Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Re: Middle ground

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Hi !

> The difficult part is that folks who say hurting AA kills people, will be

very right upon the demise of AA. Many folks after being in AA et al for

many years cannot face truth, personal responsibility or life without group

approval. Some of these will die at their own hand like ancient warriors

who couldn't face defeat.>

While I agree that removing AA from people's lives could potentially be

disastrous, I think that AA will probably not die out totally, at least, not

for a long time. I think AA is perfect for certain people in that it

provides an alternative addiction; also it is free. My only hope is that

alternatives will eventually (hopefully soon) be offered to people who seek

help with addiction. I think SMART is positioned to be the best competitor

because it's also free and non-profit. We shall see...

Judith

_______________________________________________________

Get your free, private email at http://mail.excite.com/

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi !

> The difficult part is that folks who say hurting AA kills people, will be

very right upon the demise of AA. Many folks after being in AA et al for

many years cannot face truth, personal responsibility or life without group

approval. Some of these will die at their own hand like ancient warriors

who couldn't face defeat.>

While I agree that removing AA from people's lives could potentially be

disastrous, I think that AA will probably not die out totally, at least, not

for a long time. I think AA is perfect for certain people in that it

provides an alternative addiction; also it is free. My only hope is that

alternatives will eventually (hopefully soon) be offered to people who seek

help with addiction. I think SMART is positioned to be the best competitor

because it's also free and non-profit. We shall see...

Judith

_______________________________________________________

Get your free, private email at http://mail.excite.com/

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi !

> The difficult part is that folks who say hurting AA kills people, will be

very right upon the demise of AA. Many folks after being in AA et al for

many years cannot face truth, personal responsibility or life without group

approval. Some of these will die at their own hand like ancient warriors

who couldn't face defeat.>

While I agree that removing AA from people's lives could potentially be

disastrous, I think that AA will probably not die out totally, at least, not

for a long time. I think AA is perfect for certain people in that it

provides an alternative addiction; also it is free. My only hope is that

alternatives will eventually (hopefully soon) be offered to people who seek

help with addiction. I think SMART is positioned to be the best competitor

because it's also free and non-profit. We shall see...

Judith

_______________________________________________________

Get your free, private email at http://mail.excite.com/

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

:

The letter was 's boyfriend's-she decided to stay in AA, (I guess)

and left this group.

I know there would have been a time in my AA sobriety, this kind of

free thinking would have scared me to death. I would have been

guilt-ridden at " betraying " the entity that " saved my life " . I could

not have imagined NOT going to AA meetings. I did for 15 years-been

sober for almost 18, now-and NOT by the grace of god or AA; I have been

pretty much on my own in the last few years.

Being away from AA has allowed for other opinions and views to come

into my life and caused me to start thinking for myself again. Many of

us here, if you read our responses, feel in common to 's

boyfriend's uninformed and brainwashed defense of AA.

The pull of AA is strong for many, partly because you are told you

can't think for yourself. This is real evident in his essay. It's

sad, but ignorance is bliss, as they say! (And a little knowledge is a

dangerous thing!!)

wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=5369

> I seem to have lost the name of the author of this but it doesn't

matter

> as this is my comments on the ideas presented and should not be taken

> personally.

>

> Snip>>

> Be careful with those guys... all they've done with " 12-step free " is

> >> >create another structure.

>

> Why, because we won't tell you how to think, strip you of your right

of

> expression and sap away your individuality with threats banishing you

> to the great void of the outcasts who won't work the program to face

> pitiful and incomprehensible demoralization and death? Yeah, yeah

better

> be careful of such people.

>

> Snip>>

> It is no different from any other structure, really.

> It exists mainly in opposition to AA. If there were no AA,

> 12-step free would fall to pieces.

>

> And of course not one person on this list that I have had any

> correspondence with would mind one bit, IF there were no AA, 12 step

> free would have served it's good and noble purpose and would have no

> need to exist. However the, " individuals " on this list would continue

to

> live their lives with the knowledge of a job well done. Unfortunately

> the average AA member would face the madness of the empty space in

> their heads as in : Oh my God no meeting to go to, what do I do, Oh my

> God I have to make a decision and no sponsor to call, what do I do, Oh

> my God no recipe for living as baked till brown in the BB, what do I

do.

> Oh my God I have to think for myself... ... .... what do I do!!!!

>

> Snip>>

> " Free " is in a symbiotic

> relationship to AA.

>

> A ludicrous assumption. Free, in the case of , " 12 step free " , is

> synonymous with being a freethinker, as in one who has rejected

> authority and dogma especially one that is religious. To make an

> assumption that one who has rejected such a self proclaimed authority

as

> AA, is now in a symbiotic with AA is nonsense in the extreme. AA is

> persecution of the vulnerable, a shell game of injected untruths

> supported by mass agreement and those of us who have cleared our decks

> of it's nonsense are not in a close mutually beneficial relationship

> with it.

>

> The two structures serve as a system of checks and

> balances.

>

> How can subordination, indoctrination, cult style brainwashing,

> cultivation of shame and guilt while rejecting personal responsibility

> serve as a system of checks and balances to assertiveness of self,

> freethinking, individual preference, and reduction of shame and guilt

by

> recognizing and accepting personal responsibility. I don't get the

> logic here. Of course I didn't get the logic in the BB either. Must be

> some kind of character defect I have.

>

>

>

>

>

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

:

The letter was 's boyfriend's-she decided to stay in AA, (I guess)

and left this group.

I know there would have been a time in my AA sobriety, this kind of

free thinking would have scared me to death. I would have been

guilt-ridden at " betraying " the entity that " saved my life " . I could

not have imagined NOT going to AA meetings. I did for 15 years-been

sober for almost 18, now-and NOT by the grace of god or AA; I have been

pretty much on my own in the last few years.

Being away from AA has allowed for other opinions and views to come

into my life and caused me to start thinking for myself again. Many of

us here, if you read our responses, feel in common to 's

boyfriend's uninformed and brainwashed defense of AA.

The pull of AA is strong for many, partly because you are told you

can't think for yourself. This is real evident in his essay. It's

sad, but ignorance is bliss, as they say! (And a little knowledge is a

dangerous thing!!)

wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=5369

> I seem to have lost the name of the author of this but it doesn't

matter

> as this is my comments on the ideas presented and should not be taken

> personally.

>

> Snip>>

> Be careful with those guys... all they've done with " 12-step free " is

> >> >create another structure.

>

> Why, because we won't tell you how to think, strip you of your right

of

> expression and sap away your individuality with threats banishing you

> to the great void of the outcasts who won't work the program to face

> pitiful and incomprehensible demoralization and death? Yeah, yeah

better

> be careful of such people.

