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Re: An introduction (long)

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At 11:27 AM 2/18/01 -0800, you wrote:

>I'm a 'show me' kind of guy. Anyone here who has left

>AA, and continued to lead a successful, non-drinking,

>life; please tell me all about it. I need, right now,

>to know you exist... if only for my own piece of mind.

>Even if I stay in AA, I need to know you exist. So I

>can tell a scrared, confused, newcomer who doesn't

>think that he/she can do AA, that he/she still doesn't

>have to drink... there are other ways.

Hi Matt; nice to meet you. I haven't got the time for a

long response right now, but I just wanted to say

" welcome " and to assure you that it *is* possible

not to drink without being in AA. There are quite

a few people on this list who do it every day.

Some people belong to alternative groups, such as

SMART or SOS. Others just don't drink, and prefer

getting on with their lives to being in a recovery group.

There are zillions of us out there.

More people quit drinking without AA than with it. You'd

never know it from listening to AA's propaganda, but

it's the statistical truth.

>Thank you for tolerating my blather, and I look

>forward to reading this list.

I look forward to hearing more of your experiences.

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At 11:27 AM 2/18/01 -0800, you wrote:

>I'm a 'show me' kind of guy. Anyone here who has left

>AA, and continued to lead a successful, non-drinking,

>life; please tell me all about it. I need, right now,

>to know you exist... if only for my own piece of mind.

>Even if I stay in AA, I need to know you exist. So I

>can tell a scrared, confused, newcomer who doesn't

>think that he/she can do AA, that he/she still doesn't

>have to drink... there are other ways.

Hi Matt; nice to meet you. I haven't got the time for a

long response right now, but I just wanted to say

" welcome " and to assure you that it *is* possible

not to drink without being in AA. There are quite

a few people on this list who do it every day.

Some people belong to alternative groups, such as

SMART or SOS. Others just don't drink, and prefer

getting on with their lives to being in a recovery group.

There are zillions of us out there.

More people quit drinking without AA than with it. You'd

never know it from listening to AA's propaganda, but

it's the statistical truth.

>Thank you for tolerating my blather, and I look

>forward to reading this list.

I look forward to hearing more of your experiences.

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At 11:27 AM 2/18/01 -0800, you wrote:

>I'm a 'show me' kind of guy. Anyone here who has left

>AA, and continued to lead a successful, non-drinking,

>life; please tell me all about it. I need, right now,

>to know you exist... if only for my own piece of mind.

>Even if I stay in AA, I need to know you exist. So I

>can tell a scrared, confused, newcomer who doesn't

>think that he/she can do AA, that he/she still doesn't

>have to drink... there are other ways.

Hi Matt; nice to meet you. I haven't got the time for a

long response right now, but I just wanted to say

" welcome " and to assure you that it *is* possible

not to drink without being in AA. There are quite

a few people on this list who do it every day.

Some people belong to alternative groups, such as

SMART or SOS. Others just don't drink, and prefer

getting on with their lives to being in a recovery group.

There are zillions of us out there.

More people quit drinking without AA than with it. You'd

never know it from listening to AA's propaganda, but

it's the statistical truth.

>Thank you for tolerating my blather, and I look

>forward to reading this list.

I look forward to hearing more of your experiences.

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>

> 95% of my social life, these days, is tied up in AA

> and... aw, screw it, you guys know the whole story,

> I'm sure...

>

> I want out, but I'm overwhelmed with self doubt about

> it. The racket in my brain right now is something

> else. I know what's right for me, and what's not; but

> for two years I've volunteered to be told I don't know

> shit...

>

> I'm a 'show me' kind of guy. Anyone here who has left

> AA, and continued to lead a successful, non-drinking,

> life; please tell me all about it.

Hi Matt

Thanks for the intro. You didn't blather in the least.

Yes, you can lead a sober life, more successful than ever, without

AA. I did. During my five years in AA, I sounded good at meetings,

had a passel of sponsees, and claimed " AA saved my life. " I visitied

jails, the local recovery houses, and went to frequent meetings, and

spent time listening to fifth steps and sobering up drunks. I still

know the Big Book practically by heart (It comes in handy when it's

necessary to prove to steppers that the AA program is religious)

I was an AA success all right--a forty-year-old woman who had

experienced several deranged sponsors, suffered ever worsening bouts

of depression (stinkin thinking & pity pot.) In between my glowing

tales of AA rags-to-spiritual-riches at meetings, I made a meager

living riding a bike to housecleaning jobs, lived in a decrepit old

motor hotel complete with big black roaches, and typed poetry on a

manual typewriter at a tiny kitchen table 40 feet away from a busy

railroad track. When the train went by, the whole place shook.

All of my friends were AA. After I left, I found out who my real

friends were though. There were two left.

