling with some medications issues lately. Not the usual what is safe to take/what is not safe to take stuff. I am starting new medications for my Hep C and they have to be authorized and sent through the insurance’s specialty pharmacy and after spending several weeks just getting things straight between my PCP and my liver doctor – – I now find myself spending time repeating the same info to the pharmacy, my doctor’s office and my medical insurance re: my policy information. (now I am worried this might be too long – – -) So trying to be brief I have had difficulty not only getting my doctor to agree to the medication (because of other medical issues), but then getting it authorized through my insurer and delivered to my door.

More of the story goes like this…I was also on two of these meds in the past and they did not work – now there is a new third med added to it and there seems to be a better response – – I have been on the first two meds for several trials so I know what to expect re: side effects. Also, I have a fear deep down “what if this doesn’t work??” So as you can imagine my head has been crazy at times. So when talking with my sponsor she said to share about what got me through all this; and my answer to her was that this is not my whole life. I know it would have been cooler to say the steps, the meetings, the support of the women in this program…but really, that is what I am saying because without you guys I would be drinking — this would be the perfect justification for that first (second, third, fourth…) drink. Instead I have been able to continue to work, be a mom, a partner, have fun and even start some trouble at times.

And, again, most importantly to not drink or drug. So this is a biggie for me. Being powerless in so many ways and just continuing to put one foot in front of the other and focusing on and in the moment. I have a sponsor that allows me to whine at times — which sometimes I need to do – -but my whining passes. I used to wonder why God would put me in a position to be sober and then not allow the medications to work to allow me to enjoy my sober life. Well, I think it has something to do with God allowing me to see that my sober life, which includes the Hep C, is worth something and that He will push me through when I am afraid.

So what I would like to read about is how other people have dealt with difficult situations in recovery (maybe some can share on health issues/acceptance), and how have these “situations” impacted their relationship with their Higher Power. Or just share about anything that is on your mind…This is your meeting.

Thanks for this opportunity to chair the meeting and welcome to all the new members.

Sep 11: Surrender/3rd Step

Surrender/3rd Step

For the past couple weeks I have wanted to drink. I guess you could say I wanted to experiment, you know to see if I really really was an alcoholic, understand one thing, in one hand I know that I am but in the other hand the thought has been crossing my mind that maybe I should try it. Been attending many meetings because of this and have been sharing about it at the meetings. Doing alot of reading on AA literature trying to find my answer to this dilemna. Understand the last thing I want to do is relapse. It all came about because of the corn roast I held Sat of Labor Day weekend. I can’t be around people drinking without it crossing my mind. The funny part about it is there is no one that knows me that would allow me to buy or would even sell to me any alcohol.

Well anyway the corn roast went well I have not had to relapse but thinking about it really bothers me. So in talking to a gal in the program that I attend meetings with as much as we can (our work schedules collide alot) has been very worried about me because of this. She was talking to me the other night and she thinks that the reason I struggle with this now and than is because I have not “surrendered”. I struggle with meditation as my head is alot worse than any squirrel cage you could imagine. I worry about everything and everyone even if I don’t know them personally. So a gal I used to work with also struggles with meditation and a gal at her church told her to say her prayers and do her meditation out loud. So I am trying that.

Personally I do feel I have surrendered but after she talked to me about that I am questioning myself as to exactly what “surrender” is. I try very hard to let go and let God in situations where I have no control but I still worry about it. I trust God that whatever happens is what was meant to be. Doesn’t mean it does not upset me. I believe I work very hard at my program and it really bothers me that thoughts of drinking would even come into my mind. I know when I first came into the program it seemed as though everyone at the tables had relapsed once or more. I than thought maybe that was part of the program until my sponsor here online (no longer in the group) told me that relapse did not have to be a part of my program.

I feel that I have turned my will and life over to the care of God as I understand him but now I’m wondering if I really have. Maybe my way of doing it is not the right way, I don’t know. I don’t think I’ve had any huge spiritual experience but I do feel it was a spiritual experience the night I called my daughter and said I needed help. I believe that was God tapping me on the shoulder telling me to reach out for help.

Maybe you gals can share your ESH on this and help me too understand this whole deal with surrendering. If anyone has something else they need to share on please go for it.

Sep 04: The journey, perfection, where God wants me to be

The journey, perfection, where God wants me to be

On September 2, 2012, I celebrated nine years sober. While writing my sober share, I wrote the following paragraph:

A lesson that I’m learning from God, many times via this room, is that I’m on a *journey* that never ends, and with that I never get to the ultimate goal. It’s always the goal. The goal is right now. There’s no hurry for me to be perfect, because perfect for me is to be in the place that God wants me to be, and that’s right here, right now.

Perfect is a human concept, I’m thinking today, not a God concept.

Please elaborate this, however you’d like the journey part, the perfect part, the where God wants me to be part your choice.

Or, as always, write on what you need to write on this week.

I’d like to let this ruminate in my brain for a while, and I’ll share later this week.

Thank you for being in this room.

Aug 28: How You Are/Are Not a Part Of

How You Are/Are Not a Part Of

I volunteered to chair this week because yesterday was my 61 st belly-button birthday. As I said to a meeting yesterday, I was planning to kill myself when I was 37.5 years old, and I can testify that this program saved my life!

So many topics possible! What I’d like to see discussed – because it has been so very important in my recovery – is to become “a part of” and to let go of being “apart from.” As I am typing all of this on my “smart phone” I will share more later but I wanted to get the meeting out. So how are you (or how are you not) a part of? (AA and/or the rest of life)? What does this mean for you?

So I’d like to hear from all about this. If you are still as I was not so very long ago and niot feeling a part of AA as it is called “a we program” or resent it I still encourage you to share with us. If you find it a confusing idea please share that. Everyone’s voice and thoughts help me!

Thanks everyone and have a great meeting.

Aug 21: Cravings

Cravings

While reflecting this morning as to what I wanted to share, cravings kept coming to mind. Was it the physical craving of alcohol that kept you coming back when you knew it had become a problem or was the the “affect” of the alcohol that kept you drinking before you started your journey to sobriety?

For me it has been more of the affect of alcohol. I don’t desire to drink everyday but when I feel the strongest urge to drink is when I was upset or depressed about a situation and I have “given up”…I just didn’t care anymore and I would give in and drink…I am still struggling with this as I am still trying desperately to put together a good length of sobriety, but I realize what it is that’s causing me to fall and am more aware of my feelings and acting out. I have also started seeing a counselor to help with some of the issues that are causing me to become depressed.

Life is a journey, not a destination and that holds true for sobriety! Thank you for letting me share! Many blessed days/years of sobriety for us all!

Aug 14: I Want the Hand of AA to be There Always

I Want the Hand of AA to be There Always

When I first got sober I stuck around the rooms of AA for about 3 years. I had a sponsor, went to meetings, did my steps. Then I figured I was good to go. After all, I had no intention of ever e drinking again. Good heavens, I had almost died from alcoholic hepatitis. I surely would never be dumb enough to pick up a drink! No way. I had learned my lesson.

I wanted the hand of AA always to be there whenever someone reached out for help. But it didn’t have to be MY hand. After all, I had things to do and places to be.

Fast forward five more years and we find this alcoholic sipping some wines at a tasting event. Within weeks I was back in my closet, drinking nonstop from morning until “nap” time. I basically went from pass out to pass out for several months.

Luckily, six years ago (8-13-05) I put the plug in the jug and came crawling back into the rooms of AA.

“Whenever anyone, anywhere reaches out for help I want the hand of AA to be there. For that I am responsible.”

I finally got it. I only got this program because someone was willing to be the hand of AA when I reached out. I only get to keep this program by BEING the hand of AA.

And how do I put that idea into action? By doing service for the AA organization. By being willing to sponsor women. By being as generous as I can when the basket is passed both here online and in person. By taking part in the fellowship here and F2F. By participating and sharing even when I don’t feel like it.

How about you? What do you think about that quote? How does it affect the way you live your life?

I look forward to reading your shares. Thank you all for helping me reach six years of continuous sobriety…and for keeping me connected.

Aug 07: Isolating

Isolating

Isolating has always been my first response to anything difficult. When I look back I realize that I did it as a child and if I couldn’t isolate physically I could certainly escape mentally, I thought it made me feel safe.

I drank mostly on my own. Isolating was a friend to start with, until I got sober and realized it could be my greatest enemy.

When did I isolate? Whenever I felt uncomfortable, when there was pain of any sort, when I felt I was a failure or felt threatened. Sometimes there was no reason, sometimes it was just habit.

Why did I isolate? So many reasons. I didn’t think I was good enough, I couldn’t tell you my secrets in case you wouldn’t like me……and so on. When I came into AA I was afraid that if you got to know the real me you wouldn’t accept me. I remember times when the one thing I needed most was a meeting and I really, really didn’t want to go. To be with people and let them see I was hurting, tell them about my problems, was sometimes too difficult. Sometimes I would leave a meeting feeling vulnerable – the advice of those who had already been down this path was always -phone your sponsor as soon as you get home!

What effect did it have on me? It made me feel different, lonely, unworthy, misunderstood, less able to think straight, less able to follow the program. There were so many effects I can’t list them. Possibly the worst effect was that it enabled me to perpetuate the myth that I could do this living business on my own.

What makes me stop isolating? New, learned behavior, behaviour I have to reinforce day after day . As soon as I recognize what I’m doing, I pick up the phone to another AA member even though that’s the last thing I want to do. Excuses spring up like, they might be having dinner, perhaps they’ve got company. Most powerful excuse of all – they certainly wouldn’t want to hear from me. Hopefully, by the time I get to this excuse I already have the phone in my hand!

I’ve used past and present tenses. Isolating can still be an instinctive reaction to life.

When I recognize the behavior and make the effort to connect, it increases my self worth and reminds me that I am part of a family now. It puts space between me and a drink……

…..and it sweeps away the loneliness.

Whether you’re trying to stop drinking, have hours, days or years of sobriety it would be great to hear your experience. Please share with us when you isolate, why you isolate, what effects it has on you and how you manage to stop doing it….and, of course, share on anything else you need to even if it’s not connected to the topic.

Jul 31: Patience and Understanding Succeed Every Time

Patience and Understanding Succeed Every Time

Patience: Too many times discouragement has been the bonus for unrealistic expectations, not to mention self-pity or fatigue from my wanting to change the world by the weekend. Discouragement is a warning signal that I may have wandered across the God/HP line. The secret of fulfilling my potential is in acknowledging my limitations and believing that time is a gift, not a threat.
– Daily Reflections, p. 70

AA Acronym – P A U S E = Patience And Understanding Succeed Every Time

Hi All, Jennifer here, definitely and alkie, and one who must of accidently prayed for patience. I had a tough time picking a topic…it was between Fear, Asking for help or Patience…this one won. I have had to practice a lot of patience lately.

Back when I was using, I prided myself on being a master manipulator!! If I wanted something, I would get it when I wanted it and if I couldn’t I would figure out a way to get it!! I was a master actress and didn’t even know it. Today, I have to be careful of this character defect. My friend in AA and I tease and say that we are “creative” not manipulating…however…if I am not careful, it can go into manipulation and I have to be very vigilant of this. I know I am manipulating when I am not patient about an outcome or a forthcoming thing. When I have “unrealistic expectations…self-pity and/or fatigue of wanting to change my world in a weekend”, or that day for that matter. It is when I try to take over the show….

Recently, I have shared about how I am going through yet another physical set back which then plays on my emotional and spiritual side and can set me back if I am not careful…(talking to my sponsor, working the step I need to for the situation, staying in solution and most of all, turning it over). Patience this last week was going on Doctor’s timeframe not mine. And being patient waiting for the results. It has been a chore for me to be patient enough to wait for my MRI report I will get with my doc tomorrow. She is a stickler for having to go back to her for results, she WILL NOT allow other docs to get the report until she gets it first! Usually, being the good alkie I am, could manipulate the results same day…this time, I had to sit back and wait, and I hate it, but it has been a great lesson on Patience. What I learned is that the results are the results, either way, there is nothing more I can do then what I am doing. Bed rest (which I haven’t been that good at), ice and meds (again, under doing that too), and making appropriate doc follow up appts (which I did do in the event I needed a neurosurgeon). PT I am starting anyway on Tuesday…Asking for help (hard to do but have been reaching out) so, really there is nothing more that I can do…the results are what they will be whether I got them Fri. or Monday.

The second part of the patience thing is I do have unrealistic expectations that my back “should be” better by now. I do have to admit, I go into self pity, some fear that I have gone backward again and not knowing what the future holds. Again, I am reminded to keep it simple…be patient. stop and meditate…read each day from a meditation book or AA lit. and become centered and ask HP to walk with me. “The secret to fulfilling my potential is by acknowledging my limitations and believing that time is a gift, not a treat”… Today, I need and have to acknowledge my limitations and believe that in time….things will get better….solutions will present themselves….I may have to re-arrange my life again, or make adaptations to how I do things, I have had to do this all through sobrietyand what a special gift it is that no matter what, I don’t haave to drink over any of it today!!!! In Closing, I threw in the acronym that is always sent with our daily thought and I think it appropriate for me today:

PAUSE: Patience and Understanding Succeed Everytime….this I know for sure..I may not remember when going threw my stuff, but if I PAUSE and connect with HP, let go of unrealistic expectations…I do succeed through everytime.

So please share on Patience or anything else you might have gotten out of this share….(I think I kinda got a few different topics mixed in there, sorry, not the greatest in expressing via writing, made sense to me, smiles) I look forward to hearing your ESH.

Jul 24: Progress Not Perfection

Progress Not Perfection

Good afternoon ladies Colleen here alcoholic. This program of AA is works if you work it. I know for me I must work these steps on a daily basis. I must believe there is a higher power who guides me and protects me. Drinking is no longer an option for me. It has taken 30 plus years to finally learn that this program offers so much more than not drinking.

As Dr Bob said “Try to find your own God. . .as you understand Him.” When I start doubting God I remember how powerful that first drink could be for me if I let I – so God must be all powerful. I accept that I am sober by God’s grace.

I was in a crabby mood the other day; I am human. I said some things to my husband which weren’t very nice. We talked it over the next day and I had to make amends. I have no right to let my bad mood hurt him. That is why I love this program we can start our day over when we need/want to.

