Archive for Recovery

Endigar 906 ~ Silkie

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , on July 15, 2024 by endigar

Step One: “We admitted that we were powerless over alcohol – that our lives had become unmanageable.”

1st Step Principle: We will find enduring strength only when we first admit complete defeat over our isolated, obsessive thinking and compulsive behavior. (Adapted from 12 Steps & 12 Traditions, top of page 22)

AA Extracted Value: Honesty

ACA Extracted Values: Powerlessness & Surrender

Other Extracted Values: Acceptance

Men have cried out to me in sincere and despairing appeal: “Doctor, I cannot go on like this! I have everything to live for! I must stop, but I cannot! You must help me!” Faced with this problem, if a doctor is honest with himself, he must sometimes feel his own inadequacy. Although he gives all that is in him, it often is not enough. One feels that something more than human power is needed to produce the essential psychic change. Though the aggregate of recoveries resulting from psychiatric effort is considerable, we physicians must admit we have made little impression upon the problem as a whole. Many types do not respond to the ordinary psychological approach.

~ Alcoholics Anonymous, The Doctor’s Opinion, page xxix

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Dr. William Silkworth was the neuro-psychiatrist who treated Bill Wilson the last three of the four times he was admitted to Towns Hospital for detoxification. Silkie, the “little doctor who loved drunks,” carried no illusion that medical science could do anything to help alcoholics recover. Based on the meager treatment options of the time, he estimated alcoholics had a two percent chance of recovery. Perhaps that was why he encouraged Bill to hang on to whatever had happened to him during his white light, hot flash religious conversion experience at the hospital in December of 1934. Silkworth knew from his own clinical experience that no human power could get alcoholics sober, and he was honest enough to share that observation with his patients.

Do I accept the fact that it is highly unlikely professional medical therapy alone will be able to get and keep me sober?

~ Practice These Principles by Alex M.

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I had strong suspicions during the heavy drinking I did in the military that I seemed to be responding to intoxication differently than other airmen and soldiers. Eventually I “white-knuckled” my way to abstinence and got married and had children. When my marriage blew apart because of deeper issues in my life, I gave up and returned to drinking. When I began to rack up consequences, I attempted to stop. I was shocked that no amount of will power was sufficient to put the brakes on. When the military sent me to rehab, I was still dumbfounded at my situation. The best thing that professionals could do was to point me to the rooms of AA. Now I am just as surprised that I am able to live a sober life. I was saved from suicidal despair and able to give my children an example of overcoming rather than the burden of a tragic end. Medical therapy has its place, but the Twelve Steps was what opened the door to a Power greater than my hell. I more than accept this reality, I rely on it.

Endigar 905

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on July 12, 2024 by endigar

Courage to Change of Jun 8:

Step Six speaks of being entirely ready to have God remove all my defects of character. Yet I find that I often cling to my defects because they give me a certain amount of pleasure.

What defects could possibly give me pleasure? Revenge, for one. I spend lots of time creating mental scenarios in which I punish those who have hurt me. I also get a great deal of enjoyment from thinking that I am never wrong; in other words, I cling to my pride. Yet these characteristics are defects that get in the way of living the king of life I want to live and prevent me from treating myself and others with love and respect. There is abundant reason to let them go, but to do so, I have to become willing to lose the enjoyment they sometimes deliver.

My recovery will have a giant void as long as I am unwilling to give up my shortcomings. If I want healing, I must turn over my will, my life, and my character defects to God.

Today’s Reminder

Are the small, temporary pleasures I get from my defects of character worth the price I am paying to keep them? If not, I may be entirely ready to let some of them go today.

“I know that help is waiting only for my acceptance, waiting for me to say, ‘Not my will but Thine be done.”

~ The Dilemma of the Alcoholic Marriage

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The primary focus of removing defects of character aka shortcomings is to remove thoughts and behaviors which impede my connection with my Higher Power. I suspect that some of them might remain to keep me in need of my Higher Power until other more subtle but insidious defects are discovered and targeted for removal. The litmus test for me is to ask what is getting in the way of being a part of something bigger than myself. What makes me devalue a fellowship that has my best interest at heart? What turns the genuineness of my interaction with the Higher Power into perfunctory ritual? What calls to me to become a god in isolation rather than a child of the Infinite, a dweller between the worlds?

