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In a message dated 7/25/99 10:29:44 AM Eastern Daylight Time, rashley@...

writes:

> Funny you should mention that " You shouldn't talk about that "

> implication. In AA they say you are only as sick as your secrets and lo

> and behold the organization hides some very grim realities of human

> wreckage left in it's wake while trying to keep the focus of society on

> it's contrived reasoning that it is onlt trying to help the suffering in

> need. The program works for anyone right, and the wreckage is simply

> from those who don't work it. Is an organization only as sick as it's

> secrets then? According to AA's own words, AA is very sick indeed.

Hmm... maybe this should have been posted under the " Contradictions " header...

Ta,

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>Hi and list,

> Hi, I'm back after a break. I would like to ask your opinion about

>this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that self

>revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion?

Hi ,

Self revelation is not always important in breaking out of an addiction, but

sometimes it is. If you have a " secret " -- some kind of guilt, fear, or

(perhaps imaginary) personal inadequacy, and if you drink in order to blot

it out of your consciousness, then you might need some kind of outside help

to get things in perspective. That's what psychologists and psychiatrists

are for.

When it comes to AA, though, there are only two kinds of problems:

(A) Problems for which AA is not necessary;

(B) Problems for which AA is not sufficient.

>P.S. I drank on Friday night, and have stopped again. I could use any

>support to fight the ugre to run back to AA. While my histiory shows this

>never worked, there is that little voice ( after 10 years involvement in

AA)

>which says, " maybe those AAs were right.

>

Yeah, those voices used to come back for me too, whenever I drank. They kept

coming back until the last time, when I found myself being hauled off to the

nuthouse, acutely psychotic, still clutching my Big Book... When I came out

of it I decided that maybe those AAs were wrong.

PS: assuming you want to not drink, have you ever tried going on Antabuse? I

found it helpful at one point.

Best regards,

wally

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Hi ,

The e-groups server has gone mental. Said there were 10 new messages

this morning and 2569 tonight so I am lucky to even see your mail.

You ask << I would like to ask your opinion about

this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that self

revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion? >>

First of all your secrets are your secrets. You know what they are and

it is your choice to clue anyone else in on them. Self revelation as in

discovering something about yourself that you didn't already know can

be quite helpful in giving up an addiction.

Simply put (If you want more just ask). Awareness of your own ability

to exercise internal constraints is quite important in dealing with

substance abuse. The operative words here are, your own ability and

abuse. Addiction is the result of abuse. You chose to abuse a

substance, you became addicted to it's use, only your internal

constraints can enable you to choose to stop the abuse and end the

addicitive results. You have these internal self constraints already

and that may or may not be a revelation in lots of ways but with

addiction it probably is. There is no one way, right way or wrong way

to use these except to expect that it will get done for you by an

outside power. You are quite capable of doing this. If I could offer a

suggestion - relax into it as if it were a natural place to go

considering all your own personal facts, desires, history etc. Some

people say fight, fight, fight it is so hard to do. At times it may

appear quite difficult, it may at times be difficult but you will be

better off not getting all uptight about it all the time. Here is a

little story to that end.

You move to a new town. In the middle of the town is a large mountain.

You ask about climbing it. Everyone says, no, no ,no only the strongest

and the bravest have ever made it to the top and when they got there

the were consumed by the great monster that lives on the top. Soon you

start to believe this because everyone else in the town says it is

true. Yet your a little skeptical. Then one day you just can't take

living in the town anymore. Try as you may everytime you go to drive

away you end up back in the town. You ask about this and are told the

only way out is to climb the mountain which is too hard and quite

insane as you will get consumed by the monster. Finally you get fed up,

beyond the fear and you say the hell with it. You start to climb the

mountain and sure enough the monster roars at you towering over the

town. You still climb. As you get nearer the monster amazingly gets

smaller. You push on. At last you reach the top and this 2 inch midget

sits there throwing all kinds of profanity your way theatening to end

your life, your happines and kill your pet fish. You look down at your

monster and kick him off the mountain then you move to a new town.

Does this make any sense to you.

You and only you can choose to end an addiction by stopping the abuse.

wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=6374

> Hi and list,

> Hi, I'm back after a break. I would like to ask your opinion

about

> this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that self

> revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion?

> P.S. I drank on Friday night, and have stopped again. I could use

any

> support to fight the ugre to run back to AA. While my histiory shows

this

> never worked, there is that little voice ( after 10 years involvement

in AA)

> which says, " maybe those AAs were right.

>

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Hi ,

The e-groups server has gone mental. Said there were 10 new messages

this morning and 2569 tonight so I am lucky to even see your mail.

You ask << I would like to ask your opinion about

this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that self

revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion? >>

First of all your secrets are your secrets. You know what they are and

it is your choice to clue anyone else in on them. Self revelation as in

discovering something about yourself that you didn't already know can

be quite helpful in giving up an addiction.

