Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue of Social Responsibility

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Rough draft... comments?

Apple

Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue of Social Responsibility

forgive, Forgive.... FORGIVE everyone..... and be free, Free, FREE of

resentment. God, not we, is in charge. Does this popular AA chant

sound familiar?

I will start out with a case scenario:

Kanka, a six year old girl from New Jersey was brutally raped and

murdered by ??, a convicted child molester who was released from prison

after serving ?? years for a prior case of child molestation. Mrs.

Kanka, little 's mother, outraged and rightfully so, not only

pursued the conviction of .... but has become active in getting 's

Law passed, a controversial, yet needed law which would make the names

and addresses of child molesters public, so that parents could learn if

such " former " criminals reside in their neighborhoods, since the

relapse rate for child molesters is so high.

Luckily for us, Mrs. Kanka was an " earth person " or " normie " , because

if she were not, we may not have 's Law today. Let me explain:

Mrs. Kanka's little girl, died a horrible death. A grizzly rape and

murder which was completely undeserved. Her young life was stolen from

her, through a brutal crime. Mrs. Kanka's grief is understandable, her

anger justifiable.

Her strong feelings motivated her to notify the police and subsequently

to effect the arrest and conviction of the perpetrator, sending him to

prison so the safety of the public could be assured, and justice could

be served.

Furthermore, Mrs. Kanka channeled her justifiable anger to effect

positive social change by working for the passing of 's Law, to

help protect other children and parents from such horrors.

But what would have happened if Mrs. Kanka had been an AA member?

1. Would Mrs. Kanka have been labeled as sick for holding a resentment

too long?

2. Would she have been told to " look at her part " ?

Why wasn't she with her daughter? Why was her daughter playing

alone? Did she dress her six year old daughter too sexy? Did little

ask for it? Was little a tease who got what was coming to

her?

3. The question of her " irresponsible mothering " would have come up in

the quest for " her part " .

4. Would Mrs. Kanka have been instructed by her fellow AAs to prepare

caffeinated beverages for her peers in order to get out of herself?

5. Would she have been told to pray for the murderer until her

resentment goes away?

6. Would she have been pressured to forgive?

7. Would her AA peers gently remind her that she's " powerless " over

the situation, that she should " practice acceptance " , and that God will

take care of it all if she hits her knees every night and prays.

8. Would she have been told that the murderer is just a sick child of

God who needs to be treated with the same gentleness and care as an ill

person who has pneumonia? (see page 898 of the Big Book)

9. Would she have tossed and turned for months and years afterwards,

wondering, how she had disobeyed " God's Will " and invited this tragedy

upon herself?

10. Would she have had to wrestle with the idea that God would protect

other children if she only prayed rightly, rather than pursuing the

passing of a law?

11. Would her pursuit of the passing of 's Law be seen by her

peers as meddling with the affairs of God?

12. Would Mrs. Kanka have been shamed by her AA group, because her

visible display of emotions reminded the child molesters in her AA

home group of their own past crimes, and made them feel guilty for it.

(shame Mrs. Kanka!)

13. Would Mrs. Kanka's sponsor have told her to read page 449 of the

Big Book? The bit about " acceptance is the answer to all my problems

today. "

14. Would Mrs. Kanka's strong emotions have been labeled dangerous --

a sign of potential relapse, possibly causing her fellow AAs to pull

away from her because it's disruptive to their serenity to be in the

company of a highly emotionally charged person?

15. Would Mrs. Kanka's grieving process be curtailed with group

pressure to " get out of herself " and help newcomers... the ones who are

REALLY suffering?

My answer, is I hope like hell not! I hope that we could answer NO to

all of the above questions! But sadly, I'm not sure that we could. I

have heard too many cases where the victim was made to suffer further

in the rooms of AA, and this disgusts me to no end.

I have heard too many stories of malicious individuals who are let off

the hook, so to speak, for their actions, however heinous, provided

that they admit to themselves, God and to another person the exact

nature of their wrongs. Reparations to the victim or justice served?

None!

Sometimes victims project feelings of guilt and shame onto criminals to

comfort themselves and to try to cope psychologically.

" I know what guilt feels like. I'm sure God's punishing him with

guilt! " they may say.

Let's test the accuracy of that assumption:

The typical psychological profile of sociopaths and psychopaths show

1) little affect (shallowness of feeling)

2) a lack of compassion/guilt

Here are some excellent links for learning more about these antisocial

personality disorders which characterize many (but not all) criminals:

So premature forgiveness, can and does, in many cases, leave the crime

unaddressed, and the criminal walking around, without the internal

reminder of guilt or the external reminder of justice. Something is

missing here.

Furthermore,what are the chances that the sociopath will reviolate

under these conditions? High.

What are the chances that he will reviolate if we pray rightly? (drum

roll...............) High.

In such cases, taking action by " Turning it over " is taking no action.

It is teaching criminals that they can get away with what they've done

without consequences, that their victims are the sick ones for having

anger or resentment.

This attitude does not make me feel safe in this world. I do not want

to see our criminal justice system replaced with a judge who simply

says " The people of this state find you guilty as charged, but we

forgive you, so go on your merry way and we'll try not to be angry " .

" Duh.... okay judge.... " [slash slash] [murder murder] [rape rape]

" Duh... what was YOUR part little miss victim? You owe me an amends....

ha ha ha ha ha ha " [slash slash] [murder murder] [rape rape]

Nobody is helped by blind forgiveness and blanket acceptance of evil!

Not the victim, not the perpetrator and not the community!

And as for acceptance being the answer to all our problems today?

Baloney! We could thank the fathers of our country who fought the

British for our independence that they did not possess such a world

view. We can thank Abraham Lincoln and Luther King for being

proactive rather than passively accepting of world conditions.

Here's a little quote on acceptance from " Your Erroneous Zones " by Dr.

Wayne Dyer:

Progress, yours personally and the world's depends on unreasonable men,

rather than people who adapt to their society and accept whatever comes

along. Progress depends on individuals who are innovators, who reject

convention and fashion their own worlds. In order to shift from coping

to doing, you'll have to learn to resist enculturation and the many

pressures to conform. To function fully, a resistance to enculturation

is almost a given. You may be viewed by some as insubordinate, which

is the price you'll have to pay for thinking for yourself. You may be

seen as different, be labeled selfish or rebellious, incur disapproval

from many " normal " people, and at times be ostracized. Some people will

not take kindly to your resistance to norms they've adopted for

themselves. You'll hear the old argument of, " What if everybody decided

to obey only the rules they wanted to? What kind of society would we

have then? " The simple answer to this, of course is that everybody

won't! Most people's addiction to external supports and shoulds

prohibits such a stand.

What we're talking about here has nothing to do with anarchy. No one

wants to destroy society, but many of us would like to give the

individual more freedom within it, freedom from meaningless musts and

silly shoulds.

Even sensible laws and rules will not apply under every set of

circumstances. What we are striving for is choice, that is, the ability

to be free from the servant mentality of constant adherence to the

shoulds.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Apple -

" Relapse " should be " recidivism, " " grizzly " should be " grisly. "

I think this is a good essay, but could you choose a less heinous

crime? AA members will respond that they would never say such things

under these circumstances, and perhaps rightly so. The only time I

have ever seen a group struck speechless was when a man spoke of his

grief over the recent death from meningitis of his 18-month-old child.

It seemed as though everyone present realized that this was a situation

page 449 could not address, nor could any other of the slogans that

usually sprang to their lips.

It's no good attacking AA for hypothetical actions that they really

would not engage in. Would groups in your community have responded in

this manner?

appledt-@... wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8362

> Rough draft... comments?

> Apple

>

>

>

> Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue of Social Responsibility

>

> forgive, Forgive.... FORGIVE everyone..... and be free, Free, FREE of

> resentment. God, not we, is in charge. Does this popular AA chant

> sound familiar?

>

> I will start out with a case scenario:

>

> Kanka, a six year old girl from New Jersey was brutally raped

and

> murdered by ??, a convicted child molester who was released from

prison

> after serving ?? years for a prior case of child molestation. Mrs.

> Kanka, little 's mother, outraged and rightfully so, not only

> pursued the conviction of .... but has become active in getting

's

> Law passed, a controversial, yet needed law which would make the names

> and addresses of child molesters public, so that parents could learn

if

> such " former " criminals reside in their neighborhoods, since the

> relapse rate for child molesters is so high.

>

> Luckily for us, Mrs. Kanka was an " earth person " or " normie " , because

> if she were not, we may not have 's Law today. Let me explain:

>

> Mrs. Kanka's little girl, died a horrible death. A grizzly rape and

> murder which was completely undeserved. Her young life was stolen

from

> her, through a brutal crime. Mrs. Kanka's grief is understandable,

her

> anger justifiable.

>

> Her strong feelings motivated her to notify the police and

subsequently

> to effect the arrest and conviction of the perpetrator, sending him to

> prison so the safety of the public could be assured, and justice could

> be served.

>

> Furthermore, Mrs. Kanka channeled her justifiable anger to effect

> positive social change by working for the passing of 's Law, to

> help protect other children and parents from such horrors.

>

> But what would have happened if Mrs. Kanka had been an AA member?

>

> 1. Would Mrs. Kanka have been labeled as sick for holding a

resentment

> too long?

> 2. Would she have been told to " look at her part " ?

> Why wasn't she with her daughter? Why was her daughter playing

> alone? Did she dress her six year old daughter too sexy? Did little

> ask for it? Was little a tease who got what was coming to

> her?

> 3. The question of her " irresponsible mothering " would have come up

in

> the quest for " her part " .

> 4. Would Mrs. Kanka have been instructed by her fellow AAs to prepare

> caffeinated beverages for her peers in order to get out of herself?

> 5. Would she have been told to pray for the murderer until her

> resentment goes away?

> 6. Would she have been pressured to forgive?

> 7. Would her AA peers gently remind her that she's " powerless " over

> the situation, that she should " practice acceptance " , and that God

will

> take care of it all if she hits her knees every night and prays.

> 8. Would she have been told that the murderer is just a sick child of

> God who needs to be treated with the same gentleness and care as an

ill

> person who has pneumonia? (see page 898 of the Big Book)

> 9. Would she have tossed and turned for months and years afterwards,

> wondering, how she had disobeyed " God's Will " and invited this tragedy

> upon herself?

> 10. Would she have had to wrestle with the idea that God would

protect

> other children if she only prayed rightly, rather than pursuing the

> passing of a law?

> 11. Would her pursuit of the passing of 's Law be seen by her

> peers as meddling with the affairs of God?

> 12. Would Mrs. Kanka have been shamed by her AA group, because her

> visible display of emotions reminded the child molesters in her AA

> home group of their own past crimes, and made them feel guilty for it.

> (shame Mrs. Kanka!)

> 13. Would Mrs. Kanka's sponsor have told her to read page 449 of the

> Big Book? The bit about " acceptance is the answer to all my problems

> today. "

> 14. Would Mrs. Kanka's strong emotions have been labeled dangerous --

> a sign of potential relapse, possibly causing her fellow AAs to pull

> away from her because it's disruptive to their serenity to be in the

> company of a highly emotionally charged person?

> 15. Would Mrs. Kanka's grieving process be curtailed with group

> pressure to " get out of herself " and help newcomers... the ones who

are

> REALLY suffering?

>

>

> My answer, is I hope like hell not! I hope that we could answer NO to

> all of the above questions! But sadly, I'm not sure that we could. I

> have heard too many cases where the victim was made to suffer further

> in the rooms of AA, and this disgusts me to no end.

>

> I have heard too many stories of malicious individuals who are let off

> the hook, so to speak, for their actions, however heinous, provided

> that they admit to themselves, God and to another person the exact

> nature of their wrongs. Reparations to the victim or justice served?

> None!

>

> Sometimes victims project feelings of guilt and shame onto criminals

to

> comfort themselves and to try to cope psychologically.

>

> " I know what guilt feels like. I'm sure God's punishing him with

> guilt! " they may say.

> Let's test the accuracy of that assumption:

>

> The typical psychological profile of sociopaths and psychopaths show

> 1) little affect (shallowness of feeling)

> 2) a lack of compassion/guilt

>

> Here are some excellent links for learning more about these antisocial

> personality disorders which characterize many (but not all) criminals:

>

> So premature forgiveness, can and does, in many cases, leave the crime

> unaddressed, and the criminal walking around, without the internal

> reminder of guilt or the external reminder of justice. Something is

> missing here.

>

> Furthermore,what are the chances that the sociopath will reviolate

> under these conditions? High.

> What are the chances that he will reviolate if we pray rightly? (drum

> roll...............) High.

>

> In such cases, taking action by " Turning it over " is taking no

action.

> It is teaching criminals that they can get away with what they've done

> without consequences, that their victims are the sick ones for having

> anger or resentment.