Please share on this (progress not perfection) or anything else you need to discuss

Wishing you a peaceful and cooler week! Thanks for reading me.

Jul 17: Intuitive Guidance

Intuitive Guidance

I want to share with you something that I have come to rely on which I have enjoyed as a benefit of working the Steps in this Program.

You know, there is a passage in “Stepping Stones to Recovery For Women” (p116) which says: “Knowing how to climb up the stairs does not get me to the top. The action I take may get me to the top, but if I rush or jump over some of the steps, I may fall. I find that taking them one at a time, one right after another, I will get where I want to go.”

This has been true for me (despite my desire to “work” Steps 1 through 12 over a long weekend in my early sobriety. Thank God for my Sponsor who advised me to just re-read the Big Book (BB) and Twelve & Twelve and write about Step 1 !! 🙂

The benefit I want to talk about that I have enjoyed as a result of working the Steps is described in the Promises that are listed on page 84 in the BB. “We will intuitively know how to handle situations which used to baffle us.” My Higher Power’s (God’s) voice is as close as within me and no matter where I go or what I’m doing, I only need to “pause when agitated or doubtful” (BB p87). When I quiet myself and humbly and sincerely ask for guidance, it is always – always there for me, and it is the perfect answer for the situation. This intuitive guidance does not come from my head, it seems to come from somewhere around my heart and when I “get it” ~ there is a clarity that comes to my thinking that is unmistakable and I feel comfortable with going forward with that “decision”.

For me, working through all the Steps seems to have cleared away the “junk” and shown me that my thinking did not serve me, or others, well. This process reinforced my reliance on a Higher Power to direct my thinking and my actions. The Step work built within me a greater trust in God and His guidance, and therefore opened that “intuitive” channel for Him to lead and guide and solve all my issues and problems. How cool is that? J 🙂

The trick for me is to remember to pause when agitated or doubtful ! Clearly, God’s not finished with me, but at least I’m more willing to listen for His voice.

Thanks for the opportunity to lead this meeting. I look forward to your sharing on how “intuitive guidance” works or doesn’t work for you ~ anything else that comes up for you as you have read my share, or whatever you feel a burning desire to talk about.

Jul 10: Step One – Powerlessness

Step One – Powerlessness

Hello Everyone. I’ve been absent lately and some of it has been due to ill health, some of it because I have been so busy with “other stuff” which always seemed more important than AA.

What have I learnt in the past weeks?
a that I could not manage my own life
b that a Power Greater than myself really wasn’t a nebulous thing
c that I had to actively seek for this Power that could and would help me out
d that I am utterly powerless over anything but my words/actions/deeds

My friend died last Wednesday she had the same disease (MS) as I do – her death was anything but easy – I have been watching her die over the last year and the last 3 months have been awful…. she lives/lived right next door to me…….. I wanted the power to stop her dying……… I tried so hard to stop it – I bought a book – the answer – I cooked meals (until I tired myself out and had to admit that I couldn’t do it) – I tried to make her laugh (laughter is the best medicine)………. all to no avail….

I am powerless – over other people – over life – over peoples’ actions and words – in the last few months Kerrie’s mum was acting very bizarrely (as one might expect a mum to act)…….

I am powerless over life and people and places and things – my husband is leaving me but in the nicest way – we are still best-friends but living apart for over 4 years has this effect on a marriage – he wants to move on and by definition moving on means moving away – I know that this isn’t happening because we have “differences” or he’s having an “affair” (he may very well be) but because I could no longer live with him – and I am powerless over that chain of events…..

I have only realised that what I have been trying to do is deny my powerlessness – I want to be able to control people/places/things and the more I try the worse it gets – I get angry and then I start having attacks of the its someone’s fault or attacks of self-pity or attacks of denial…….. I don’t want to life to continue any more……

But really that’s not real – what I have learnt in 3 days has been that if I pray hard enough my God will turn on a light – and I will come to believe that God could and would if s/he/it were sought – what I need more of is the courage to seek……….

Jul 03: Bled of Self-Sufficiency

Bled of Self-Sufficiency

Today let’s look at pg. 21 of the 12 x 12:
“Alcohol…bleeds us of all self-sufficiency and all will to resist its demands.”

Until we figure out that alcohol takes so much more away from us than it actually gives us, we cannot see that it has indeed bled us dry and left us empty of all things of worth. To see we are powerless over alcohol, or anything else for that matter, we have to get that clear picture of what our life really was like; not, the version we see through our beer goggles!

We were so positive alcohol gave us courage, confidence, fun, and friends. When we step back and take an honest look at things we will see that for one, alcohol courage and confidence are not courage or confidence by any means. They are lies…lies told us by the alcohol which only seeks to bleed us of anything worthwhile. Fun? Would you want your “fun” posted on the internet or shown to your mother? Not me! Friends? Those fellow drinkers are only friends as long as we drink. That’s just not a friend.

I know when I came in the doors the 2nd time in 2005 I was definitely bled of self-sufficiency. The bottle was my crutch so I wouldn’t have to stand on my own two feet or deal with life as it was. Bit by bit my tank has been re-filled with the things that count eternally: joy, peace, love, compassion, honesty, friendship, kindness, and a healthy respect for where I’ve been and how far I’ve come.

What has your experience been?

Jun 26: Let Go & Let God

Let Go & Let God

It has been some time since I put my name forward for the weekly topic, I thought, yes no problem I have lots of topics to write about! Seeking inspiration in the last few days I seemed to hit ‘blanks’, I handed over to my HP and suddently this topic of ‘Let Go & Let God’ seemed appropriate

I came to the AA Fellowship in January 2009 and was very blessed to meet someone who took me through the program in my first year of sobriety. I loved those months working through the steps, I was hungry for relief from the awful pain of my secret life of alcoholism. I am forever grateful that I had reunited with my HP a couple of years prior to coming into recovery, I had prayed for help, knowing I was in deep trouble, and having no control over my drinking and my life, not able to put down that bottle.

Each morning now when I rise, I take time to myself to write a little on recovery, talk with my HP, read some literature, and express my gratitude, all suggested in the BB. At night, I take my inventory. These practices each day have become a very important and much needed part of my life.

Step Three tells me:

‘Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood him’

I hand my day over to God ‘ take this day and do with it as you will’. However when I take my inventory at night and walk through my day, it seems to me time and time again, I ask to Let Go & Let God, to hand over and trust. but in taking my inventory – I see where I took back control, didnt listen, tried to fix. I can see where I allowed those defects of mine to take over?

What I am beginning to realise – this is Raidy seeking pefection – not progress.

In the past two months I have had some personal challenges. Firstly having surgery on my hands, this was a real test for me of Letting Go & Letting God, its now on reflection that I see what I learned from this experience – I did hand each day over and my HP got me through showing me parts of myself that needed some work – my impatience, my need to control, my lack of trust in others, my stubborness – not wanting to ask for help.

My second experience recently, I had my brother come to stay with me for six weeks while he had daily treatments for throat cancer. What I have learned from this experience is that I can see how my program is working in my life, Letting Go and Letting God, taking this period of time One day at a time. I am also seeing parts of myself that show – caring, empathy, strength of character and being available in an unselfish way, and I feel its ok for me to acknowledge those to myself. I was not available in this way when I was drinking.

I can now see that when I do hand over my will and my life to God each day, it works, there are no flashing lights, drum rolls or messages falling out of the sky, just my HP paving a way for me each day on my recovery journey. Its about me accepting life on lifes terms each day, Letting Go and Letting God.

I would love to hear your shares and ESH on this topic, and to learn from you how you Let Go and Let God into your lives.

Jun 19: Emotional Hangovers

Emotional Hangovers

I know that I’ve had many, many hangovers from drinking in the past where I was sick, sorry, disgusted, fed up, anxious and full of worry from my behavior the night before. Sometimes I get those feelings in sobriety so today I’d like to touch on the emotional hangover. What is it anyway? Please keep an open mind.

Pages 88-89 of the Twelve and Twelve tell us: “But there is another kind of hangover which we all experience whether drinking or not. That is the emotional hangover, the direct result of yesterday’s and sometimes today’s excesses of negative emotion – anger, fear, jealousy, and the like. If we would live serenely today and tomorrow, we certainly need to eliminate these hangovers. This doesn’t mean we need to wander morbidly around in the past. It requires an admission and correction of errors now…”

Yes I have had emotional hangovers in sobriety and still do today and they usually end up with me thinking that I’m a terrible person and saying, ‘when will I ever learn.’ I used to get them when I lost my temper and got into arguments. These days, I ‘intuitively know’ when I have said or done something that not only has hurt another person, but has destroyed my sense of well-being. I get a feeling of a hole in the pit of my stomach and my head begins to review what happened and what I can do about it. My sponsor is a great listener and provides me with meaningful suggestions that have worked for her over the years.

Through working the Steps, I have gained insight into the cause and consequences of my actions and have lost most of my passion for arguments and temper tantrums. Steps 1 through 9 teach me how to deal with my feelings towards people, places and things so that I avoid a resentment, and Steps 10 to 12 show me how to do it to maintain my serenity. Specifically, Step 10 tells me how to deal with a budding resentment and that is to deal with it immediately before it becomes full-blown and to make the appropriate amends.

If I find myself hanging on to a resentment, I ‘intuitively’ go to my favourite story in the Big Book: Freedom From Bondage – Page 552 – and pray for the person I’m resenting until I can see him/her as just another person who can make mistakes just as I do. What I’ve found out over time, is that the very thing that I can’t overlook in others is the very thing of which I am guilty. Over time, the resentment is gradually relieved and my sense of personal well-being and peace returns. What a program we have through the Big Book which I’ve always referred to as my “Guide to Life.”

Before I go, I would like to tell you that I went to an AA meeting on my 22nd AA birthday and it felt great to be there after a number of years away. I met folks I knew from my last home group and it was great to rub elbows with fellow alkies. I surely miss the handshakes, hugs, greetings, smiles, and discussions before and after the meetings. This was a further affirmation that AA is where I belong.

Do you have moments/times of “Emotional Hangovers”? How do you deal with them? Please feel free to share on this topic or on anything else that’s going on with you.

Jun 12: Compassion

Compassion

I’ve had things come up in the past few weeks where the solution appears to be that I do a fourth, fifth, six, and seventh step on my judgmental instincts. The answer of course, becomes turning over my judgment to the HP of my understanding and prayer.

What then happens the next time I encounter the individual in question – or a situation where people are saying the same sort of things, is that I experience a wave of what I can only call compassion. It’s not pity – I don’t feel sorry for the other person. It’s not resignation – I don’t have the feeling of “giving in” to something. Instead, it feels like tolerance, acceptance, and a form of love that isn’t the romantic kind or something “sweet.” That “something” that I’m thinking feels a bit like something new and kind of nice I can’t call anything but a touch, a hint, of a sort of unconditional love. Maybe unconditional acceptance. Anyway…

What I know is that I want to somehow fit myself to feel this more and more often. I don’t think I can force the situation or feeling. I want to find ways to fit myself to my HP’s will so that particular form of inner peace, that serenity, comes to me more and more. I think it’s the state that HP would like me to walk around in the world with.

Anyway, I’d love to hear more about what you have discovered about compassion in your sober journeys.

Jun 05: Rigorous Honesty

Rigorous Honesty

I was flipping through my 12 & 12 yesterday and saw that I had highlighted an expression on page 57–‘anxious apartness’. The paragraph reads, ‘When we reached AA, and for the first time in our lives stood among people who seemed to understand, the sense of belonging was tremendously exciting. We thought the isolation problem had been solved. But we soon discovered that while we weren’t alone any more in a social sense, we still suffered many of the old pangs of anxious apartness. Until we talked with complete candor of our conflicts, and had listened to someone else do the same thing, we still didn’t belong. Step Five was the answer. It was the beginning of true kinship with man and God’.

I remember the day I highlighted ‘anxious apartness’. It was one of those expressions that described so vividly a feeling I was very familiar with, and one I still experience in some situations. I was in one of those situations recently–it was a funeral for the father of a friend of mine. Other than my friend, I didn’t know a soul there and I didn’t really want to go to the reception after the service, but I wanted to be there for my friend. Even though he is in the program, very few other people were, so there was drinking, which usually doesn’t bother me. However, when you add ‘anxious apartness’ to an event serving alcohol, it can be an awkward situation. I couldn’t wait to leave. What is interesting is that when I called my partner after the funeral and mentioned I didn’t know anyone, her response was, “Well, it won’t take long for you to change that!” Most anyone who knows me would guess the same thing–I’m generally friendly, and seemingly fearless in social

situations That’s the outside of me I put on display, but the inside is a different matter entirely. I am full of fear, terribly uncomfortable, certain that I will bore you within the first 5 minutes of a conversation, and feel completely out of place. Those old insecurities are still in there–and they’re ones that call for some kind of ‘social lubricant’ (if you catch my drift…) Only in the safety of AA can I ‘talk with complete candor’ of conflicts I grapple with like this, and would love to know if anyone else still experiences ‘anxious apartness’ and how you alleviate those old feelings of dis-ease.

Thank you for letting me lead this week. I will be celebrating 19 years this coming Wednesday and I have nothing but gratitude for this life-changing program and for women like you who walk this journey with me.

May 29: The Pencils

The Pencils

My mind has been flitting around all week from one thing to another as I tried to think of a topic for this week’s meeting. I kept landing on a story that my first sponsor told me in the beginning of my sobriety. It was a story about a cup full of pencils on a school teachers desk. She said that during a normal week that cup would get knocked around pretty good and sometimes fell to the floor. After a while those pencils that were on the outer edges of the cup would get scuffed up or broken, sometimes broken so badly that they were no longer able to do their job. Only the ones in the middle of the pack remained unharmed. She said it was like that in AA. If you stay on the edges you are likely to get all scuffed up and maybe fall to the floor, but if you remain in the center of the pack you will stay safe.

