November
“The last …years of my life have been rich and meaningful. I have had my share of problems, heartaches and disappointments, because that is life, but also I have known a great deal of joy, and a peace that is the handmaiden of an inner freedom. I have a wealth of friends and, with my AA friends, an unusual quality of fellowship. For, to these people, I am truly related. First, through mutual pain and despair, and later through mutual objectives and new-found faith and hope. And, as the years go by, working together, sharing our experiences with one another, and also sharing a mutual trust, understanding and love – without strings, without obligation – we acquire relationships that are unique and priceless.”
– Alcoholics Anonymous, 3rd Edition, 1976, “Alcoholics Anonymous Number Three,” Ch 12 (“The Keys of the Kingdom“), p 312.
Today, I cannot and must not forget my early beginning in AA and the “mutual pain and despair” with other newcomers and, now, the “mutual objectives and new-found faith and hope” of recovery and sobriety. Whether I recognize it, this is progress. I need not look so far ahead to the promises of the Program at the expense of what I have gained since I joined the Fellowship; if my baptismal pain and despair have been replaced with faith and hope, I am moving forward. And that, for today, is enough. I cannot expect sobriety to spare me the “problems, heartaches and disappointments” that come with life, but I can expect to meet them with a sober perspective – as long as I do what Program advises: one Step and one day at a time. Today, if I can say my despair of my first days in the Program has been replaced with hope and faith, I can also say I’m moving where I need to move – forward. And our common journey continues.
Step by step. – Chris, M.
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