I want to change frequencies and connect to the beyond. I am entirely ready.

Endigar 904 ~ An Honest Desire

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , on July 10, 2024 by endigar

Step One: “We admitted that we were powerless over alcohol – that our lives had become unmanageable.”

1st Step Principle: We will find enduring strength only when we first admit complete defeat over our isolated, obsessive thinking and compulsive behavior. (Adapted from 12 Steps & 12 Traditions, top of page 22)

AA Extracted Value: Honesty

ACA Extracted Values: Powerlessness & Surrender

Other Extracted Values: Acceptance


Alcoholic Me (AM): I am in trouble here and need help.

Fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA): Do you have an honest desire to stop drinking?

AM: Well, not exactly. I do have an honest desire to stop reaping consequences from my drinking.

AA: Good luck to you. We are here to help you stop drinking and learn to live a sober life.

AM: Wait, that’s it? My drinking has empowered me in the past. It has been a magical solution to the painful realities that surround me. I just need to be able to control the consumption a bit.

AA: Alcoholism is progressive, chronic, and fatal if left untreated. It is our experience that complete abstinence from alcohol is necessary for the true alcoholic. If you can control your drinking and enjoy it while you restrain yourself, you may not be an alcoholic. For the alcoholic, the solutions provided by drinking fade and give way to the problems of a growing physical craving and overwhelming mental obsession. The cure becomes the killer.

AM: I am back. The consequences are humiliating and overwhelming. I am hurting those who love me. So, I am back. I cannot stop by myself. I honestly want to stop drinking and find a way to live without it.

AA: Welcome back. Let us introduce you to your true self and teach you to connect with a power greater than alcohol. Just keep coming back.

AM + Honesty = AA.

It works if you work it.

Endigar 903

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on March 25, 2024 by endigar

Courage to Change of Jun 7:

When I took Step Five I looked carefully at the words, “Admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human being . . ..” The order of these words, placing God first, then myself, and then someone else, struck me. So often I have been vaguely aware of some truth in my life that I was unwilling to admit to myself. Yet my Higher Power had already placed that thought in my mind. He must have –if I’m trying to ignore it, I surely didn’t put it there.

I try to use this when making decisions about my life. When I assume that my Higher Power has already put the answer in my mind, I can then be willing to acknowledge that answer– whether I think I’ll like it or not. It may rise up into my awareness right away, or it may take some time and patience, but I can trust that it will become clear. Then I share my thoughts with another person I trust. This process helps me to take action on the answers I receive and to move forward with my life.

Today’s Reminder

There is nothing in life that need confound me. With my Higher Power’s help, I can find the answer to any problem I face. This knowledge gives me courage to follow through with action. I need only be willing to accept the answer I receive.

“Look within! . . . The secret is inside you.”

~ Hui-neng

END OF QUOTE—————————————

There was once a great argument about whether zero actually exists. Mathematics deals with calculations of what is. Was there actually a place where absolute nothingness was true? In the end, pragmatism won out. Zero makes mathematics work. Is the concept of God a variable for the absolute infinity of existence? In the 12 Step program, the God concept wins out because it works. Not because we can answer with absolutes.

“I try to use this when making decisions about my life.” Pragmatism over absolutes. Transformation over transaction. I never face impossibilities, mystery, or completions without a surrender to my Higher Power’s pragmatic reality protecting my efforts. As in mathematics, I have an “order of operation.” I seek inspiration from the macro-infinity (God out there), confirmation from the micro-infinity (God within me) and working validation through the connective infinity of those invested in recovery of the highest version of self.