During my time in this program I have found myself on occasion getting complacent and finding excuses to stay away from meetings and isolate. From somewhere in the deep recesses comes the story of the pencils and I am reminded once again that I stay safe by staying in the middle of the pack. My sobriety is contingent on a daily reprieve and that means my connection to God and to you. I get that connection by going to meetings, talking to my HP, my sponsor and my fellow alcoholics and letting you know what is really going on with me. I need to remember where I came from and what is needed to be on this journey. If I have one hand in yours, one hand in God’s I do not have another to pick up a drink.

There have been times of tragedy in my sobriety where, had I not been in the center of the pack I don’t know if I would have survived. If you have had similar times, please share with us. Of course, please feel free to share whatever is on your mind also.

May 22: Making Amends

Making Amends

Making amends is something that has stopped me in my tracks. The thought of making direct amends sets off every alarm in my brain. I have heard people share about “cleaning their side of the street” and of blessings they have received as a result of their willingness to do this step. I pray to God for willingness, but only half heartedly.

So, this week I would like to invite those who made amends and those who have not to share on this step. I always hear people share about their thorough amends and I am aware that the program says without this step we will likely drink again…. that is why I want to hear from the group how they have worked this step or not worked it – I don’t want to drink again.

I am looking forward to your shares on the topic or whatever else may be floating around in your mind. Thanks for allowing me to chair the meeting.

May 15: Hearing the Truth

Hearing the Truth

I’m Melanye and I am an alcoholic. Recently I have been faced with having to tell others things they turn out not to be willing or able to hear. I have found that whether you are talking about it involving another alcoholic or not they all can pretty much react poorly, even explosively. You never know when you are saying it that it won’t be taken well. I’ve come to accept that it is a possibility. Alcoholics do not always use the tools they are taught to handle these things. But, I have to admit it still makes my heart race a bit when hearing/reading a response that just isn’t appropriate.

I have to remind myself that I cannot control how my words are received. I can only pray before speaking, then speak from the heart. What comes next is out of my hands. The newly sober or “repeat sober” people tend to be worse at accepting what they are hearing, even when it comes from a place of love and caring. I am known for saying to my Sponsees, “I will continue to gently knock at the door until you are ready to answer it.” But, I’ve also said, “I’m not going to sit here and allow you to abuse me just because you don’t like what you hear.”

On the flip side I have to pull out my toolbox when someone is telling ME something. Sometimes it’s on target; sometimes it’s hateful and uncalled for; sometimes it’s warped; sometimes it’s nonsense. No matter what it turns out to be I’m rummaging around that box for the right tool for the job. I do my best to react and respond appropriately. However, last time I checked in the mirror, perfection wasn’t standing there. Like anyone else there are times when I must make amends. This thing we call recover is a lifetime journey and therefore a lifetime of lessons.

What experience have you had with either side of this coin?? The floor is now open for sharing.

May 08: Got HP (Higher Power)?

Got HP (Higher Power?)

Hello Ladies of GROW, and happy mom’s day to whom celebrate. Mother’s day depending on the day it lands is both a joy and sad for me. If it lands on May 9th, that is the day my grandmother passed away. It also happens to be my brother’s bday…yikes.

The reason I bring this up and it is bitter sweet each year as it passes is that my grandmother was a very special lady…not only in her own way, but to me also. She was the only person in my life growing up that gave me unconditional love and accepted me just the way I was. Don’t get me wrong, my mom is a very special lady too, I can see that now in recovery!! I didn’t always feel that way, but she had the daughnting task of raising not only one but two addicted children and I also had very severe Learning Disabilities and ADHD in a time when they didn’t know much about it….so while my mom was doing her best to keep me in check which was a lot of times ended up in yelling…my grandmother (and father for that matter) were my buffers. I am blessed that today in recovery (going on 18 plus years) my mom and I have a wonderful relationship!! I do miss my grandma tho even tho tomorrow it will be 22 years since her passing….ok, on to the topic…

The reason why I bring up my grandma is becuz when I first arrived into the program, they told me that I needed to go to meetings, get a sponsor and work the steps…awesome…no worries….went to meetings (I was ready to), got a sponsor, but then came the steps….step one…got it….step two…ummmm….ooookkkkkk….step three….eeeeeerrrtttttt….at a stand still….I need GOD or HP in my life?? hmmmm…not sure about that one….so my sponsor said to me, “It just needs to be greater then yourself…it can be a door knob….an animal….a feeling….the AA group and meetings…GOD–Good Orderly Direction—HP–Higher Power (greater then yourself). So…ok…I think I can do that….I adopted my grandmother’s cat when she passed. It waas a living thing that I felt my grandma’s energy with, so…I started talking to the cat (she didn’t answer back….or did she??? smiles) but I started to do what would eventually become prayer to me. I sensed my grandmother around me, I could still hear her words of wisdom and that got me by until I could actually form what my HP looked like.

Today, it is the rooms of AA, the ladies words, the breeze that wisps by me when I am praying for faith and understanding, it is an unconditional love feeling that something out there is taking care of me. When I have difficulty turning things over, or feeling stuck and not “feeling” HP, my network of ladies or for sure my sponsor will say something that allows me to get back to faith and HP.

So, today, without my HP (along with everything else mentioned) I know for a fact, I would not be able to stay sober….or…maybe stay sober, but not sane and I kinda prefer both!! smiles…I have done the dry drunk thing….didn’t drink…but wasn’t sane either, and it wasn’t pretty….I prefer HP in my life today…

For those ladies who are new….finding your God of Your Understand, HP, is and doesn’t need to be as hard or scarey as it may have been in childhood. I loved that my first sponsor gave me permission to let go of that HP and find an adult one, one that worked for me…again, so long as it wasn’t me….my prayer for the newcommer is that you find your HP and learn to turn it over….

So with that, Got HP?? and what does she/he/it mean to you?? or talk about whatever you may need to share!!

May 01: Humility

Humility

Humility, I find, is a topic I like to muse on. Even though I’m not 100% sure what it is (that’s because I’m an alcoholic, it doesn’t come naturally), I know it’s an attitude I would like to learn to embrace.

In the book Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions it says, “The whole emphasis of Step Seven is on humility.” (Page 76) Reading Step Seven again, I found that it takes its time defining the wordI was looking for an entry like that found in Websterr’s, but I read the entire Step before the idea sunk in.

From what I glean, humility, simply is that itattention, respectis not about me. “The Seventh Step is where we make the change in our attitude which permits us, with humility as our guide, to move out from ourselves toward others and toward God(italics mine).” (Page 76)

Movement in my attitude towards God. Page 75 has a really good quote that sums my attitude before, then the movin’ on me (pun intended): “During this process of learning more about humility, the most profound result of all was the change in our attitude toward God We began to get over the idea that the Higher Power was a sort of bush-league pinch hitter, to be called upon only in an emergency. The notion that we would still live our own lives, God helping a little now and then, began to evaporate Refusing to place God firrst, we had deprived ourselves of His help. But now the words ‘Of myself I am nothing, the Father doeth the works’ began to carry a bright promise and meaning.” (Page 75) I am no longer the wee girl with a quarter in her hand, standing before the Vending Machine that is God, demanding with a prayer what is behind G-6.

Movement in how I consider others. This part I won’t get into now, maybe later this week.

I’ll add one more comment, from Page 75: “A great turning point in our lives came when we sought for humility as something we really wanted, rather than as something we must have.”

Please comment on humility, or whatever you need to talk about.

Apr 24: Moving On

Moving On

I want to share with you the lyrics from a Rascal Flatts song that speaks about so much that we as alcoholics go through in recovery. For me the sharpest point in the song is that there are faces that will never let me change and that Ive taken lots of blame. This was particularly poignant being that I recently had to cut my brother out of my life. He IS that song to me. The accusations, the blame, the insults…all from someone who has not seen me or spoken to me in 2 years. The biggest lesson in this: move on…just move on…for your sanity, for your recovery, for your own self-respect…move on.

Please share what these lyrics mean to you.

“I’m Moving On”

I’ve dealt with my ghosts and I’ve faced all my demons
Finally content with a past I regret
I’ve found you find strength in your moments of weakness
For once I’m at peace with myself
I’ve been burdened with blame, trapped in the past for too long
I’m movin’ on

I’ve lived in this place and I know all the faces
Each one is different but they’re always the same
They mean me no harm but it’s time that I face it
They’ll never allow me to change
But I never dreamed home would end up where I don’t belong
I’m movin’ on
I’m movin’ on

At last I can see life has been patiently waiting for me
And I know there’s no guarantees, but I’m not alone
There comes a time in everyone’s life
When all you can see are the years passing by
And I have made up my mind that those days are gone

I sold what I could and packed what I couldn’t
Stopped to fill up on my way out of town
I’ve loved like I should but lived like I shouldn’t
I had to lose everything to find out
Maybe forgiveness will find me somewhere down this road
I’m movin’ on

I’m movin’ on
I’m movin’ on

Apr 17: The Journey to Feeling Safe

The Journey to Feeling Safe

Good Morning Ladies of Grow. I have thought long and hard about what topic to suggest for this meeting, and I keep coming back to the fact that we have so many new members joining our ranks. First I would like to extend a warm welcome to you all. This group of women, have shown me so much caring and support on the good days and the bad ones. This group of women are very active in their support, and communications. They ARE different from any other group I have belonged to, and I want to let them (collectively) know that they have made me feel safe.

Safe was something unfamiliar to me when I came into the rooms. I was as addicted to crisis as I was to alcohol. Safe just didn’t fit. Safe didn’t excite me. Safe feels like a warm toasty blanket on a cold night. Today, I treasure and like, safe.

So, keeping all our newcomers in mind would you ladies tell them the stories of your evolution to feeling safe, what tools you learned to use to help you feel safe. Also, would those new to our meeting please talk about what makes you feel unsafe.

Please remember, those of you who have just stopped drinking are the most important person/s in the room. Without you, I don’t remember what I felt like walking into this room. I need you as much as you need me, maybe alittle more. So please share whats going on with you, the good and the bad.

Thanks for being here, and I look forward to

Apr 10: Freedom through Sobriety

Freedom through Sobriety

Good morning Ladies and thank you for allowing me to chair this week’s meeting. The past week or so I have been thinking about the freedom I have today through my journey in sobriety. April 1st I ended up in the ER and was than sent by ambulance to another hospital about an hour north of where I live. I had an e-coli infection in my bladder and urninary tract, kidney stones, was septic and was miserable. I spent 5 days in the hospital and am still on the mend but doing well. The Dr’s. told me if I had waited another day to go into ER I would still be in the hospital as I would have gone into septic shock.

Laying in the hospital gave me alot of time to think about how grateful I am today for the freedom that this program has given me being sober. Had I not been sober I truly could be dead today because the alcohol would have covered up how I felt and knowing how I was when I was drinking I would never have gone to the ER for anyone. When I was sick I covered it with alcohol.

Alcohol took away my freedom to make good choices and decisions. I did not take good care of myself healthwise. The total freedom to be rigorously honest about what is going on with me and to know how to use it without hurting people. The freedom of my feelings and to be able to feel them and not be ashamed of how I feel about something.

Just this past Thurs. a friend of mine here in town committed suicide. I just cried and cried as I was so sad and did not understand it because he just was not the type of guy that I ever felt would do something like this. He had a very good business but got hooked up with the wrong friends. I think to myself if it were not for this program of AA how I would have been up the street to the bar Thurs night drinking.

God has given me the freedom through this program today that I know that no matter what happens in my life today I do not have to take a drink.

Apr 03: Admitting We Were Alcoholic

Admitting We Were Alcoholic

Admitting we were alcoholic. On Page 30 of the BB in the Chapter call “More About

Alcoholism” the chapter begins “Most of us were unwilling to admit we were real alcoholics. No person likes to they he is bodily and mentally different from his fellows. Therefore it is not suprising that our drinking careers have been characterized by countless vain attempts to prove we could drink like other people.”

How many vain attempts does it take us to get here…I know for me it’s been quite a few. How long did it take for us to admit we weren’t like other drinkers…that alcohol possessed us? For me I am still working through this. But my desire to live a life of sobriety keeps me coming back!

Mar 27: Dealing with Resentments

Dealing with Resentments

I’ve been grappling lately with a resentment that has affected my serenity. D Thankfully, the Big Book offers an extremely effective method for dealing with resentments. It has been my experience in the past that it works – plain and simple, “it works if you work it”.

“It you have a resentment you want to be free of, if you will pray for the person or the thing that you resent, you will be free. If you will ask in prayer for everything you want for yourself to be given to them, you will be free. Ask for their health, their prosperity, their happiness, and you will be free. Even when you don’t really want it for them and your prayers are only words and you don’t mean it, go ahead and do it anyway. Do it every day for two weeks, and you will find you have come to mean it and to want it for them, and you will realize that where you used to feel bitterness and resentment and hatred you now feel compassionate understanding and love.”

It was my first Sponsor years ago who suggested this exercise for dealing with resentments ~ except she suggested that I do the praying for 30 days ~ I guess she figured I was a slow-learner. J But, I have found repeatedly over the years that this works ~ in fact, I usually find that at the end of two weeks I have forgotten to pray for the person because the resentment was gone, it just was not an issue anymore. If it happens that I get to the end of two weeks and I still feel the resentment, I extend the time another two weeks. Rarely have I found that necessary, but certainly the resentment is gone before the end of that second two weeks.

I encourage you to share about how resentments have affected your sobriety or your life in general and how you resolve them. Or, please feel free to share if you have a burning issue that affects your sobriety.

Mar 20: Being of Service and/or Sponsorship

Being of Service and/or Sponsorship

When I first came into AA, I had a wonderful sponsor. She got me into service right away. Up North, in meetings, we sold raffle tixs at meetings for books, I would do that. Sold lit at the meetings, help clean up, etc. At about 18 months, I think, or about 2 years sober, I was asked to sponsor a gal. I gladly took on that job. It was rough, she was not completely ready, and subsequently relapsed and went all over the groups and blamed me. At the time, it crushed me. I didn’t realize then what I know now that I am just not that powerful!! smiles…

And all through the program and doing my steps, I was always concerned about, “Am I doing them right?” Is this person guiding me “right”. This was a theme all throughout my Masters program also…am I “counseling” right? I did everything by the book I was too afraid to be myself and what kind of counselor I wanted to be, I felt I needed to be what the department wanted me to be, and when I graduated, real life was not in my books. I was afraid to be my authentic self when counseling.

