Guest guest Posted August 1, 2001 Report Share Posted August 1, 2001 welcome , that was indeed a good observation your friend made. when i was in AA someone was trying to make a different point and asked " if there is any other way to be sober, why aren't those people here telling us about it? " he was challenging the idea any thing else worked, when i left AA i knew the reason was because AA wouldn't welcome their ideas. AA has been the same for 60 years for a reason, it doesn't want to be changed or challenged to grow beyond what it is. it demands conformity of experience (spiritual awakening), and those who dont share that experience aren't really made comfortable ( " we agnostics " sets that tone). i too stopped thinking of myself as alcoholic, its a masochistic label to apply ones former habit as their identify for life. i met a man in AA who introduced himself as " im an alcoholic and my name is pete " because he said his alcoholism was pertinent to his identify than his name. that sent a red flags up to me that there was something wrong there. there already books on the subject, but please dont let that discourage your from writing one. as for your friends maybe you can help them along by telling them about this forum or introducing them to the books of Ken Ragge, charles bufe, and stanton peele. there also is a book called AA Horror stories, which may be of interest to you, you can find any of them on amazon.com or your local giant bookstore /coffee shop. also check out the links and files section of this group to help your research further along Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 1, 2001 Report Share Posted August 1, 2001 welcome , that was indeed a good observation your friend made. when i was in AA someone was trying to make a different point and asked " if there is any other way to be sober, why aren't those people here telling us about it? " he was challenging the idea any thing else worked, when i left AA i knew the reason was because AA wouldn't welcome their ideas. AA has been the same for 60 years for a reason, it doesn't want to be changed or challenged to grow beyond what it is. it demands conformity of experience (spiritual awakening), and those who dont share that experience aren't really made comfortable ( " we agnostics " sets that tone). i too stopped thinking of myself as alcoholic, its a masochistic label to apply ones former habit as their identify for life. i met a man in AA who introduced himself as " im an alcoholic and my name is pete " because he said his alcoholism was pertinent to his identify than his name. that sent a red flags up to me that there was something wrong there. there already books on the subject, but please dont let that discourage your from writing one. as for your friends maybe you can help them along by telling them about this forum or introducing them to the books of Ken Ragge, charles bufe, and stanton peele. there also is a book called AA Horror stories, which may be of interest to you, you can find any of them on amazon.com or your local giant bookstore /coffee shop. also check out the links and files section of this group to help your research further along Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 1, 2001 Report Share Posted August 1, 2001 , Wow! Your story brought me out of the shadows. Your story and conclusions about the 12 step movement are articulate and insightful to say the least. I do however believe I know where the people with the really long term sobriey are. They retired to Flordia where they spew their wisdom and emotionally abuse newcomers, lol. Good luck to you, CAG > Greetings to all on the List. > > I am new to this list, obviously, and feel like a proper introduction is in > order. This message gets long. Most of what I have to say is experiential > rather than theoretical and I felt a fair amount of background was > necessary. I hope that if I have exceeded any message length etiquette that > this will be regarded as a onetime offense. > > I am a former member of AA. I have several friends who are former members of > AA as well. We met either in AA or through people in AA about 10 years ago. > A couple of my friends and acquaintances still attend. We are all critical > of AA. Lately I have been talking to them about trying to collect stories > from people who no longer attend AA, to compile a book that dispels a lot of > the myths about the necessity and monopoly of AA. A few years ago one of my > friends stood up at a meeting and asked the very poignant question, " Where > are all the old timers? If AA is as successful, and necessary for lasting > sobriety, where are all the people who have 20, 30, or 40 years of sobriety? > There should be many here tonight. " This simple observation implies a lot. I > was not present at this meeting, I had quit AA before this event. But I was > happy to hear that he had rattled the cage. He told me that one person > approached him afterward and thanked him for bringing this up. Interestingly > he was not met with any direct confrontation. But how could anyone dispute > something that is so plainly evident? > > In AA you always hear that those who leave eventually drink against their > wills. This is also obviously not so. Surely, not all those would-be > old-timers are drunk. I know a few. Some moderate, I know a few of them too. > > So, anyway back to my book idea. Well, I decided to research this idea a > little and stopped dead in my tracks when I got on the Internet to see if > anyone had organized any such people and found this list as well as some > various publications. So for now I have abandoned the book idea. I am very > happy to see that there are