Simply put (If you want more just ask). Awareness of your own ability

to exercise internal constraints is quite important in dealing with

substance abuse. The operative words here are, your own ability and

abuse. Addiction is the result of abuse. You chose to abuse a

substance, you became addicted to it's use, only your internal

constraints can enable you to choose to stop the abuse and end the

addicitive results. You have these internal self constraints already

and that may or may not be a revelation in lots of ways but with

addiction it probably is. There is no one way, right way or wrong way

to use these except to expect that it will get done for you by an

outside power. You are quite capable of doing this. If I could offer a

suggestion - relax into it as if it were a natural place to go

considering all your own personal facts, desires, history etc. Some

people say fight, fight, fight it is so hard to do. At times it may

appear quite difficult, it may at times be difficult but you will be

better off not getting all uptight about it all the time. Here is a

little story to that end.

You move to a new town. In the middle of the town is a large mountain.

You ask about climbing it. Everyone says, no, no ,no only the strongest

and the bravest have ever made it to the top and when they got there

the were consumed by the great monster that lives on the top. Soon you

start to believe this because everyone else in the town says it is

true. Yet your a little skeptical. Then one day you just can't take

living in the town anymore. Try as you may everytime you go to drive

away you end up back in the town. You ask about this and are told the

only way out is to climb the mountain which is too hard and quite

insane as you will get consumed by the monster. Finally you get fed up,

beyond the fear and you say the hell with it. You start to climb the

mountain and sure enough the monster roars at you towering over the

town. You still climb. As you get nearer the monster amazingly gets

smaller. You push on. At last you reach the top and this 2 inch midget

sits there throwing all kinds of profanity your way theatening to end

your life, your happines and kill your pet fish. You look down at your

monster and kick him off the mountain then you move to a new town.

Does this make any sense to you.

You and only you can choose to end an addiction by stopping the abuse.

wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=6374

> Hi and list,

> Hi, I'm back after a break. I would like to ask your opinion

about

> this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that self

> revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion?

> P.S. I drank on Friday night, and have stopped again. I could use

any

> support to fight the ugre to run back to AA. While my histiory shows

this

> never worked, there is that little voice ( after 10 years involvement

in AA)

> which says, " maybe those AAs were right.

>

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Hi Wally,

I am in private therepy, so I will keep what you said in mind.

Interestingly, my m.d., when I asked about Antabuse, was completely against

it. He told me to go to AA. So it is no small wonder that after drinking,

part of me would at least recall this kind of advise. I am determined to

avoid all 12 step attendece, and yes I am determined not to drink.

Still sober and 12 step free

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,

Your post made alot of sense. Thank you for taking the time to give

such a thoughtful post. If it is Ok, I would like to print it and read it

often. I am so glad that I found this list!

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I totally disagree with the " sick as your secrets " dogma. First of

all, most

psychological theories of therapy pretty much agree that there are some

things that needn't be given up and shouldn't be given up for

successful therapy. Second, I'm not even sure what it means. When I

was in treatment we had a lecture on this subject. You should have

seen the rush to confess in the week after the lecture, plus the rush

to rat other people out. But the stuff that was revealed was mostly, I

think, stuff that had nothing to do with drinking. Lots of people had

broken minor facility rules. Some people were having extramarital

affairs. Some people were gay. Do these secrets have anything to do

with sickness? They may betray a certain indifference to obeying the

law or keeping promises, or a resistance to going along with the

pressure to conform, but to me, none of these things are evidence of

sickness. Might they have something to do with why people drank?

Maybe, and a good clinician (if there are any among drug and alcohol

counselors) could probably find out. On the whole, though, I doubt it.

To me it seemed like a way for the counselors to enforce discipline

when they couldn't watch us every minute. On the other hand, I

remember someone once going to a counselor and saying that she was

worried because another patient was inducing vomiting after every meal,

and she was told that it was a selfish program, she should work her own

and not try to work anyone else's. That was a secret that probably had

some medical significance, but it wasn't betrayed (if that's the right

word) within the week after the lecture.

Did this phrase form any part of the original AA program, or is it one

that was imported into AA from treatment? I suspect you will not find

any reference to it in any AA literature.

wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=6374

> Hi and list,

> Hi, I'm back after a break. I would like to ask your opinion

about

> this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that self

> revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion?

> P.S. I drank on Friday night, and have stopped again. I could use

any

> support to fight the ugre to run back to AA. While my histiory shows

this

> never worked, there is that little voice ( after 10 years involvement

in AA)

> which says, " maybe those AAs were right.

>

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Joe,

Yet the organization of AA won't own up to its secrets - like you said,

mental mind games with vulnerable newcomers. Instead when people like that

are brought up in discussion the AAer responds with 'yes, there are people

like that, lah di da and nothing needs to be done, because we don't take

each other's inventory, because they haven't had a drink today.'

Jan

Re: secrets

>At 09:58 PM 7/26/99 EDT, you wrote:

>>Hi and list,

>> Hi, I'm back after a break. I would like to ask your opinion about

>>this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that self

>>revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion?

>>P.S. I drank on Friday night, and have stopped again. I could use any

>>support to fight the ugre to run back to AA. While my histiory shows this

>>never worked, there is that little voice ( after 10 years involvement in

AA)

>>which says, " maybe those AAs were right.

>>

>

>Hi . AA uses the IDEA of honesty rather than honesty itself. The idea

>of honesty, coupled with guilt and confession is used to manipulate and

>control people. The guilt thing is quite subtle because people with

>addictive behaviour and damge and such in their past have things they feel

>bad about and this can be manipulated. We are not as sick as our secrets-

>secrets are normal healthy things to have. AA calls private information

> " secrets " in order to make people feel guilty for keeping personal

>information private. If everybody confesses, everybody can be made " subject

>to spiritual law " . What incredible bollocks! AA uses this guilt and

>manipulation to control people instead of giving them the tools and

>understanding they need to deal with their behaviour.