>

> Snip>>

> It is no different from any other structure, really.

> It exists mainly in opposition to AA. If there were no AA,

> 12-step free would fall to pieces.

>

> And of course not one person on this list that I have had any

> correspondence with would mind one bit, IF there were no AA, 12 step

> free would have served it's good and noble purpose and would have no

> need to exist. However the, " individuals " on this list would continue

to

> live their lives with the knowledge of a job well done. Unfortunately

> the average AA member would face the madness of the empty space in

> their heads as in : Oh my God no meeting to go to, what do I do, Oh my

> God I have to make a decision and no sponsor to call, what do I do, Oh

> my God no recipe for living as baked till brown in the BB, what do I

do.

> Oh my God I have to think for myself... ... .... what do I do!!!!

>

> Snip>>

> " Free " is in a symbiotic

> relationship to AA.

>

> A ludicrous assumption. Free, in the case of , " 12 step free " , is

> synonymous with being a freethinker, as in one who has rejected

> authority and dogma especially one that is religious. To make an

> assumption that one who has rejected such a self proclaimed authority

as

> AA, is now in a symbiotic with AA is nonsense in the extreme. AA is

> persecution of the vulnerable, a shell game of injected untruths

> supported by mass agreement and those of us who have cleared our decks

> of it's nonsense are not in a close mutually beneficial relationship

> with it.

>

> The two structures serve as a system of checks and

> balances.

>

> How can subordination, indoctrination, cult style brainwashing,

> cultivation of shame and guilt while rejecting personal responsibility

> serve as a system of checks and balances to assertiveness of self,

> freethinking, individual preference, and reduction of shame and guilt

by

> recognizing and accepting personal responsibility. I don't get the

> logic here. Of course I didn't get the logic in the BB either. Must be

> some kind of character defect I have.

>

>

>

>

>

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

:

The letter was 's boyfriend's-she decided to stay in AA, (I guess)

and left this group.

I know there would have been a time in my AA sobriety, this kind of

free thinking would have scared me to death. I would have been

guilt-ridden at " betraying " the entity that " saved my life " . I could

not have imagined NOT going to AA meetings. I did for 15 years-been

sober for almost 18, now-and NOT by the grace of god or AA; I have been

pretty much on my own in the last few years.

Being away from AA has allowed for other opinions and views to come

into my life and caused me to start thinking for myself again. Many of

us here, if you read our responses, feel in common to 's

boyfriend's uninformed and brainwashed defense of AA.

The pull of AA is strong for many, partly because you are told you

can't think for yourself. This is real evident in his essay. It's

sad, but ignorance is bliss, as they say! (And a little knowledge is a

dangerous thing!!)

wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=5369

> I seem to have lost the name of the author of this but it doesn't

matter

> as this is my comments on the ideas presented and should not be taken

> personally.

>

> Snip>>

> Be careful with those guys... all they've done with " 12-step free " is

> >> >create another structure.

>

> Why, because we won't tell you how to think, strip you of your right

of

> expression and sap away your individuality with threats banishing you

> to the great void of the outcasts who won't work the program to face

> pitiful and incomprehensible demoralization and death? Yeah, yeah

better

> be careful of such people.

>

> Snip>>

> It is no different from any other structure, really.

> It exists mainly in opposition to AA. If there were no AA,

> 12-step free would fall to pieces.

>

> And of course not one person on this list that I have had any

> correspondence with would mind one bit, IF there were no AA, 12 step

> free would have served it's good and noble purpose and would have no

> need to exist. However the, " individuals " on this list would continue

to

> live their lives with the knowledge of a job well done. Unfortunately

> the average AA member would face the madness of the empty space in

> their heads as in : Oh my God no meeting to go to, what do I do, Oh my

> God I have to make a decision and no sponsor to call, what do I do, Oh

> my God no recipe for living as baked till brown in the BB, what do I

do.

> Oh my God I have to think for myself... ... .... what do I do!!!!

>

> Snip>>

> " Free " is in a symbiotic

> relationship to AA.

>

> A ludicrous assumption. Free, in the case of , " 12 step free " , is

> synonymous with being a freethinker, as in one who has rejected

> authority and dogma especially one that is religious. To make an

> assumption that one who has rejected such a self proclaimed authority

as

> AA, is now in a symbiotic with AA is nonsense in the extreme. AA is

> persecution of the vulnerable, a shell game of injected untruths

> supported by mass agreement and those of us who have cleared our decks

> of it's nonsense are not in a close mutually beneficial relationship

> with it.

>

> The two structures serve as a system of checks and

> balances.

>

> How can subordination, indoctrination, cult style brainwashing,

> cultivation of shame and guilt while rejecting personal responsibility

> serve as a system of checks and balances to assertiveness of self,

> freethinking, individual preference, and reduction of shame and guilt

by

> recognizing and accepting personal responsibility. I don't get the

> logic here. Of course I didn't get the logic in the BB either. Must be

> some kind of character defect I have.

>

>

>

>

>

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hey ;

Good to hear from you. The Author was 's boyfriend and she

posted it. However, she neglected to tell him that AA brooked no

dissent from the party line, he thought both AA and the free zone

discussed each other like the D's and R's in an election.

I disagree that the 12step free zone would die with the demise of

AA et al. The free zone is an idea marketplace. The XA's are our

topic now, but color AA gone and we'd be comparing SMART and

RR and 16steps et al, we would still have a purpose because

anyone can jump in with any idea. The principle according to

kenr1, is free exchange of ideas without the groupers picking on

the individual. Subtract the groupers, your left with free exchange

of ideas, a principle that I hope never dies.

The difficult part is that folks who say hurting AA kills people, will

be very right upon the demise of AA. Many folks after being in AA

et al for many years cannot face truth, personal responsibility or life

without group approval. Some of these will die at their own hand

like ancient warriors who couldn't face defeat. Where we see

opportunity, they see fear of the unknown, perhaps unknowable,

where we see challenge, they see failure, where we see options,

they see foreboding ambiguity and lack of authority, where we see

a prison, they see structured living. To all of these, Fear Is The

Key.

I will never see, an opportunity, challenge or option, if I am

burdened with a total fear of the unknown and long for the time

tested authoritarian way. While drinking, like most I think, I lived

on the edge and thought I longed for a peaceful existence. I was a

patsy for AA because they promised a peaceful existence.

However, they didn't tell me I had to take a lobotomy to get it. But

isn't that really what AA offers, an emotional/intellectual lobotomy?