>

> This attitude does not make me feel safe in this world. I do not want

> to see our criminal justice system replaced with a judge who simply

> says " The people of this state find you guilty as charged, but we

> forgive you, so go on your merry way and we'll try not to be angry " .

>

> " Duh.... okay judge.... " [slash slash] [murder murder] [rape rape]

> " Duh... what was YOUR part little miss victim? You owe me an

amends....

> ha ha ha ha ha ha " [slash slash] [murder murder] [rape rape]

>

> Nobody is helped by blind forgiveness and blanket acceptance of evil!

> Not the victim, not the perpetrator and not the community!

>

> And as for acceptance being the answer to all our problems today?

> Baloney! We could thank the fathers of our country who fought the

> British for our independence that they did not possess such a world

> view. We can thank Abraham Lincoln and Luther King for being

> proactive rather than passively accepting of world conditions.

>

> Here's a little quote on acceptance from " Your Erroneous Zones " by Dr.

> Wayne Dyer:

>

> Progress, yours personally and the world's depends on unreasonable

men,

> rather than people who adapt to their society and accept whatever

comes

> along. Progress depends on individuals who are innovators, who reject

> convention and fashion their own worlds. In order to shift from

coping

> to doing, you'll have to learn to resist enculturation and the many

> pressures to conform. To function fully, a resistance to

enculturation

> is almost a given. You may be viewed by some as insubordinate, which

> is the price you'll have to pay for thinking for yourself. You may be

> seen as different, be labeled selfish or rebellious, incur disapproval

> from many " normal " people, and at times be ostracized. Some people

will

> not take kindly to your resistance to norms they've adopted for

> themselves. You'll hear the old argument of, " What if everybody

decided

> to obey only the rules they wanted to? What kind of society would we

> have then? " The simple answer to this, of course is that everybody

> won't! Most people's addiction to external supports and shoulds

> prohibits such a stand.

>

> What we're talking about here has nothing to do with anarchy. No one

> wants to destroy society, but many of us would like to give the

> individual more freedom within it, freedom from meaningless musts and

> silly shoulds.

>

> Even sensible laws and rules will not apply under every set of

> circumstances. What we are striving for is choice, that is, the

ability

> to be free from the servant mentality of constant adherence to the

> shoulds.

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Apple -

" Relapse " should be " recidivism, " " grizzly " should be " grisly. "

I think this is a good essay, but could you choose a less heinous

crime? AA members will respond that they would never say such things

under these circumstances, and perhaps rightly so. The only time I

have ever seen a group struck speechless was when a man spoke of his

grief over the recent death from meningitis of his 18-month-old child.

It seemed as though everyone present realized that this was a situation

page 449 could not address, nor could any other of the slogans that

usually sprang to their lips.

It's no good attacking AA for hypothetical actions that they really

would not engage in. Would groups in your community have responded in

this manner?

appledt-@... wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8362

> Rough draft... comments?

> Apple

>

>

>

> Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue of Social Responsibility

>

> forgive, Forgive.... FORGIVE everyone..... and be free, Free, FREE of

> resentment. God, not we, is in charge. Does this popular AA chant

> sound familiar?

>

> I will start out with a case scenario:

>

> Kanka, a six year old girl from New Jersey was brutally raped

and

> murdered by ??, a convicted child molester who was released from

prison

> after serving ?? years for a prior case of child molestation. Mrs.

> Kanka, little 's mother, outraged and rightfully so, not only

> pursued the conviction of .... but has become active in getting

's

> Law passed, a controversial, yet needed law which would make the names

> and addresses of child molesters public, so that parents could learn

if

> such " former " criminals reside in their neighborhoods, since the

> relapse rate for child molesters is so high.

>

> Luckily for us, Mrs. Kanka was an " earth person " or " normie " , because

> if she were not, we may not have 's Law today. Let me explain:

>

> Mrs. Kanka's little girl, died a horrible death. A grizzly rape and

> murder which was completely undeserved. Her young life was stolen

from

> her, through a brutal crime. Mrs. Kanka's grief is understandable,

her

> anger justifiable.

>

> Her strong feelings motivated her to notify the police and

subsequently

> to effect the arrest and conviction of the perpetrator, sending him to

> prison so the safety of the public could be assured, and justice could

> be served.

>

> Furthermore, Mrs. Kanka channeled her justifiable anger to effect

> positive social change by working for the passing of 's Law, to

> help protect other children and parents from such horrors.

>

> But what would have happened if Mrs. Kanka had been an AA member?

>

> 1. Would Mrs. Kanka have been labeled as sick for holding a

resentment

> too long?

> 2. Would she have been told to " look at her part " ?

> Why wasn't she with her daughter? Why was her daughter playing

> alone? Did she dress her six year old daughter too sexy? Did little

> ask for it? Was little a tease who got what was coming to

> her?

> 3. The question of her " irresponsible mothering " would have come up

in

> the quest for " her part " .

> 4. Would Mrs. Kanka have been instructed by her fellow AAs to prepare

> caffeinated beverages for her peers in order to get out of herself?

> 5. Would she have been told to pray for the murderer until her

> resentment goes away?

> 6. Would she have been pressured to forgive?

> 7. Would her AA peers gently remind her that she's " powerless " over

> the situation, that she should " practice acceptance " , and that God

will

> take care of it all if she hits her knees every night and prays.

> 8. Would she have been told that the murderer is just a sick child of

> God who needs to be treated with the same gentleness and care as an

ill

> person who has pneumonia? (see page 898 of the Big Book)

> 9. Would she have tossed and turned for months and years afterwards,

> wondering, how she had disobeyed " God's Will " and invited this tragedy

> upon herself?

> 10. Would she have had to wrestle with the idea that God would

protect

> other children if she only prayed rightly, rather than pursuing the

> passing of a law?

> 11. Would her pursuit of the passing of 's Law be seen by her

> peers as meddling with the affairs of God?

> 12. Would Mrs. Kanka have been shamed by her AA group, because her

> visible display of emotions reminded the child molesters in her AA

> home group of their own past crimes, and made them feel guilty for it.

> (shame Mrs. Kanka!)

> 13. Would Mrs. Kanka's sponsor have told her to read page 449 of the

> Big Book? The bit about " acceptance is the answer to all my problems

> today. "

> 14. Would Mrs. Kanka's strong emotions have been labeled dangerous --

> a sign of potential relapse, possibly causing her fellow AAs to pull

> away from her because it's disruptive to their serenity to be in the

> company of a highly emotionally charged person?

> 15. Would Mrs. Kanka's grieving process be curtailed with group

> pressure to " get out of herself " and help newcomers... the ones who

are

> REALLY suffering?

>

>

> My answer, is I hope like hell not! I hope that we could answer NO to

> all of the above questions! But sadly, I'm not sure that we could. I

> have heard too many cases where the victim was made to suffer further

> in the rooms of AA, and this disgusts me to no end.

>

> I have heard too many stories of malicious individuals who are let off

> the hook, so to speak, for their actions, however heinous, provided

> that they admit to themselves, God and to another person the exact

> nature of their wrongs. Reparations to the victim or justice served?

> None!

>

> Sometimes victims project feelings of guilt and shame onto criminals

to

> comfort themselves and to try to cope psychologically.

>

> " I know what guilt feels like. I'm sure God's punishing him with

> guilt! " they may say.

> Let's test the accuracy of that assumption:

>

> The typical psychological profile of sociopaths and psychopaths show

> 1) little affect (shallowness of feeling)

> 2) a lack of compassion/guilt

>

> Here are some excellent links for learning more about these antisocial

> personality disorders which characterize many (but not all) criminals:

>

> So premature forgiveness, can and does, in many cases, leave the crime

> unaddressed, and the criminal walking around, without the internal

> reminder of guilt or the external reminder of justice. Something is

> missing here.

>

> Furthermore,what are the chances that the sociopath will reviolate

> under these conditions? High.

> What are the chances that he will reviolate if we pray rightly? (drum

> roll...............) High.

>

> In such cases, taking action by " Turning it over " is taking no

action.

> It is teaching criminals that they can get away with what they've done

> without consequences, that their victims are the sick ones for having

> anger or resentment.

>

> This attitude does not make me feel safe in this world. I do not want

> to see our criminal justice system replaced with a judge who simply

> says " The people of this state find you guilty as charged, but we

> forgive you, so go on your merry way and we'll try not to be angry " .

>

> " Duh.... okay judge.... " [slash slash] [murder murder] [rape rape]

> " Duh... what was YOUR part little miss victim? You owe me an

amends....

> ha ha ha ha ha ha " [slash slash] [murder murder] [rape rape]

>

> Nobody is helped by blind forgiveness and blanket acceptance of evil!

> Not the victim, not the perpetrator and not the community!

>

> And as for acceptance being the answer to all our problems today?

> Baloney! We could thank the fathers of our country who fought the

> British for our independence that they did not possess such a world

> view. We can thank Abraham Lincoln and Luther King for being

> proactive rather than passively accepting of world conditions.

>

> Here's a little quote on acceptance from " Your Erroneous Zones " by Dr.

> Wayne Dyer:

>

> Progress, yours personally and the world's depends on unreasonable

men,

> rather than people who adapt to their society and accept whatever

comes

> along. Progress depends on individuals who are innovators, who reject

> convention and fashion their own worlds. In order to shift from

coping

> to doing, you'll have to learn to resist enculturation and the many

> pressures to conform. To function fully, a resistance to

enculturation

> is almost a given. You may be viewed by some as insubordinate, which

> is the price you'll have to pay for thinking for yourself. You may be

> seen as different, be labeled selfish or rebellious, incur disapproval

> from many " normal " people, and at times be ostracized. Some people

will

> not take kindly to your resistance to norms they've adopted for

> themselves. You'll hear the old argument of, " What if everybody

decided

> to obey only the rules they wanted to? What kind of society would we

> have then? " The simple answer to this, of course is that everybody

> won't! Most people's addiction to external supports and shoulds

> prohibits such a stand.

>

> What we're talking about here has nothing to do with anarchy. No one

> wants to destroy society, but many of us would like to give the

> individual more freedom within it, freedom from meaningless musts and

> silly shoulds.

>

> Even sensible laws and rules will not apply under every set of

> circumstances. What we are striving for is choice, that is, the

ability

> to be free from the servant mentality of constant adherence to the

> shoulds.

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

At 06:57 PM 9/30/99 -0700, kayleighs@... wrote:

>Apple -

>

> " Relapse " should be " recidivism, " " grizzly " should be " grisly. "

>

>I think this is a good essay, but could you choose a less heinous

>crime? AA members will respond that they would never say such things

>under these circumstances,

I wouldn't bet on it, I've known many AA'ers who have lots of 'tough

love'...

>and perhaps rightly so.

Certainly rightly so, and they should also never blame the victims

of lesser crimes.

>The only time I

>have ever seen a group struck speechless was when a man spoke of his

>grief over the recent death from meningitis of his 18-month-old child.

>It seemed as though everyone present realized that this was a situation

>page 449 could not address, nor could any other of the slogans that

>usually sprang to their lips.

>

>It's no good attacking AA for hypothetical actions that they really

>would not engage in. Would groups in your community have responded in

>this manner?

That's an interesting question, and one way I could think of to

answer that is to go to a meeting where no one is likely to know me

and tell the above story, and see their reactions. But I choose not to

go to an AA meeting today. :)

I've told this at least once already on this list, but I'll repeat

it because it struck me so strangely at the time I heard it.

A man talked about a friend of his telling his story at a speaker's

meeting. His friend's son had died earlier that day, and not only did

this friend tell his story, he didn't even mention his son's death.

The man telling about his friend said how much he admired his friend's

program (or his friend's working of THE Program), to not only

be able to tell his story but to not mentione the death of his son,

that such a wonderful ability was only possible through working the

program of AA.

I see this as one of the crulest and most heartless 'achievements'

of the program that I've ever heard of, to be able to put a program

obligation above one's grrief for the death of a son.

-----

http://listen.to/benbradley

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Perhaps I am being naive. Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.

But I've never seen an AA group be this callous. If someone else has

witnessed it, I certainly won't argue, but I will be astonished and

appalled.

ben bradley wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8371

> At 06:57 PM 9/30/99 -0700, kayleighs@... wrote:

> >Apple -

> >

> > " Relapse " should be " recidivism, " " grizzly " should be " grisly. "

> >

> >I think this is a good essay, but could you choose a less heinous

> >crime? AA members will respond that they would never say such things

> >under these circumstances,

>

> I wouldn't bet on it, I've known many AA'ers who have lots of

'tough

> love'...

>

> >and perhaps rightly so.

>

> Certainly rightly so, and they should also never blame the victims

> of lesser crimes.

>

> >The only time I

> >have ever seen a group struck speechless was when a man spoke of his

> >grief over the recent death from meningitis of his 18-month-old

child.

> >It seemed as though everyone present realized that this was a

situation

> >page 449 could not address, nor could any other of the slogans that

> >usually sprang to their lips.