>

>The whole slant of AA is off into the aerie-faerie metaphysical area where

>people can meditate and pontificate till the cows come home without doing

>anything to change what really matters- their behaviour. So no, we are not

>as sick as our secrets, we are as sick as our behaviour. If you have

>private information that you do not wish to disclose to everybody, that is

>normal and healthy. If you are abusing vulnerable people and pretending to

>be a spiritual giant, THAT is sick.

>

>AA discourages the keeping of personal information while enabling (in true

>spiritual fashion) widespread psychological and sexual abuse of vulnerable

>people looking for help. Needless to say, you won't find many established

>AA members openly confessing to that one. The irony is that in practice it

>is people like you, who are harming no-one, but who still have a sense of

>some personal responsibility, that feel the healthy guilt for their less

>than perfect behaviour- while the people in a position of trust who abuse

>newcomers don't apparently feel guilty at all. , tell the little voice

>that it can take a flying fuck at a rolling donut. You need AA like a

>banana needs a hammer!

>

>Joe Berenbaum

>mailto:joe-b@...

>

>

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

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

>Save on vitamins & supplements. Use coupon code: EGROUPS99

>at checkout. http://clickhere./click/463

>

>

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

> - Simplifying group communications

>

>

>

>

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Joe,

Yet the organization of AA won't own up to its secrets - like you said,

mental mind games with vulnerable newcomers. Instead when people like that

are brought up in discussion the AAer responds with 'yes, there are people

like that, lah di da and nothing needs to be done, because we don't take

each other's inventory, because they haven't had a drink today.'

Jan

Re: secrets

>At 09:58 PM 7/26/99 EDT, you wrote:

>>Hi and list,

>> Hi, I'm back after a break. I would like to ask your opinion about

>>this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that self

>>revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion?

>>P.S. I drank on Friday night, and have stopped again. I could use any

>>support to fight the ugre to run back to AA. While my histiory shows this

>>never worked, there is that little voice ( after 10 years involvement in

AA)

>>which says, " maybe those AAs were right.

>>

>

>Hi . AA uses the IDEA of honesty rather than honesty itself. The idea

>of honesty, coupled with guilt and confession is used to manipulate and

>control people. The guilt thing is quite subtle because people with

>addictive behaviour and damge and such in their past have things they feel

>bad about and this can be manipulated. We are not as sick as our secrets-

>secrets are normal healthy things to have. AA calls private information

> " secrets " in order to make people feel guilty for keeping personal

>information private. If everybody confesses, everybody can be made " subject

>to spiritual law " . What incredible bollocks! AA uses this guilt and

>manipulation to control people instead of giving them the tools and

>understanding they need to deal with their behaviour.

>

>The whole slant of AA is off into the aerie-faerie metaphysical area where

>people can meditate and pontificate till the cows come home without doing

>anything to change what really matters- their behaviour. So no, we are not

>as sick as our secrets, we are as sick as our behaviour. If you have

>private information that you do not wish to disclose to everybody, that is

>normal and healthy. If you are abusing vulnerable people and pretending to

>be a spiritual giant, THAT is sick.

>

>AA discourages the keeping of personal information while enabling (in true

>spiritual fashion) widespread psychological and sexual abuse of vulnerable

>people looking for help. Needless to say, you won't find many established

>AA members openly confessing to that one. The irony is that in practice it

>is people like you, who are harming no-one, but who still have a sense of

>some personal responsibility, that feel the healthy guilt for their less

>than perfect behaviour- while the people in a position of trust who abuse

>newcomers don't apparently feel guilty at all. , tell the little voice

>that it can take a flying fuck at a rolling donut. You need AA like a

>banana needs a hammer!

>

>Joe Berenbaum

>mailto:joe-b@...

>

>

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

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

>Save on vitamins & supplements. Use coupon code: EGROUPS99

>at checkout. http://clickhere./click/463

>

>

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

> - Simplifying group communications

>

>

>

>

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Joe,

Yet the organization of AA won't own up to its secrets - like you said,

mental mind games with vulnerable newcomers. Instead when people like that

are brought up in discussion the AAer responds with 'yes, there are people

like that, lah di da and nothing needs to be done, because we don't take

each other's inventory, because they haven't had a drink today.'

Jan

Re: secrets

>At 09:58 PM 7/26/99 EDT, you wrote:

>>Hi and list,

>> Hi, I'm back after a break. I would like to ask your opinion about

>>this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that self

>>revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion?

>>P.S. I drank on Friday night, and have stopped again. I could use any

>>support to fight the ugre to run back to AA. While my histiory shows this

>>never worked, there is that little voice ( after 10 years involvement in

AA)

>>which says, " maybe those AAs were right.

>>

>

>Hi . AA uses the IDEA of honesty rather than honesty itself. The idea

>of honesty, coupled with guilt and confession is used to manipulate and

>control people. The guilt thing is quite subtle because people with

>addictive behaviour and damge and such in their past have things they feel

>bad about and this can be manipulated. We are not as sick as our secrets-

>secrets are normal healthy things to have. AA calls private information

> " secrets " in order to make people feel guilty for keeping personal

>information private. If everybody confesses, everybody can be made " subject

>to spiritual law " . What incredible bollocks! AA uses this guilt and

>manipulation to control people instead of giving them the tools and

>understanding they need to deal with their behaviour.