Personology is a word I created by splicing Personal Mythology. Because the denotation of mythology is something not true but fabricated from imagination, it was inadequate to describe what I meant when I said Personal Mythology. There are four parameters that define one’s Personology:

  • Creative Story Writing to capture elusive or paradoxical concepts and express them with the simplest clarity possible
  • Spiritual Hypothesis Testing to explore incoming evidence and ongoing experience with life beyond the organic veil
  • Establishes a Peace Treaty with the swirling chaos and mystery of our environment
  • Provides Pragmatic Inspiration for the living of our individual mortal lives

Use it if it fulfills the pragmatic imperative of your recovery.

Endigar 902

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on March 12, 2024 by endigar

Courage to Change of Jun 6:

How easy it can be to justify our own unacceptable behavior! Perhaps we excuse ourselves, claiming that we were provoked or had no choice. Or we dismiss our actions by telling ourselves that everyone does the same thing. With these and other justifications, we pretend that our wrongs don’t count. This denial must be overcome when we take the Fourth Step.

With this Step we take a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves. It is fearless because of the strong spiritual foundation we have established by taking the first three Steps. It is moral because we list what we feel has been right or wrong about our conduct. And it is searching. The only way we can take this Step thoroughly, searchingly, is to resist the desire to justify and excuse what we uncover. It may demand courage and self-discipline, but by freely acknowledging who we have been, we can make positive changes about who we are becoming.

Today’s Reminder

I am a human being with strengths and weaknesses, capable of achievements and mistakes. Because I accept this, I can look closely at myself. Today I will find something to appreciate and something to improve.

“You never find yourself until you face the truth.”

~ Pearl Bailey

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There are several delusion producers in my life: programing from a dysfunctional family, addiction’s self-protection in my psyche, layers of fear from perceived threats, and the manifold coping skills to accommodate pain aversion.

In the 12 Step program, I have found that Hope and Action with a litmus test of whether I am helpful to others is my primary method of living a genuine life. Hope targets a destination of value. Action keeps that hope from metastasizing into wishful thinking. The usefulness to others proves the value of my work.

The moral inventory helps me see the truth about me and the life I have been living. It is a process that gives spirituality and self-recovery a pragmatic push toward fulfilment of whatever part of the Higher Power has been embedded within.

Endigar 901 ~ Meditation at the Tree of Life

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , on March 1, 2024 by endigar

Meditating on Step One realities in ACA:

~ I am powerless over the effects of alcoholism and family dysfunction.

~ I am powerless over the “Laundry List traits,” or the traits I developed to cope with my family’s dysfunction.

~ My life is unmanageable when I focus on others rather than myself.

~ I did not cause my family’s addiction or dysfunction.

~ My feelings and thoughts are separate from the thoughts of my parents and my family.

~ I can stop trying to heal or to change my family through my current relationships. I can stop trying to change others.

~ I can stop condemning myself without mercy.

~ I am a valuable person.

~ The solution is to become my own loving parent. I will learn to reparent myself with gentleness, humor, love, and respect.

~ As a Self-parent, I seek the real identity of my core being, and increased self-esteem, genuine courage before authority figures establishing win-win social negotiations, development of my intrinsic ability to share intimacy, replace fears of abandonment with attraction to strength without losing a tolerance of weakness, to feel and appreciate stability, peacefulness, and the reality of financial security, to learn how to play and have fun in life, and to choose to love people who can love and be responsible for themselves.

~ As a Self-parent I will teach my inner core child to establish healthy boundaries so that such beneficial limits will become easier to set; I will teach him to make healthier decisions so that he will no longer fear success nor failure; I will teach him to connect with a support network that will help him slowly release his dysfunctional behaviors; and I will teach him to work with his Higher Power to expect the best and get it.

Paraphrased from the Steps Workbook of ACA.

Endigar 900

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on February 26, 2024 by endigar

Courage to Change of Jun 5:

The Third Step talks about placing my will and my life in the care of a Higher Power. For me, this Power is a presence that loves me as I am, that accepts me with compassion on the bad days as well as the good. Once I have accepted that the destructive presence of another’s alcoholism has affected my life, I need the benevolent influence of a Power untouched by this disease. What I do in turning over my will and my life is to become receptive to guidance; I become willing to accept the care of a Power greater than myself.