> >

> >It's no good attacking AA for hypothetical actions that they really

> >would not engage in. Would groups in your community have responded

in

> >this manner?

>

> That's an interesting question, and one way I could think of to

> answer that is to go to a meeting where no one is likely to know me

> and tell the above story, and see their reactions. But I choose not to

> go to an AA meeting today. :)

>

> I've told this at least once already on this list, but I'll repeat

> it because it struck me so strangely at the time I heard it.

> A man talked about a friend of his telling his story at a speaker's

> meeting. His friend's son had died earlier that day, and not only did

> this friend tell his story, he didn't even mention his son's death.

> The man telling about his friend said how much he admired his friend's

> program (or his friend's working of THE Program), to not only

> be able to tell his story but to not mentione the death of his son,

> that such a wonderful ability was only possible through working the

> program of AA.

> I see this as one of the crulest and most heartless 'achievements'

> of the program that I've ever heard of, to be able to put a program

> obligation above one's grrief for the death of a son.

>

> -----

> http://listen.to/benbradley

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Perhaps I am being naive. Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.

But I've never seen an AA group be this callous. If someone else has

witnessed it, I certainly won't argue, but I will be astonished and

appalled.

ben bradley wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8371

> At 06:57 PM 9/30/99 -0700, kayleighs@... wrote:

> >Apple -

> >

> > " Relapse " should be " recidivism, " " grizzly " should be " grisly. "

> >

> >I think this is a good essay, but could you choose a less heinous

> >crime? AA members will respond that they would never say such things

> >under these circumstances,

>

> I wouldn't bet on it, I've known many AA'ers who have lots of

'tough

> love'...

>

> >and perhaps rightly so.

>

> Certainly rightly so, and they should also never blame the victims

> of lesser crimes.

>

> >The only time I

> >have ever seen a group struck speechless was when a man spoke of his

> >grief over the recent death from meningitis of his 18-month-old

child.

> >It seemed as though everyone present realized that this was a

situation

> >page 449 could not address, nor could any other of the slogans that

> >usually sprang to their lips.

> >

> >It's no good attacking AA for hypothetical actions that they really

> >would not engage in. Would groups in your community have responded

in

> >this manner?

>

> That's an interesting question, and one way I could think of to

> answer that is to go to a meeting where no one is likely to know me

> and tell the above story, and see their reactions. But I choose not to

> go to an AA meeting today. :)

>

> I've told this at least once already on this list, but I'll repeat

> it because it struck me so strangely at the time I heard it.

> A man talked about a friend of his telling his story at a speaker's

> meeting. His friend's son had died earlier that day, and not only did

> this friend tell his story, he didn't even mention his son's death.

> The man telling about his friend said how much he admired his friend's

> program (or his friend's working of THE Program), to not only

> be able to tell his story but to not mentione the death of his son,

> that such a wonderful ability was only possible through working the

> program of AA.

> I see this as one of the crulest and most heartless 'achievements'

> of the program that I've ever heard of, to be able to put a program

> obligation above one's grrief for the death of a son.

>

> -----

> http://listen.to/benbradley

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think most people in AA do encourage a member to " forgive and forget " in

most any situation. An example is one meeting I went to where a guy talked

about how he was, 'sexually abused by a grandparent as a kid.' He said his

sponsor had encouraged him to apologize to the grandparent and forgive him.

The victim said in the open that he 'didn't see how he could do that. How

he could see his part.' In the end, he asked others for their opinion.

Nobody else in the mtg. said a word about it.

So, I think this kind of advice happens behind the scenes or in

private. Usually between a sponsor and sponsee. Its rarely said in an open

meeting, " quit your whining. You did something to cause the abuse. " I had

that same thing happen to me. I talked at several meetings and got really

positive feedback. Then, in private, one on one conversations after the

mtg. I got a lot of 'advice.' One guy, told me he was tired of hearing me

'whine at every meeting.' That hit me like a ton of bricks. Here I was

thinking I was doing the right thing by openly discussing my problems with

new sobriety. I thought I was being honest.

One of the things I picked up on in AA is that most the open discussion

meetings try to stay upbeat and real compassionate. A newcomer may ask for

help and then get 10 or 12 really understanding and loving responses from

other members. I think people try to put there best face forward in public.

Its what goes on after the meeting that matters.

>From: kayleighs@...

>Reply-To: 12-step-freeegroups

>To: 12-step-freeeGroups

>Subject: Re: Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue of Social

>Responsibility

>Date: Thu, 30 Sep 1999 18:57:35 -0700

>

>Apple -

>

> " Relapse " should be " recidivism, " " grizzly " should be " grisly. "

>

>I think this is a good essay, but could you choose a less heinous

>crime? AA members will respond that they would never say such things

>under these circumstances, and perhaps rightly so. The only time I

>have ever seen a group struck speechless was when a man spoke of his

>grief over the recent death from meningitis of his 18-month-old child.

>It seemed as though everyone present realized that this was a situation

>page 449 could not address, nor could any other of the slogans that

>usually sprang to their lips.

>

>It's no good attacking AA for hypothetical actions that they really

>would not engage in. Would groups in your community have responded in

>this manner?

>

>appledt-@... wrote:

>original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8362

> > Rough draft... comments?

> > Apple

> >

> >

> >

> > Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue of Social Responsibility

> >

> > forgive, Forgive.... FORGIVE everyone..... and be free, Free, FREE of

> > resentment. God, not we, is in charge. Does this popular AA chant

> > sound familiar?

> >

> > I will start out with a case scenario:

> >

> > Kanka, a six year old girl from New Jersey was brutally raped

>and

> > murdered by ??, a convicted child molester who was released from

>prison

> > after serving ?? years for a prior case of child molestation. Mrs.

> > Kanka, little 's mother, outraged and rightfully so, not only

> > pursued the conviction of .... but has become active in getting

>'s

> > Law passed, a controversial, yet needed law which would make the names

> > and addresses of child molesters public, so that parents could learn

>if

> > such " former " criminals reside in their neighborhoods, since the

> > relapse rate for child molesters is so high.

> >

> > Luckily for us, Mrs. Kanka was an " earth person " or " normie " , because

> > if she were not, we may not have 's Law today. Let me explain:

> >

> > Mrs. Kanka's little girl, died a horrible death. A grizzly rape and

> > murder which was completely undeserved. Her young life was stolen

>from

> > her, through a brutal crime. Mrs. Kanka's grief is understandable,

>her

> > anger justifiable.

> >

> > Her strong feelings motivated her to notify the police and

>subsequently

> > to effect the arrest and conviction of the perpetrator, sending him to

> > prison so the safety of the public could be assured, and justice could

> > be served.

> >

> > Furthermore, Mrs. Kanka channeled her justifiable anger to effect

> > positive social change by working for the passing of 's Law, to

> > help protect other children and parents from such horrors.

> >

> > But what would have happened if Mrs. Kanka had been an AA member?

> >

> > 1. Would Mrs. Kanka have been labeled as sick for holding a

>resentment

> > too long?

> > 2. Would she have been told to " look at her part " ?

> > Why wasn't she with her daughter? Why was her daughter playing

> > alone? Did she dress her six year old daughter too sexy? Did little

> > ask for it? Was little a tease who got what was coming to

> > her?

> > 3. The question of her " irresponsible mothering " would have come up

>in

> > the quest for " her part " .

> > 4. Would Mrs. Kanka have been instructed by her fellow AAs to prepare

> > caffeinated beverages for her peers in order to get out of herself?

> > 5. Would she have been told to pray for the murderer until her

> > resentment goes away?

> > 6. Would she have been pressured to forgive?

> > 7. Would her AA peers gently remind her that she's " powerless " over

> > the situation, that she should " practice acceptance " , and that God

>will

> > take care of it all if she hits her knees every night and prays.

> > 8. Would she have been told that the murderer is just a sick child of

> > God who needs to be treated with the same gentleness and care as an

>ill

> > person who has pneumonia? (see page 898 of the Big Book)

> > 9. Would she have tossed and turned for months and years afterwards,

> > wondering, how she had disobeyed " God's Will " and invited this tragedy

> > upon herself?

> > 10. Would she have had to wrestle with the idea that God would

>protect

> > other children if she only prayed rightly, rather than pursuing the

> > passing of a law?

> > 11. Would her pursuit of the passing of 's Law be seen by her

> > peers as meddling with the affairs of God?

> > 12. Would Mrs. Kanka have been shamed by her AA group, because her

> > visible display of emotions reminded the child molesters in her AA

> > home group of their own past crimes, and made them feel guilty for it.

> > (shame Mrs. Kanka!)

> > 13. Would Mrs. Kanka's sponsor have told her to read page 449 of the

> > Big Book? The bit about " acceptance is the answer to all my problems

> > today. "

> > 14. Would Mrs. Kanka's strong emotions have been labeled dangerous --

> > a sign of potential relapse, possibly causing her fellow AAs to pull

> > away from her because it's disruptive to their serenity to be in the

> > company of a highly emotionally charged person?

> > 15. Would Mrs. Kanka's grieving process be curtailed with group

> > pressure to " get out of herself " and help newcomers... the ones who

>are

> > REALLY suffering?

> >

> >

> > My answer, is I hope like hell not! I hope that we could answer NO to

> > all of the above questions! But sadly, I'm not sure that we could. I

> > have heard too many cases where the victim was made to suffer further

> > in the rooms of AA, and this disgusts me to no end.

> >

> > I have heard too many stories of malicious individuals who are let off

> > the hook, so to speak, for their actions, however heinous, provided

> > that they admit to themselves, God and to another person the exact

> > nature of their wrongs. Reparations to the victim or justice served?

> > None!

> >

> > Sometimes victims project feelings of guilt and shame onto criminals

>to

> > comfort themselves and to try to cope psychologically.

> >

> > " I know what guilt feels like. I'm sure God's punishing him with

> > guilt! " they may say.

> > Let's test the accuracy of that assumption:

> >

> > The typical psychological profile of sociopaths and psychopaths show

> > 1) little affect (shallowness of feeling)

> > 2) a lack of compassion/guilt

> >

> > Here are some excellent links for learning more about these antisocial

> > personality disorders which characterize many (but not all) criminals:

> >

> > So premature forgiveness, can and does, in many cases, leave the crime

> > unaddressed, and the criminal walking around, without the internal

> > reminder of guilt or the external reminder of justice. Something is

> > missing here.

> >

> > Furthermore,what are the chances that the sociopath will reviolate

> > under these conditions? High.

> > What are the chances that he will reviolate if we pray rightly? (drum

> > roll...............) High.

> >

> > In such cases, taking action by " Turning it over " is taking no

>action.

> > It is teaching criminals that they can get away with what they've done

> > without consequences, that their victims are the sick ones for having

> > anger or resentment.

> >

> > This attitude does not make me feel safe in this world. I do not want

> > to see our criminal justice system replaced with a judge who simply

> > says " The people of this state find you guilty as charged, but we

> > forgive you, so go on your merry way and we'll try not to be angry " .

> >

> > " Duh.... okay judge.... " [slash slash] [murder murder] [rape rape]

> > " Duh... what was YOUR part little miss victim? You owe me an

>amends....

> > ha ha ha ha ha ha " [slash slash] [murder murder] [rape rape]

> >

> > Nobody is helped by blind forgiveness and blanket acceptance of evil!

> > Not the victim, not the perpetrator and not the community!

> >

> > And as for acceptance being the answer to all our problems today?

> > Baloney! We could thank the fathers of our country who fought the

> > British for our independence that they did not possess such a world

> > view. We can thank Abraham Lincoln and Luther King for being

> > proactive rather than passively accepting of world conditions.

> >

> > Here's a little quote on acceptance from " Your Erroneous Zones " by Dr.

> > Wayne Dyer:

> >

> > Progress, yours personally and the world's depends on unreasonable

>men,

> > rather than people who adapt to their society and accept whatever

>comes

> > along. Progress depends on individuals who are innovators, who reject

> > convention and fashion their own worlds. In order to shift from

>coping

> > to doing, you'll have to learn to resist enculturation and the many

> > pressures to conform. To function fully, a resistance to

>enculturation

> > is almost a given. You may be viewed by some as insubordinate, which

> > is the price you'll have to pay for thinking for yourself. You may be

> > seen as different, be labeled selfish or rebellious, incur disapproval

> > from many " normal " people, and at times be ostracized. Some people

>will

> > not take kindly to your resistance to norms they've adopted for

> > themselves. You'll hear the old argument of, " What if everybody

>decided

> > to obey only the rules they wanted to? What kind of society would we

> > have then? " The simple answer to this, of course is that everybody

> > won't! Most people's addiction to external supports and shoulds

> > prohibits such a stand.

> >

> > What we're talking about here has nothing to do with anarchy. No one

> > wants to destroy society, but many of us would like to give the

> > individual more freedom within it, freedom from meaningless musts and

> > silly shoulds.