>

>The whole slant of AA is off into the aerie-faerie metaphysical area where

>people can meditate and pontificate till the cows come home without doing

>anything to change what really matters- their behaviour. So no, we are not

>as sick as our secrets, we are as sick as our behaviour. If you have

>private information that you do not wish to disclose to everybody, that is

>normal and healthy. If you are abusing vulnerable people and pretending to

>be a spiritual giant, THAT is sick.

>

>AA discourages the keeping of personal information while enabling (in true

>spiritual fashion) widespread psychological and sexual abuse of vulnerable

>people looking for help. Needless to say, you won't find many established

>AA members openly confessing to that one. The irony is that in practice it

>is people like you, who are harming no-one, but who still have a sense of

>some personal responsibility, that feel the healthy guilt for their less

>than perfect behaviour- while the people in a position of trust who abuse

>newcomers don't apparently feel guilty at all. , tell the little voice

>that it can take a flying fuck at a rolling donut. You need AA like a

>banana needs a hammer!

>

>Joe Berenbaum

>mailto:joe-b@...

>

>

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

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

>Save on vitamins & supplements. Use coupon code: EGROUPS99

>at checkout. http://clickhere./click/463

>

>

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

> - Simplifying group communications

>

>

>

>

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Hi Kayleigh,

There are alot of slogans used in AA that were never in the BB. Sick as

your secrets is one of them. I don't know when and where AA started

injecting the pop psychology babble. Probably during the 80's when the Baby

Boomers started hitting the treatment centers in droves and brought their

self-help books along. I personally can't stand one I heard alot recently

in meetings: 'don't sweat the small stuff and it's all small stuff' From a

book written obviously by a man who probably had his wife do all the child

rearing. You can bet when my stepson's fever rose to 104 and up, it was a

big deal to me and I worried about him. I remember one member in AA who was

involved in a car accident that killed his 2-year old. This was after he

quit drinking. I doubt he would've welcomed the 'don't sweat the small

stuff' garbage. There is no slogan that works for a tragedy like that.

Jan

Re: secrets

>I totally disagree with the " sick as your secrets " dogma. First of

>all, most

>psychological theories of therapy pretty much agree that there are some

>things that needn't be given up and shouldn't be given up for

>successful therapy. Second, I'm not even sure what it means. When I

>was in treatment we had a lecture on this subject. You should have

>seen the rush to confess in the week after the lecture, plus the rush

>to rat other people out. But the stuff that was revealed was mostly, I

>think, stuff that had nothing to do with drinking. Lots of people had

>broken minor facility rules. Some people were having extramarital

>affairs. Some people were gay. Do these secrets have anything to do

>with sickness? They may betray a certain indifference to obeying the

>law or keeping promises, or a resistance to going along with the

>pressure to conform, but to me, none of these things are evidence of

>sickness. Might they have something to do with why people drank?

>Maybe, and a good clinician (if there are any among drug and alcohol

>counselors) could probably find out. On the whole, though, I doubt it.

> To me it seemed like a way for the counselors to enforce discipline

>when they couldn't watch us every minute. On the other hand, I

>remember someone once going to a counselor and saying that she was

>worried because another patient was inducing vomiting after every meal,

>and she was told that it was a selfish program, she should work her own

>and not try to work anyone else's. That was a secret that probably had

>some medical significance, but it wasn't betrayed (if that's the right

>word) within the week after the lecture.

>

>Did this phrase form any part of the original AA program, or is it one

>that was imported into AA from treatment? I suspect you will not find

>any reference to it in any AA literature.

>

> wrote:

>original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=6374

>> Hi and list,

>> Hi, I'm back after a break. I would like to ask your opinion

>about

>> this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that self

>> revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion?

>> P.S. I drank on Friday night, and have stopped again. I could use

>any

>> support to fight the ugre to run back to AA. While my histiory shows

>this

>> never worked, there is that little voice ( after 10 years involvement

>in AA)

>> which says, " maybe those AAs were right.

>>

>

>

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

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

>Save on vitamins & supplements. Use coupon code: EGROUPS99

>at checkout. http://clickhere./click/463

>

>

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

> - Simplifying group communications

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Hi Kayleigh,

There are alot of slogans used in AA that were never in the BB. Sick as

your secrets is one of them. I don't know when and where AA started

injecting the pop psychology babble. Probably during the 80's when the Baby

Boomers started hitting the treatment centers in droves and brought their

self-help books along. I personally can't stand one I heard alot recently

in meetings: 'don't sweat the small stuff and it's all small stuff' From a

book written obviously by a man who probably had his wife do all the child

rearing. You can bet when my stepson's fever rose to 104 and up, it was a

big deal to me and I worried about him. I remember one member in AA who was

involved in a car accident that killed his 2-year old. This was after he

quit drinking. I doubt he would've welcomed the 'don't sweat the small

stuff' garbage. There is no slogan that works for a tragedy like that.