I think of this care as a source of love and support that surrounds me in my daily life. I do not need to earn it or to work for it; I need only be receptive to it. I continue to have a will to exercise and a life to live, but I do so bathed in a light of love and understanding.

Today’s Reminder

When I open my heart to a Power that fills me with love and acceptance, I can begin to extend those qualities to others. I may not do it perfectly or even consistently, but I can recognize my progress one day at a time.

“God’s gifts put man’s best dreams to shame.”

~ Elizabeth Barret Browning

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I did not seek a Power “untouched by this disease.” There is a natural cruelty to a Higher Power that only officiates the big, infinite reality of life. I looked for a power intimately acquainted with my own suffering. I looked for a Power that embraced my individual life. Is it possible that when the words, “it is not good for the man to be alone,” were written, this Higher Power was letting us all know that It was lonely.

“I believe the universe wants to be noticed. I think the universe is improbably biased toward the consciousness, that it rewards intelligence in part because the universe enjoys its elegance being observed. And who am I, living in the middle of history, to tell the universe that it-or my observation of it-is temporary?”

~ John Green, the Fault in Our Stars

It is this intimate Higher Power that I seek, and that I trust to care about me and mine.

Elizabeth Barret Browning began writing poetry under the protective umbrella of her father’s massive slave-owning business in Jamaica. She sacrificed that protection for the intimate love of a fellow poet. He had fallen in love with her through her writing. The marriage of Elizabeth and Robert Browning brought an end to her affiliation with her Father’s individual-crushing dominance and a new poetry arose from the intimacy of the married couple as they moved from England to Italy.

For me, the ultimate god-gift is genuine, intimate care that hungers for my reciprocation. No more distance. I seek an exclusive relationship with a Higher Power that hungers for the same. The paradox is that when I have such a reality in my life, I want to share it with others. I suppose the Infinite One can have an exclusive relationship with everyone and there is no risk of losing my own private intimacy.

Be prospered.

Endigar 899

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on February 21, 2024 by endigar

Courage to Change of Jun 4:

The Second Step is about possibility, about hope. With this Step, we come to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity. We are asked to open our minds to the possibility that help is available. Perhaps there is a source of assistance that can do for us what we have been unable to do for ourselves. We don’t have to believe that it will happen, only that it could.

This little bit of hope, this chink in the armor of despair, is enough to show that we are willing to move in the direction of healing. Once we recognize that the possibility of help exists, it seems worthwhile to explore a relationship with a Higher Power. A little willingness can go a long way toward making hope and faith an ongoing part of our lives. In the hands of a Higher Power, sanity and serenity become realistic hopes.

Today’s Reminder

Our literature speaks of the possibility of finding contentment and even happiness through recover in Al-Anon. Today I will take the Second Step in that process and open my mind to hope.

“Finding inner strength is looking beyond the visible and focusing life’s search on the unseen.”

~ As We Understood . . .

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As a young man, I never understood why hope was considered a virtue. The word feels like a synonym for wishful thinking. It seemed to be an excuse to daydream about better days ahead. Wasn’t hope an admission of abdication?

Then I witnessed the ignition of hope in my own life and in the lives of others in these rooms devoted to personal recovery. This is what I now know about the capacity for hope. It is a trained response to those times in life when the wolves are at the door. It is for the time when retreat and surrender will only invite further destruction, a shrinking brain, a tragic end. Surrounded by the confident assertion of impossibility, hope garners intelligence, builds networks, and remembers the place where life spirits are forged. Hope sharpens my senses to a course of action in the midst of the overwhelming clamor of fear. Isn’t hope the first step in the hero’s journey?

“What is great in man is that he is a bridge and not an end…”

~ Friedrich Nietzsche

Endigar 898 ~ My 11th Step Prayer – Updated

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on February 12, 2024 by endigar

UNLESS the God of my understanding builds my home, it is futility for me to build in isolation. I ask the Infinite One to build through me.