> >

> > Even sensible laws and rules will not apply under every set of

> > circumstances. What we are striving for is choice, that is, the

>ability

> > to be free from the servant mentality of constant adherence to the

> > shoulds.

> >

> >

> >

> >

>

>

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

>

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

> - Simplifying group communications

>

>

>

>

______________________________________________________

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think most people in AA do encourage a member to " forgive and forget " in

most any situation. An example is one meeting I went to where a guy talked

about how he was, 'sexually abused by a grandparent as a kid.' He said his

sponsor had encouraged him to apologize to the grandparent and forgive him.

The victim said in the open that he 'didn't see how he could do that. How

he could see his part.' In the end, he asked others for their opinion.

Nobody else in the mtg. said a word about it.

So, I think this kind of advice happens behind the scenes or in

private. Usually between a sponsor and sponsee. Its rarely said in an open

meeting, " quit your whining. You did something to cause the abuse. " I had

that same thing happen to me. I talked at several meetings and got really

positive feedback. Then, in private, one on one conversations after the

mtg. I got a lot of 'advice.' One guy, told me he was tired of hearing me

'whine at every meeting.' That hit me like a ton of bricks. Here I was

thinking I was doing the right thing by openly discussing my problems with

new sobriety. I thought I was being honest.

One of the things I picked up on in AA is that most the open discussion

meetings try to stay upbeat and real compassionate. A newcomer may ask for

help and then get 10 or 12 really understanding and loving responses from

other members. I think people try to put there best face forward in public.

Its what goes on after the meeting that matters.

>From: kayleighs@...

>Reply-To: 12-step-freeegroups

>To: 12-step-freeeGroups

>Subject: Re: Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue of Social

>Responsibility

>Date: Thu, 30 Sep 1999 18:57:35 -0700

>

>Apple -

>

> " Relapse " should be " recidivism, " " grizzly " should be " grisly. "

>

>I think this is a good essay, but could you choose a less heinous

>crime? AA members will respond that they would never say such things

>under these circumstances, and perhaps rightly so. The only time I

>have ever seen a group struck speechless was when a man spoke of his

>grief over the recent death from meningitis of his 18-month-old child.

>It seemed as though everyone present realized that this was a situation

>page 449 could not address, nor could any other of the slogans that

>usually sprang to their lips.

>

>It's no good attacking AA for hypothetical actions that they really

>would not engage in. Would groups in your community have responded in

>this manner?

>

>appledt-@... wrote:

>original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8362

> > Rough draft... comments?

> > Apple

> >

> >

> >

> > Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue of Social Responsibility

> >

> > forgive, Forgive.... FORGIVE everyone..... and be free, Free, FREE of

> > resentment. God, not we, is in charge. Does this popular AA chant

> > sound familiar?

> >

> > I will start out with a case scenario:

> >

> > Kanka, a six year old girl from New Jersey was brutally raped

>and

> > murdered by ??, a convicted child molester who was released from

>prison

> > after serving ?? years for a prior case of child molestation. Mrs.

> > Kanka, little 's mother, outraged and rightfully so, not only

> > pursued the conviction of .... but has become active in getting

>'s

> > Law passed, a controversial, yet needed law which would make the names

> > and addresses of child molesters public, so that parents could learn

>if

> > such " former " criminals reside in their neighborhoods, since the

> > relapse rate for child molesters is so high.

> >

> > Luckily for us, Mrs. Kanka was an " earth person " or " normie " , because

> > if she were not, we may not have 's Law today. Let me explain:

> >

> > Mrs. Kanka's little girl, died a horrible death. A grizzly rape and

> > murder which was completely undeserved. Her young life was stolen

>from

> > her, through a brutal crime. Mrs. Kanka's grief is understandable,

>her

> > anger justifiable.

> >

> > Her strong feelings motivated her to notify the police and

>subsequently

> > to effect the arrest and conviction of the perpetrator, sending him to

> > prison so the safety of the public could be assured, and justice could

> > be served.

> >

> > Furthermore, Mrs. Kanka channeled her justifiable anger to effect

> > positive social change by working for the passing of 's Law, to

> > help protect other children and parents from such horrors.

> >

> > But what would have happened if Mrs. Kanka had been an AA member?

> >

> > 1. Would Mrs. Kanka have been labeled as sick for holding a

>resentment

> > too long?

> > 2. Would she have been told to " look at her part " ?

> > Why wasn't she with her daughter? Why was her daughter playing

> > alone? Did she dress her six year old daughter too sexy? Did little

> > ask for it? Was little a tease who got what was coming to

> > her?

> > 3. The question of her " irresponsible mothering " would have come up

>in

> > the quest for " her part " .

> > 4. Would Mrs. Kanka have been instructed by her fellow AAs to prepare

> > caffeinated beverages for her peers in order to get out of herself?

> > 5. Would she have been told to pray for the murderer until her

> > resentment goes away?

> > 6. Would she have been pressured to forgive?

> > 7. Would her AA peers gently remind her that she's " powerless " over

> > the situation, that she should " practice acceptance " , and that God

>will

> > take care of it all if she hits her knees every night and prays.

> > 8. Would she have been told that the murderer is just a sick child of

> > God who needs to be treated with the same gentleness and care as an

>ill

> > person who has pneumonia? (see page 898 of the Big Book)

> > 9. Would she have tossed and turned for months and years afterwards,

> > wondering, how she had disobeyed " God's Will " and invited this tragedy

> > upon herself?

> > 10. Would she have had to wrestle with the idea that God would

>protect

> > other children if she only prayed rightly, rather than pursuing the

> > passing of a law?

> > 11. Would her pursuit of the passing of 's Law be seen by her

> > peers as meddling with the affairs of God?

> > 12. Would Mrs. Kanka have been shamed by her AA group, because her

> > visible display of emotions reminded the child molesters in her AA

> > home group of their own past crimes, and made them feel guilty for it.

> > (shame Mrs. Kanka!)

> > 13. Would Mrs. Kanka's sponsor have told her to read page 449 of the

> > Big Book? The bit about " acceptance is the answer to all my problems

> > today. "

> > 14. Would Mrs. Kanka's strong emotions have been labeled dangerous --

> > a sign of potential relapse, possibly causing her fellow AAs to pull

> > away from her because it's disruptive to their serenity to be in the

> > company of a highly emotionally charged person?

> > 15. Would Mrs. Kanka's grieving process be curtailed with group

> > pressure to " get out of herself " and help newcomers... the ones who

>are

> > REALLY suffering?

> >

> >

> > My answer, is I hope like hell not! I hope that we could answer NO to

> > all of the above questions! But sadly, I'm not sure that we could. I

> > have heard too many cases where the victim was made to suffer further

> > in the rooms of AA, and this disgusts me to no end.

> >

> > I have heard too many stories of malicious individuals who are let off

> > the hook, so to speak, for their actions, however heinous, provided

> > that they admit to themselves, God and to another person the exact

> > nature of their wrongs. Reparations to the victim or justice served?

> > None!

> >

> > Sometimes victims project feelings of guilt and shame onto criminals

>to

> > comfort themselves and to try to cope psychologically.

> >

> > " I know what guilt feels like. I'm sure God's punishing him with

> > guilt! " they may say.

> > Let's test the accuracy of that assumption:

> >

> > The typical psychological profile of sociopaths and psychopaths show

> > 1) little affect (shallowness of feeling)

> > 2) a lack of compassion/guilt

> >

> > Here are some excellent links for learning more about these antisocial

> > personality disorders which characterize many (but not all) criminals:

> >

> > So premature forgiveness, can and does, in many cases, leave the crime

> > unaddressed, and the criminal walking around, without the internal

> > reminder of guilt or the external reminder of justice. Something is

> > missing here.

> >

> > Furthermore,what are the chances that the sociopath will reviolate

> > under these conditions? High.

> > What are the chances that he will reviolate if we pray rightly? (drum

> > roll...............) High.

> >

> > In such cases, taking action by " Turning it over " is taking no

>action.

> > It is teaching criminals that they can get away with what they've done

> > without consequences, that their victims are the sick ones for having

> > anger or resentment.

> >

> > This attitude does not make me feel safe in this world. I do not want

> > to see our criminal justice system replaced with a judge who simply

> > says " The people of this state find you guilty as charged, but we

> > forgive you, so go on your merry way and we'll try not to be angry " .

> >

> > " Duh.... okay judge.... " [slash slash] [murder murder] [rape rape]

> > " Duh... what was YOUR part little miss victim? You owe me an

>amends....

> > ha ha ha ha ha ha " [slash slash] [murder murder] [rape rape]

> >

> > Nobody is helped by blind forgiveness and blanket acceptance of evil!

> > Not the victim, not the perpetrator and not the community!

> >

> > And as for acceptance being the answer to all our problems today?

> > Baloney! We could thank the fathers of our country who fought the

> > British for our independence that they did not possess such a world

> > view. We can thank Abraham Lincoln and Luther King for being

> > proactive rather than passively accepting of world conditions.

> >

> > Here's a little quote on acceptance from " Your Erroneous Zones " by Dr.

> > Wayne Dyer:

> >

> > Progress, yours personally and the world's depends on unreasonable

>men,

> > rather than people who adapt to their society and accept whatever

>comes

> > along. Progress depends on individuals who are innovators, who reject

> > convention and fashion their own worlds. In order to shift from

>coping

> > to doing, you'll have to learn to resist enculturation and the many

> > pressures to conform. To function fully, a resistance to

>enculturation

> > is almost a given. You may be viewed by some as insubordinate, which

> > is the price you'll have to pay for thinking for yourself. You may be

> > seen as different, be labeled selfish or rebellious, incur disapproval

> > from many " normal " people, and at times be ostracized. Some people

>will

> > not take kindly to your resistance to norms they've adopted for

> > themselves. You'll hear the old argument of, " What if everybody

>decided

> > to obey only the rules they wanted to? What kind of society would we

> > have then? " The simple answer to this, of course is that everybody

> > won't! Most people's addiction to external supports and shoulds

> > prohibits such a stand.

> >

> > What we're talking about here has nothing to do with anarchy. No one

> > wants to destroy society, but many of us would like to give the

> > individual more freedom within it, freedom from meaningless musts and

> > silly shoulds.

> >

> > Even sensible laws and rules will not apply under every set of

> > circumstances. What we are striving for is choice, that is, the

>ability

> > to be free from the servant mentality of constant adherence to the

> > shoulds.

> >

> >

> >

> >

>

>

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

>

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

> - Simplifying group communications

>

>

>

>

______________________________________________________

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think most people in AA do encourage a member to " forgive and forget " in

most any situation. An example is one meeting I went to where a guy talked

about how he was, 'sexually abused by a grandparent as a kid.' He said his

sponsor had encouraged him to apologize to the grandparent and forgive him.

The victim said in the open that he 'didn't see how he could do that. How

he could see his part.' In the end, he asked others for their opinion.

Nobody else in the mtg. said a word about it.

So, I think this kind of advice happens behind the scenes or in

private. Usually between a sponsor and sponsee. Its rarely said in an open

meeting, " quit your whining. You did something to cause the abuse. " I had

that same thing happen to me. I talked at several meetings and got really

positive feedback. Then, in private, one on one conversations after the

mtg. I got a lot of 'advice.' One guy, told me he was tired of hearing me

'whine at every meeting.' That hit me like a ton of bricks. Here I was

thinking I was doing the right thing by openly discussing my problems with

new sobriety. I thought I was being honest.

One of the things I picked up on in AA is that most the open discussion

meetings try to stay upbeat and real compassionate. A newcomer may ask for

help and then get 10 or 12 really understanding and loving responses from

other members. I think people try to put there best face forward in public.

Its what goes on after the meeting that matters.

>From: kayleighs@...

>Reply-To: 12-step-freeegroups

>To: 12-step-freeeGroups

>Subject: Re: Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue of Social

>Responsibility

>Date: Thu, 30 Sep 1999 18:57:35 -0700

>

>Apple -

>

> " Relapse " should be " recidivism, " " grizzly " should be " grisly. "

>

>I think this is a good essay, but could you choose a less heinous

>crime? AA members will respond that they would never say such things

>under these circumstances, and perhaps rightly so. The only time I

>have ever seen a group struck speechless was when a man spoke of his

>grief over the recent death from meningitis of his 18-month-old child.

>It seemed as though everyone present realized that this was a situation

>page 449 could not address, nor could any other of the slogans that

>usually sprang to their lips.

>

>It's no good attacking AA for hypothetical actions that they really

>would not engage in. Would groups in your community have responded in

>this manner?

>

>appledt-@... wrote:

>original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8362

> > Rough draft... comments?

> > Apple

> >

> >

> >

> > Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue of Social Responsibility

> >

> > forgive, Forgive.... FORGIVE everyone..... and be free, Free, FREE of

> > resentment. God, not we, is in charge. Does this popular AA chant

> > sound familiar?