Of course with those two gone, where is invention, improvisation,

creativity? In the toilet I believe. Without emotional and intellectual

autonomy nothing is invented except the expected. A better micro

chip instead of a new concept that makes the chip obsolete.

Would you go to an art class and see paint by number? Sounds

ridiculous doesn't it? Yet we all paid homage to life by the

numbers and now it sounds equally ridiculous.

My vision and definition of a " Peaceful Life " was not to attain peace

by giving up everything that brought strong emotion, I wanted

freedom from fear so that I could live. I even listened to one AA

lecture on how to avoid being Too Happy! (Honest Injun) Also one

on not getting angry and one on " Processing Grief " They had it

laid out neatly with time limits. Wouldn't doing all these things well

be the mark of a control freak? Someone who not only must

control their environment, but their emotions. They have a name for

that, I believe Sociopath would be the name of doing all these

perfectly.

We scream loudly about what AA and AA folks have done to us.

Would a fair description of the behavior we object to be

Passive/Aggressive behavior. Someone who intentionally hurts you

and then exhausts themselves apologizing or acts like it was

someone else that did it. Both a result (I think) of suppressing

anger. According to what I've learned anger will come out, one way

or another. Anger doesn't cause drunkeness, putting alcohol in my

mouth is the cause of that. I'd rather be angry for a little while,

than miserable for a long while

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hey ;

Good to hear from you. The Author was 's boyfriend and she

posted it. However, she neglected to tell him that AA brooked no

dissent from the party line, he thought both AA and the free zone

discussed each other like the D's and R's in an election.

I disagree that the 12step free zone would die with the demise of

AA et al. The free zone is an idea marketplace. The XA's are our

topic now, but color AA gone and we'd be comparing SMART and

RR and 16steps et al, we would still have a purpose because

anyone can jump in with any idea. The principle according to

kenr1, is free exchange of ideas without the groupers picking on

the individual. Subtract the groupers, your left with free exchange

of ideas, a principle that I hope never dies.

The difficult part is that folks who say hurting AA kills people, will

be very right upon the demise of AA. Many folks after being in AA

et al for many years cannot face truth, personal responsibility or life

without group approval. Some of these will die at their own hand

like ancient warriors who couldn't face defeat. Where we see

opportunity, they see fear of the unknown, perhaps unknowable,

where we see challenge, they see failure, where we see options,

they see foreboding ambiguity and lack of authority, where we see

a prison, they see structured living. To all of these, Fear Is The

Key.

I will never see, an opportunity, challenge or option, if I am

burdened with a total fear of the unknown and long for the time

tested authoritarian way. While drinking, like most I think, I lived

on the edge and thought I longed for a peaceful existence. I was a

patsy for AA because they promised a peaceful existence.

However, they didn't tell me I had to take a lobotomy to get it. But

isn't that really what AA offers, an emotional/intellectual lobotomy?

Of course with those two gone, where is invention, improvisation,

creativity? In the toilet I believe. Without emotional and intellectual

autonomy nothing is invented except the expected. A better micro

chip instead of a new concept that makes the chip obsolete.

Would you go to an art class and see paint by number? Sounds

ridiculous doesn't it? Yet we all paid homage to life by the

numbers and now it sounds equally ridiculous.

My vision and definition of a " Peaceful Life " was not to attain peace

by giving up everything that brought strong emotion, I wanted

freedom from fear so that I could live. I even listened to one AA

lecture on how to avoid being Too Happy! (Honest Injun) Also one

on not getting angry and one on " Processing Grief " They had it

laid out neatly with time limits. Wouldn't doing all these things well

be the mark of a control freak? Someone who not only must

control their environment, but their emotions. They have a name for

that, I believe Sociopath would be the name of doing all these

perfectly.

We scream loudly about what AA and AA folks have done to us.

Would a fair description of the behavior we object to be

Passive/Aggressive behavior. Someone who intentionally hurts you

and then exhausts themselves apologizing or acts like it was

someone else that did it. Both a result (I think) of suppressing

anger. According to what I've learned anger will come out, one way

or another. Anger doesn't cause drunkeness, putting alcohol in my

mouth is the cause of that. I'd rather be angry for a little while,

than miserable for a long while

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hey ;

Good to hear from you. The Author was 's boyfriend and she

posted it. However, she neglected to tell him that AA brooked no

dissent from the party line, he thought both AA and the free zone

discussed each other like the D's and R's in an election.

I disagree that the 12step free zone would die with the demise of

AA et al. The free zone is an idea marketplace. The XA's are our

topic now, but color AA gone and we'd be comparing SMART and

RR and 16steps et al, we would still have a purpose because

anyone can jump in with any idea. The principle according to

kenr1, is free exchange of ideas without the groupers picking on

the individual. Subtract the groupers, your left with free exchange

of ideas, a principle that I hope never dies.

The difficult part is that folks who say hurting AA kills people, will

be very right upon the demise of AA. Many folks after being in AA

et al for many years cannot face truth, personal responsibility or life

without group approval. Some of these will die at their own hand

like ancient warriors who couldn't face defeat. Where we see

opportunity, they see fear of the unknown, perhaps unknowable,

where we see challenge, they see failure, where we see options,

they see foreboding ambiguity and lack of authority, where we see

a prison, they see structured living. To all of these, Fear Is The

Key.

I will never see, an opportunity, challenge or option, if I am

burdened with a total fear of the unknown and long for the time

tested authoritarian way. While drinking, like most I think, I lived

on the edge and thought I longed for a peaceful existence. I was a

patsy for AA because they promised a peaceful existence.

However, they didn't tell me I had to take a lobotomy to get it. But

isn't that really what AA offers, an emotional/intellectual lobotomy?

Of course with those two gone, where is invention, improvisation,

creativity? In the toilet I believe. Without emotional and intellectual

autonomy nothing is invented except the expected. A better micro

chip instead of a new concept that makes the chip obsolete.

Would you go to an art class and see paint by number? Sounds

ridiculous doesn't it? Yet we all paid homage to life by the

numbers and now it sounds equally ridiculous.

My vision and definition of a " Peaceful Life " was not to attain peace

by giving up everything that brought strong emotion, I wanted

freedom from fear so that I could live. I even listened to one AA

lecture on how to avoid being Too Happy! (Honest Injun) Also one

on not getting angry and one on " Processing Grief " They had it

laid out neatly with time limits. Wouldn't doing all these things well

be the mark of a control freak? Someone who not only must

control their environment, but their emotions. They have a name for

that, I believe Sociopath would be the name of doing all these

perfectly.

We scream loudly about what AA and AA folks have done to us.