UNLESS the God of my understanding guards the city of my birth, no security system will keep it safe. I ask the Complete Entity of the Universe to keep safe that which is important in my life.

It is futility for me to get up early, go to bed late, and eat the bread of anxious toil, for the God of my understanding gives blessings to me even when I am sleeping. I ask for the loving embrace of the Spirit to help me pause, relax, take it easy, and to listen.

Behold, my new life is a heritage and a gift from the God of my understanding. Gomu causes the womb of my soul to bring forth a reward. I shall not close the door on it but will learn to pack it all into the stream of life. I ask you to relieve me of the fears that come with this mortal body.

Like the precision strikes of a warrior’s arrows, so are the works of the God of my understanding from within me. I am blessed with a full quiver of new life because of my connection with Gomu. Help me to walk the narrow path of my own individuation that gives permission to others to do the same.

I will not stand in my isolating selfishness, and when I meet my adversaries at the city gate of my mirror, I will not be ashamed. I will address my true wrongs, make amends, and forsake debilitating shame. Help me, Gomu, to be useful through this process.

Speaking for me, I will look expectantly to You, God of my understanding, and with confidence in You I will keep watch;

I will take this confident expectation with me today and wait for the God of my recovery of the true Self.

I know that You will hear me.

Do not rejoice over me when I suffer the tragedies of life, O my enemy!

Though I fall, I will rise;

Though I sit in the darkness of distress, the Spirit of Gomu shall be a light for me.

So be it and so say we all.

Endigar 897

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on January 25, 2024 by endigar

Courage to Change of Jun 3:

In order to keep family and friends from interfering with their drinking, alcoholics sometimes create diversions by accusing or provoking. At such a time, we who have been affected by someone else’s drinking tend to react, to argue, and to defend ourselves. As a result, nobody has to look at the alcoholism, for we are too busy focusing on the particular point being argued — any topic will do. And unfortunately, what we defend against we make real.

When we take Step One, we admit that we are powerless over this disease. We do not have the strength necessary to fight it. Defending ourselves by engaging in arguments with actively drinking or otherwise irrational people is as fruitless as donning armor to protect ourselves from a nuclear explosion. Only a Power greater than ourselves can restore us to sanity.

Today’s Reminder

I am responsible for taking the actions necessary to keep myself safe. But when my safety is not at risk, I can take time to make choices about my responses. I don’t have to react instantly to provocation, and I am not obligated to justify myself to anyone. By turning to my Higher Power for protection, rather than my wits or my will, I avail myself of the best possible defense.

“Once we learned to see our situation as it really was, we understood why it was necessary for us to turn to a Power greater than ourselves.”

~ Al-Anon’s Twelve Steps & Twelve Traditions

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I found in my own life that spiritual proclamations with no meat hooks are worthless. The saying to “Let Go, and Let God,” means nothing if it isn’t offered in a room with 12 Steps hanging on the wall. If you cannot find a way to digest a spiritual assertion into a pragmatic expression, discard it. Spirituality without boots on the ground is recreational religion.

Also, the notion that my wits and will are mutually exclusive in seeking connection with God is not helpful. The will of the aversive control I experience from alcohol, directly or indirectly, is the enslaving impulse in my life. It was active in me to enforce the negative contract I had with addiction and its intimate agents. I have found that to overcome that aversive control, I need distance, detachment, and some time to work on myself, so that I can establish a system of counter-control in my own life. I have discovered that it is important for me to know myself, to learn to better process my emotions, and to build my personal freedom by increasing the gap between stimulus and response. Connecting with the Higher Power gives me an archetype to emulate, because there is no one more professional at “loving detachment” than the God of my understanding.

Finally, it was important for me to see the iron clad link between sanity and honesty. The eyes of a sane man can see things as they are. The clearer that vision was in my life, the greater the possibility of having some sanity in my head and in my home. That is why the first principle in the program is a commitment to truthful appraisal of the dysfunction of my world, and the unmanageability of my mind in isolation.

Be prospered as you transform into the highest version of Yourself.