> >

> > I will start out with a case scenario:

> >

> > Kanka, a six year old girl from New Jersey was brutally raped

>and

> > murdered by ??, a convicted child molester who was released from

>prison

> > after serving ?? years for a prior case of child molestation. Mrs.

> > Kanka, little 's mother, outraged and rightfully so, not only

> > pursued the conviction of .... but has become active in getting

>'s

> > Law passed, a controversial, yet needed law which would make the names

> > and addresses of child molesters public, so that parents could learn

>if

> > such " former " criminals reside in their neighborhoods, since the

> > relapse rate for child molesters is so high.

> >

> > Luckily for us, Mrs. Kanka was an " earth person " or " normie " , because

> > if she were not, we may not have 's Law today. Let me explain:

> >

> > Mrs. Kanka's little girl, died a horrible death. A grizzly rape and

> > murder which was completely undeserved. Her young life was stolen

>from

> > her, through a brutal crime. Mrs. Kanka's grief is understandable,

>her

> > anger justifiable.

> >

> > Her strong feelings motivated her to notify the police and

>subsequently

> > to effect the arrest and conviction of the perpetrator, sending him to

> > prison so the safety of the public could be assured, and justice could

> > be served.

> >

> > Furthermore, Mrs. Kanka channeled her justifiable anger to effect

> > positive social change by working for the passing of 's Law, to

> > help protect other children and parents from such horrors.

> >

> > But what would have happened if Mrs. Kanka had been an AA member?

> >

> > 1. Would Mrs. Kanka have been labeled as sick for holding a

>resentment

> > too long?

> > 2. Would she have been told to " look at her part " ?

> > Why wasn't she with her daughter? Why was her daughter playing

> > alone? Did she dress her six year old daughter too sexy? Did little

> > ask for it? Was little a tease who got what was coming to

> > her?

> > 3. The question of her " irresponsible mothering " would have come up

>in

> > the quest for " her part " .

> > 4. Would Mrs. Kanka have been instructed by her fellow AAs to prepare

> > caffeinated beverages for her peers in order to get out of herself?

> > 5. Would she have been told to pray for the murderer until her

> > resentment goes away?

> > 6. Would she have been pressured to forgive?

> > 7. Would her AA peers gently remind her that she's " powerless " over

> > the situation, that she should " practice acceptance " , and that God

>will

> > take care of it all if she hits her knees every night and prays.

> > 8. Would she have been told that the murderer is just a sick child of

> > God who needs to be treated with the same gentleness and care as an

>ill

> > person who has pneumonia? (see page 898 of the Big Book)

> > 9. Would she have tossed and turned for months and years afterwards,

> > wondering, how she had disobeyed " God's Will " and invited this tragedy

> > upon herself?

> > 10. Would she have had to wrestle with the idea that God would

>protect

> > other children if she only prayed rightly, rather than pursuing the

> > passing of a law?

> > 11. Would her pursuit of the passing of 's Law be seen by her

> > peers as meddling with the affairs of God?

> > 12. Would Mrs. Kanka have been shamed by her AA group, because her

> > visible display of emotions reminded the child molesters in her AA

> > home group of their own past crimes, and made them feel guilty for it.

> > (shame Mrs. Kanka!)

> > 13. Would Mrs. Kanka's sponsor have told her to read page 449 of the

> > Big Book? The bit about " acceptance is the answer to all my problems

> > today. "

> > 14. Would Mrs. Kanka's strong emotions have been labeled dangerous --

> > a sign of potential relapse, possibly causing her fellow AAs to pull

> > away from her because it's disruptive to their serenity to be in the

> > company of a highly emotionally charged person?

> > 15. Would Mrs. Kanka's grieving process be curtailed with group

> > pressure to " get out of herself " and help newcomers... the ones who

>are

> > REALLY suffering?

> >

> >

> > My answer, is I hope like hell not! I hope that we could answer NO to

> > all of the above questions! But sadly, I'm not sure that we could. I

> > have heard too many cases where the victim was made to suffer further

> > in the rooms of AA, and this disgusts me to no end.

> >

> > I have heard too many stories of malicious individuals who are let off

> > the hook, so to speak, for their actions, however heinous, provided

> > that they admit to themselves, God and to another person the exact

> > nature of their wrongs. Reparations to the victim or justice served?

> > None!

> >

> > Sometimes victims project feelings of guilt and shame onto criminals

>to

> > comfort themselves and to try to cope psychologically.

> >

> > " I know what guilt feels like. I'm sure God's punishing him with

> > guilt! " they may say.

> > Let's test the accuracy of that assumption:

> >

> > The typical psychological profile of sociopaths and psychopaths show

> > 1) little affect (shallowness of feeling)

> > 2) a lack of compassion/guilt

> >

> > Here are some excellent links for learning more about these antisocial

> > personality disorders which characterize many (but not all) criminals:

> >

> > So premature forgiveness, can and does, in many cases, leave the crime

> > unaddressed, and the criminal walking around, without the internal

> > reminder of guilt or the external reminder of justice. Something is

> > missing here.

> >

> > Furthermore,what are the chances that the sociopath will reviolate

> > under these conditions? High.

> > What are the chances that he will reviolate if we pray rightly? (drum

> > roll...............) High.

> >

> > In such cases, taking action by " Turning it over " is taking no

>action.

> > It is teaching criminals that they can get away with what they've done

> > without consequences, that their victims are the sick ones for having

> > anger or resentment.

> >

> > This attitude does not make me feel safe in this world. I do not want

> > to see our criminal justice system replaced with a judge who simply

> > says " The people of this state find you guilty as charged, but we

> > forgive you, so go on your merry way and we'll try not to be angry " .

> >

> > " Duh.... okay judge.... " [slash slash] [murder murder] [rape rape]

> > " Duh... what was YOUR part little miss victim? You owe me an

>amends....

> > ha ha ha ha ha ha " [slash slash] [murder murder] [rape rape]

> >

> > Nobody is helped by blind forgiveness and blanket acceptance of evil!

> > Not the victim, not the perpetrator and not the community!

> >

> > And as for acceptance being the answer to all our problems today?

> > Baloney! We could thank the fathers of our country who fought the

> > British for our independence that they did not possess such a world

> > view. We can thank Abraham Lincoln and Luther King for being

> > proactive rather than passively accepting of world conditions.

> >

> > Here's a little quote on acceptance from " Your Erroneous Zones " by Dr.

> > Wayne Dyer:

> >

> > Progress, yours personally and the world's depends on unreasonable

>men,

> > rather than people who adapt to their society and accept whatever

>comes

> > along. Progress depends on individuals who are innovators, who reject

> > convention and fashion their own worlds. In order to shift from

>coping

> > to doing, you'll have to learn to resist enculturation and the many

> > pressures to conform. To function fully, a resistance to

>enculturation

> > is almost a given. You may be viewed by some as insubordinate, which

> > is the price you'll have to pay for thinking for yourself. You may be

> > seen as different, be labeled selfish or rebellious, incur disapproval

> > from many " normal " people, and at times be ostracized. Some people

>will

> > not take kindly to your resistance to norms they've adopted for

> > themselves. You'll hear the old argument of, " What if everybody

>decided

> > to obey only the rules they wanted to? What kind of society would we

> > have then? " The simple answer to this, of course is that everybody

> > won't! Most people's addiction to external supports and shoulds

> > prohibits such a stand.

> >

> > What we're talking about here has nothing to do with anarchy. No one

> > wants to destroy society, but many of us would like to give the

> > individual more freedom within it, freedom from meaningless musts and

> > silly shoulds.

> >

> > Even sensible laws and rules will not apply under every set of

> > circumstances. What we are striving for is choice, that is, the

>ability

> > to be free from the servant mentality of constant adherence to the

> > shoulds.

> >

> >

> >

> >

>

>

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

>

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

> - Simplifying group communications

>

>

>

>

______________________________________________________

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Why don't you write up this experience for Apple? It would be very

powerful, I think, since it really happened, and really points up the

deficiencies of 12 step groups.

" rebekah " wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8381

>

> Believe it or not, this can and does happen. I won't say that

EVERYONE

> reacts the way described, but it only takes a few times to feel

crushed.

> Time and time again I have experienced 12 stepppers try desperately

to apply

> philosophies to situations in ludicrous ways.

>

> Back in '97, I was going through a tremendous amount of grief

following

> the deaths of some very significant people in my life. I had someone

tell me

> it was probably my fault because I needed to become a better person

....

> obviously these people wanted to get away from me. I should examine

that I

> was in some kind of DENIAL. Acceptance was the answer to all of my

> problems....along with a reference to 449. Nothing happens by

mistake!!!!

> Someone else suggested God wanted to teach me something! (Maybe to

run like

> hell away from idiots and thier stupid platitudes and

quasi-psychology)

>

> On one occasion very shortly after my son died, I was called to do

a 12

> step visit. (my name had been on some list for years after i left)

When I

> explained my situation and gracefully refused, they became very

indignant

> and tried to lecture me about how selfish I was for grieving.(in my

opinion

> taking care of myself) I should get off of my pity pot and go help

others.

> (somebody wanted a ride to a meeeting)

>

> I have been patted on the head and told " God never gives you more

than you

> can handle " as a response to my normal feelings of grief and sadness.

I have

> had people walk away from me with statements of " Sorry, I don't do

feelings "

> with some sort of sense of pride and superiority.

>

> I can say that ANGER has been a motivating factor to take care of

myself.

> I no longer look for compassion or understanding from people who are

sick

> and emotionally incapable of giving it.

>

> I realized early on that if I was unhappy with aspects of myself

and my

> life, I was the one who was responsible for doing something about it.

I

> saved my own life....not the program, not some sponsor...me. After

years of

> thinking someone else had the answers, I finally started looking

inside

> myself for them.

> Rebekah

>

>

>

>

> ----------

> >From: kayleighs@...

> >To: 12-step-freeegroups

> >Subject: Re: Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue of

Social

> Responsibility

> >Date: Thu, Sep 30, 1999, 10:47 PM

> >

>

> >Perhaps I am being naive. Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.

> >But I've never seen an AA group be this callous. If someone else has

> >witnessed it, I certainly won't argue, but I will be astonished and

> >appalled.

> >

> >ben bradley wrote:

> >original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=83

71

> >> At 06:57 PM 9/30/99 -0700, kayleighs@... wrote:

> >> >Apple -

> >> >

> >> > " Relapse " should be " recidivism, " " grizzly " should be " grisly. "

> >> >

> >> >I think this is a good essay, but could you choose a less heinous

> >> >crime? AA members will respond that they would never say such

things

> >> >under these circumstances,

> >>

> >> I wouldn't bet on it, I've known many AA'ers who have lots of

> >'tough

> >> love'...

> >>

> >> >and perhaps rightly so.

> >>

> >> Certainly rightly so, and they should also never blame the

victims

> >> of lesser crimes.

> >>

> >> >The only time I

> >> >have ever seen a group struck speechless was when a man spoke of

his

> >> >grief over the recent death from meningitis of his 18-month-old

> >child.

> >> >It seemed as though everyone present realized that this was a

> >situation

> >> >page 449 could not address, nor could any other of the slogans

that

> >> >usually sprang to their lips.

> >> >

> >> >It's no good attacking AA for hypothetical actions that they

really

> >> >would not engage in. Would groups in your community have

responded

> >in

> >> >this manner?

> >>

> >> That's an interesting question, and one way I could think of to

> >> answer that is to go to a meeting where no one is likely to know me

> >> and tell the above story, and see their reactions. But I choose

not to

> >> go to an AA meeting today. :)

> >>

> >> I've told this at least once already on this list, but I'll

repeat

> >> it because it struck me so strangely at the time I heard it.

> >> A man talked about a friend of his telling his story at a

speaker's

> >> meeting. His friend's son had died earlier that day, and not only

did

> >> this friend tell his story, he didn't even mention his son's death.

> >> The man telling about his friend said how much he admired his

friend's

> >> program (or his friend's working of THE Program), to not only

> >> be able to tell his story but to not mentione the death of his son,

> >> that such a wonderful ability was only possible through working the

> >> program of AA.

> >> I see this as one of the crulest and most heartless

'achievements'

> >> of the program that I've ever heard of, to be able to put a program

> >> obligation above one's grrief for the death of a son.

> >>

> >> -----

> >> http://listen.to/benbradley

> >

> >

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Why don't you write up this experience for Apple? It would be very

powerful, I think, since it really happened, and really points up the

deficiencies of 12 step groups.

" rebekah " wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8381

>

> Believe it or not, this can and does happen. I won't say that

EVERYONE

> reacts the way described, but it only takes a few times to feel

crushed.

> Time and time again I have experienced 12 stepppers try desperately

to apply

> philosophies to situations in ludicrous ways.