Well, this leads me to service work, sponsorship and the program for me today. After many years of whatever by the book was…I realized that all things are guides!! I was reminded by I think my awesome and wonderful current sponsor (and I mean that *winks*;) that Bill and Bob did not have a book!!! They allowed thier HP’s to guide them. AA did not start out with a Big Book or the 12 and 12…. And I learned throughout the years that so long as I use these materials as guides, then I am doing the next right thing in guiding another or myself. We are not all the same. For me, I have learning disabilities, and when I did my first 4th step, the way the book stated, it was kinda confusing…years later, I used a different kinda guide via workbook that Joe McQ suggested, and wow, that was what I needed to do what I needed to get my 4th out of me and on paper. It worked for me.

Today, I sponsor two ladies. The first one is a gal who has time in the program, so I agreed to sponsor her because I “swore that I would never sponsor a newbie again” this was said out of fear. Well, becasue it is difficult for me to get to meetings f2f due to physical limitations, I am a part of not only this awesome online group, but another one that has real time meetings and chat.

A gal whispered me a couple weeks ago in need of help and goes through very similar health stuff as me…we talked on the phone and she really needed a sponsor but didn’t know how to go about it. I, not even thinking so much about it, offered to assist her until she was able to either find one at a f2f meeting or found another in her area if she so chose to find a different one…..WOW…what an HP thing!!! She reminds me of me when I first got here…exactly like me…she says there are no coinsidences, it is working for her so far, she is following suggestions, and my HP which I am relying on heavily and my own wonderful sponsor, are guiding me to humbly assist this lady in her new journey.

You see, it isn’t about me!!! It is about just simply sharing my ESH the way it was so freely given to me. If this gal relapses, that is not on me…I am not that powerful! I was, however, thus far, blessed with a gal and a new experience that is allowing me to begin to experience sponsorship with a newbie again and boy is it keeping me sober!!!

So, my point is, that for me today, I just try to do the next right thing….Sponsorship for me is kinda like parenting (I am not a parent, however, I play one on TV…no seriously, I have neices and friend’s with babies, I am also by degree a School and Guidance Counselor not working in the field but have) so I have a feeling what it could be like or look at others in my life who are parents…we all have different styles…sponsoring, to me, is kinda like that, for me it is not one size fits all, some follow strict Big Book, others pass on the way they were taken through the steps…for me, I just pray, let HP work through me and try not to mind freak over am I doing this right or wrong…so long as my intentions are out of kindness, love, honest, openminded and willing to carry the message, I am doing ok.

So, I hope that all made sense….I am still trying to just be in the moment myself and remind myself everything above as I sponsor this newbie….just being of service whether it is sharing at a meeting, chairing, sponsoring or just being a sober person today…Thank HP for this gift and for all of you and with that I pass and open the meeting to this topic, or whatever else you may need to share.

Mar 13: Letting Go of Old Beliefs

Letting Go of Old Beliefs

Good morning ladies of GROW, my name is Colleen and I am an alcoholic. The shares that have been posted the last few weeks have been awesome. I am so grateful to be a member of GROW. For this week, I am choosing the topic of letting go of old beliefs.. One of my old beliefs about God/HP/Goddess is a punishing God. Even today, at times I feel that I am being punished by God.. I yell and scream about my life thinggs don’t go my way.. Thank God I don’t stay in that mode. How immature is that

Another old belief is that I am in competition with you. I am not in competition with anyone. How sick is that line of thinking? When my mother was still alive, she talked about her friend’s health issues ending with with “Look at me-my life is more tragic.” When I was sober in the late 80’s, I needed to have a more tragic life than you. Today, I know none of that is important.

I thank God for this program. It is teaching me to live one day at a time. I hope I am making sense. Please share your views on God and character defects that keep you separate from others.

Mar 13: Change

Change

Thank You for letting me chair this meeting today. I will celebrate 29 years of sobriety on March 15th. Especially during the time near a milestone date for me, all of the chaos and desperation that I was feeling at that time is very clear to me. I’ve been told that our “special” date can also become over whelming, and lead to a relapse. I’ve seen it happen. I have tried to learn from the mistakes of others. Especially when they begin the conversation with “Don’t do what I did…….” IMHO it’s OK for you to say “Congratulations” or something like that.

But I’m here to warn you not to be overly impressed with *quantity* of sobriety. Look for *quality* of sobriety. Many “long timers” take their sobriety for granted … big mistake! They then become IMHO “Good, bad examples”.

I remember being told, the only person who has been sober longer than I me, is a person who got out of bed before I did today. Considering that I obviously stay up late, and don’t have to get up to go to work, it’s pretty easy to have more sobriety than me. 😀 I have so much I want to share with you. No one thing seems more important than another.

In the beginning I stayed sober out of fear of returning to what *was* before AA. I still get urges to drink, and I’m still afraid of becoming worse than I was when I came to this program.

The “Serenity Prayer” has been very important to my recovery. I had a Serenity Prayer necklace that I wore constantly, the first few years I was in the program. At work I would hold that necklace and stay close to my program, while I did my work. I always have it right in front of me. So far the only thing I’ve found that I can change is me. My attitude. Set boundaries (that I never had before), and either ignore people who don’t respect them, or simply get away from those people. I can’t please all of the people, all of the time. Crap! I’m lucky if I can please myself some of the time. I *work* at doing what is best for me … my “Elf”. I don’t always know what that is. But I do know I will always find the answer to any questions I have at an AA meeting. I don’t even have to ask the question. Someone at that meeting will undoubtedly share their ESH in a way that will help me find that answer in myself.

I was told I must remain *teachable*. One might think that at 29 years sober & 70 years old, I’d know a whole lot more answers than I do. The answers are still the same today as they were 29 years ago. I have to be flexible and willing to change, or I’m going to be miserable. I don’t want to be miserable. I want to make the changes in myself that I need to do to be happy. I like happy.

“Change” may be the one word that all of this boils down to. I think that about says it all.

Mar 06: Appreciating Where We’ve Come From

Appreciating Where We’ve Come From

Appreciate: be fully aware of; hold dear; recognize with gratitude This topic is on my mind because for Valentine’s Day my husband got me a membership to Ancestry.com. This was very important to me because for my WHOLE life I’ve known NOTHING about my father’s side of the family. The whole Martin family refused to talk about our history or simply tell any of us what country we emigrated from! This always made me furious and it was much worse because my father, who might have told me things, died in a car crash 7 months before my birth.

So, after working for several weeks on Ancestry.com I have traced the Martin side all the way back to the 1100s in Scotland and England!!!! While I did find 1 ancestor had 1 male slave inherited from his father and that one ancestor fought WITH the British against America, I can see NO reason to hide anything from me. Needless to say I’ve been very emotional for these last few weeks. Knowing where my family came from is very important to me. Just as important as appreciating the fact that I am, and have been for almost 6 years, sober after 15 years of active alcoholism.

I now fully appreciate the gravity of my prior behavior and the road I was on. I feel the appreciation to my bones that I am no longer “that person” nor am I doing “those things” which were destroying me and my life. Each day I breathe another breath and each day that I wake up I can increasingly appreciate the struggles, traumas, and lessons which brought me to today. I appreciate the difference between a life as an alcoholic lost in the bottle and misery versus the life of a sober alcoholic smelling the roses with each step. And above all I appreciate those who’ve gone before me that learned the Program which saved my life.

Do you appreciate fully and massively what you came from in alcoholism? Tell us what this has brought up in your heart and mind.

Feb 27: Think Think Think

Think Think Think

Hi, my name is Lori and I’m an alcoholic. Thank you for allowing me to lead this week’s meeting.

When I lived in Traverse City, Michigan, the club I belonged to was in a dingy old house just a couple blocks south of Lake Michigan. I think it was the nicotine stains that held the curtains together, and the spots on the carpet were, indeed, stains, not polka dots.

But what I remember most about that room were signs on the (yes, stained) walls. One Day at a Time. First Things First. And my favorite, Think, think, think.

Think, think, think. For my wee brain, I’ve taken that to mean think the thought throughwhatever the thought happened to be at that time.

When I first got sober, and still sometimes now, the first think in the series is drinking alcohol. Whenever thoughts of good old days want to be entertained, I find, the best way for me to deal with them to entertain them thoroughly. In other words, move on to the second and third think.

For example, back when I was in the service, I had some really good friends. In the present time, sometimes I think about a friend I served with, what we did, and wonder what s/he is up to now.

Think number one is all well and good, but it can easily move on to think number two, which is turning the slice of time into something way super much more meaningful than it was.

Like the times living in the second platoon barracks of 15th Transportation Company, at Nellingen Kassern, Nellingen, Deutschland, listening to Ozzy Ozbourne’s Crazy Train in Mook’s room, while drinking Stutgarter Hofbrau out of 2 liter bottles, enhanced with shots of German liquors were were discovering. Oh, but weren’t those just the best, best times ever?

If I stop there, take my thoughts no further, I’m doing myself a disservice. I have to move on to think number three.

It takes think number three to remember the night I woke up from a black out and a guy was getting off mea guy I never would have invitedd up in the first placemy panties and tampon laying off to the side.

I have to think the good times through enough to remember that I, as the result of my drinking, put myself in many vulnerable situations, and many times the result was not such a good time.

I have to consider all, all, all the thinks, otherwise I fool myself into thinking that, by not drinking, I’m missing out on the best of times.

What think, think, think means to me is to go beyond the first summons thought, beyond the glorious musing thought, to reality thought, how drinking alcohol is destructive to me.

Remembering that I quit for a reason (that through my drinking, myself and others get hurt) keeps me quit. And helps me remember that these are the best of times, the ones in recovery.

And all this from a nicotine-stained sign on a road I can no longer remember the name of.

Ladies, this week please share on the AA-ism think, think, think, or anything that you need to this week.

Feb 20: Our Personal Spiritual Experiences

Our Personal Spiritual Experiences

The Big Book tells us that alcoholism is a physical, emotional, and spiritual disease. Getting sober does much to address both the physical and emotional aspects of the disease, but the steps are the key to curing the spiritual malady. In fact, the 12th Step says “Having had a spiritual awakening as THE result of these steps, ” (In the meetings I attend, most people read “a result” instead of “the result.”)

Before I put the bottle down, I believed in a Higher Power, but I could not make contact. I would read the Bible with a joint in one hand and a beer in the other and then wonder what was missing. I was missing. I couldn’t have a spiritual life while drowning in spirits.

AA and the steps have given me the most valuable gift of my life – an ongoing, deeply internal contact with the God of my understanding. It is so deep and personal, in fact, that I seldom talk about my own spiritual experience.

Today, I choose to share about it. I am not a religious person. Raised a Christian, I have spent years studying the Bhagavad Gita and Zen Buddhism. Recently, I have read the Qur’an. My heart tells me that there is only one God, no matter what humans call him/her/it (even when the name is “Serendipity”). My Higher Power is the core of every particle in the universe.

Every spiritual text I have read has a simple message. Love God, and love each other. This, I believe, is the base of the 12th Step. When I help another alcoholic, I am serving my Higher Power. And that’s why my Higher Power gave me the gift of sobriety – so I could be of service.

After years and years of being self-absorbed and self-centered, AA and the Steps have placed my in a position to be of service, to love God and to love my fellow creatures. And with that gift comes the responsibility to serve, whether it be another alcoholic, my family or friends, strangers, and even animals. That is my spiritual experience.

Basically, I would use a modified John F. Kennedy quote to express my spiritual experience: Ask not what your HP can do for you. Ask what you can do for your Higher Power.

Please share with us this week about your unique spiritual experience in sobriety.

Feb 13: Doing the Next Right Thing

Doing the Next Right Thing

First I want to thank my online sponsor for graciously offering to let me Chair the meeting this week, she had been scheduled and I had not requested the date early enough. February 18 will be, God willing the 14th Anniversary of my sobriety. What a blessing, what a gift that I need to keep treasuring.

“Doing the next right thing” is an excellent piece of advice that my online sponsor shared with me in the very early days of my sobriety. The “next right thing” lines up our tasks so that we are not overwhelmed with lots of demands that can confuse us. We only deal with one at a time, which is much more manageable.

I find that the “next right thing” is often small. It may be as simple as taking a deep refreshing breath or doing something caring for a friend. My action

grounds me with the principles of the beautiful program of Alcoholics Anonymous. Or it may just as easily be some small chore. Whatever it turns out to be, the act of asking the question, helps me decide the appropriate response, and I am not as likely to make a poorly considered choice that I will most likely, later regret. Think of “Doing the next right thing” as a compass that always points in the right direction.

When I found myself totally dependent on others, after having my leg broken during knee replacement surgery last August, “Doing the next right thing” became particularly important. Doing deep breathing, trying to get out of myself by helping someone else, taking little steps which eventually added up to actual steps was such an important part of my staying sober & sane!

I would like to hear how you have used this principle in your sobriety. Wishing you all another 24 hours of sobriety.

Feb 06: Making Your Way Back to a Daily Life of Sobriety

Making Your Way Back to a Daily Life of Sobriety

Whether you are finding your way back to real life after years of drinking OR coming back to living day by day sober and healthy from a time in complacency or maybe rebellion, it is a daunting task. So many emotions, fears, resentments, losses, and darkness. No matter your geographic location, age, marital status, or anything else peace is only found by taking one step at a time with a solid Program. I’ve been lost in drinking and I’ve been lost in complacency. Neither place is one somebody ever wants to be and it takes courage and faith to fight your way out of them.

Some never find their way back at all. All of us in this group have made our way out of the darkness of drinking and even more still from the despair of just not caring about living the Program. The latter can lead you right back to the very darkness you fought your way out of in the first place. While it would be wonderful if all who found life beyond alcoholism stayed there…we all know it just isn’t true. There are so many speed bumps out there to trip us up and trip us up royally!

I would like us to consider our own experiences with such and what “bright light” or two showed us the way back. And with that let us all share our gratitude for making it back, whether this is your first time here, 3rd, or 10th.

Above all else, please remind yourself frequently that some just never find their way back at all.