a lot of other people who share a distaste for > things AA - who have given some serious thought to the problems of > alcoholism and drug addiction and care enough to share their thoughts. I > also started to feel a need to again reexamine my experience in AA and my > experience with alcohol and drugs. I tried to accept the brainwashing AA > offered. It never took, and I was always arguing these things with my > sponsor. Now I would like to get a keener vision of it all and survey the > damage. I have always felt that the treatment centers and the AA did me some > harm. They didn't need to smash my already crushed ego and then insist on > religion, did they? I guess it never occurred to anyone to just talk > straight with me. > > A couple weeks ago, I had a couple old friends from high school contact me. > We used to drink a lot together. They have both managed to abstain for 2 > years or so. They both attribute this to their AA membership. I don't. This > is an interesting development. The last time I saw either of these people, I > was a " hard core " AA member - service work, meetings, sponsor, sponsees, Big > Book, AA history, I was " doing the deal " . They were surprised to hear that I > no longer attend AA. " What do you do in its place " , one of them asked. > " Nothing " , said I. Later I pondered that AA indeed functions as an alcohol > substitute for some people, so I could see where my friend may have been > coming from. I haven't really gotten into it with them yet. Most of our > conversations have been about old times and old friends. But the day is > coming when I will need to lay it on the line, and I won't be able to do so > without challenging a lot of the things they currently believe. This may be > good for them. It is probably good for everyone. I have to believe that they > will figure this out for themselves in time as I did anyway. I never gave AA > a proper farewell. This may be my chance. > > My parents' divorce at age 10, and subsequent remarriages, one to an abusive > stepparent, were very traumatic events. Unfortunately it took a long time > before I decided to grow beyond the effects. At age 11, my father decided he > had a drinking problem and did the treatment/AA deal. He stopped attending > AA after about 5 years and is better for it. At age 14, I overdosed on > alcohol. I wanted to see what it was to be drunk. Well, my ignorance almost > killed me. I drank the whole litre and landed in the hospital near death. At > age 16, I was a nervous wreck, and very unhappy at home. Drinking with older > friends was easy and fun. I knew right away, that summer, that I had some > sort of problem. I drank all the time and it felt right. At age 17, I was in > my first chemical dependency rehabilitation program. I was on an all > adolescent unit. The manipulation and psychological warfare by the staff was > constant. When I gave a detailed and honest account of my drug use my > inquisitors told me I was " rationalizing " . That was 1985. > > I live in the heartland of treatment centers, Minnesota, not far from > Hazelden. There are halfway houses and treatment facilities all over the > Twin Cities. This may be true of most major metropolitan areas in this > country now, but I know that a lot of people still come to Minnesota for > treatment. Minnesota is a very liberal state and public funding for alcohol > and drug treatment was a snap during the 80's and early 90's. That's changed > some by now. > > So I was born in the thick of the Tx/AA/disease/insurance/healthcare > culture, if you will. From 1985 to 1990 I was in treatment facilities a > total of 5 more times each time I wanted to get sober. I also stayed at a > couple halfway houses and similar facilities. I went to countless AA > meetings. That was how " recovery " was supposed to work - you get treatment > and detoxification, and then you go to AA for the rest of your life, right? > These were the popular notions then, and I think they still are to a large > degree. > > Alcohol was a real problem for me. I also had a lot of lingering emotional > ill health. Since my childhood, I had been walking around feeling worthless, > powerless, and stupid. In my early 20's I was a depressed, anxious, nervous > wreck. And I was drunk and/or stoned all day everyday. When my father would > say, " Why won't you take charge of your life? " I would think, " Dad, don't > you understand? The first step says I am powerless. " The book, " Alcoholics > Anonymous " told me that I had " lost the power of choice in drink. " The > popular and widely espoused idea in AA and treatment said that I was > completely and utterly powerless over everything - " people, places, and > things " , as they say in the AA meetings I used to attend. So rather than > being a help to me, these ideas kept me right where I didn't need to be - > waiting on a miracle. The last thing I needed in my life was more ego > deflation. But I was vulnerable and needed some sort of help. > > I was not thinking very clearly at that time. No one in my immediate > environment was thinking very clearly at that time. Short of a miracle, what > would be my hope? > > The last day I drank, the miracle came. I opened my eyes, and made a > decision. I sat on my bed and said, " This is the end. It only gets worse > each time. This is it. " I proceeded to seek help in AA. I can't say that all > my AA experiences were bad. If anything, I met a handful of very close and > interesting friends who I continue to enjoy. They are mostly no longer AA > people themselves. Those who do attend are on the fringe. > > AA didn't help me with my emotional troubles. Not much anyway. Some of the > socialization