Would a fair description of the behavior we object to be

Passive/Aggressive behavior. Someone who intentionally hurts you

and then exhausts themselves apologizing or acts like it was

someone else that did it. Both a result (I think) of suppressing

anger. According to what I've learned anger will come out, one way

or another. Anger doesn't cause drunkeness, putting alcohol in my

mouth is the cause of that. I'd rather be angry for a little while,

than miserable for a long while

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Absolutely bitchin' post, .

As you can see not only do I need deprogramming from AA, but from

Southern California surf culture as well.

I spent my day driving to Mexico with a twenty year veteran of the step

war's. She's been sober for the last ten years and rose through the

ranks to become a step guru, one of the AA elite. Long story, short she

recently suffered some terrible losses, battled depression, cut back on

meetings, and soon found herself demoted to AA pariah. All of her

friends turned their backs on her. Her best friend over a10 year period

dealt the final blow. The friend had an extravagant 10 year birthday and

didn't even invite her. When my friend asked to meet with her and talk

about it , she was told that she needed to ask her sponsor first!

Absolutely disgraceful! And I'm just giving you the short form. It's

much worse than my abbreviated description. Hopefully she will fill you

all in on the gory details herself. I was just a grumbling refusenik so

I didn't have much to lose in the end. She was at the top of AA game,

blasting her way into the fourth dimension with an inexhaustible supply

of newcomers for fuel when all of a sudden all the wheels came off.

Today was the first time she'd had someone to talk to who really

understood what she'd been through, and she appreciated the validation.

I really understood how she felt since my arrival on this site brought

much the same sentiment for me. I was also able to let her know that

many of the women on this site had also experienced a lot of the same

shame and guilt about no longer attending many their regular meetings.

Listening to her was just like reading the posts on 12 Step Free. I just

wish this lady had a computer.

An interesting footnote:

On a previous post I mentioned major speaker meetings based on Clancy's

Pacific Group popping up throughout the country. Get this. There is one

such meeting just up the freeway from me. My fallen friend told me today

that it's resident Top Guru(25+ years) just drank recently. Sadly, he

happens to be a pretty nice guy with a great sense of humor, a hell of

an intellect, and a really funny pitch. I wouldn't be surprised if some

of you have heard his tapes. He's not your typical stomach turning

zealot. I almost tempted to pay him a visit and do another Un-Step call.

I don't know though. He's pretty old and the shock might kill him if his

family(all AA) and following didn't first.

After today's experience I'm confident my future attendance of meetings

or subsequent relapse is as likely as the second coming of Bill

at the AA 2000 Convention in Minneapolis.

Anyone want to set up a booth!!! We could really stir things up. Hey

Apple, how about plane with an " alternative recovery " banner flying over

the big stadium meeting(50,000 people), dropping AADeprogramming

leaflets on the brainwashed masses below.

A delicious image, n'est ce pas?

By the way, love the AADeprogramming site. Is it yours?

D Hall wrote:

>

> Hey ;

>

> Good to hear from you. The Author was 's boyfriend and she

> posted it. However, she neglected to tell him that AA brooked no

> dissent from the party line, he thought both AA and the free zone

> discussed each other like the D's and R's in an election.

>

> I disagree that the 12step free zone would die with the demise of

> AA et al. The free zone is an idea marketplace. The XA's are our

> topic now, but color AA gone and we'd be comparing SMART and

> RR and 16steps et al, we would still have a purpose because

> anyone can jump in with any idea. The principle according to

> kenr1, is free exchange of ideas without the groupers picking on

> the individual. Subtract the groupers, your left with free exchange

> of ideas, a principle that I hope never dies.

>

> The difficult part is that folks who say hurting AA kills people, will

> be very right upon the demise of AA. Many folks after being in AA

> et al for many years cannot face truth, personal responsibility or life

> without group approval. Some of these will die at their own hand

> like ancient warriors who couldn't face defeat. Where we see

> opportunity, they see fear of the unknown, perhaps unknowable,

> where we see challenge, they see failure, where we see options,

> they see foreboding ambiguity and lack of authority, where we see

> a prison, they see structured living. To all of these, Fear Is The

> Key.

>

> I will never see, an opportunity, challenge or option, if I am

> burdened with a total fear of the unknown and long for the time

> tested authoritarian way. While drinking, like most I think, I lived

> on the edge and thought I longed for a peaceful existence. I was a

> patsy for AA because they promised a peaceful existence.

> However, they didn't tell me I had to take a lobotomy to get it. But

> isn't that really what AA offers, an emotional/intellectual lobotomy?

> Of course with those two gone, where is invention, improvisation,

> creativity? In the toilet I believe. Without emotional and intellectual

> autonomy nothing is invented except the expected. A better micro

> chip instead of a new concept that makes the chip obsolete.

> Would you go to an art class and see paint by number? Sounds

> ridiculous doesn't it? Yet we all paid homage to life by the

> numbers and now it sounds equally ridiculous.

>

> My vision and definition of a " Peaceful Life " was not to attain peace

> by giving up everything that brought strong emotion, I wanted

> freedom from fear so that I could live. I even listened to one AA

> lecture on how to avoid being Too Happy! (Honest Injun) Also one

> on not getting angry and one on " Processing Grief " They had it

> laid out neatly with time limits. Wouldn't doing all these things well

> be the mark of a control freak? Someone who not only must

> control their environment, but their emotions. They have a name for

> that, I believe Sociopath would be the name of doing all these

> perfectly.

>

> We scream loudly about what AA and AA folks have done to us.

> Would a fair description of the behavior we object to be

> Passive/Aggressive behavior. Someone who intentionally hurts you

> and then exhausts themselves apologizing or acts like it was

> someone else that did it. Both a result (I think) of suppressing

> anger. According to what I've learned anger will come out, one way

> or another. Anger doesn't cause drunkeness, putting alcohol in my

> mouth is the cause of that. I'd rather be angry for a little while,

> than miserable for a long while

>

>

>

> ------------------------------------------------------------------------

> Don't let the next virus knock you out! Special Offer to eGroups members

> Install @Backup by June 30th and win a $100 Gift Certificate from Amazon

> .com and @Backup free for a year! http://clickhere./click/363

>

> eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

> - Simplifying group communications

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

If one considers the value of personal freedoms relinquished, abandoned

intellectual integrity, and thousands of hours spent on meetings and

step related activities, I would hardly consider in my wildest

imagination that Alcoholics Anonymous is FREE. Many AA's feel that they

will never be able to repay their debt to AA. To AA I say in my best

defiant N.Y. tone, " DEBT THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!! "

JOHN

Judith Stillwater wrote:

>

> Hi !