Jan 30: What I Gained in Sobriety

What I Gained in Sobriety

Yesterday I was blessed with the opportunity to attend a beautiful wedding of the daughter of people who have been friends with us forever. Attending a wedding is one of those things I could never picture doing without a glass in my hand. But I had a fabulous day, toasted with Martinelli’s, danced a bunch, remember the whole thing and woke up feeling great this morning.

I was afraid when I got sober my best days were behind me. I didn’t think I would be as humorous, I didn’t think romance could blossom without the bubbly, I didn’t think sports events would be as fun. Turns out I was absolutely wrong. My life is richer, fuller and more fun now.

Part of it is that alcohol gave me a theatrical, false sense of emotion. I could build a drama around a moment, making it appear more romantic, funnier, etc. Turns out, I was just drunk enough to be stupid!

The other part is that the Big Book has taught me how to live life sober, and taken me on a spiritual path which has given me compassion, appreciation and true caring for others.

May you all walk in the sunlight of the spirit while you ponder the topic of the week: What I thought I would lose in sobriety, and what I gained instead.

Jan 23: It Works When I Work It

It Works When I Work It

I guess I am one for slogans, they sure helped me keep my thinking simple. You know I can complicate things pretty badly. When I got here I needed simple.

It works, when I work it.

hm-mm In the beginning that meant, I didn’t go to parties and out with my drinking buddies. It meant that I had to be honest enough with them so that I could protect myself. My real friends didn’t judge me and didn’t pressure me to continue drinking if I didn’t want to. My drinking friends, did. Pretty soon I didn’t feel comfortable being the only non drinking person with a bunch of drinkers. I felt out of place. But I found a place where I felt safe, and at home. In the rooms of AA, at tables or at a computer I find a sense of belonging that I always used alcohol or other substances to find. Gradually I went from being at home in a bar( actually my story is I was home alone on the couch passed out), to being at home in the church, hospital, or fire station or where ever the meeting is held.

By working the 12 steps of this program as suggested by the big book and taught to me by my sponsors, when crisis arises I have a ” kit of tools” that I can use to protect myself. It works when I work it, and I reach for it when I have pain. Just like I would reach for the bottle of aspirin.

More importantly, this is a program of spiritual maintenance. My sobriety, serenity and happiness is a daily reprieve based on my spiritual fitness. To stay spiritually fit, I have to pray, meditate and act on the guidance I receive. The big book tell me that there will come a time when only my higher power will stand between me and a drink.

Frankly, everyday, my higher power stands between me and that drink. Without him, I would. I would love to, I am an alcoholic.

Thank god for this program and that I still remember how bad I felt when I did drink.

It works, WHEN I work it.

I hope that something in there, sparks something in you, and if it doesn’t please share on what’s affecting your sobriety today.

Jan 16: One Day at a Time

One Day at a Time

Keep coming back it really works.

You are all probably wondering about my topic but this coming Tues. I will have 5 yrs of sobriety and it has alot to do with this AA quote or slogan, whatever you want to call it, that I have this straight sobriety. Last night I was at a meeting and there was 19 members at the table and out of all those members there was only 2 of us who had straight sobriety with no relapse. One gentleman just recently celebrated 55 yrs but when he came into the program he got 3 yrs and than relapsed. This seemed to be how all their stories started out as we were doing a 1st step for a guy.

In each of their shares they told how they quit praying in the morning, going too meetings, calling their sponsors and yadda yadda. I have, with God’s help, kept coming back to the program on a daily basis and I strongly believe that it is why it has worked for me. I have a huge fear (good fear) of relapse and so have been taught from around the tables that if I work this program and keep coming back and do not pick up that first drink or take the first sip that I will not relapse. This disease of alcoholism is very cunning, bafflling and powerful and so when I get up in the morning and (once in awhile forget) open up and talk to God first thing I have set my day of “one day at a time” and that is all it takes.

I am so blessed and grateful for my upcoming 5 yrs but know that I made it by just working this program “one day at a time” and “keep coming back” to it daily. Jean had or maybe even still has a quote “Sobriety is a gift of which the price to pay is eternal vigilance”.

Thank you for allowing me to chair this week and gals you can share on this topic or any topic you would like to. I am open to anything.

Jan 09: Contempt Prior to Investigation

Contempt Prior to Investigation

While considering a topic for this week I opened the Big Book – not sure what I was looking for, but looking none the less. I ended up in the back of the book – reading the Appendices – landing on #2 Spiritual Experience.

Initially I thought that what fit for me right now was to share about my own spiritual experience. But after reading I found at the end a quote from Herbert Spencer – – and this is what really fits where I am right now – in the moment.

“There is a principal which is a bar against all information, which is proof against all arguments and which cannot fail to keep a (wo)man in everlasting ignorance —–that principal in contempt prior to investigation.”

Today, I think my spiritual experience can be found in this quote. I was a world class screw up. It was my claim to fame ! For real. I started drinking and drugging at an early age and there wasn’t much I thought I could do well in life – – other than get high. People in my family got high, I got high, my friends got high, and many of my neighbors got high (and still get high!). It was expected.

Throughout the years I learned, very well, to hate myself – for the things I did, for the things I didn’t do, and basically for being me. In 1991 I put the needle down. I put the bottle down too, but picked it back up several times since then. I have been in and out of AA over the years – lately more out than in.

But over the years I have done some things that have allowed change to my life. I received my HS diploma, I went to college, I went to Grad School, I have been at the same job for almost 10 yrs, I own a home (though at times I miss the “ghetto”!), and I have a wonderful partner AND more important than anything else — I have a 10 yr old daughter who lights up my life! For real.

More recently I have gotten a sponsor, I am working the steps with my sponsor…I am making a conscious effort to be honest. My life has gotten better, and at some level, God has helped me to get better on the inside too. HOWEVER, I find myself judging myself based on the past – – despite the evidence of change in the present. And this is what the quote made me see – – that I am not fair to myself. Everyone else is ok – but not me – I am a bad person…rewind…everyone else is ok but not me !!!

Well, this has to stop. I have to ask God to help me – not only with forgiving other people – – but with forgiving myself. I was the victim of others actions for a very long time — but not lately — lately I have been a victim of my own contempt…what better way to stay a drunk, right?

So, I would like to hear whatever it is you have to say – – on this topic or on another. Because you never know where you are going to find what you need at the moment — I never expected to find it in the back of the book!

Jan 02: God Could and Would if He Were Sought

God Could and Would if He Were Sought

To introduce a topic, I will restate a portion of “How It Works” here:

Our description of the alcoholic, the chapter to the agnostic, and our personal adventures before and after make clear three pertinent ideas:
(a) That we were alcoholic and could not manage our own lives.
(b) That probably no human power could have relieved our alcoholism.
(c) That God could and would if He were sought.

After many hard years of drinkin’ and druggin’ and “men-in’, and thankfully, a number of years of sobriety, I’m convinced that (a) I am alcoholic and I have come to understand and accept that I (by myself) I cannot manage my own life; (b) I’m also convinced that my alcoholism ~ and all the other “isms” connected with it ~ will not be relieved by me or any other human being.

I say convinced because I need to be reminded (through meetings, Sponsors) that my best thinking got me drunk, hung-over, in a blackout and married to someone I didn’t like. 🙂 What helps me most NOW is working and re-working the Steps as outlined in the Big Book, and through that process, I discover and re-discover that (c) “God could and would if He were sought.”

For me, this is an ongoing process ~ my brain/psyche is still alcoholic and I get caught up in (or create) the current drama in my life and I need to be reminded to “pause when agitated” and ask for GOD = Good Orderly Direction. Otherwise, I find myself off in the ditch.

When I do take the time to put God in the center of whatever is going on, everything comes together well — much better than I could have created on my own. I find myself noticing that God did for me what I could not do for myself. Examples of that include my recent celebration of 24 years of sobriety; my marriage of 20+ years when, prior to this Program, I could not maintain a relationship for longer than 20 months max; the enjoyment of good, fun, meaningful relationships with my family members, with healthy boundaries and loving support; and reasonably healthy boundaries in my work that has a tendency to be all-consuming.

The list could go on but, suffice to say ~ God has done for me what I could not do for myself in every area of my life. Wherever I let Him in, it gets better.

Please share about how, in your own Program of recovery, “God could and would if He were sought”.

To the NEWCOMERS and new members, I send a special request that you share about wherever you are at the moment because it helps me stay sober to read your stories and to share with you what it was like for me. Words don’t have to be fancy. Just share from your heart.

2010 – Group Conscience Decisions

2010 Group Conscience Decisions

This is a summary of the group conscience decisions made in 2010.


May 2010

  • It was decided to add the most recent Group Inventory to the GROW Web Page.
  • It was decided to hold our next Group Inventory in June 2010.

November 2010

  • It was decided that the Webmaster be a non-rotating TS position
  • It was decided to reinstate the position of Rotating Backup
  • It was decided not to have GROW Business cards
  • It was decided to add to the “Welcome” letter a paragraph that advises all members to add grow@oso-aa.org to their address book
  • It was decided to have a new position temporary mentor to assist new members adjusting to online AA
  • It was decided to send a polite reply to person sending survey and then referral to OIAA.
  • It was decided to adding the following to the webkeeper and back-up webkeeper job descriptions designs, develops, and maintains the GROW website so that it is accessible to people with visual disabilities as well as those without visual disabilities.

2009 – Group Conscience Decisions

2009 Group Conscience Decisions

This is a summary of the group conscience decisions made in 2009.


April, 2009

Note: during the April meeting, the GROW group changed from Binhost to OSO-AA because of increasing concerns for the support of the list servers.

  • Treasurer and PayPal Account
    Each Treasurer will setup a paypal account that would be for the duration of the treasurer’s term and that each subsequent treasurer open a new PayPal account.
  • Having an either / or signer for account
    It was decided that we will keep it simple by having one signer for account.
  • Frequency of Treasurer reports
    It was decided that the Treasurer will every 6 months to the Business Meeting and monthly to the Steering Committee.
  • Treasurer as sole signer and controller of bank account
    It was decided that the Treasurer will be sole signer and controller of the bank account.

2008 – Group Conscience Decisions

2008 Group Conscience Decisions

This is a summary of the group conscience decisions made in 2008.


January, 2008

GROW authorizes the Treasurer to pay our email list
service provider bill up to six months in advance, as per an earlier
group conscience decision


April, 2008

  • Second Signer for Treasurer
    A group conscience decision was made to have a
    non-rotating 2nd signer to assist the treasurer.
  • Frequency of Business Meetings
    It was decided to hold business meetings twice per year in April and October.

October, 2008

  • Common Language for Trusted Servants
    It was decided to separate out certain text (called “common language” during discussion) in the trusted servant positions an post these statements in one place only, with a link in each description to this common language.
  • Weekly Meeting reminders and posting of chairs
    It was decided to post regular weekly reminders of the meeting topics and to post the upcoming chairs.
  • Change in Steering Committee structure
    It was decided to change the steering committee to the following guidelines:

    All trusted servants whose term is longer than six months are members of the steering committee. In addition, the Steering Committee will include the Immediate Past Business Chair, Immediate Past Secretary, Immediate Past GSR, and the Webkeeper.

    + The SC helps out trusted servants as needed.

    + If someone needs to step aside from a position, or if one becomes
    vacant for some reason, the SC seeks out volunteers and appoints them
    until the next business meeting.

    + In the case of “disruptions,” the SC follows the GROW guidelines,
    with the changes that three members are chosen from among the SC
    (instead of having it mandated which trusted servants intervene).

    • Trusted Servant Positions
      It was decided to change the trusted servant list to the following:

      • Birthday listkeeper
      • Business Chair
      • Greeter (1)
      • GSR representative
      • Listkeeper
      • Listkeeper Backup
      • OIAA rep
      • Secretary
      • Sponsor listkeeper
      • 12-step listkeeper
      • Treasurer
      • 2nd signer
      • Weekly topic listkeeper
      • Webkeeper
      • Webkeeper backup
    • Secretary and Business Chair responsibilities
      We reached consensus on the responsibilities for the Secretary and for the Busines Chair:

      Secretary

      • 1 Year term
      • 2 years sobriety
      • Must be member of Business List
      • Should have completed AA Steps 1 through 12
      • Adheres to confidentiality of private emails
      • Serves on the Steering Committee
      • Works closely with the other Trusted Servants including privately and
        discreetly informing members who stray from the guidelines
      • Maintains a list of emergency contact phone numbers of all trusted
        servants for use by trusted servants, not for general distribution
      • Keeps a current list of trusted servants and term dates
      • Calls for nominations/volunteers
      • Confirms nominees will accept and serve
      • Announces new trusted servants
      • Sends Steering Committee Welcome Letter to all new trusted servants
      • Fields questions sent both publicly and privately
      • Serves as temporary back-up to the Business Meeting Chair
      • Does NOT handle anything related to the business meeting
      • Informs the business chair if elections are needed for trusted servants
      • For duties and requirements common to all Trusted Servant positions, see Trusted Servant Common Duties.

      Business Meeting Chair

      • 2 year term
      • 5 years sobriety
      • Must remain member of Business List
      • Moderate business meetings; keep discussions focused on agenda
      • Keep track of and review all discussions
      • Be responsible for keeping the issues clear. If a motion is offered, be sure that it is stated clearly and distinctly so that all know what they are discussing and voting on.
      • Set agenda for meetings, placing items on the agenda in the order received.
      • Work closely with other trusted servants, especially the Secretary.
      • Serve as temporary back-up to the Secretary.
      • Know all group conscience decisions and guide group to adhere to them.
      • Have knowledge and good understanding of A.A. Traditions and A.A. Service Manual.
      • Have understanding of Group Conscience Guidelines and A.A. guidelines and how to apply them.
      • As much as possible, remain fair and unbiased, willing to listen and be flexible. (At times the Chair will need to remain flat-footed. Refer to A.A. Service Manual)
      • Have knowledge and good understanding of A.A. Concepts.
      • Review all posts from both business and main list for items which should be brought to the business meeting.
      • Be prepared for an increase in both public and private correspondence.
      • Be accountable for answering questions.
      • Writes and files minutes at end of each 4-day period for business list.
      • Writes and files a summary at end of each 4-day period for main list.
      • Counts votes during group conscience decisions.
      • Announces results of votes in business meeting minutes.
      • Receives information from Secretary if elections are needed.
      • If more than one volunteer for a position, calls for election, and counts votes
      • For duties and requirements common to all Trusted Servant positions, see Trusted Servant Common Duties.