eventually helped me start to feel like less of a freak I > suppose. My AA sponsor, though a hardnosed Big Book type, also didn't buy > the powerlessness trip, and as a good friend implored me to challenge > myself. And being around other people who were into the same basic goal > probably provided a more affirmative environment. > > About my 2nd year sober I became very involved in local AA service work, I > started sponsoring people, I was speaking at treatment centers and detox, I > knew the Big Book inside and out, I knew AA history, I was going to > meetings, calling my sponsor, praying and meditating. I was sometimes trying > to make my experience match what the Big Book said was true for us all, but > I wasn't always saying what I was supposed to, and I just couldn't make it > match. I learned the game and I played it to a degree, but I have an > inquisitive mind and I annoyed my sponsor with philosophical questions about > what the AA program implied. I met other people in AA with the same > questions. > > I should mention that earlier in my AA experience when I started to " open my > mind " to spiritual or religious ideas, I started attending a church with a > coworker. This phase still embarrasses me, but I think it illustrates some > parallels with my AA experience. This church was a fundamentalist evangelist > thing. I even spoke in tongues. It was actually something I had already > learned to do while very drunk one night and screwing around with friends. I > really tried. I read that bible at least 3 times through and the New > Testament several more. I met with church elders with my questions for which > they had no answers. I just couldn't believe. It was all too ridiculous and > dangerous. My intellect proved less vulnerable than my emotions. > > A similar triumph happened in AA. When religion failed, I thought I could > still be okay in AA. But I burned out, and still suffered horrible > depressions. Something was eating me, and guess what? AA's moralistic, guilt > laden message was not helping. The prayers were unanswered. I stopped > praying. Let me note that over the years my AA attendance had been sporadic. > It just lacked something potent all along. I wanted to get at the core of > what had been eating me all those years, but showing up at AA meetings to > hear people talk about how they are " nothing but an alcoholic " , that " being > an alcoholic is the most important fact of my life " , and then lay a lot of > the same old moralistic rubbish on themselves about how they were bad people > desperately seeking miracles.need I say more. Near the end, I would attend > AA meetings and not stand with the group to open and close the meetings with > prayers. I didn't believe in that God, I didn't pray in my own life. And I > stopped introducing myself as an alcoholic. Alcoholics are people who drink. > I don't drink. Why call myself something I am not? To fit in? I was done > with AA. > > I found a valuable aid in a psychotherapist to help me sort out some of my > emotional stuff. I started making some new choices for myself, and in so > doing started to realize that the reason I was sober was certainly not > because I had played by all the rules. I had not, in fact, I had many > periods of absence from AA, and I could never accept the " God " idea. My > intense period of activity in AA actually only lasted about 2 years. I just > couldn't believe. I have come to realize that my decision to stop drinking > in 1990 is the reason I am still sober. I tried to play the game, I even > laid it on thick, but facts are facts. Everything in my life was the result > of choices I had made within certain limitations. I chose not to drink and > to remain abstinent. Thus, I have remained sober. No miracle. I had no > " spiritual experience " as a requisite to abstinence or a freer life. I do > have the power of choice in drink and always have. When I decided I didn't > want to do it anymore, I stopped. The cultural setting in which I found > myself instructed me to follow an unnecessary path in AA. But no matter how > much I tried to believe in things that were not true, I still continued to > make right decisions for myself. My success came from me, not from " coming > to believe " in anything. > > AA has complicated things for me along the way. I think it was helpful in > some ways - social, an emphasis on self-examination - but so much of it is > bullshit. And I probably don't need to share all the abuses of some of its > members. There are a lot of bad ideas in AA. The Big Book is chock full of > rhetoric and fallacies. I took what I needed, myself, and left the rest. > > I choose abstinence. I remember well how I felt drunk. I don't believe I > would like it any less. I remember the payoff. It seems cheap now. And the > consequences were no fun. I don't have an interest in alcoholic beverages > and I don't feel a need to conduct a test. I don't have a general feeling > that anyone else should do as I do or as I think. Different situations need > different things. Just as alcohol and the Big Book did not provide the > answer to all my problems, AA or any other one thing is not the answer for > all. > > s Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 1, 2001 Report Share Posted August 1, 2001 : Check out THE TRUTH ABOUT AA, AA HORROR STORIES, RESISTING 12-STEP COERCION, and aadeprogramming.com. Like you, I had a fucked up childhood, alcoholic father, sociopathic mother, sociopathic brother, poverty, much assorted constant abuse. I have a psychoanalyst now. My father died with 17 years of abstinence. He was very paranoid and phobic about people, so he couldn't go to meetings. He