>

> Back in '97, I was going through a tremendous amount of grief

following

> the deaths of some very significant people in my life. I had someone

tell me

> it was probably my fault because I needed to become a better person

....

> obviously these people wanted to get away from me. I should examine

that I

> was in some kind of DENIAL. Acceptance was the answer to all of my

> problems....along with a reference to 449. Nothing happens by

mistake!!!!

> Someone else suggested God wanted to teach me something! (Maybe to

run like

> hell away from idiots and thier stupid platitudes and

quasi-psychology)

>

> On one occasion very shortly after my son died, I was called to do

a 12

> step visit. (my name had been on some list for years after i left)

When I

> explained my situation and gracefully refused, they became very

indignant

> and tried to lecture me about how selfish I was for grieving.(in my

opinion

> taking care of myself) I should get off of my pity pot and go help

others.

> (somebody wanted a ride to a meeeting)

>

> I have been patted on the head and told " God never gives you more

than you

> can handle " as a response to my normal feelings of grief and sadness.

I have

> had people walk away from me with statements of " Sorry, I don't do

feelings "

> with some sort of sense of pride and superiority.

>

> I can say that ANGER has been a motivating factor to take care of

myself.

> I no longer look for compassion or understanding from people who are

sick

> and emotionally incapable of giving it.

>

> I realized early on that if I was unhappy with aspects of myself

and my

> life, I was the one who was responsible for doing something about it.

I

> saved my own life....not the program, not some sponsor...me. After

years of

> thinking someone else had the answers, I finally started looking

inside

> myself for them.

> Rebekah

>

>

>

>

> ----------

> >From: kayleighs@...

> >To: 12-step-freeegroups

> >Subject: Re: Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue of

Social

> Responsibility

> >Date: Thu, Sep 30, 1999, 10:47 PM

> >

>

> >Perhaps I am being naive. Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.

> >But I've never seen an AA group be this callous. If someone else has

> >witnessed it, I certainly won't argue, but I will be astonished and

> >appalled.

> >

> >ben bradley wrote:

> >original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=83

71

> >> At 06:57 PM 9/30/99 -0700, kayleighs@... wrote:

> >> >Apple -

> >> >

> >> > " Relapse " should be " recidivism, " " grizzly " should be " grisly. "

> >> >

> >> >I think this is a good essay, but could you choose a less heinous

> >> >crime? AA members will respond that they would never say such

things

> >> >under these circumstances,

> >>

> >> I wouldn't bet on it, I've known many AA'ers who have lots of

> >'tough

> >> love'...

> >>

> >> >and perhaps rightly so.

> >>

> >> Certainly rightly so, and they should also never blame the

victims

> >> of lesser crimes.

> >>

> >> >The only time I

> >> >have ever seen a group struck speechless was when a man spoke of

his

> >> >grief over the recent death from meningitis of his 18-month-old

> >child.

> >> >It seemed as though everyone present realized that this was a

> >situation

> >> >page 449 could not address, nor could any other of the slogans

that

> >> >usually sprang to their lips.

> >> >

> >> >It's no good attacking AA for hypothetical actions that they

really

> >> >would not engage in. Would groups in your community have

responded

> >in

> >> >this manner?

> >>

> >> That's an interesting question, and one way I could think of to

> >> answer that is to go to a meeting where no one is likely to know me

> >> and tell the above story, and see their reactions. But I choose

not to

> >> go to an AA meeting today. :)

> >>

> >> I've told this at least once already on this list, but I'll

repeat

> >> it because it struck me so strangely at the time I heard it.

> >> A man talked about a friend of his telling his story at a

speaker's

> >> meeting. His friend's son had died earlier that day, and not only

did

> >> this friend tell his story, he didn't even mention his son's death.

> >> The man telling about his friend said how much he admired his

friend's

> >> program (or his friend's working of THE Program), to not only

> >> be able to tell his story but to not mentione the death of his son,

> >> that such a wonderful ability was only possible through working the

> >> program of AA.

> >> I see this as one of the crulest and most heartless

'achievements'

> >> of the program that I've ever heard of, to be able to put a program

> >> obligation above one's grrief for the death of a son.

> >>

> >> -----

> >> http://listen.to/benbradley

> >

> >

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Why don't you write up this experience for Apple? It would be very

powerful, I think, since it really happened, and really points up the

deficiencies of 12 step groups.

" rebekah " wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8381

>

> Believe it or not, this can and does happen. I won't say that

EVERYONE

> reacts the way described, but it only takes a few times to feel

crushed.

> Time and time again I have experienced 12 stepppers try desperately

to apply

> philosophies to situations in ludicrous ways.

>

> Back in '97, I was going through a tremendous amount of grief

following

> the deaths of some very significant people in my life. I had someone

tell me

> it was probably my fault because I needed to become a better person

....

> obviously these people wanted to get away from me. I should examine

that I

> was in some kind of DENIAL. Acceptance was the answer to all of my

> problems....along with a reference to 449. Nothing happens by

mistake!!!!

> Someone else suggested God wanted to teach me something! (Maybe to

run like

> hell away from idiots and thier stupid platitudes and

quasi-psychology)

>

> On one occasion very shortly after my son died, I was called to do

a 12

> step visit. (my name had been on some list for years after i left)

When I

> explained my situation and gracefully refused, they became very

indignant

> and tried to lecture me about how selfish I was for grieving.(in my

opinion

> taking care of myself) I should get off of my pity pot and go help

others.

> (somebody wanted a ride to a meeeting)

>

> I have been patted on the head and told " God never gives you more

than you

> can handle " as a response to my normal feelings of grief and sadness.

I have

> had people walk away from me with statements of " Sorry, I don't do

feelings "

> with some sort of sense of pride and superiority.

>

> I can say that ANGER has been a motivating factor to take care of

myself.

> I no longer look for compassion or understanding from people who are

sick

> and emotionally incapable of giving it.

>

> I realized early on that if I was unhappy with aspects of myself

and my

> life, I was the one who was responsible for doing something about it.

I

> saved my own life....not the program, not some sponsor...me. After

years of

> thinking someone else had the answers, I finally started looking

inside

> myself for them.

> Rebekah

>

>

>

>

> ----------

> >From: kayleighs@...

> >To: 12-step-freeegroups

> >Subject: Re: Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue of

Social

> Responsibility

> >Date: Thu, Sep 30, 1999, 10:47 PM

> >

>

> >Perhaps I am being naive. Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.

> >But I've never seen an AA group be this callous. If someone else has

> >witnessed it, I certainly won't argue, but I will be astonished and

> >appalled.

> >

> >ben bradley wrote:

> >original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=83

71

> >> At 06:57 PM 9/30/99 -0700, kayleighs@... wrote:

> >> >Apple -

> >> >

> >> > " Relapse " should be " recidivism, " " grizzly " should be " grisly. "

> >> >

> >> >I think this is a good essay, but could you choose a less heinous

> >> >crime? AA members will respond that they would never say such

things

> >> >under these circumstances,

> >>

> >> I wouldn't bet on it, I've known many AA'ers who have lots of

> >'tough

> >> love'...

> >>

> >> >and perhaps rightly so.

> >>

> >> Certainly rightly so, and they should also never blame the

victims

> >> of lesser crimes.

> >>

> >> >The only time I

> >> >have ever seen a group struck speechless was when a man spoke of

his

> >> >grief over the recent death from meningitis of his 18-month-old

> >child.

> >> >It seemed as though everyone present realized that this was a

> >situation

> >> >page 449 could not address, nor could any other of the slogans

that

> >> >usually sprang to their lips.

> >> >

> >> >It's no good attacking AA for hypothetical actions that they

really

> >> >would not engage in. Would groups in your community have

responded

> >in

> >> >this manner?

> >>

> >> That's an interesting question, and one way I could think of to

> >> answer that is to go to a meeting where no one is likely to know me

> >> and tell the above story, and see their reactions. But I choose

not to

> >> go to an AA meeting today. :)

> >>

> >> I've told this at least once already on this list, but I'll

repeat

> >> it because it struck me so strangely at the time I heard it.

> >> A man talked about a friend of his telling his story at a

speaker's

> >> meeting. His friend's son had died earlier that day, and not only

did

> >> this friend tell his story, he didn't even mention his son's death.

> >> The man telling about his friend said how much he admired his

friend's

> >> program (or his friend's working of THE Program), to not only

> >> be able to tell his story but to not mentione the death of his son,

> >> that such a wonderful ability was only possible through working the

> >> program of AA.

> >> I see this as one of the crulest and most heartless

'achievements'

> >> of the program that I've ever heard of, to be able to put a program

> >> obligation above one's grrief for the death of a son.

> >>

> >> -----

> >> http://listen.to/benbradley

> >

> >

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Apple, Rebekah:

This is a topic I addressed in my (first) submission to the 12-step

Horror book. The more I think of it, the angrier I can get. AA works

to SUPPRESS emotion instead of EXPRESS.

I have run into AA'ers since leaving and the mask is there. There is

so much turmoil in the eyes. I have a developmentally disabled

daughter who was raped by two men whe she was 16. When I took them to

court, there was no one in AA there with me- " that's too close " they

said. Now I know what they meant-too close to emotion. (They both

went to prison for 3 years each)

I am a very passionate person and my anger (along with other various

and sundry emotions) comes out. As I look over the 15 years I went to

tables and remember the looks when I cried and expressed anger and only

heard the platitudes about turning it over and letting go and letting

God. I scared a lot of people, I guess! I would not accept that I

shouldn't feel, but my expression frightened a lot of people-why?

Because if you express anger, you will lose CONTROL? Control of what?

appledt-@... wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8385

> It tears my heart out. Really it does.

> Apple

>

> " rebekah " wrote:

> original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8374

> >

> > This really tears my heart out. Do you remember the man who was

> crying in

> > the meeting? I am so angry that AA and other 12 step groups promote

> the LIE

> > that the program is the " last house on the block " .

> >

> > How many desperately unhappy people are afraid to admit to

themselves

> and

> > others that AA doesn't hold all of the answers. I have seen so many

> people

> > do service work, stand up and proclaim the glories of the program

> while

> > silently suffering some horrendous personal tragedy. Thier fear is

> that they

> > can't possibly admit(to themselves or others) that maybe there are

> some

> > things that are beyond the program. The " poster child " syndrome. I

> watched

> > helplessly as both my son and best friend fell victim to this kind

of

> > thinking and lost thier lives. They were terribly busy trying to set

> an

> > example to others all the while ignoring thier own pain because it

was

> > " selfish self-involved " . Rebekah

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

> > >From: appledtp@...

> > >To: 12-step-freeegroups

> > >Subject: Re: Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue

of

> Social

> > Responsibility

> > >Date: Fri, Oct 1, 1999, 2:54 AM

> > >

> >

> > >This sickens me... it's as if the program is a giant feelings

> eraser.

> > >Horrible.

> > >Apple

> > >

> > >> A man talked about a friend of his telling his story at a

> speaker's

> > >> meeting. His friend's son had died earlier that day, and not only

> did

> > >> this friend tell his story, he didn't even mention his son's

death.

> > >> The man telling about his friend said how much he admired his

> friend's

> > >> program (or his friend's working of THE Program), to not only

> > >> be able to tell his story but to not mentione the death of his

son,

> > >> that such a wonderful ability was only possible through working

the

> > >> program of AA.

> > >> I see this as one of the crulest and most heartless

> 'achievements'

> > >> of the program that I've ever heard of, to be able to put a

program

> > >> obligation above one's grrief for the death of a son.

> > >>

> > >> -----

> > >> http://listen.to/benbradley

> > >

> > >

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Apple, Rebekah:

This is a topic I addressed in my (first) submission to the 12-step

Horror book. The more I think of it, the angrier I can get. AA works

to SUPPRESS emotion instead of EXPRESS.

I have run into AA'ers since leaving and the mask is there. There is

so much turmoil in the eyes. I have a developmentally disabled

daughter who was raped by two men whe she was 16. When I took them to

court, there was no one in AA there with me- " that's too close " they

said. Now I know what they meant-too close to emotion. (They both

went to prison for 3 years each)

I am a very passionate person and my anger (along with other various

and sundry emotions) comes out. As I look over the 15 years I went to

tables and remember the looks when I cried and expressed anger and only

heard the platitudes about turning it over and letting go and letting

God. I scared a lot of people, I guess! I would not accept that I

shouldn't feel, but my expression frightened a lot of people-why?

Because if you express anger, you will lose CONTROL? Control of what?

appledt-@... wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8385

> It tears my heart out. Really it does.

> Apple

>

> " rebekah " wrote:

> original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8374

> >

> > This really tears my heart out. Do you remember the man who was

> crying in

> > the meeting? I am so angry that AA and other 12 step groups promote

> the LIE

> > that the program is the " last house on the block " .