2007 – Group Conscience Decisions

2007 Group Conscience Decisions

This is a summary of the group conscience decisions made in 2007.


January, 2007

  • PayPal Guidelines [decision by consensus]

    Agreed to include PayPal as one option for making 7th Tradition contributions to GROW, and approved the following guidelines:

    1) GROW will offer PayPal as a method for making 7th Step Contributions.

    2) GROW will register for PayPal’s standard website payment service using an email account established only for this purpose and for use only by the GROW Treasurer and Secretary. The PayPal account and e-mail address will be connected to the account established by the Treasurer for the purposes of GROW finances. The e-mail address will stay the same through Treasurer and Secretary rotations. The password will change with each Treasurer and Secretary.

    3) The Treasurer’s 7th Tradition Letter will stress that PayPal is only one option for contributing to GROW and include the following informational warning to her message:

    If a member chooses to use PayPal as a payment option, she should be aware of the following:

    * PayPal is a safe money-exchange operation if (and only if) you follow their safety recommendations, which are posted very clearly on their website.

    * Always go to the website through typing in their URL: https://www.paypal.com (note the “s” is important).

    * Do not go to the website through a link on any email letter.

    * Always assume that an email message sent to you that says it is from PayPal is a scam. PayPal does not send out email to members.

    *If you are at all uncomfortable, consider using another means to contribute to GROW

  • .

  • Revised 7th Tradition Letters [decision by consensus]

    Hi Everyone,

    The basket is now being passed. Tradition Seven: “Every A.A. group ought to be fully self-supporting, declining outside contributions.” We have no dues or fees, but we do have expenses. These include rent for the listserver and web page, bank fees, and contributions to OIAA and GSO.

    Contributions are appreciated, and can be made by check or by PayPal. See procedures below.

    TO CONTRIBUTE BY CHECK

    Per group conscience, please make checks payable to [INSERT TREASURER’S NAME] with “GROW” in the memo line and mail to: [Treasurer’s name and mailing address]

    If you want confirmation of contribution, please include your e-mail address.

    TO CONTRIBUTE BY PAYPAL

    To contribute using PayPal, first read “Important Note About PayPal” below so you do this safely. Then, go to PayPal’s secure website: (https://www.paypal.com/us/)

    – If you don’t already have an account, sign up for a PayPal account

    – Click the Send Money tab

    – Enter an amount and recipients email, which is: tradition7@g-r-o-w.com

    – PayPal will send confirmation of your payment.

    =========================

    Important Note About PayPal:

    If you choose to use PayPal, please remember that PayPal is a safe money-exchange operation if (and only if) you follow the safety recommendations posted on the PayPal website.

    * To safely and securely access the PayPal website or your account, open a new web browser (e.g. Internet Explorer, Safari, Firefox) and type in the PayPal URL (https://www.paypal.com/us/) to be sure you are on the real PayPal site.

    * PayPal will send confirmation of payment. They will never ask for your password in an email. Always assume any email from PayPal asking for a reply is a scam and do not reply.

    *To learn more about protecting yourself from fraud, visit the PayPal Security Center. Click “Security Center” on the bottom of any PayPal page.

    *If you are at all uncomfortable using PayPal, consider sending your contribution by check.

    [ ENTER TREASURER’S NAME ]

  • Revised Job Descriptions [decision by consensus]
    • Secretary – To current wording we have added the following:

      “Receive copies of email messages sent to tradition7@g-r-o-w.com; have access to the GROW PayPal account at https://www.paypal.com/.”

    • Treasurer – To current wording we have added the following:

      “Receive copies of email messages sent to tradition7@g-r-o-w.com; have access to the GROW PayPal account at https://www.paypal.com/

      Set up password for the PayPal account; share this password with the Secretary *and the webkeepers.

    • Webkeeper – We do not currently have a job description for GROW webkeeper.

      A draft of a complete job description will be offered at the April business meeting. The following items will be included:

      As owner of EsoSoft account, change the forwarding information of tradition7@g-r-o-w.com with each new Treasurer.
      Receive copies of email messages sent to tradition7@g-r-o-w.com; have access to the GROW PayPal account at https://www.paypal.com/, and provide technical support to Treasurer as needed.

  • PayPal Account Ownerships [decision by consensus]

    Approved Laura B. to be listed as the “owner” of GROW’s PayPal account

  • PayPal Documentss [decision by consensus]

    Agreed PayPal documents need not be posted on the GROW website, but will be made available to members upon request.

  • Emergency Contact Information [decision by consensus]
    Agreed that all trusted servants will provide an emergency contact phone number to the GROW Secretary. This information will be available only to Trusted Servants, and not for general distribution.

July, 2007

  • Form Letters [decision by consensus]
    A simple list of letters and notices that are to be posted to GROW (what they are, which job does them, how often sent) will be maintained by the archivist and posted in the members-only section of the GROW website.
  • Rotating Backup [decision by consensus]
    Agreed to create a new trusted servant titled “Rotating Back-up.” This trusted servant would be “on call” to temporarily carry out the tasks of the Birthday Listkeeper, the Sponsor Listkeeper, and the Weekly Meeting Lead Listkeeper if necessary.

    Rotating Back-up Job Description

    1 year term

    1 year sobriety
    Must be member of business list
    Review GROW mail daily
    Be available to temporarily carry out the tasks of the Birthday, Sponsor, and Weekly Meeting Lead listkeepers, as necessary.
    Have an understanding of the duties of each job
    Know how to access job descriptions and form letters necessary to carry out the tasks
    Send letter of introduction to new birthday, sponsor and weekly mtg. listkeepers when they begin new term.
    Maintain current copies of birthday, sponsor and weekly meeting lead lists
    Provide successor with all necessary information, and serve as a mentor for a period of time to ensure continuity of service.

    The following are helpful to this position:
    o Organized
    o Good E-mail program such as Eudora, Outlook, etc.
    o Reliable Server
    o Good communication skills
    o Be able to cut, copy, paste, and save to a folder

  • Secretary Backup [decision by consensus]
    Agreed that the Business Chair backs-up Secretary.
  • Steering committee Welcomes New Trusted Servants [decision by consensus]
    Agreed that the Steering Committee will send out a welcome letter to each new trusted servant. The letter will include a thank you and simple guidelines, including where to find her job description, who to ask for help, and what to do if she can’t complete her duties. The one letter will include the names and contact information for all of the trusted servants.

October, 2007

Job Descriptions [decision by consensus]

Agreed to make the following changes to job descriptions for the purpose of uniformity and clarity:

BUSINESS MEETING CHAIR
Added to “Work with Secretary and Listkeeper to deal with disruptions”…
*in keeping with Our Common Welfare Guidelines, as approved group conscience.* (with link to common welfare guidelines)

GREETER
Add links to Greeter letters 1 and 2

LISTKEEPER
Add links to E-Mail Etiquette and Monthly Listkeeper Message
Add to “Work with Chair and Secretary to deal with disruptions”…
*in keeping with Our Common Welfare Guidelines, as approved group
conscience.* (with link to common welfare guidelines)

SECRETARY
Add links to Etiquette and FAQ
Delete Welcome Letter, add Greeter letters 1 and 2 with links
Add: Send Steering Committee Welcome Letter [link] to all new trusted servants.
Add: “Work with Chair and Listkeeper to deal with disruptions”…
*in keeping with Our Common Welfare Guidelines, as approved group
conscience.* (with link to common welfare guidelines)

SPONSOR LISTKEEPER
Delete “Periodically confirm sponsor volunteers are still GROW members”
Replace with: “At the term’s beginning and midterm, confirm sponsor volunteers are still GROW members. “
Add to “Once each month mail sponsor list to the group and seek
additional volunteers for online sponsoring”…
***”using Sponsor Letter Template approved by group conscience”

TREASURER
Delete: “# Send weekly announcements to the group, passing the basket (announcement includes a postal mailing address for contributions)
Replace with: Send weekly passing-the-basket announcement to the group, using the 7th Tradition Announcement Template approved by group conscience. Be sure to include your postal mailing address for mail-in contributions (with link)

12 STEP VOLUNTEER LISTKEEPER

Delete: “Occasionally verify that members of the 12 Step Committee are
current GROW members
Replace with: “Verify once a month that members of the 12 Step Committee are current
GROW members.”

Delete: “Send out periodic [MONTHLY] announcements”
Replace with: “Send out monthly announcements to the group regarding Step
opportunities, using 12-Step Opportunity Letter approved by group
conscience.”

WEEKLY LEADER LISTKEEPER

Delete: “Schedule should be completed up to three months in advance”
Replace with: “Schedule should be completed for no more than three
months in advance.

Delete “Make periodic announcements to the group asking for volunteers
Replace with “At the end of each month, call for topic volunteers to fill the 3rd unfilled month, using Weekly Leader Template approved by group conscience.” (with link.)

Webkeeper & Backup [decision by consensus]

Agreed to the following job descriptions for the webkeeper and webkeeper backup:

WEBKEEPER

Non-rotating term
2 years sobriety
2 years GROW membership

Must be member of Business List

Be a non-voting member of the Steering Committee

Maintain public website (g-r-o-w.com) for GROW to provide information about Alcoholics Anonymous and for the purpose of attracting new members, Information should include:
–Info about Alcoholics Anonymous
–Info about GROW
–Frequently Asked Questions
–Our Guiding Philosophy
–Guide for Email Etiquette
–Traditions in Cyberspace
–How to become a member

Maintain a password protected private section on g-r-o-w.com to provide GROW members with information about GROW, including:
–List of trusted servants and job descriptions
–Info about how we conduct business
–Group conscience decisions
–Common Welfare Guidelines
–Archives in keeping with group conscience guidelines
–Important Addresses

Work closely with GROW Archivist and Steering Committee to ensure that pertinent group history is preserved and that archives are accessible to GROW members in keeping with the GROW Archives Guidelines.

Inform Steering Committee when updates are made to the website.

Consult with Steering Committee before making substantial design or content changes to GROW website.

Post quarterly business meetings and keep updated throughout the business meeting.

Ensure that any material post on g-r-o-w.com appropriately protects the anonymity of anyone mentioned.

As owner of the EsoSoft account, pay annual service fee and provide copy of invoice/receipt to GROW Treasurer for reimbursement.

As owner of the EsoSoft account, change the forwarding information of tradition7@g-r-o-w.com with each new Treasurer.

Provide the Backup Webkeeper’s email address to EsoSoft and designate
her as co-owner.

Provide Backup Webkeeper with all necessary information and passwords
to access the Esosoft account and web server.

Receive copies of email messages sent to tradition7@g-r-o-w.com; have access to the GROW PayPal account at https://www.paypal.com/, and provide technical support to Treasurer as needed. Must be able to reply to business and steering committee email within 48 hours. If unable to do so, should inform the steering committee in advance, or in the case of a computer related problem, telephone another member of the Steering Committee.

Upon retirement, transfer EsoSoft account to successor, provide successor with all necessary information, including job guidelines, and serve as a mentor for a period of time to ensure continuity of service.

The following are helpful to this position:

–Organized
–Good E-mail program
–Reliable Server
–Good communication skills
–Be able to cut, copy, paste, and save to a folder
–Basic knowledge of web design and development and
ability to problem solve server issues with service provider

BACKUP WEBKEEPER

Non-rotating term

2 years sobriety

2 years GROW membership

Must be member of Business List

Carry out duties as outlined in the Webkeeper Job Guidelines and
maintain g-r-o-w.com in the absence of the Webkeeper.

Be designated as co-owner of the EsoSoft account.

Receive, from the Webkeeper, all necessary information and passwords
to access the EsoSoft account and g-r-o-w.com web server.

As co-owner, receive copies of all email messages, invoices and
account statements from EsoSoft.

Receive copies of email messages sent to tradition7@g-r-o-w.com; have
access to the GROW PayPal account at https://www.paypal.com/, and
provide technical support to Treasurer as needed.

In the event of an emergency in which the Webkeeper is no longer
available, contact EsoSoft to make necessary changes in account.

In the permanent absence of the Webkeeper, assume the duties
permanently, or at least until the next business meeting when a new
Webkeeper can be selected.

In absence of the Webkeeper, pay annual EsoSoft service fee and
provide copy of invoice/receipt to GROW Treasurer for reimbursement.

Transfer EsoSoft account to permanent Webkeeper or designate new
Backup Webkeeper as co-owner, providing all necessary passwords and
information to access EsoSoft account and web server.

Serve as a mentor to replacement for a period of time to ensure
continuity of service.

Non-responding TS Language [decision by consensus]

Must be able to reply to business and steering committee email within 48
hours. If unable to do so, should inform the steering committee in
advance, or in the case of a computer related problem, make every effort
to telephone another group member who can let the Steering Committee know.

* Lack of response to business, steering committee, or direct personal
email by another trusted servant for a period of seven consecutive days
will be reason for a temporary replacement chosen by the steering committee.

* Lack of response to business, steering committee, or direct personal
email by another trusted servant for a period of fourteen consecutive
days will be reason for temporary replacement by steering committee
until a permanent replacement can be chosen by the next business meeting.

Birthday Listkeeper Job Description [decision by consensus]

We have agreed to change the Birthday Listkeeper’s Job Description as follows:

  • Add link to Sample Birthday Letter
  • Delete: “Send out notice to group toward end of month, asking who is
    celebrating 3-, 6-, 9-, 12- and 18-month birthdays in the following month (requesting replies to be sent privately.)”
  • Replace with: “Send out notice to group toward end of month, asking who is celebrating 30 days, 3-, 6-, 9-, 18-month, or any multiple of annual birthdays, in the following month (requesting replies to be sent
    privately.)”
  • Delete “Develop list of celebrants for each month and — at the end of
    each week — send to the group a list of those members who will celebrate 3-, 6-, 9-, 12- and 18-month birthdays during the coming week; or, if the Birthday Listkeeper so chooses, send birthday announcements to the group early in the a.m.on the day of each birthday.”
  • Replace with: Develop list of celebrants for each month and — at the end of each week — send to the group a list of those members who will celebrate 30 days, 3-, 6-, 9-, 18-month, or any multiple of annual birthdays during the coming week; or, if the Birthday Listkeeper so chooses, send birthday announcements to the group early in the a.m.on the day of each birthday.”

