
Created to carry the message of recovery to all addicts. Whether the addiction is alcohol, drugs, food or any other addiction the program of recovery is the same. I am a recovering alcoholic of over twenty-seven years, a day at a time of course and I believe my primary purpose is to stay sober and help other alcoholics achieve recovery. Remember seven days without a meeting makes one weak. Sign up to get emails.This Blog is NOT IN ANY WAY affiliated to either A.A. or N.A. Help to stop drinking.
Walk In Dry Places
- Home
- Daily Reflections
- Meditations
- Prayers
- Big Book
- Grapevine
- NA Stuff
- Quotes
- Zen Thoughts
- Other Stuff
- 12 Steps
- Keep It Simple
- Recovery Speakers
- As Bill Sees It
- Twenty Four Hours
- Traditions
- WorkShops
- Walk In Dry Places
- Biblical Quotes
- Alanon
- Joe & Charlie
- Literature
- Step By Step
- Eye Opener
- Am I An Alcoholic?
- Native American
- CONTACT US
- Easy Does It
- DISCLAIMER
- Zoom Meetings - N.B. We aren't Responsible for these meetings - Nor do we endorse them
AA Grapevine Quote Your-First Headline-Description
Your-Second-Headline-Title-Here Your-Second-Headline-Description-Here
Your-Third-Headline-Title-Here Your-Third-Headline-Description-Here
Monday, 9 June 2014
PROMISES
“Experience is simply the name we give our mistakes.”Oscar Wilde
Before program, I would dwell in my mistakes. Experience, feh! I was all about self-abuse and feeling rotten about mistakes. My mistakes would certainly lead to overeating, since there was no other option in my mind. Even with years of therapy – with the same therapist – I still used eating as a soothing tool for those times when the mistake was enough to send me into a tailspin. Time and time again people would tell me I was too hard on myself, or that I should just relax and smile. Another mistake for me to internalize — I couldn’t even make a mistake right. I wonder now if I sometimes looked for things to call mistakes so I’d have a reason to feel as rotten as I did most of the time. Having been abused as a child wasn’t enough, blaming other people for my pain never satiated me.
In my first OA meeting, I heard the promises and I started to feel something melt away. Some of the shame and self-pity evaporated into the room of men and women who also felt this lack of satisfaction. A room of men and women loved me because I struggled with the same addictive behaviors. I don’t think I’d ever been loved for my weakness, and there is something powerful in that. When I make a mistake, I can think about my friends in OA who tell me that there is no wrong way, just another way.
One day at a time…
I can know that there are people who love me because I share in their weakness, and I can read the promises to realize that recovery is possible.
~ AJ
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
I will not allow spam or back links to other sites as I can not moderate where these are going to.