>

>

>

> > The difficult part is that folks who say hurting AA kills people, will be

> very right upon the demise of AA. Many folks after being in AA et al for

> many years cannot face truth, personal responsibility or life without group

> approval. Some of these will die at their own hand like ancient warriors

> who couldn't face defeat.>

>

> While I agree that removing AA from people's lives could potentially be

> disastrous, I think that AA will probably not die out totally, at least, not

> for a long time. I think AA is perfect for certain people in that it

> provides an alternative addiction; also it is free. My only hope is that

> alternatives will eventually (hopefully soon) be offered to people who seek

> help with addiction. I think SMART is positioned to be the best competitor

> because it's also free and non-profit. We shall see...

>

> Judith

>

> _______________________________________________________

> Get your free, private email at http://mail.excite.com/

>

> ------------------------------------------------------------------------

> GET $10 OFF ANY ORDER @ healthshop.com! No min. purchase req.

> Save on vitamins & supplements. Use coupon code: EGROUPS at checkout

> http://clickhere./click/432

>

> eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

> - Simplifying group communications

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

> If one considers the value of personal freedoms relinquished, abandoned

intellectual integrity, and thousands of hours spent on meetings and step

related activities, I would hardly consider in my wildest imagination that

Alcoholics Anonymous is FREE. Many AA's feel that they will never be able to

repay their debt to AA. To AA I say in my best defiant N.Y. tone, " DEBT

THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!! " >

I stand by what I said. Money is a big factor for the majority of people.

Judith

_______________________________________________________

Get your free, private email at http://mail.excite.com/

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

> If one considers the value of personal freedoms relinquished, abandoned

intellectual integrity, and thousands of hours spent on meetings and step

related activities, I would hardly consider in my wildest imagination that

Alcoholics Anonymous is FREE. Many AA's feel that they will never be able to

repay their debt to AA. To AA I say in my best defiant N.Y. tone, " DEBT

THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!! " >

I stand by what I said. Money is a big factor for the majority of people.

Judith

_______________________________________________________

Get your free, private email at http://mail.excite.com/

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Yes let's do... We'll set up a booth.

The bottom line is that reason just cannot compete with the strength

and seductiveness of a large group of people all saying the same thing.

It's a mass appeal thing as far as I see it. It's the religious

sensation that's sweeping the nation.

Yes, the site is mine . Boy was it fun to put it up...

Apple

> Anyone want to set up a booth!!! We could really stir things up. Hey

> Apple, how about plane with an " alternative recovery " banner flying

over

> the big stadium meeting(50,000 people), dropping AADeprogramming

> leaflets on the brainwashed masses below.

>

> A delicious image, n'est ce pas?

>

> By the way, love the AADeprogramming site. Is it yours?

>

>

>

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi ;

If the guy you're talking about is Judge Gates(Sounded like him

when you said excellent sense of humor), I have heard one of his

tapes. I think he's the brother of the former LA Police Chief.

Hope you can get your friend on the internet. It can be done quite

cheaply. This old hog I'm using I gave $100 for. It's an AST

486dx33 and is fine for lists, usenet etc. No sound, no cd rom, but

it came with a 28.8 modem, so all I had to do was install the

software and hook up the phone line. We have two better ones,

but I just like this one. Has dos 6.22 and win 3.11. I can lock up

our p-166 with win95 in about 30 minutes, but have no problem with

3.11 beyond getting too many windows open at one time. I need to

stick some more memory in it, only 16meg right now. Not the

fastest, but it gets the job done. Something like this beats the

devil out of not being connected.

I even have browsers and email on my 286's in the shop. They are

not however practical for anybody learning. Everything is done from

Dos in the 286, because it's only a 16 bit processor and slow at

10mhz. I just use them because I have them. Matter of fact I still

have my first old 8088 computer, big old 21.4 meg hard drive, Mass

storage they called it back then. Now a single game can take

more space than that! Enuff bout puters.

I imagine your friend was a bit surprised to learn her story is not

rare among us. I hope she can at least get a peek at us to know

she has a quite a bit of company and not just in California or for

that matter the USA.

A treatment incident I had completely for gotten about till a couple

of days ago on another list. It happened to a couple of women, not

me, but I was present through the whole nasty thing.

In May of 1989, I was in Treatment at Mercy Hospital in Des

Moines. The facility was on the third floor but much of what we did

was on two and in the basement 1st sub level. One woman had

claustrophobia and always took the stairs. Another woman from

our group would walk with her. The counsellors started getting on

them, telling them it was mostly BS and they didn't have time to be

waiting on them all the time.

They withstood it till some suck up patients began getting on them

along with counsellors. They got on the elevator with pressure from

a woman counsellor, in the basement, the counsellor got on also.

The elevator stuck between two and three and both women

panicked. Three of us got crosswise of the opening like chimney

climbers one atop the other and forced the door about 3 inches

before it stuck on something and we could get it no further. The

counsellor was standing dumbstruck hollering nonsense orders.

One of the women had fainted dead away and the other was

practically bouncing off the walls. The strongest guy got on all

fours and got the woman to stand on his back pressed against the

crack in the door so she could see light and get air. While another

guy was using the elevator phone to get help, we got the other

woman's head as close to the opening as possible. One young girl

started mouth to mouth on her because she was breathing so slow

and in spasms, but she came out of it. The counsellor was totally

useless, not even thinking to use the phone while others were

occupied. It took in the area of 45 minutes for the engineers to get

us out.

Next morning at big group the counsellors started in on the women

for causing a disturbance with the ultimate self pity and some

patients sucked up and continued it. I lost it and told them exactly

what I thought including slime and scum. Course they turned on

me and one woman came over and said " Thank you , you've

been a friend and I'll miss you. " She kept right on going and I've

never seen her since. The other woman left later that day. I of

course was accused of being the reason they left, bucause of my

inappropriate behavior, which consisted of getting angry. I'm sure it

got to me on some level, but not on the surface. Everyone got

accused of nonsense if you didn't kiss their patoot. The suck ups

could fail drug tests and get defended by the staff because they

were trying hard. The rest of us laughed, they were trying hard

alright, do you know how much effort it takes to get someone to

bring grass or coke to a treatment center? 8-) At some point I just

quit cooperating and did as I pleased. I graduated anyway, still

have the chip somewhere.

I discovered that to graduate you just had to have a way to pay the

8 thousand and be there. My bill was around 11 due to bill padding

with useless medical tests.

Rose was really sold on the place untill folks besides me started

telling her what was going on. In her part, they were doing stuff

under a real shrink with counsellors as aides. They were doing role

playing, and breaking into groups of four and doing real issues and

good stuff, while on our side their was no shrink.