2006 – Group Conscience Decisions

2006 Group Conscience Decisions

This is a summary of the group conscience decisions made in 2006.


January, 2006

By consensus:

  • Agreed that we want a summary of founders’ history and, with permission from Grapevine Magazine, a copy of the story “Oreos and a T-shirt” posted on our g-r-o-w.com Archives section.
  • Agreed that the current Treasurer term will be shortened to July so that the Secretary and Treasurer will rotate at the same time.
  • Agreed that GROW will maintain bank records for a period of seven (7) years.and that records older than seven (7) years will be destroyed.

By majority vote:

Adopted the following Archive Guidelines, which encompass and/or replace the Archive Proposal adopted in April 2000:

  1. The Archives are established to maintain a history of Grateful Recovering Online Women (GROW) in order to provide for an accurate rendering of the experience of GROW from its inception for the benefit of future GROW members and A.A. as a whole. We also recognize that archives serve a technical purpose in an online environment.
  2. GROW shares are automatically archived on the binhost server, and available to subscribed GROW members with a unique password which is disabled when the member is unsubscribed from GROW.
  3. GROW-BUS shares are automatically archived on the binhost server, and available only to GROW-BUS list members during business meetings.
  4. GROW and GROW-BUS archives are never publicly available. They are understood to be the property of the email list and will be deleted from the binhost server if or when the GROW email lists discontinue services with the binhost provider.
  5. Archives maintained by the Archivist and posted in the password protected members’ only section of g-r-o-w.com will include:

    a) A history written by the founders of GROW.

    b) A listing of trusted servant job guidelines, and current trusted servants and terms.

    c) Quarterly reports for the most recent 2 years from Treasurer, Listkeeper, Secretary, OIAA, GSR and Steering Committee Secretary.

    d) All Group Conscience decisions.

    e) Current letter and format templates used by or for Greeter-Welcomer, Listkeeper, email list provider, meeting format, 12 Step Chair, Topic Leader Chair, Sponsor Listkeeper, FYI, E-Mail Etiquette, etc.

    f) Business meeting agendas and minutes for the most recent 2 years.

  6. The GROW Archivist will maintain in her possession electronic back-up of those items listed in Section 5a through 5f.
  7. The GROW Archivist is authorized to destroy pre-binhost personal shares in her possession. She is further authorized to save, at her discretion, specific pre-binhost GROW email that could alter and/or further define GROW history with the understanding that these shares would never be made public.
  8. The GROW Archivist shall ensure that any non-binhost archived documents protect the individual anonymity, and shall work with the web keeper to ensure that these documents are appropriately displayed on g-r-o-w.com.

April, 2006

Adopted the following revision of the Archivist Job Description [decision by consensus]:

ARCHIVIST JOB DESCRIPTION

-Non-rotating term

-5 years sobriety

-1 year GROW membership

-Must be member of Business List

-Be a non-voting member of the Steering Committee

-Read all email from GROW meeting list, all email from GROW Business List,and all Steering Committee correspondence daily.

-Serve as focal person for GROW Archives, working with the Co-archivist, Steering Committee and Webkeeper to ensure that pertinent group history is preserved and that archives are accessable to GROW members in keeping with the GROW Archives Guidelines.

-Ensure that any publicly-presented material appropriately protects the anonymity of anyone mentioned.

-Maintain an electronic copy of pre-binhost archives as determined by GROW Archives Guidelines.

-Be able to access and research GROW and GROW-BUS archives on binhost as appropriate.

-Upon retirement, provide successor with all necessary information, including job guidelines, letter templates, and active lists; and serve as a mentor for a period of time to ensure continuity of service.

-The following are helpful to this position:

Organized

Good E-mail program such as Eudora, Outlook, Netscape, etc.

Reliable Server

Good communication skills

Be able to cut, copy, paste, and save to a folder

Good service sponsor

Adopted the following revision of the Co-Archivist Job Description [decision by consensus]:

C0-ARCHIVIST JOB DESCRIPTION

-1 year term

-3 years sobriety

-3 months GROW membership

-Must be member of Business List

-Be a member of the Steering Committee

-Provide support and back-up to the Archivist.

-Read all email from GROW meeting list, all email from GROW Business List,
and all Steering Committee correspondence daily.

-Maintain in her possession a an electronic back-up of pre-binhost archives as determined by GROW Archives Guidelines.

-Be able to access and research GROW and GROW-BUS archives on binhost as
appropriate.

-At the end of the term, provide successor with job guidelines and pre-binhost archives; and serve as a mentor for a period of time to ensure continuity of service.

-The following are helpful to this position:

Organized

Good E-mail program such as Eudora, Outlook, Netscape, etc.

Reliable Server

Good communication skills

Be able to cut, copy, paste, and save to a folder

Good service sponsor

Weekly meeting leaders should have a minimum of three months GROW membership and a minimum of three months sobriety [decision by consensus].


July, 2006

By consensus:

  • E-mail addresses of our trusted servants will be included in the monthly message sent by the Secretary to GROW.
  • All trusted servants are required to attend business meetings and will be automatically subscribed to the business list by the Listkeeper.
  • We will make our 7th Tradition contribution checks in the name of our treasurer.

October, 2006

By consensus:

  • We will include the word “daily” in the Greeter (and Back-Up Greeter) job description, with regard to reading GROW mail.
  • We will include a sentence in the Greeter (and Back-Up Greeter) job description to the effect that the Greeter send an e-mail to the 12-Step Volunteer Listkeeper about women who need extra support.
  • Reaffirmed that weekly meeting leads are sent on Sunday, with no time specified. The Weekly Lead Listkeeper may, at her discretion, maintain a list of available leaders she can call on to start the meeting if no lead is posted by Monday morning.

By majority vote:

  • Weekly meeting leaders should have a minimum of 30 days GROW membership and a minimum of 90 days of sobriety. (This changes group conscience by consensus of April 06)

2005 – Group Conscience Decisions

2005 Group Conscience Decisions

This is a summary of the group conscience decisions made in 2005.


January 2005

Agreed by Consensus:

  1. The web hosting and domain registration accounts shall list Webmaster as owner. Webmaster will provide Web Committee with the necessary contact information so they can access the account should Webmaster be unable to. This would allow the Web Committee or a designee to change the account information, make payments, etc.
  2. Web Committee members who have the experience and willingness to serve as back up will be provided with the necessary information by Web Master to access the webserver to make changes or updates, if necessary.
  3. Committee members interested in learning about web building can do so little by little and help the Web Master monitor the website for mistakes, broken links and problems.

April 2005

Agreed by Consensus:

  1. Combined the Greeter/Welcomer job description to reflect the combining of these positions, a decision we made in Oct. 04, and which took effect when the last welcomers finished their terms. The revised job description reads as follows:

    Greeter/Welcomer Job Description

    -1 Year Term 1 Year Sobriety

    – Member of Business List

    – Receive inquiries requesting information about GROW from Listkeeper.

    – Send initial response to potential new member.

    – Keep track of inquiries.

    – After receiving appropriate response (sometimes need to clarify Third Tradition adherence or being female) subscribe them to the list.

    – After receiving confirmation from listservice that the subscription has been accepted, send a welcome letter to the new member (letter provided), and introduce new member to the group. ( Place in subject line: New Member [email address]

    – Respond to questions from new members regarding the group.

    – If new member does not have access to the web, forward group information, as requested.

    – Work closely with Listkeeper.

    – Send resubscription requests to the Listkeeper.

    – Provide successor with all necessary information, including job guidelines; and serve as a mentor for a period of time to ensure continuity of service.

    – The following are helpful to this position:

    -Good organizational skills

    -Frequent checks for e-mail

    -Good e-mail program with filters and know how to set them up

    -Be able to cut, copy, paste, and save to a folder

  2. An Archives Committee, comprised of Susan G., Lori, Gigi, and Timi T., is tasked with revising GROW’s archives procedures to reflect, as best as possible, the discussions we have had during this business meeting. The committee will seek input from our Listkeepers regarding their proposal before it is presented at the October business meeting.
  3. Revised Greeter’s letter to read as follows:

    Welcome to GROW! Now that you’re subscribed, this is one of two emails you will receive to help you start participating in our meeting right away. You might want to print these out for future reference.

    A new meeting topic is sent to everyone on the list each Sunday and we share throughout the week. On-topic and Off-topic shares are welcome. We ask that off-topic posts be appropriate for an AA meeting. Please
    note in your subject line if your share is off topic (we usually type Off: … )

    To share with the group, just address your email to grow@binhost.com and your post will be forwarded to all members.

    Please be sure your email is set to send and receive plain text, and do not type in all CAPS.

    The secretary posts information about the trusted servants and guidelines for our email etiquette once a month. The Listkeeper (the person who makes sure the technical side our email list works smoothly) also posts information monthly.

    You’ll find lots more information on our GROW web site. The URL for GROW is:

    http://www.g-r-o-w.com

    Some of the information is for members only, so you’ll need the following:

    user name: sobertoday

    password: how2484

    If you have questions not answered by our website information, please write me and I’ll be sure to answer or send your question to someone who can.

    I hope Grateful Recovering Online Women is helpful to you in your
    journey and growth in sobriety. Again, Welcome!


July 2005

By consensus:

  • Reaffirmed that Co-archivist fills in for Archivist during temporary absence of the Archivist.
  • Agreed to leave the Archivist and Co-archivist job descriptions as they are. Adding the word “continuous” is considered unnecessary and the words “membership of AA” redundant.

October 2005

MINUTES – By consensus

  • The Secretary and Chair will carry out their duties as written and the Secretary will post Minutes to both GROW and GROW-BUS, reaffirming previous group conscience.
  • GROW BUS Minutes should include enough detail to accurately record what transpires during each 4-day segment and should be identified in the subject line as “Minutes” rather than “Update” or “Summary.
  • The following clarification about what Minutes should contain is to be added to the Secretary’s job description:
    • What TS reports were presented to the meeting
    • What discussions were on the table
    • The outcome of the discussion
    • How that decision would be entered into the record as a GC Decision (wording)
    • What discussions are ongoing and a brief background as to why
    • If there was a change to a previous group conscience decision; what it is changing from and to
    • Any other business before us and the outcome
    • TS positions filled and still open
    • GROW website url and password

BIRTHDAYS – By consensus

It has been recorded as group conscience decision that GROW will celebrate quarterly sobriety dates in addition to the annual birthdays we now recognize, and the Birthday Listkeepers job description has been revised to reflect this change.

WEEKLY TOPIC – By consensus

Our Weekly Meeting Lead Listkeeper will resume maintaining a list of topic shares and pass the list on to her replacement; and for reference purposes, a list of topic shares will be displayed in the Archive section of g-r-o-w.com for a period of one year.

ARCHIVES – By consensus

GROW will discontinue the archiving of shares to GROW. We authorized our Archivist to save, at her discretion, specific GROW emails that could alter and/or further define GROW history with the understanding that these shares would never go public. (This applies to past, present and future archiving procedures).

We will maintain 10 digests at all times, leaving it to our Listkeepers and Archivists (guided by these and past unrevised group conscience decisions) to determine how and when to delete past archives and turn off the current archive option.

These decisions have been incorporated into the Archive Guidelines adopted in April 2000. GROW’s Archive Guidelines now read as follows:

GROW ARCHIVE GUIDELINES – (Adopted 4/00; revised 10/05)

The Archives are established to maintain a history of Grateful Recovering Online Women (GROW) in order to provide for an accurate rendering of the experience of GROW from its inception for the benefit of future GROW members and A.A. as a whole.

As of October, 2005, we do not archive shares to the GROW list and our Archivist is authorized to save, at her discretion, specific GROW emails that could alter and/or further define GROW history with the understanding that these shares would never go public.

We will maintain 10 GROW digests at all times, leaving it to our Listkeepers and Archivists to determine how and when to delete past archives and turn off the current archive option.

These decisions do not change the Archives Guidelines adopted in April, 2000.

Archives may include: Pertinent correspondence on founding of the group Listing of TS’s Terms, who/when, service responsibilities (when, why and if changed) Quarterly reports from each TS Group Conscience decisions Form letters (Greeter, Welcomer, Listkeeper, majordomo, meeting format, 12 Step Chair, Topic Leader Chair, Sponsor Listkeeper, FYI, E-Mail Etiquette, etc.) Changes within the group structure (ex, listserver change) Steering Committee Actions (summary) * Business meeting minutes and agenda’s Copies of the digest for a period of 2 years to be reviewed periodically to insure pertinent group history be preserved.

A representative sampling of the archives will be publicly displayed as suggested by the GSO Guidelines. These publicly presented archives will contain historical documents that may be of the greatest interest to the largest number its members. All other archives may be made available in a timely manner to current members upon request.

The current Archivist will serve as a nonrotating historian so that there will be a focal person for the collection.

The Archivist will receive copies of Steering Committee mail and be non-voice receiver of correspondence.

The Steering Committee will select a recording secretary among its members to provide a summary of Steering Committee discussions and actions.

The Archivist shall ensure that any publicly presented material appropriately protect the anonymity of anyone mentioned. i.e., the standard of first name-last initial shall apply.

A rotating Co-Archivist will assist the non-rotating Archivist. The Co-Archivist is a one year term (suggested length of sobriety – 3 years; suggested length of GROW membership – 3 months)


2004 – Group Conscience Decisions

2004 Group Conscience Decisions

This is a summary of the group conscience decisions made in 2004. The previous year’s listings are for 2002; there were no group conscience decisions made in 2003.


January, 2004

Agreed to:

  1. continue to send our representative to OSC;
  2. oppose the the proposed OSC Charter;
  3. withhold any other decisions (and discussions) regarding OSC until the group arrives at a Charter we can support; and that we
  4. write a brief statement to this effect for our rep to share with OSC.

Changed Treasurer term length from one (1) year to two (2) years.


April, 2004

Agreed to add the following statement to the GSR/OCR job description:

  • ” Anticipate heavy increase in correspondence, especially during the months when OSC is in session.”