> >

> > How many desperately unhappy people are afraid to admit to

themselves

> and

> > others that AA doesn't hold all of the answers. I have seen so many

> people

> > do service work, stand up and proclaim the glories of the program

> while

> > silently suffering some horrendous personal tragedy. Thier fear is

> that they

> > can't possibly admit(to themselves or others) that maybe there are

> some

> > things that are beyond the program. The " poster child " syndrome. I

> watched

> > helplessly as both my son and best friend fell victim to this kind

of

> > thinking and lost thier lives. They were terribly busy trying to set

> an

> > example to others all the while ignoring thier own pain because it

was

> > " selfish self-involved " . Rebekah

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

> > >From: appledtp@...

> > >To: 12-step-freeegroups

> > >Subject: Re: Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue

of

> Social

> > Responsibility

> > >Date: Fri, Oct 1, 1999, 2:54 AM

> > >

> >

> > >This sickens me... it's as if the program is a giant feelings

> eraser.

> > >Horrible.

> > >Apple

> > >

> > >> A man talked about a friend of his telling his story at a

> speaker's

> > >> meeting. His friend's son had died earlier that day, and not only

> did

> > >> this friend tell his story, he didn't even mention his son's

death.

> > >> The man telling about his friend said how much he admired his

> friend's

> > >> program (or his friend's working of THE Program), to not only

> > >> be able to tell his story but to not mentione the death of his

son,

> > >> that such a wonderful ability was only possible through working

the

> > >> program of AA.

> > >> I see this as one of the crulest and most heartless

> 'achievements'

> > >> of the program that I've ever heard of, to be able to put a

program

> > >> obligation above one's grrief for the death of a son.

> > >>

> > >> -----

> > >> http://listen.to/benbradley

> > >

> > >

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

what i think is sick about aa 9among any many things) is they will say

to thsoe going thru hard experinces, 'turn it over, let it go,

acceptance, blah blah blah " .

but they cant accept that anger, grief, saddness, even exhuburance are

all human emotions. there is nothing wrong with any of them. they are

part of humna experince and ahve value. instead they would try to shut

anyone up who is feeling them by saying 'get out of yourself or your on

pitty pot, your happiness is a " pink cloud " etc...

i belive i read in " combating mind control cults " by steven hassan

(great book, look for it in and noble) that this lack of emotion

is one common elemets these cults exhibit. it goes hand in hand with

mindless obiendance. i think cult mechanisms recognize any definative

emotion is soething that can be tuned agianst it. blandess, numbness

can be molded like clay. its bliss to the cult machinary.

wrose-@... wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8391

> Apple, Rebekah:

>

> This is a topic I addressed in my (first) submission to the 12-step

> Horror book. The more I think of it, the angrier I can get. AA works

> to SUPPRESS emotion instead of EXPRESS.

>

> I have run into AA'ers since leaving and the mask is there. There is

> so much turmoil in the eyes. I have a developmentally disabled

> daughter who was raped by two men whe she was 16. When I took them

to

> court, there was no one in AA there with me- " that's too close " they

> said. Now I know what they meant-too close to emotion. (They both

> went to prison for 3 years each)

>

> I am a very passionate person and my anger (along with other various

> and sundry emotions) comes out. As I look over the 15 years I went to

> tables and remember the looks when I cried and expressed anger and

only

> heard the platitudes about turning it over and letting go and letting

> God. I scared a lot of people, I guess! I would not accept that I

> shouldn't feel, but my expression frightened a lot of people-why?

> Because if you express anger, you will lose CONTROL? Control of what?

>

>

>

> appledt-@... wrote:

> original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8385

> > It tears my heart out. Really it does.

> > Apple

> >

> > " rebekah " wrote:

> > original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8

374

> > >

> > > This really tears my heart out. Do you remember the man who was

> > crying in

> > > the meeting? I am so angry that AA and other 12 step groups

promote

> > the LIE

> > > that the program is the " last house on the block " .

> > >

> > > How many desperately unhappy people are afraid to admit to

> themselves

> > and

> > > others that AA doesn't hold all of the answers. I have seen so

many

> > people

> > > do service work, stand up and proclaim the glories of the program

> > while

> > > silently suffering some horrendous personal tragedy. Thier fear is

> > that they

> > > can't possibly admit(to themselves or others) that maybe there are

> > some

> > > things that are beyond the program. The " poster child " syndrome. I

> > watched

> > > helplessly as both my son and best friend fell victim to this kind

> of

> > > thinking and lost thier lives. They were terribly busy trying to

set

> > an

> > > example to others all the while ignoring thier own pain because it

> was

> > > " selfish self-involved " . Rebekah

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

> > > >From: appledtp@...

> > > >To: 12-step-freeegroups

> > > >Subject: Re: Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue

> of

> > Social

> > > Responsibility

> > > >Date: Fri, Oct 1, 1999, 2:54 AM

> > > >

> > >

> > > >This sickens me... it's as if the program is a giant feelings

> > eraser.

> > > >Horrible.

> > > >Apple

> > > >

> > > >> A man talked about a friend of his telling his story at a

> > speaker's

> > > >> meeting. His friend's son had died earlier that day, and not

only

> > did

> > > >> this friend tell his story, he didn't even mention his son's

> death.

> > > >> The man telling about his friend said how much he admired his

> > friend's

> > > >> program (or his friend's working of THE Program), to not only

> > > >> be able to tell his story but to not mentione the death of his

> son,

> > > >> that such a wonderful ability was only possible through working

> the

> > > >> program of AA.

> > > >> I see this as one of the crulest and most heartless

> > 'achievements'

> > > >> of the program that I've ever heard of, to be able to put a

> program

> > > >> obligation above one's grrief for the death of a son.

> > > >>

> > > >> -----

> > > >> http://listen.to/benbradley

> > > >

> > > >

> >

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

what i think is sick about aa 9among any many things) is they will say

to thsoe going thru hard experinces, 'turn it over, let it go,

acceptance, blah blah blah " .

but they cant accept that anger, grief, saddness, even exhuburance are

all human emotions. there is nothing wrong with any of them. they are

part of humna experince and ahve value. instead they would try to shut

anyone up who is feeling them by saying 'get out of yourself or your on

pitty pot, your happiness is a " pink cloud " etc...

i belive i read in " combating mind control cults " by steven hassan

(great book, look for it in and noble) that this lack of emotion

is one common elemets these cults exhibit. it goes hand in hand with

mindless obiendance. i think cult mechanisms recognize any definative

emotion is soething that can be tuned agianst it. blandess, numbness

can be molded like clay. its bliss to the cult machinary.

wrose-@... wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8391

> Apple, Rebekah:

>

> This is a topic I addressed in my (first) submission to the 12-step

> Horror book. The more I think of it, the angrier I can get. AA works

> to SUPPRESS emotion instead of EXPRESS.

>

> I have run into AA'ers since leaving and the mask is there. There is

> so much turmoil in the eyes. I have a developmentally disabled

> daughter who was raped by two men whe she was 16. When I took them

to

> court, there was no one in AA there with me- " that's too close " they

> said. Now I know what they meant-too close to emotion. (They both

> went to prison for 3 years each)

>

> I am a very passionate person and my anger (along with other various

> and sundry emotions) comes out. As I look over the 15 years I went to

> tables and remember the looks when I cried and expressed anger and

only

> heard the platitudes about turning it over and letting go and letting

> God. I scared a lot of people, I guess! I would not accept that I

> shouldn't feel, but my expression frightened a lot of people-why?

> Because if you express anger, you will lose CONTROL? Control of what?

>

>

>

> appledt-@... wrote:

> original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8385

> > It tears my heart out. Really it does.

> > Apple

> >

> > " rebekah " wrote:

> > original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8

374

> > >

> > > This really tears my heart out. Do you remember the man who was

> > crying in

> > > the meeting? I am so angry that AA and other 12 step groups

promote

> > the LIE

> > > that the program is the " last house on the block " .

> > >

> > > How many desperately unhappy people are afraid to admit to

> themselves

> > and

> > > others that AA doesn't hold all of the answers. I have seen so

many

> > people

> > > do service work, stand up and proclaim the glories of the program

> > while

> > > silently suffering some horrendous personal tragedy. Thier fear is

> > that they

> > > can't possibly admit(to themselves or others) that maybe there are

> > some

> > > things that are beyond the program. The " poster child " syndrome. I

> > watched

> > > helplessly as both my son and best friend fell victim to this kind

> of

> > > thinking and lost thier lives. They were terribly busy trying to

set

> > an

> > > example to others all the while ignoring thier own pain because it

> was

> > > " selfish self-involved " . Rebekah

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

> > > >From: appledtp@...

> > > >To: 12-step-freeegroups

> > > >Subject: Re: Forgiveness, Acceptance and the Issue

> of

> > Social

> > > Responsibility

> > > >Date: Fri, Oct 1, 1999, 2:54 AM

> > > >

> > >

> > > >This sickens me... it's as if the program is a giant feelings

> > eraser.

> > > >Horrible.

> > > >Apple

> > > >

> > > >> A man talked about a friend of his telling his story at a

> > speaker's

> > > >> meeting. His friend's son had died earlier that day, and not

only

> > did

> > > >> this friend tell his story, he didn't even mention his son's

> death.

> > > >> The man telling about his friend said how much he admired his

> > friend's

> > > >> program (or his friend's working of THE Program), to not only

> > > >> be able to tell his story but to not mentione the death of his

> son,

> > > >> that such a wonderful ability was only possible through working

> the

> > > >> program of AA.

> > > >> I see this as one of the crulest and most heartless

> > 'achievements'

> > > >> of the program that I've ever heard of, to be able to put a

> program

> > > >> obligation above one's grrief for the death of a son.

> > > >>

> > > >> -----

> > > >> http://listen.to/benbradley

> > > >

> > > >

> >

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Bingo!

I even heard a woman judge once refer to a rape as a " relationship

problem " . The woman was talking to me.

Apple

kayleigh-@... wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8388

> I agree that AAers are clueless when it comes to sympathizing with a

> real loss. The man I described soon left the group. I don't know

> where he went, but I sure hope he found some help.

>

> I also totally agree about rape -- I have heard too many women blame

> themselves for being raped, and of course this gives the guys the idea

> that anything goes. If she's the guilty one, then he's not, right?

> Unfortunately the legal system still buys into this idea, that if a

> woman is drunk, then the guy is less culpable. I don't believe this

> for a minute, if a woman is elderly or retarded we regard him as more

> culpable, if anything, and I don't think that it relieves him of any

> guilt whatsoever if the woman is drunk. He still had to make up his

> mind to do it and act on that decision. To believe that the woman's

> being drunk somehow excuses him is to believe that men are prey to

> uncontrollable sexual urges, and that this is somehow natural and

> forgivable.

>

> appledt-@... wrote:

> original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8379

> > Thanks for the tips....

> > Typos corrected. (It's not " Grizzly " as in bear? hmmmm...) Yes, I

do

> > think some people from my AA community would have told the mother

some

> > of the things from the list. I do not think they would have said

the

> > most obviously idiotic ones perhaps. I can't help but think of

> > Rebekah's story (also on the site) when I made the list. She

suffered

> > the loss of her son, and received little or no support from the AA

> > community and was actually told to " get out of herself " with service

> > work while still grieving. And rape? Forget it... around these

parts,

> > there's a lingering group conclusion that the woman asked for it and

> > put herself in that position, unlike the other saavy women in AA who

> > havent' been raped.

> > Apple

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > > Apple -

> > >

> > > " Relapse " should be " recidivism, " " grizzly " should be " grisly. "

> > >

> > > I think this is a good essay, but could you choose a less heinous

> > > crime? AA members will respond that they would never say such

> things

> > > under these circumstances, and perhaps rightly so. The only time

I

> > > have ever seen a group struck speechless was when a man spoke of

his

> > > grief over the recent death from meningitis of his 18-month-old

> > child.

> > > It seemed as though everyone present realized that this was a

> > situation

> > > page 449 could not address, nor could any other of the slogans

that

> > > usually sprang to their lips.

> > >

> > > It's no good attacking AA for hypothetical actions that they

really

> > > would not engage in. Would groups in your community have

responded

> in

> > > this manner?

> > >

> >

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Bingo!

I even heard a woman judge once refer to a rape as a " relationship

problem " . The woman was talking to me.

Apple

kayleigh-@... wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8388

> I agree that AAers are clueless when it comes to sympathizing with a

> real loss. The man I described soon left the group. I don't know

> where he went, but I sure hope he found some help.

>

> I also totally agree about rape -- I have heard too many women blame

> themselves for being raped, and of course this gives the guys the idea

> that anything goes. If she's the guilty one, then he's not, right?

> Unfortunately the legal system still buys into this idea, that if a

> woman is drunk, then the guy is less culpable. I don't believe this

> for a minute, if a woman is elderly or retarded we regard him as more

> culpable, if anything, and I don't think that it relieves him of any

> guilt whatsoever if the woman is drunk. He still had to make up his

> mind to do it and act on that decision. To believe that the woman's

> being drunk somehow excuses him is to believe that men are prey to

> uncontrollable sexual urges, and that this is somehow natural and

> forgivable.