Like you perhaps, I 'd like to look a couple of them up and just

insult the devil out of them and say " If you'll stand for that you'll

bend over for this. " 8-) Then tell them, " You're right where you're

supposed to be " Like you, I hate that phrase.

That center closed in 92, for lack of patients. Reputations travel in

the alcoholic's world. I believe it was the first of a bunch to close.

Perhaps one day they'll all be gone. There's not many left around

here.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hey ;

As I mentioned to someone, you are recovering from AA and

getting your feet on the ground much faster than I did. Probably

the only thing or maybe two that kept me away was the urge to

drink was almost constant while in AA and it diappeared a short

time after getting away. That wanting a drink all the time would get

me eventually. Before I was convinced it was because I wasn't

working the program correctly and had plenty of folks to tell me

that belief was correct.

My last stint in AA started at around 14 or more months sober and

lasted to about two years sober. Before I went back to AA I

handn't had the drink need for quite a while, but it returned after I

started back to AA. When, a month or so after I totally quit AA, it

went away again, I was convinced I should not go back to AA, but

didn't know what I would do. Des Moines was 85 miles away.

They had Recovery Incorporated, but I couldn't get in because it's

not for drunks. I went to a counsellor for a while and he put a

sneaky move on me to get me locked up, and it failed due to a

record mix up. He wasn't really a counsellor I later learned, but did

have a degree in social work. Far as I know he's still here. I saw

him at the hospital last winter.

In the month you've been out, you've got about to where I was at

three or four years out. My anger at the things done to me and at

the folks who did them, kept me going too. That's why I continually

say anger won't get me drunk, putting alcohol in my mouth got me

drunk, nothing else. If I don't drink the stuff I won't get drunk no

matter how pissed off I am. Off course I'm not trying to sell the

idea that being angry 24/7 is a gret idea, but it won't get me drunk,

might blow a hole in my heart carried to extreme, but won't cause

intoxication.

I hope things continue to go well for you and it sounds as if they

will. Besides, when the usual Shit Happens that befalls everyone,

youll handle it. We about have to or quit, because going back and

taking that AA abuse is just no longer an option. A comfortable

prison cell is still a cage.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

It has taken me a while to finally break free of AA and NA....and for that matter, anything 12 step related.

As someone mentioned here, I find myself recoiling from it like a hot flame.

Looking back at the first 5 years I spent in those rooms, totally immersed in it...I have to laugh that it is obvious why it seemed to fit like a familiar glove. I grew up on guilt and shame...my mother was a religious fanatic, and a prescription junkie at that. I don't know how many times I heard the phrase " You would be no where without me! " and all sorts of admonishments that strong feelings could land you in the looney bin. Anger was forbidden, and being really happy wasn't exactly encouraged either.

Suffering was a noble endeaver.

The rooms of AA seemed just like home. Somewhere along the line (being drug and alcohol free helped) I began to figure out it was me who was making the decision to not use and choosing to improve my life...not the masochistic steps and certainly not the whacked-out people who frequented those rooms. I did take that phrase " Take what you want and leave the rest " to heart....although it is repeated endlessly but seldom followed. Little by little I was scrapping almost everything as it was beginning to feel as harmful as drinking or using drugs for me. The few things I found helpful, I realized could be found outside of the rooms and free of the endless program babble and idiotic concepts applied to every situation regardless of whether they were appropriate for the given situation.

It has been helpful to find people to have in my life who weren't totally obsessed with drinking and getting high. I meet them all of the time...at school and as a result of having a variety of interests. None of them have been to AA. It's been helpful to have people I can be totally honest with. Again, all of the people I have in my life really listen to me, and I feel I can trust them. Not one of them barrages me with stupid program jargon.They actually encourage me to think and act for myself. What a great concept!

Anger has become a trusted friend.(as well as all of the other " normal " feelings every person has) It got me out of those blasted rooms filled with some of the sickest people

I have ever met. I have so many stories I can't even begin to recall them all now.

I was at a conference for parents who had experienced the death of a child...and the main speaker talked about the phrase " God never gives you more than you can handle " as being one of the stupidest things a grieving parent could ever hear.

I haven't been to a meeting in over 6 years. My life feels like it began the day I left AA. I haven't been back, and my life has never been better. I found out the world wasn't flat, and no, I haven't started drinking or using drugs again, despite any difficult times I have had that are just a part of living life. There are a lot of places I can go in the world to learn healthy coping skills, and AA did me more harm than good. I am finding that I am a pretty good judge of what works for me. I am very wary of anyone who tries to tell me that they know more than I do about what is good for me. BTW ...I HATE the Oprah Show and all of those " experts " she has on who have written a book to be applied to every area in your life. Any damn fool can write a book.

I have really enjoyed reading postings on this list. Having a place to talk about the bad experiences people have had in AA and other 12 step groups is part of the process of finally being allowed to be honest and

un-do some of the intense programming that goes on there. Rebekah

(Church of the Divine Rebekah) I'm not looking for converts...form your own beliefs!

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

www. - Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

It has taken me a while to finally break free of AA and NA....and for that matter, anything 12 step related.

As someone mentioned here, I find myself recoiling from it like a hot flame.

Looking back at the first 5 years I spent in those rooms, totally immersed in it...I have to laugh that it is obvious why it seemed to fit like a familiar glove. I grew up on guilt and shame...my mother was a religious fanatic, and a prescription junkie at that. I don't know how many times I heard the phrase " You would be no where without me! " and all sorts of admonishments that strong feelings could land you in the looney bin. Anger was forbidden, and being really happy wasn't exactly encouraged either.

Suffering was a noble endeaver.

The rooms of AA seemed just like home. Somewhere along the line (being drug and alcohol free helped) I began to figure out it was me who was making the decision to not use and choosing to improve my life...not the masochistic steps and certainly not the whacked-out people who frequented those rooms. I did take that phrase " Take what you want and leave the rest " to heart....although it is repeated endlessly but seldom followed. Little by little I was scrapping almost everything as it was beginning to feel as harmful as drinking or using drugs for me. The few things I found helpful, I realized could be found outside of the rooms and free of the endless program babble and idiotic concepts applied to every situation regardless of whether they were appropriate for the given situation.

It has been helpful to find people to have in my life who weren't totally obsessed with drinking and getting high. I meet them all of the time...at school and as a result of having a variety of interests. None of them have been to AA. It's been helpful to have people I can be totally honest with. Again, all of the people I have in my life really listen to me, and I feel I can trust them. Not one of them barrages me with stupid program jargon.They actually encourage me to think and act for myself. What a great concept!