Agreed by vote to change the percentage of our excess funds donated to OIAA and GSO as follows:

  • GROW will contribute 20% to OIAA and 80% to GSO. Our OIAA Rep will privately let the OIAA Treasurer know that we are reducing our contribution in keeping with our letter of April, 2003.

Agreed by consensus to the following:

  • We will send the amount originally scheduled for April, as these funds were collected under the group conscience of a 50/50 split between OIAA and GSO.

July/August, 2004

The July business meeting was extended into August because the July meeting was interrupted by server problems. GROW changed listservers from Esosoft to Binhost during this time frame.

  • Agreed by unanimous vote to revise the treasurer job guidelines to include a requirement of at least one year as a member of GROW. (8/0404)
  • Agreed by consensus to withdraw from OSC. (8/0404)
  • Agreed by consensus that for the September 2004 inventory, we will use the same 12 inventory questions we have used in our previous two group inventories.
  • Agreed by consensus to increase our prudent reserve to $100 in anticipation of possible increased expenses with Treasurer rotation and new bank account in October.

October, 2004

  • Archives: The change to Binhost, which now provides us with password-protected searchable archives by date, topic, author and topic created several questions to answer. By consensus we decided: 1) We will continue providing the archive section on the g-r-o-w website. 2) The g-r-o-w website archive section will include a link to the Binhost archives; 3) The GROW archivist will continue to backing up the digests and saving them to a disk for safekeeping.
  • By consensus we reaffirmed that the archivist should be a non-rotating trusted servant.
  • By consensus we reaffirmed that our archive procedures are in keeping with traditions.
  • By consensus we decided that the Webkeeper should be a non-rotating trusted servant position and that there should be a back-up.
  • By consensus we agreed to combine the Greeter and Welcomer positions when the current Welcomers’ terms end.
  • By consensus we agreed that, because of restrictions by her local banks, our current treasurer, Annette, will ask for checks to be made out to her with GROW as a memo. (There is no consensus at this time to extend this decision to future treasurers).
  • By consensus we agreed that the Webkeeper and Archivist should be reimbursed for the cost of the website and the cost of disks needed to back up digests.
  • By consensus we agreed that the founder’s correspondence should be maintained by the founders and not available for general perusal. (There is no consensus at this time as to whether said correspondence should be available to someone other than the founders for research purposes).
  • By consensus we agreed that the GSR will serve as the OIAA alternate. (Clarification: We will have one OIAA representative who has no GSR duties and one GSR who also serves as the OIAA Alternate.

2002 – Group Conscience Decisions

2002 Group Conscience Decisions

This is a summary of the group conscience decisions made in 2002. The next year’s listings are for 2004; there were no group conscience decisions made in 2003.


July, 2002

By consensus agreed to the following:

  1. That GROW continue to send an Online Service Representative to the Online Service Conferences, but that GROW will withhold any formal endorsement of the OSC until (at least) after a report on the next conference scheduled for January 2003.
  2. That the Online Service Representative advise the GROW steering committee and/or business list of Advisory ballots and any other significant decisions presented as representing group conscience for all online AA groups.

At our October 2002 business meeting, we may want to discuss provisions for the service position of Online Service Representative. In the meantime Tina and Karen will keep the steering committee informed, and our April 2003, business agenda will include a review of the report on the January 2003, conference.


2001 – Group Conscience Decisions

2001 Group Conscience Decisions

This is a summary of the group conscience decisions made in 2001.


April 2001

  • By consensus agreed to add the responsibility for re-posting the topic mid-week to the Weekly Leader Listkeeper job description.
  • By consensus, the secretary will post the following reminder to the group at least once a month (this is in addition to the entire guide to email etiquette currently being posted): “Hi, Just a reminder that we here in GROW enjoy both on- and off-topic posts. While we send personal messages such as welcomes, hugs, and “enjoyed-your-share” comments privately, when one of our members needs help, we can all benefit from the show of open support and the sharing of experience, strength and hope shared publicly.
  • By consensus, agreed to conduct a group inventory in September, 2001.

October 2001

  • By consensus agreed:
    1. Hold off on putting a button on our website until we have a chance to see how it works for other groups; and
    2. Add a statement under our current OIAA link informing visitors that 24-hour help is available by visiting the OIAA website, or by calling Alcoholics Anonymous as listed in local telephone directories.
  • By consensus agreed that GROW welcomer(s) will send our online sponsor list to new members.

2000 – Group Conscience Decisions

2000 Group Conscience Decisions

This is a summary of the group conscience decisions made in 2000.


January 2000

  • Due to an emergency change in our list service provider from Esosoft to World during the preceeding quarter, our list cost has increased. As there is no annual discount with the new service, we will pay on a monthly basis. The refund due us for advance payment on our previous account will be applied to the GROW website. The GROW website will remain at Esosoft, at least until these funds are spent.
  • The Secretary and the Business Meeting Chair service responsibility descriptions are revised to include:
    • must be able to commit to reading email on a daily basis;
    • must participate in all steering committee meetings;
    • must be able to reply to business and steering committee email within 48 hours. If unable to do so, should inform the steering committee in advance, or in the case of a computer related problem, telephone another member of the Steering Committee.
    • Lack of response to business, steering committee, or direct personal email for a period of seven consecutive days will be reason for a temporary replacement chosen by the steering committee.
    • Lack of response to business, steering committee, or direct personal email for a period of fourteen consecutive days will be reason for temporary replacement by steering committee until a permanent replacement can be chosen by the next business meeting.
  • GROW will host a special women’s chat session during the OIAA Suite hosting at 2000 International Convention. GROW “business cards” will be made available, the content of which will be decided by our OIAA representatives.
  • The OIAA representative will make at least quarterly reports to the group, relying on the steering committee as a sounding board to help sort out which issues affect A.A. as a whole and thus require a group conscience.
  • Adopted the following Archives Proposal:

    * The Archives are established to maintain a history of Grateful Recovering Online Women (GROW) in order to provide for an accurate rendering of the experience of GROW from its inception for the benefit of future GROW members and A.A. as a whole.

    * Archives may include: Pertinent correspondence on founding of the group Listing of TS’s Terms, who/when, service responsibilities (when, why and if changed) Quarterly reports from each TS Group Conscience decisions Form letters (Greeter, Welcomer, Listkeeper, majordomo, meeting format, 12 Step Chair, Topic Leader Chair, Sponsor Listkeeper, FYI, E-Mail Etiquette, etc.) Changes within the group structure (ex, listserver change) Steering Committee Actions (summary)

    * Business meeting minutes and agenda’s Copies of the digest for a period of 2 years to be reviewed periodically to insure pertinent group history be preserved.

    * A representative sampling of the archives will be publicly displayed as suggested by the GSO Guidelines. These publicly presented archives will contain historical documents that may be of the greatest interest to the largest number its members. All other archives may be made available in a timely manner to current members upon request.

    * The current Archivist will serve as a nonrotating historian so that there will be a focal person for the collection.

    • The Archivist will receive copies of Steering Committee mail and be non-voice receiver of correspondence.
    • The Steering Committee will select a recording secretary among its members to provide a summary of Steering Committee discussions and actions.
    • The Archivist shall ensure that any publicly presented material appropriately protect the anonymity of anyone mentioned. i.e., the standard of first name-last initial shall apply.

    * A rotating Co-Archivist will assist the non-rotating Archivist. The Co-Archivist is a one year term (suggested length of sobriety – 3 years; suggested length of GROW membership – 3 months)


April 2000

GROW will support a mail list being formed for the duration of the OIAA International Convention where convention visitors could share on the chosen topic, demonstrating how e-mail meetings work. GROW will ask for volunteers from the group to participate. We will not open the GROW mail list up to convention visitors.


July 2000

  • By consensus, adopted the Archives Committee report and recommendations for the archives Storage and Display.
  • By consensus, approved the Archivist position as a trusted servant.

    We have found nothing in A.A. literature stating that a non-rotating position cannot be considered a trusted servant. We believe that the person assuming the responsibility of archivist is being trusted to perform a considerable service for the group, and that in keeping with group autonomy, we can choose to define this non-rotating position as a trusted servant.

  • By consensus, approved procedure for replacing non-rotating Archivist if necessary.

    In the event that the permanent archivist must be replaced, the co-archivist will be offered the position of permanent Archivist. If the co-archivist declines, she will serve as temporary archivist until a permanent archivist is selected following our guidelines and normal procedures for selecting trusted servants.

  • By consensus, agreed to post the call for trusted servants at least 3 days before the start of a business meeting to maintain a 7-day window and stay in sync with the business meeting schedule.
  • By consensus, agreed that the relapse of a trusted servant is a matter to be handled privately by the Secretary, with support and advice from the Steering Committee as necessary. A trusted servant who relapses would be asked to resign and encouraged to return, when sober, to any open trusted servant position for which she is qualified.
  • By consensus, adopted a Co-Archivist job description

October 2000

By consensus, approved the following clarification to be added to the co-archivist job description: “Each new co-archivist is provided with an up-to-date archive file by the previous co-archivist, which she maintains and adds to during her term, then passes on to the next co-archivist.”


1999 – Group Conscience Decisions

1999 Group Conscience Decisions

This is a summary of the group conscience decisions made in 1999.


January 1999

  • All service commitments currently held shall be extended for a period of one month so all positions will expire during the month of a regularly scheduled business meeting. (One time only extension.)
  • Backup Trusted Servants will step in to a vacated position and fulfill the balance of the remaining term of those Trusted Servants resigning before their commitment is up.
  • The end of service commitment will be staggered for these positions to maintain continuity of subscribing service to our new members. (One time only.)
  • The topic will be reposted during the week with encouragement to hear from members who haven’t yet shared on topic.
  • Decisions about whether to immediately subscribe someone (possibly still drinking and asking for help and/or information) or send such requests on to the Greeters will be at the discretion of our Listkeeper.
  • The doors of the business meeting will remain open to all members for the duration of the meeting, and the steering committee will determine how to bring late comers up to speed with the least amount of disruption to the business at hand.
  • GROW does not allow group postings of any copyrighted material for which permission to distribute has not been obtained from the copyright owner.

April 1999

The business list will be closed at the end of each quarterly business meeting. All members will be unsubbed from the business list, and will need to re-subscribe to the business list at the start of each new business meeting.


October 1999

  • GROW will, in addition to our regular weekly topics, have a Step discussion and a Tradition discussion each month; Step and Tradition to correspond with the month. (To begin immediately). The following format will be sent every Sunday separately from the weekly topic:

    Subject Line: Step and Tradition Topic

    According to group conscience, GROW holds monthly Step and Tradition discussions to correspond with the month. This being [month], you are invited to share on Step ____ and Tradition _____ in addition to the weekly topics.

    Step _____ (Include as it appears in the contents of the 12 x 12)

    Tradition _____ (Include both short and long form).

  • The group secretary position shall be assigned the role of list “owner.”
  • Beginning with the March invoice, we will change payment on account to Esosoft from semi-annual to annual. We will increase our prudent reserve to accommodate this change.
  • The dates of service for our Members at Large will run from November through October (appointed during October business meeting, rotate out at the end of the next October business meeting).

1998 – Group Conscience Decisions

July 1998
  • 7/6/98 – To archive group history
  • 7/7/98 – To register group with GSO
  • 7/8/98 – Seventh tradition distribution
  • 7/13/98 – To develop a website for the group
  • 7/17/98 – To conduct business on a separate mail list
  • 7/18/98 – To hold business meetings quarterly (in the months of January, April, July, October) using a 4-day format. No digest on business list.
  • 7/19/98 – To use Esosoft as Listserver
  • 7/23/98 – Adoption of Traditions in Cyberspace
  • 7/27/98 – Trusted Servants positions will be filled by either volunteer or nominee. If more than one meets group guidelines, the position will be filled by election.
  • 7/28/98 – Steering Committee: purpose and who serves.
  • 7/29/98 – To hold periodic group inventory (how often still to be determined)
August 1998
  • 8/3/98 – Adopted weekly meeting format
  • 8/4/98 – Several general guidelines
    • Group Conscience Guidelines
    • Group Guidelines for Mail List Etiquette
    • Common Welfare Guidelines (disruptions procedure)
  • 8/11/98 – Online Sponsor Statement
  • 8/14/98 – Greeter letter; Birthday Listkeeper Service Responsibilities; Trusted Servants, terms of Service and Sobriety Requirements
  • 8/17/98 – Archivist to develop service responsibilities after a trial period in this position
  • 8/19/98 – Treasurer Service Responsibilities
  • 8/20/98 – To use Esosoft WWW services for website. Only AA recovery links to be included
  • 8/21/98 – Name of Group “Grateful Recovering Online Women (GROW)
  • 8/22/98 – To pay Esosoft for 6 months service each pay period. To pay by check (cash) not credit card.
  • 8/23/98 – To send new meeting announcement to appropriate sources; several service position responsibilities:
    • Welcomer Service Responsibilities
    • Chair Service Responsibilities
    • Greeter Service Responsibilities
    • GSR Service Responsibilities
    • Leader Listkeeper Service Responsibilities
    • OIAA Rep Service Responsibilities
    • Secretary Service Responsibilities
    • 12 Step Listkeeper Service Responsibilities
    • Sponsor Listkeeper Service Responsibilities
  • 8/24/98 – Listkeeper Service Responsibilities; several “form” letters:
    • Pass-the-Basket Announcement
    • majordomo Letter – Main List
    • majordomo letter – Business List
    • Welcomer Letter
  • 8/25/98 – Several items:
    • 12 Step Volunteer Letter
    • FYI Letter Format, to include list of current trusted servants, group addresses and web page information.
    • Secretary to serve as second signer on checking account in case of emergency
  • 8/31/98 – All Group Conscience Decisions have a six month “no revisit.”
September 1998
  • 9/2/98 – To have password-protected members-only web pages for member information not of general interest to the public.
  • 9/3/98 – Only the approval address will be shown on the public pages of the website; reply to be set to sender of original mail
  • 9/4/98 – First group inventory to be held in September, 1999 and at least every two years thereafter.
  • 9/5/98 – First business meeting to be held in January, 1999.