Jan

Re: secrets

>I totally disagree with the " sick as your secrets " dogma. First of

>all, most

>psychological theories of therapy pretty much agree that there are some

>things that needn't be given up and shouldn't be given up for

>successful therapy. Second, I'm not even sure what it means. When I

>was in treatment we had a lecture on this subject. You should have

>seen the rush to confess in the week after the lecture, plus the rush

>to rat other people out. But the stuff that was revealed was mostly, I

>think, stuff that had nothing to do with drinking. Lots of people had

>broken minor facility rules. Some people were having extramarital

>affairs. Some people were gay. Do these secrets have anything to do

>with sickness? They may betray a certain indifference to obeying the

>law or keeping promises, or a resistance to going along with the

>pressure to conform, but to me, none of these things are evidence of

>sickness. Might they have something to do with why people drank?

>Maybe, and a good clinician (if there are any among drug and alcohol

>counselors) could probably find out. On the whole, though, I doubt it.

> To me it seemed like a way for the counselors to enforce discipline

>when they couldn't watch us every minute. On the other hand, I

>remember someone once going to a counselor and saying that she was

>worried because another patient was inducing vomiting after every meal,

>and she was told that it was a selfish program, she should work her own

>and not try to work anyone else's. That was a secret that probably had

>some medical significance, but it wasn't betrayed (if that's the right

>word) within the week after the lecture.

>

>Did this phrase form any part of the original AA program, or is it one

>that was imported into AA from treatment? I suspect you will not find

>any reference to it in any AA literature.

>

> wrote:

>original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=6374

>> Hi and list,

>> Hi, I'm back after a break. I would like to ask your opinion

>about

>> this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that self

>> revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion?

>> P.S. I drank on Friday night, and have stopped again. I could use

>any

>> support to fight the ugre to run back to AA. While my histiory shows

>this

>> never worked, there is that little voice ( after 10 years involvement

>in AA)

>> which says, " maybe those AAs were right.

>>

>

>

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

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

>Save on vitamins & supplements. Use coupon code: EGROUPS99

>at checkout. http://clickhere./click/463

>

>

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

> - Simplifying group communications

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Bjorn,

I like to subscribe to the idea of 'not being too open minded or your brains

will fall out'

Jan

Re: secrets

>I think I agree with your disagreement, just want to add some diversive

>hints.

>

>Nietzsche said ( translated from danish ) : " Where there is a big

>secret, there is a big shame. "

>

>The second hint is from an american postcard 15 years ago. " Keep an

>open mind, and people will throw all kinds of trash into it! "

>

>Bjoern

>

>kayleighs@... wrote:

>

>>

>> I totally disagree with the " sick as your secrets " dogma. First of

> all, most

> psychological theories of therapy pretty much agree that there are some

> things that needn't be given up and shouldn't be given up for

> successful therapy. Second, I'm not even sure what it means. When I

> was in treatment we had a lecture on this subject. You should have

> seen the rush to confess in the week after the lecture, plus the rush

> to rat other people out. But the stuff that was revealed was mostly, I

> think, stuff that had nothing to do with drinking. Lots of people had

> broken minor facility rules. Some people were having extramarital

> affairs. Some people were gay. Do these secrets have anything to do

> with sickness? They may betray a certain indifference to obeying the

> law or keeping promises, or a resistance to going along with the

> pressure to conform, but to me, none of these things are evidence of

> sickness. Might they have something to do with why people drank?

> Maybe, and a good clinician (if there are any among drug and alcohol

> counselors) could probably find out. On the whole, though, I doubt it.

> To me it seemed like a way for the counselors to enforce discipline

> when they couldn't watch us every minute. On the other hand, I

> remember someone once going to a counselor and saying that she was

> worried because another patient was inducing vomiting after every meal,

> and she was told that it was a selfish program, she should work her own

> and not try to work anyone else's. That was a secret that probably had

> some medical significance, but it wasn't betrayed (if that's the right

> word) within the week after the lecture.

>

> Did this phrase form any part of the original AA program, or is it one

> that was imported into AA from treatment? I suspect you will not find

> any reference to it in any AA literature.

>

> wrote:

> original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=6374

> > Hi and list,

> > Hi, I'm back after a break. I would like to ask your opinion

> about

> > this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that self

> > revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion?

> > P.S. I drank on Friday night, and have stopped again. I could use

> any

> > support to fight the ugre to run back to AA. While my histiory shows

> this

> > never worked, there is that little voice ( after 10 years involvement

> in AA)

> > which says, " maybe those AAs were right.

> >

>

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

>> [click here]

>> Click Here!

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

>> www. - Simplifying group communications

>

>

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

>GET WHAT YOU DESERVE! A NextCard Platinum VISA: DOUBLE Rewards points,

>NO annual fee & rates as low as 9.9% FIXED APR. Apply online today!

>http://clickhere./click/606

>

>

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> - Simplifying group communications

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

I was once in a meeting where a man told of his grief over the death of

his 18 month old son, from meningitis. Nobody had a word to say. Yet

if the guy had said he was being divorced, people would have popped up

from all over with slogans. It's as though they've decided beforehand

how painful something ought to be.

Most people probably feel more pain over the death of a child than over

splitting up with a spouse, but I've know a bunch of people in AA who

have been divorced, and it is painful and the attitude they encounter

is sort of that it just goes with the territory.