Anger has become a trusted friend.(as well as all of the other " normal " feelings every person has) It got me out of those blasted rooms filled with some of the sickest people

I have ever met. I have so many stories I can't even begin to recall them all now.

I was at a conference for parents who had experienced the death of a child...and the main speaker talked about the phrase " God never gives you more than you can handle " as being one of the stupidest things a grieving parent could ever hear.

I haven't been to a meeting in over 6 years. My life feels like it began the day I left AA. I haven't been back, and my life has never been better. I found out the world wasn't flat, and no, I haven't started drinking or using drugs again, despite any difficult times I have had that are just a part of living life. There are a lot of places I can go in the world to learn healthy coping skills, and AA did me more harm than good. I am finding that I am a pretty good judge of what works for me. I am very wary of anyone who tries to tell me that they know more than I do about what is good for me. BTW ...I HATE the Oprah Show and all of those " experts " she has on who have written a book to be applied to every area in your life. Any damn fool can write a book.

I have really enjoyed reading postings on this list. Having a place to talk about the bad experiences people have had in AA and other 12 step groups is part of the process of finally being allowed to be honest and

un-do some of the intense programming that goes on there. Rebekah

(Church of the Divine Rebekah) I'm not looking for converts...form your own beliefs!

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

www. - Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

AMEN BRO,

I figure if the first year of crippling, suicidal, agitated, medication

denied depression, coupled with the incessant patronizing drone of

AAspeak, punctuated with the the cherished phrase " You're right where

you're supposed to be " , didn't get me drunk then nothing will.

MY SMARMY METAPHOR OF THE DAY: This site is like a cyberspace

underground railroad for AA slaves.

By the way what does 8-) mean?

D Hall wrote:

>

> Hey ;

>

> As I mentioned to someone, you are recovering from AA and

> getting your feet on the ground much faster than I did. Probably

> the only thing or maybe two that kept me away was the urge to

> drink was almost constant while in AA and it diappeared a short

> time after getting away. That wanting a drink all the time would get

> me eventually. Before I was convinced it was because I wasn't

> working the program correctly and had plenty of folks to tell me

> that belief was correct.

>

> My last stint in AA started at around 14 or more months sober and

> lasted to about two years sober. Before I went back to AA I

> handn't had the drink need for quite a while, but it returned after I

> started back to AA. When, a month or so after I totally quit AA, it

> went away again, I was convinced I should not go back to AA, but

> didn't know what I would do. Des Moines was 85 miles away.

> They had Recovery Incorporated, but I couldn't get in because it's

> not for drunks. I went to a counsellor for a while and he put a

> sneaky move on me to get me locked up, and it failed due to a

> record mix up. He wasn't really a counsellor I later learned, but did

> have a degree in social work. Far as I know he's still here. I saw

> him at the hospital last winter.

>

> In the month you've been out, you've got about to where I was at

> three or four years out. My anger at the things done to me and at

> the folks who did them, kept me going too. That's why I continually

> say anger won't get me drunk, putting alcohol in my mouth got me

> drunk, nothing else. If I don't drink the stuff I won't get drunk no

> matter how pissed off I am. Off course I'm not trying to sell the

> idea that being angry 24/7 is a gret idea, but it won't get me drunk,

> might blow a hole in my heart carried to extreme, but won't cause

> intoxication.

>

> I hope things continue to go well for you and it sounds as if they

> will. Besides, when the usual Shit Happens that befalls everyone,

> youll handle it. We about have to or quit, because going back and

> taking that AA abuse is just no longer an option. A comfortable

> prison cell is still a cage.

>

>

>

> ------------------------------------------------------------------------

> Just Tell Us What You Want...

> Respond.com - Shopping the World for You!

> http://clickhere./click/390

>

> eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

> - Simplifying group communications

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

AMEN BRO,

I figure if the first year of crippling, suicidal, agitated, medication

denied depression, coupled with the incessant patronizing drone of

AAspeak, punctuated with the the cherished phrase " You're right where

you're supposed to be " , didn't get me drunk then nothing will.

MY SMARMY METAPHOR OF THE DAY: This site is like a cyberspace

underground railroad for AA slaves.

By the way what does 8-) mean?

D Hall wrote:

>

> Hey ;

>

> As I mentioned to someone, you are recovering from AA and

> getting your feet on the ground much faster than I did. Probably

> the only thing or maybe two that kept me away was the urge to

> drink was almost constant while in AA and it diappeared a short

> time after getting away. That wanting a drink all the time would get

> me eventually. Before I was convinced it was because I wasn't

> working the program correctly and had plenty of folks to tell me

> that belief was correct.

>

> My last stint in AA started at around 14 or more months sober and

> lasted to about two years sober. Before I went back to AA I

> handn't had the drink need for quite a while, but it returned after I

> started back to AA. When, a month or so after I totally quit AA, it

> went away again, I was convinced I should not go back to AA, but

> didn't know what I would do. Des Moines was 85 miles away.

> They had Recovery Incorporated, but I couldn't get in because it's

> not for drunks. I went to a counsellor for a while and he put a

> sneaky move on me to get me locked up, and it failed due to a

> record mix up. He wasn't really a counsellor I later learned, but did

> have a degree in social work. Far as I know he's still here. I saw

> him at the hospital last winter.

>

> In the month you've been out, you've got about to where I was at

> three or four years out. My anger at the things done to me and at

> the folks who did them, kept me going too. That's why I continually

> say anger won't get me drunk, putting alcohol in my mouth got me

> drunk, nothing else. If I don't drink the stuff I won't get drunk no

> matter how pissed off I am. Off course I'm not trying to sell the

> idea that being angry 24/7 is a gret idea, but it won't get me drunk,

> might blow a hole in my heart carried to extreme, but won't cause

> intoxication.

>

> I hope things continue to go well for you and it sounds as if they

> will. Besides, when the usual Shit Happens that befalls everyone,

> youll handle it. We about have to or quit, because going back and

> taking that AA abuse is just no longer an option. A comfortable

> prison cell is still a cage.

>

>

>

> ------------------------------------------------------------------------

> Just Tell Us What You Want...

> Respond.com - Shopping the World for You!

> http://clickhere./click/390

>

> eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

> - Simplifying group communications

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi ;

The 8-) is supposed to be a grin on a guy wearing glasses, turned

sideways. Takes a bit of imagination to fill it out though.

Like your underground railroad idea. However, I feel in reality, AA

is the streetcar/subway and we are the Elevated railway. We don't

need a hole in the ground to stay on track!

We may be in the minority now, but we are picking up steam.