>

> appledt-@... wrote:

> original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8379

> > Thanks for the tips....

> > Typos corrected. (It's not " Grizzly " as in bear? hmmmm...) Yes, I

do

> > think some people from my AA community would have told the mother

some

> > of the things from the list. I do not think they would have said

the

> > most obviously idiotic ones perhaps. I can't help but think of

> > Rebekah's story (also on the site) when I made the list. She

suffered

> > the loss of her son, and received little or no support from the AA

> > community and was actually told to " get out of herself " with service

> > work while still grieving. And rape? Forget it... around these

parts,

> > there's a lingering group conclusion that the woman asked for it and

> > put herself in that position, unlike the other saavy women in AA who

> > havent' been raped.

> > Apple

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > > Apple -

> > >

> > > " Relapse " should be " recidivism, " " grizzly " should be " grisly. "

> > >

> > > I think this is a good essay, but could you choose a less heinous

> > > crime? AA members will respond that they would never say such

> things

> > > under these circumstances, and perhaps rightly so. The only time

I

> > > have ever seen a group struck speechless was when a man spoke of

his

> > > grief over the recent death from meningitis of his 18-month-old

> > child.

> > > It seemed as though everyone present realized that this was a

> > situation

> > > page 449 could not address, nor could any other of the slogans

that

> > > usually sprang to their lips.

> > >

> > > It's no good attacking AA for hypothetical actions that they

really

> > > would not engage in. Would groups in your community have

responded

> in

> > > this manner?

> > >

> >

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

kayleigh-@... wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8388

> I agree that AAers are clueless when it comes to sympathizing with a

> real loss.

On the day I got my first GA (gambler's) Chip for 6 months good

behavior, I got to give the " guest " recitation of my story. I had

rushed back to Vegas from SAn Francisco, where I had accidently run

into the very first public showing of the Aids Quilt (1987). I had to

rush back because I didn't want to miss the " honor " that was to be

bestowed upon me that night. While at the quilt viewing, I found a

panel in memory of my very first boyfriend from college. I was

grieving him, and sorrowful about now having been personally touched by

the plague, which had only existed as rumor to me at that point. I

added this this new chapter to my " story " (gamblelog) at the meeting. I

was actually crying in public and at the podium no less. Expressing my

grief and sorrow did make me feel better. After the meeting, Mike I.

(12 years abstinent, who declared at every available opportunity that

Jesus was his higher power) literally dragged me into the hallway, and

told me that what I had said was totally inappropriate for a meeting,

and that I had better never tell that story again. He told me that I

was supposed to tell only how bad it was out there and that I was now

happy and joyous and free, and that Serenity kept me from feeling

otherwise and that my serenity came from my program. period!

Until tonight, (because of having read Apples Essay, and the critiques

and stories about AA's failure regarding expressing emotion vs.

stuffing, and other posts relating to it in this thread,) I thought he

was talking about never mentioning being gay, Aids, etc. I went back

into the closet at GA for the rest of my time. It suddenly dawned on

me a few minutes ago that he was actually talking about my emotions. I

had put those into the closet also while I was still a groupie. But,

I'm crying while I'm typing this. Halelujah!

PS, I heard from someone that mike gave up 22 years of abstinance

sometime last year by putting a quarter in a slot machine at the 7-11.

It was said he had the best program in the whole city, and was

great-great-great grandsponsor to hundreds of groupers. He had to

start all over again. Poor Mike, still powerless after all those

years! I'll bet Satan made him do it.

Jack

Link to comment
Share on other sites

jack,

nice pesonal story, very moving. its my belief that once you get clean

and sober, all that 12 step group have to beat you down with as signs

of your " disease " is your own humanity.

i ahev a great essay by the sports writer of thewashngton post on GA

how he believes its misguided if your interested.

dave

jackandj-@... wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8401

> kayleigh-@... wrote:

> original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8388

> > I agree that AAers are clueless when it comes to sympathizing with a

> > real loss.

>

> On the day I got my first GA (gambler's) Chip for 6 months good

> behavior, I got to give the " guest " recitation of my story. I had

> rushed back to Vegas from SAn Francisco, where I had accidently run

> into the very first public showing of the Aids Quilt (1987). I had to

> rush back because I didn't want to miss the " honor " that was to be

> bestowed upon me that night. While at the quilt viewing, I found a

> panel in memory of my very first boyfriend from college. I was

> grieving him, and sorrowful about now having been personally touched

by

> the plague, which had only existed as rumor to me at that point. I

> added this this new chapter to my " story " (gamblelog) at the meeting.

I

> was actually crying in public and at the podium no less. Expressing

my

> grief and sorrow did make me feel better. After the meeting, Mike I.

> (12 years abstinent, who declared at every available opportunity that

> Jesus was his higher power) literally dragged me into the hallway, and

> told me that what I had said was totally inappropriate for a meeting,

> and that I had better never tell that story again. He told me that I

> was supposed to tell only how bad it was out there and that I was now

> happy and joyous and free, and that Serenity kept me from feeling

> otherwise and that my serenity came from my program. period!

>

> Until tonight, (because of having read Apples Essay, and the critiques

> and stories about AA's failure regarding expressing emotion vs.

> stuffing, and other posts relating to it in this thread,) I thought he

> was talking about never mentioning being gay, Aids, etc. I went back

> into the closet at GA for the rest of my time. It suddenly dawned on

> me a few minutes ago that he was actually talking about my emotions. I

> had put those into the closet also while I was still a groupie. But,

> I'm crying while I'm typing this. Halelujah!

>

> PS, I heard from someone that mike gave up 22 years of abstinance

> sometime last year by putting a quarter in a slot machine at the 7-11.

> It was said he had the best program in the whole city, and was

> great-great-great grandsponsor to hundreds of groupers. He had to

> start all over again. Poor Mike, still powerless after all those

> years! I'll bet Satan made him do it.

>

> Jack

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

jack,

nice pesonal story, very moving. its my belief that once you get clean

and sober, all that 12 step group have to beat you down with as signs

of your " disease " is your own humanity.

i ahev a great essay by the sports writer of thewashngton post on GA

how he believes its misguided if your interested.

dave

jackandj-@... wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8401

> kayleigh-@... wrote:

> original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8388

> > I agree that AAers are clueless when it comes to sympathizing with a

> > real loss.

>

> On the day I got my first GA (gambler's) Chip for 6 months good

> behavior, I got to give the " guest " recitation of my story. I had

> rushed back to Vegas from SAn Francisco, where I had accidently run

> into the very first public showing of the Aids Quilt (1987). I had to

> rush back because I didn't want to miss the " honor " that was to be

> bestowed upon me that night. While at the quilt viewing, I found a

> panel in memory of my very first boyfriend from college. I was

> grieving him, and sorrowful about now having been personally touched

by

> the plague, which had only existed as rumor to me at that point. I

> added this this new chapter to my " story " (gamblelog) at the meeting.

I

> was actually crying in public and at the podium no less. Expressing

my

> grief and sorrow did make me feel better. After the meeting, Mike I.

> (12 years abstinent, who declared at every available opportunity that

> Jesus was his higher power) literally dragged me into the hallway, and

> told me that what I had said was totally inappropriate for a meeting,

> and that I had better never tell that story again. He told me that I

> was supposed to tell only how bad it was out there and that I was now

> happy and joyous and free, and that Serenity kept me from feeling

> otherwise and that my serenity came from my program. period!

>

> Until tonight, (because of having read Apples Essay, and the critiques

> and stories about AA's failure regarding expressing emotion vs.

> stuffing, and other posts relating to it in this thread,) I thought he

> was talking about never mentioning being gay, Aids, etc. I went back

> into the closet at GA for the rest of my time. It suddenly dawned on

> me a few minutes ago that he was actually talking about my emotions. I

> had put those into the closet also while I was still a groupie. But,

> I'm crying while I'm typing this. Halelujah!

>

> PS, I heard from someone that mike gave up 22 years of abstinance

> sometime last year by putting a quarter in a slot machine at the 7-11.

> It was said he had the best program in the whole city, and was

> great-great-great grandsponsor to hundreds of groupers. He had to

> start all over again. Poor Mike, still powerless after all those

> years! I'll bet Satan made him do it.

>

> Jack

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jack, can I weave this into your story? It's important stuff! The

world needs to know what kind of BS goes down.

Apple

jackandj-@... wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8401

> kayleigh-@... wrote:

> original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8388

> > I agree that AAers are clueless when it comes to sympathizing with a

> > real loss.

>

> On the day I got my first GA (gambler's) Chip for 6 months good

> behavior, I got to give the " guest " recitation of my story. I had

> rushed back to Vegas from SAn Francisco, where I had accidently run

> into the very first public showing of the Aids Quilt (1987). I had to

> rush back because I didn't want to miss the " honor " that was to be

> bestowed upon me that night. While at the quilt viewing, I found a

> panel in memory of my very first boyfriend from college. I was

> grieving him, and sorrowful about now having been personally touched

by

> the plague, which had only existed as rumor to me at that point. I

> added this this new chapter to my " story " (gamblelog) at the meeting.

I

> was actually crying in public and at the podium no less. Expressing

my

> grief and sorrow did make me feel better. After the meeting, Mike I.

> (12 years abstinent, who declared at every available opportunity that

> Jesus was his higher power) literally dragged me into the hallway, and

> told me that what I had said was totally inappropriate for a meeting,

> and that I had better never tell that story again. He told me that I

> was supposed to tell only how bad it was out there and that I was now

> happy and joyous and free, and that Serenity kept me from feeling

> otherwise and that my serenity came from my program. period!

>

> Until tonight, (because of having read Apples Essay, and the critiques

> and stories about AA's failure regarding expressing emotion vs.

> stuffing, and other posts relating to it in this thread,) I thought he

> was talking about never mentioning being gay, Aids, etc. I went back

> into the closet at GA for the rest of my time. It suddenly dawned on

> me a few minutes ago that he was actually talking about my emotions. I

> had put those into the closet also while I was still a groupie. But,

> I'm crying while I'm typing this. Halelujah!

>

> PS, I heard from someone that mike gave up 22 years of abstinance

> sometime last year by putting a quarter in a slot machine at the 7-11.

> It was said he had the best program in the whole city, and was

> great-great-great grandsponsor to hundreds of groupers. He had to

> start all over again. Poor Mike, still powerless after all those

> years! I'll bet Satan made him do it.

>

> Jack

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jack, can I weave this into your story? It's important stuff! The

world needs to know what kind of BS goes down.

Apple

jackandj-@... wrote:

original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8401

> kayleigh-@... wrote:

> original article:/group/12-step-free/?start=8388

> > I agree that AAers are clueless when it comes to sympathizing with a

> > real loss.

>

> On the day I got my first GA (gambler's) Chip for 6 months good

> behavior, I got to give the " guest " recitation of my story. I had

> rushed back to Vegas from SAn Francisco, where I had accidently run

> into the very first public showing of the Aids Quilt (1987). I had to

> rush back because I didn't want to miss the " honor " that was to be

> bestowed upon me that night. While at the quilt viewing, I found a

> panel in memory of my very first boyfriend from college. I was

> grieving him, and sorrowful about now having been personally touched

by

> the plague, which had only existed as rumor to me at that point. I

> added this this new chapter to my " story " (gamblelog) at the meeting.

I

> was actually crying in public and at the podium no less. Expressing

my

> grief and sorrow did make me feel better. After the meeting, Mike I.

> (12 years abstinent, who declared at every available opportunity that

> Jesus was his higher power) literally dragged me into the hallway, and

> told me that what I had said was totally inappropriate for a meeting,

> and that I had better never tell that story again. He told me that I

> was supposed to tell only how bad it was out there and that I was now

> happy and joyous and free, and that Serenity kept me from feeling

> otherwise and that my serenity came from my program. period!

>

> Until tonight, (because of having read Apples Essay, and the critiques

> and stories about AA's failure regarding expressing emotion vs.

> stuffing, and other posts relating to it in this thread,) I thought he

> was talking about never mentioning being gay, Aids, etc. I went back

> into the closet at GA for the rest of my time. It suddenly dawned on

> me a few minutes ago that he was actually talking about my emotions. I

> had put those into the closet also while I was still a groupie. But,

> I'm crying while I'm typing this. Halelujah!

>

> PS, I heard from someone that mike gave up 22 years of abstinance

> sometime last year by putting a quarter in a slot machine at the 7-11.

> It was said he had the best program in the whole city, and was

> great-great-great grandsponsor to hundreds of groupers. He had to

> start all over again. Poor Mike, still powerless after all those

> years! I'll bet Satan made him do it.

>

> Jack

>

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...