<015601bed8e7$4142e2a0$4014fed-@mrsy> wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=6475

> Hi Kayleigh,

>

> There are alot of slogans used in AA that were never in the BB. Sick

as

> your secrets is one of them. I don't know when and where AA started

> injecting the pop psychology babble. Probably during the 80's when

the Baby

> Boomers started hitting the treatment centers in droves and brought

their

> self-help books along. I personally can't stand one I heard alot

recently

> in meetings: 'don't sweat the small stuff and it's all small stuff'

From a

> book written obviously by a man who probably had his wife do all the

child

> rearing. You can bet when my stepson's fever rose to 104 and up, it

was a

> big deal to me and I worried about him. I remember one member in AA

who was

> involved in a car accident that killed his 2-year old. This was

after he

> quit drinking. I doubt he would've welcomed the 'don't sweat the

small

> stuff' garbage. There is no slogan that works for a tragedy like

that.

>

> Jan

>

> Re: secrets

>

>

> >I totally disagree with the " sick as your secrets " dogma. First of

> >all, most

> >psychological theories of therapy pretty much agree that there are

some

> >things that needn't be given up and shouldn't be given up for

> >successful therapy. Second, I'm not even sure what it means. When I

> >was in treatment we had a lecture on this subject. You should have

> >seen the rush to confess in the week after the lecture, plus the rush

> >to rat other people out. But the stuff that was revealed was

mostly, I

> >think, stuff that had nothing to do with drinking. Lots of people

had

> >broken minor facility rules. Some people were having extramarital

> >affairs. Some people were gay. Do these secrets have anything to do

> >with sickness? They may betray a certain indifference to obeying the

> >law or keeping promises, or a resistance to going along with the

> >pressure to conform, but to me, none of these things are evidence of

> >sickness. Might they have something to do with why people drank?

> >Maybe, and a good clinician (if there are any among drug and alcohol

> >counselors) could probably find out. On the whole, though, I doubt

it.

> > To me it seemed like a way for the counselors to enforce discipline

> >when they couldn't watch us every minute. On the other hand, I

> >remember someone once going to a counselor and saying that she was

> >worried because another patient was inducing vomiting after every

meal,

> >and she was told that it was a selfish program, she should work her

own

> >and not try to work anyone else's. That was a secret that probably

had

> >some medical significance, but it wasn't betrayed (if that's the

right

> >word) within the week after the lecture.

> >

> >Did this phrase form any part of the original AA program, or is it

one

> >that was imported into AA from treatment? I suspect you will not

find

> >any reference to it in any AA literature.

> >

> > wrote:

> >original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=63

74

> >> Hi and list,

> >> Hi, I'm back after a break. I would like to ask your opinion

> >about

> >> this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that

self

> >> revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion?

> >> P.S. I drank on Friday night, and have stopped again. I could use

> >any

> >> support to fight the ugre to run back to AA. While my histiory

shows

> >this

> >> never worked, there is that little voice ( after 10 years

involvement

> >in AA)

> >> which says, " maybe those AAs were right.

> >>

> >

> >

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Guest guest

I was once in a meeting where a man told of his grief over the death of

his 18 month old son, from meningitis. Nobody had a word to say. Yet

if the guy had said he was being divorced, people would have popped up

from all over with slogans. It's as though they've decided beforehand

how painful something ought to be.

Most people probably feel more pain over the death of a child than over

splitting up with a spouse, but I've know a bunch of people in AA who

have been divorced, and it is painful and the attitude they encounter

is sort of that it just goes with the territory.

<015601bed8e7$4142e2a0$4014fed-@mrsy> wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=6475

> Hi Kayleigh,

>

> There are alot of slogans used in AA that were never in the BB. Sick

as

> your secrets is one of them. I don't know when and where AA started

> injecting the pop psychology babble. Probably during the 80's when

the Baby

> Boomers started hitting the treatment centers in droves and brought

their

> self-help books along. I personally can't stand one I heard alot

recently

> in meetings: 'don't sweat the small stuff and it's all small stuff'

From a

> book written obviously by a man who probably had his wife do all the

child

> rearing. You can bet when my stepson's fever rose to 104 and up, it

was a

> big deal to me and I worried about him. I remember one member in AA

who was

> involved in a car accident that killed his 2-year old. This was

after he

> quit drinking. I doubt he would've welcomed the 'don't sweat the

small

> stuff' garbage. There is no slogan that works for a tragedy like

that.

>

> Jan

>

> Re: secrets

>

>

> >I totally disagree with the " sick as your secrets " dogma. First of

> >all, most

> >psychological theories of therapy pretty much agree that there are

some

> >things that needn't be given up and shouldn't be given up for

> >successful therapy. Second, I'm not even sure what it means. When I

> >was in treatment we had a lecture on this subject. You should have

> >seen the rush to confess in the week after the lecture, plus the rush

> >to rat other people out. But the stuff that was revealed was

mostly, I

> >think, stuff that had nothing to do with drinking. Lots of people

had

> >broken minor facility rules. Some people were having extramarital

> >affairs. Some people were gay. Do these secrets have anything to do

> >with sickness? They may betray a certain indifference to obeying the

> >law or keeping promises, or a resistance to going along with the

> >pressure to conform, but to me, none of these things are evidence of

> >sickness. Might they have something to do with why people drank?