abstained on his own. I have chosen to abstain on my own. I have many aa horror stories I could tell. They would fill a book. Any person should approach their problems with addiction by whatever means they choose. I would not recommend aa or rational recovery. In rational recovery, you supposedly have this mysterious " addictive voice " . Sounds like a lot of crap to me. I rejected it immediately. I know nothing about SOS, or LSR. I've heard of SMART. Apparently a split off of rational recovery. My last aa friend blew me off when I told her about the reading I had been doing. She has an " alternative " women's only type aa meeting at her house. She said everyone was worried about me because I hadn't shown up in a while. She told me she honestly believed she relapsed because she didn't have a group to share her recovery with and aa fills that need for her. If she so much believes that, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophesy, and she stays sober. I do not regard myself as a recovering alcoholic, pothead, LSD freak, speed freak. I consider myself a non-drinker who also doesn't use drugs. As to the length of your post. Post as long as you fucking want to. If someone doesn't want to finish it, they don't have to. I enjoyed your post. Good luck to you. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 1, 2001 Report Share Posted August 1, 2001 > Greetings to all on the List. > > I am new to this list, obviously, and feel like a proper introduction is in > order. This message gets long. Most of what I have to say is experiential > rather than theoretical and I felt a fair amount of background was > necessary. I hope that if I have exceeded any message length etiquette that > this will be regarded as a onetime offense. > >> > s Hi , Welcome - I'm netty. Left, disappeared, crawled away from AA six months ago. Appreciate your intro. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 1, 2001 Report Share Posted August 1, 2001 At 02:19 PM 8/1/01 -0500, s wrote: >Greetings to all on the List. >I am a former member of AA. Me too, welcome. >So, anyway back to my book idea. Well, I decided to research this idea a >little and stopped dead in my tracks when I got on the Internet to see if >anyone had organized any such people and found this list as well as some >various publications. So for now I have abandoned the book idea. I'm of course glad you found all this, but I'm disappointed that you're not following up on the book idea. I do hope you eventually do so. There are not that many books out there that directly challenge the AA dogma, and I feel each new one on the " recovery " shelves of bookstores can make a difference. There are far too many books on " How to Really And Truly Work The Twelve Steps " , and too few on why you're better off not doing so. >I am very >happy to see that there are a lot of other people who share a distaste for >things AA - who have given some serious thought to the problems of >alcoholism and drug addiction and care enough to share their thoughts. I >also started to feel a need to again reexamine my experience in AA and my >experience with alcohol and drugs. I tried to accept the brainwashing AA >offered. It never took, and I was always arguing these things with my >sponsor. It " took " for me my first couple of years, I went to daily meetings, then it started to fade as I started asking serious questions. I found only more slogans in AA, and real answers in " outside literature " , mostly various books in the library, many of them on cults (many of which mention AA by name). What books have you read, or at least what titles have you seen so far? I've probably read 100-200 recovery-related books (probably a small fraction of such books published), and maybe one or two dozen that are " recovery-questioning " (I've read probably MOST such books). One of the most enlightning books I read had nothing to do with AA and little to do with cults (I suppose one could argue that the field of parapsychology is a cult). It's " The Adventures of a Parapsychologist " by Blackmore, in which she describes looking for evidence for ESP, which she very much wanted to find, but after many trials and writing a PHD thesis on it, she found no hard evidence for it. What was amusing was the claims of evidence from other researchers she knew, claims she was able to explain away when close scrutiny found problems with their procedures/experiments. I found the parallel between beliefs in ESP and the beliefs I had (but were fading fast) from AA (about God, the steps, going to meetings, and how not drinking is 'contingent' on all these things) to be remarkable. ---------- http://listen.to/benbradley Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 2, 2001 Report Share Posted August 2, 2001 --- In 12-step-free@y..., " s " <no_never_met_him@h...> Dear , I have read your post here. I think you *should* write your book! It is very disconcerting, is it not, to encounter ideas you thought were extremely strange, only to find people who have been struggling with the same issues. (PS: I am talking about myself here)! The hard part comes when it seems redundant. In part, that is true. But there *is* another perspective. One that you can find and that will resonate with other people. People need to hear that the steps are not the only solution. And you can help them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 3, 2001 Report Share Posted August 3, 2001 Welcome, s And thanks for your eloquent and insightful account of your experiences. I look forward to more of the same. Regards, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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