Several new folks just since you came on board. This group will

eventually get too big and spawn others. In this day and age where

most folks seem to want a Messiah to save them from the world as

it is, we might grow slowly. Free thinking is not in vogue. Folks

are rather pretty ripe for an Adolph Hitler or a Winston Churchill

type to tell them how and when to think. Were that not true,

Charlton Heston and his " Guns will save you " message would be

laughed and legislated out of business. I guess maybe his real

message is " Happiness is a warm gun, or, My uzi has a longer

barrel that yours " Maybe " Kill your deer and clean it instantly with

a cyclic rate of 720 rounds per minute and a double stacked 60

round clip. " You got to keep extras though, because that 60 round

clip emptys in 6 seconds and you might miss. God how stupid do

they think we are! Did I ever mention I'm opinionated. Maybe you

figured that out. 8-)

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi ;

The 8-) is supposed to be a grin on a guy wearing glasses, turned

sideways. Takes a bit of imagination to fill it out though.

Like your underground railroad idea. However, I feel in reality, AA

is the streetcar/subway and we are the Elevated railway. We don't

need a hole in the ground to stay on track!

We may be in the minority now, but we are picking up steam.

Several new folks just since you came on board. This group will

eventually get too big and spawn others. In this day and age where

most folks seem to want a Messiah to save them from the world as

it is, we might grow slowly. Free thinking is not in vogue. Folks

are rather pretty ripe for an Adolph Hitler or a Winston Churchill

type to tell them how and when to think. Were that not true,

Charlton Heston and his " Guns will save you " message would be

laughed and legislated out of business. I guess maybe his real

message is " Happiness is a warm gun, or, My uzi has a longer

barrel that yours " Maybe " Kill your deer and clean it instantly with

a cyclic rate of 720 rounds per minute and a double stacked 60

round clip. " You got to keep extras though, because that 60 round

clip emptys in 6 seconds and you might miss. God how stupid do

they think we are! Did I ever mention I'm opinionated. Maybe you

figured that out. 8-)

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi Judith;

I agree with both you and . In terms of cash, AA is free or

practically so.

In human terms, the price is extravagant indeed! However, most

folks like me don't realize the price until later, after they've paid with

years of their lives, and through the nose.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi Judith;

I agree with both you and . In terms of cash, AA is free or

practically so.

In human terms, the price is extravagant indeed! However, most

folks like me don't realize the price until later, after they've paid with

years of their lives, and through the nose.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Welcome, Rebekah!

Great post! I feel so much like you.

I have grown by leaps and bounds since leaving AA @3 years ago. I was

a " guru " on the steps, had memorized " How It Works " well enough to be

asked to recite it opening meetings. What a frickin' honor, huh??

The guilt and shame has been there all my life too, and AA only

exacerbated my feelings woth their methods.

I had an argument with my mom on the phone a couple of weeks ago. She

really wants me to believe in god since my fiance's son was killed @ 3

months ago. There's a reason, she says. I say, " What is the reason? "

I ask. " It's not for you to know, " she says. " Why shouldn't I know

why a sweet, loving, gentle 21-year-old boy is taken from the family

that loves him so much and a son that really needs his father growing

up? " Well, you get the idea. I love my mother, but I won't accept pat

words and phrases. Sounds too much like AA brainwashing...!

wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=5391

>

> It has taken me a while to finally break free of AA and NA....and

for that

> matter, anything 12 step related.

> As someone mentioned here, I find myself recoiling from it like a hot

flame.

>

>

> Looking back at the first 5 years I spent in those rooms, totally

immersed

> in it...I have to laugh that it is obvious why it seemed to fit like a

> familiar glove. I grew up on guilt and shame...my mother was a

religious

> fanatic, and a prescription junkie at that. I don't know how many

times I

> heard the phrase " You would be no where without me! " and all sorts of

> admonishments that strong feelings could land you in the looney bin.

Anger

> was forbidden, and being really happy wasn't exactly encouraged

either.

> Suffering was a noble endeaver.

>

> The rooms of AA seemed just like home. Somewhere along the line

(being drug

> and alcohol free helped) I began to figure out it was me who was

making the

> decision to not use and choosing to improve my life...not the

masochistic

> steps and certainly not the whacked-out people who frequented those

rooms. I

> did take that phrase " Take what you want and leave the rest " to

> heart....although it is repeated endlessly but seldom followed.

Little by

> little I was scrapping almost everything as it was beginning to feel

as

> harmful as drinking or using drugs for me. The few things I found

helpful, I

> realized could be found outside of the rooms and free of the endless

> program babble and idiotic concepts applied to every situation

regardless of

> whether they were appropriate for the given situation.

>

> It has been helpful to find people to have in my life who weren't

totally

> obsessed with drinking and getting high. I meet them all of the

time...at

> school and as a result of having a variety of interests. None of them

have

> been to AA. It's been helpful to have people I can be totally honest

with.

> Again, all of the people I have in my life really listen to me, and I

feel I

> can trust them. Not one of them barrages me with stupid program

jargon.They

> actually encourage me to think and act for myself. What a great

concept!

>

> Anger has become a trusted friend.(as well as all of the other

" normal "

> feelings every person has) It got me out of those blasted rooms

filled with

> some of the sickest people

> I have ever met. I have so many stories I can't even begin to recall

them

> all now.

>

> I was at a conference for parents who had experienced the death of a

> child...and the main speaker talked about the phrase " God never gives

you

> more than you can handle " as being one of the stupidest things a

grieving

> parent could ever hear.

>

> I haven't been to a meeting in over 6 years. My life feels like it

began

> the day I left AA. I haven't been back, and my life has never been

better. I

> found out the world wasn't flat, and no, I haven't started drinking

or using

> drugs again, despite any difficult times I have had that are just a

part of

> living life. There are a lot of places I can go in the world to learn

> healthy coping skills, and AA did me more harm than good. I am

finding that

> I am a pretty good judge of what works for me. I am very wary of

anyone who

> tries to tell me that they know more than I do about what is good for

me.

> BTW ...I HATE the Oprah Show and all of those " experts " she has on

who have

> written a book to be applied to every area in your life. Any damn

fool can

> write a book.

>

> I have really enjoyed reading postings on this list. Having a place

to

> talk about the bad experiences people have had in AA and other 12 step

> groups is part of the process of finally being allowed to be honest

and

> un-do some of the intense programming that goes on there. Rebekah

> (Church of the Divine Rebekah) I'm not looking for converts...form

your own

> beliefs!

>

>

------------------------------------------------------------------------

eGroups.com home: /group/12-step-free

- Simplifying group communications

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...