> >Maybe, and a good clinician (if there are any among drug and alcohol

> >counselors) could probably find out. On the whole, though, I doubt

it.

> > To me it seemed like a way for the counselors to enforce discipline

> >when they couldn't watch us every minute. On the other hand, I

> >remember someone once going to a counselor and saying that she was

> >worried because another patient was inducing vomiting after every

meal,

> >and she was told that it was a selfish program, she should work her

own

> >and not try to work anyone else's. That was a secret that probably

had

> >some medical significance, but it wasn't betrayed (if that's the

right

> >word) within the week after the lecture.

> >

> >Did this phrase form any part of the original AA program, or is it

one

> >that was imported into AA from treatment? I suspect you will not

find

> >any reference to it in any AA literature.

> >

> > wrote:

> >original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=63

74

> >> Hi and list,

> >> Hi, I'm back after a break. I would like to ask your opinion

> >about

> >> this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that

self

> >> revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion?

> >> P.S. I drank on Friday night, and have stopped again. I could use

> >any

> >> support to fight the ugre to run back to AA. While my histiory

shows

> >this

> >> never worked, there is that little voice ( after 10 years

involvement

> >in AA)

> >> which says, " maybe those AAs were right.

> >>

> >

> >

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Guest guest

I don't think I agree with what Nietzsche said, but you can take it a

couple different ways.

First, society has unwritten rules about what we do and do not talk

about. I do not relate my autobiography to every person I meet. I do

not tell them about my medical problems or my sex life. People don't

want to hear it.

If, however, you have a secret that weighs on you, that you want to

share with someone, that burdens you with the effort of keeping it

secret, then perhaps there is some truth in the saying.

I don't understand the reference to the " open mind " quote as connected

to my post. Can you explain it?

wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=6498

> I think I agree with your disagreement, just want to add some

diversive

> hints.

>

> Nietzsche said ( translated from danish ) : " Where there is a big

> secret, there is a big shame. "

>

> The second hint is from an american postcard 15 years ago. " Keep an

> open mind, and people will throw all kinds of trash into it! "

>

> Bjoern

>

> kayleighs@... wrote:

>

> >

> > I totally disagree with the " sick as your secrets " dogma. First of

> all, most

> psychological theories of therapy pretty much agree that there are

some

> things that needn't be given up and shouldn't be given up for

> successful therapy. Second, I'm not even sure what it means. When

I

> was in treatment we had a lecture on this subject. You should have

> seen the rush to confess in the week after the lecture, plus the

rush

> to rat other people out. But the stuff that was revealed was

mostly, I

> think, stuff that had nothing to do with drinking. Lots of people

had

> broken minor facility rules. Some people were having extramarital

> affairs. Some people were gay. Do these secrets have anything to

do

> with sickness? They may betray a certain indifference to obeying

the

> law or keeping promises, or a resistance to going along with the

> pressure to conform, but to me, none of these things are evidence of

> sickness. Might they have something to do with why people drank?

> Maybe, and a good clinician (if there are any among drug and alcohol

> counselors) could probably find out. On the whole, though, I doubt

it.

> To me it seemed like a way for the counselors to enforce discipline

> when they couldn't watch us every minute. On the other hand, I

> remember someone once going to a counselor and saying that she was

> worried because another patient was inducing vomiting after every

meal,

> and she was told that it was a selfish program, she should work her

own

> and not try to work anyone else's. That was a secret that probably

had

> some medical significance, but it wasn't betrayed (if that's the

right

> word) within the week after the lecture.

>

> Did this phrase form any part of the original AA program, or is it

one

> that was imported into AA from treatment? I suspect you will not

find

> any reference to it in any AA literature.

>

> wrote:

> original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=6

374

> > Hi and list,

> > Hi, I'm back after a break. I would like to ask your opinion

> about

> > this, " you are as sick as your secrets " idea. Do you think that

self

> > revelation is of importance in giving up an addicion?

> > P.S. I drank on Friday night, and have stopped again. I could use

> any

> > support to fight the ugre to run back to AA. While my histiory

shows

> this

> > never worked, there is that little voice ( after 10 years

involvement

> in AA)

> > which says, " maybe those AAs were right.

> >

>

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Guest guest

Yes, I've had a number of empty messages from . As to , I

have figured out that if a message from someone else freezes the

computer, it's a response to a post of 's. What on earth is

going on here?

wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=6500

> As far as the dicky listserv goes, in my case tI seem to

> get all the mails, but some of themn are empty. This is a

> case in point - there was nothing typed by , only the

> egroups adds at the end, which I deleted..

>

> Pete

>

>

>

>

>

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At 05:46 PM 7/28/99 -0700, kayleighs@... wrote:

>I was once in a meeting where a man told of his grief over the death of

>his 18 month old son, from meningitis. Nobody had a word to say. Yet

>if the guy had said he was being divorced, people would have popped up

>from all over with slogans. It's as though they've decided beforehand

>how painful something ought to be.

Yes, and AA'ers can't have so much pain that they would drink over it.

I may have told this before here. I once heard a man in an AA meeting

tell a story of his friend. His friend was scheduled to be the speaker

at an AA speaker meeting one evening, but earlier that day his son had died.

This man's friend went ahead and told his story at the meeting, and he

never did even mention his son's death. Of the people in the speaker meeting,

only he and his friend knew of his friend's son's death.

This man went on (please locate and prepare barf bags now...) to

say how much he admired his friend and the program he worked, and that it

was only through working the AA program that his friend was able to fulfill

his obligations to AA, to tell of the positive things in his life rather

than the negative, and how happy he was to be in this wonderful program

of Alcoholics Anonymous.

>Most people probably feel more pain over the death of a child than over

>splitting up with a spouse, but I've know a bunch of people in AA who

>have been divorced, and it is painful and the attitude they encounter

>is sort of that it just goes with the territory.

I heard a few times at the 8111 club (in the upscale area of Roswell/

Dunwoody, GA) it said in a semi-joking manner that " you really don't know

what sober is until you've been through a divorce sober " . They were alluding

to the fact that there seemed to be a lot of divorces among the attendees

of that club.

-----

<http://listen.to/benbradley> New and Improved!

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Guest guest

Ben,

I think it's the general consensus on this list that AA clubs are just meat

markets without the booze. My husband who wants a divorce from me is

hanging out at the local AA club every day now. He started traipsing down

there when I was in the hospital with pneumonia last December. Next thing I

know he wants a divorce. Says he needs a meeting every day. Bull - he's

there to chase new vulnerable women. Good riddance to him. God have mercy

on the next gal he gets his con artist hands on.

Lands sakes, I have a bit resentment now don't I.

Jan

Re: secrets

>At 05:46 PM 7/28/99 -0700, kayleighs@... wrote:

>>I was once in a meeting where a man told of his grief over the death of

>>his 18 month old son, from meningitis. Nobody had a word to say. Yet

>>if the guy had said he was being divorced, people would have popped up

>>from all over with slogans. It's as though they've decided beforehand

>>how painful something ought to be.

>

> Yes, and AA'ers can't have so much pain that they would drink over it.

>

> I may have told this before here. I once heard a man in an AA meeting

>tell a story of his friend. His friend was scheduled to be the speaker

>at an AA speaker meeting one evening, but earlier that day his son had

died.

>This man's friend went ahead and told his story at the meeting, and he

>never did even mention his son's death. Of the people in the speaker

meeting,

>only he and his friend knew of his friend's son's death.

> This man went on (please locate and prepare barf bags now...) to

>say how much he admired his friend and the program he worked, and that it

>was only through working the AA program that his friend was able to fulfill

>his obligations to AA, to tell of the positive things in his life rather

>than the negative, and how happy he was to be in this wonderful program

>of Alcoholics Anonymous.

>

>>Most people probably feel more pain over the death of a child than over

>>splitting up with a spouse, but I've know a bunch of people in AA who

>>have been divorced, and it is painful and the attitude they encounter

>>is sort of that it just goes with the territory.

>

> I heard a few times at the 8111 club (in the upscale area of Roswell/

>Dunwoody, GA) it said in a semi-joking manner that " you really don't know

>what sober is until you've been through a divorce sober " . They were

alluding

>to the fact that there seemed to be a lot of divorces among the attendees

>of that club.

>-----

><http://listen.to/benbradley> New and Improved!

>

>

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

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

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

>http://clickhere./click/615

>

>

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

> - Simplifying group communications

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

No but trying to keep it a secret that you have a sickness will often be

revealed by your secretions and over use of tissue paper. The question

then becomes is it sick to try and keep your secretions a secret?

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Do these secrets have anything to do

with sickness?

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Re: secrets

>Hi Wally,

> I am in private therepy, so I will keep what you said in mind.

>Interestingly, my m.d., when I asked about Antabuse, was completely against

>it. He told me to go to AA. So it is no small wonder that after drinking,

>part of me would at least recall this kind of advise. I am determined to

>avoid all 12 step attendece, and yes I am determined not to drink.

>Still sober and 12 step free

>

>

Hi ,

My experience with MDs, when it comes to drinking problems, is that they all

have very definite opinions, which they are sure are the ultimate truth, but

that there is no general consensus among them on anything.

In the early '80s, one MD told me that I really didn't drink all that much,

and that if I ate balanced meals, took vitamins, and exercised more, he was

sure that my difficulties with alcohol would go away. Another said that I

would probably drink myself to death within six months, that AA or any sort

of treatment would be futile, and that what I really ought to do was get

myself locked up in an institution for life.

The next to last of them to 'treat' me was a psychiatrist. He seemed to be

unusually intelligent, for a man with a medical degree. He noted that I had

been through several 28-day treatment programs and had gone to thousands of

AA meetings over a period of 12 years, but that I had never stayed sober

more than 3 months except when I took antabuse. He thought I should keep

taking it for the rest of my life.

Eventually I did quit taking it, though. It seemed to me that if I went

through life believing that I needed it to stay sober that I'd never develop

any real self-confidence about being abstinent, and might actually have a

greater long-term risk of 'relapsing.' What led me to believe that things

might be different this time was that I had finally seen through the

AA/treatment mythology, had it not been for which I would probably have

gotten sober 12 years earlier.

But I would not hestitate to go back on it if I thought I needed to. I never

had any side-effects or reactions. Undoubtedly sensitivity to the stuff

varies.

I think the moral of the story is that each of us has to find out what works

for his own self and then stick to it, regardless of what anyone else

thinks.

-- wally

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