I got treatment for depression first, and had to see a therapist for

about a year. My life took off. But it took some work for awhile,

Matt. However, it's five years later and I work at a job I love,

producing and scheduling programs for a community TV station. I have

a SO and we live in a decent place, I drive a car, am online, and

compiled stories for a book that was recently published. I've

produced dozens of programs, published about 30 poems, and maintain

two websites. Its amazing what one can accomplish when one's time

isn't tied up with running back and forth to AA activities being a

good little parrot.

Matt, you can stay sober without AA. Keep in mind that you can always

run back to a meeting if you have to. If you've any doubt about your

ability to stay sober, go to the RR website and take their crash

course. This will fortify you:

http://www.rationalrecovery.org/Crash.html

Here are some other techniques for staying sober:

http://www.habitsmart.com/urges.html

If anyone in AA is still your friend after you leave, then consider

it a real friendship and concentrate on those frienships. If you fill

up your time with activities you love, you will automatically attract

other friends. Once you're moving in the world of normal people, you

will begin considering yourself normal. You will be less angry

because you will be spending time the way you wish, with people who

aren't pissing you off with rudeness and verbal abuse.

> to know you exist... if only for my own piece of mind.

> Even if I stay in AA, I need to know you exist. So I

> can tell a scrared, confused, newcomer who doesn't

> think that he/she can do AA, that he/she still doesn't

> have to drink... there are other ways.

There are lots of other ways. In fact, most people who stay

clean/sober after problem drinking or alcholism do so on their own.

The AA population represents very few of these:

http://www.aahorror.net/studies.htm#works

Your post was enjoyable, Matt. Welcome to 12-Step Free.

Best,

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Matt-

Your problems are all based on the false belief that AA is the only way. It most certainly is not.

There you have it. It sounds as if, like me, you walked into meetings again and again because you believed it was the only way to a normal life. I left last November. It was the second best decision I've ever made - the best was marrying my wife. I feel great saying that because when I was in AA, asking my wife to marry me had to be second best because we all know that for an AA member, joining Alcoholics Anonymous is hands down the most important thing they've ever done. To think otherwise is to put yourself in a dangerous situation. Niwittery like this is the reason I left.

You can join me in frustration knowing that one trip to the bookstore could have made six years of a difference in my life, not in drinking time, but time spent in AA. It's not that I was never in the bookstores, quite the contrary. But my first attempt to seek help, three years before my last drink, instilled in me a belief that when alcoholics were finished drinking they joined AA. This "help" never suggested other options. What they did was drive into me knowledge about drinking so I'd know when it was time to quit and join AA. So when I decided to quit, that's exactly what I did. It never occurred to me to just quit. Alcoholics can't do that. Did you know that? I also didn't look into SMART Recovery, Rational Recovery, SOS, or any of the others. I simply took it as a matter of faith that AA was it.

Concerning addiction, treatment, and recovery, I have learned that a person who wants to take control of their own life had better do his homework.

I've got a web site, www.sobrietyfrontiers.com where I talk about AA in more detail. See you around this list.

Nate

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Matt-

Your problems are all based on the false belief that AA is the only way. It most certainly is not.

There you have it. It sounds as if, like me, you walked into meetings again and again because you believed it was the only way to a normal life. I left last November. It was the second best decision I've ever made - the best was marrying my wife. I feel great saying that because when I was in AA, asking my wife to marry me had to be second best because we all know that for an AA member, joining Alcoholics Anonymous is hands down the most important thing they've ever done. To think otherwise is to put yourself in a dangerous situation. Niwittery like this is the reason I left.

You can join me in frustration knowing that one trip to the bookstore could have made six years of a difference in my life, not in drinking time, but time spent in AA. It's not that I was never in the bookstores, quite the contrary. But my first attempt to seek help, three years before my last drink, instilled in me a belief that when alcoholics were finished drinking they joined AA. This "help" never suggested other options. What they did was drive into me knowledge about drinking so I'd know when it was time to quit and join AA. So when I decided to quit, that's exactly what I did. It never occurred to me to just quit. Alcoholics can't do that. Did you know that? I also didn't look into SMART Recovery, Rational Recovery, SOS, or any of the others. I simply took it as a matter of faith that AA was it.

Concerning addiction, treatment, and recovery, I have learned that a person who wants to take control of their own life had better do his homework.

I've got a web site, www.sobrietyfrontiers.com where I talk about AA in more detail. See you around this list.

Nate

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Matt-

Your problems are all based on the false belief that AA is the only way. It most certainly is not.

There you have it. It sounds as if, like me, you walked into meetings again and again because you believed it was the only way to a normal life. I left last November. It was the second best decision I've ever made - the best was marrying my wife. I feel great saying that because when I was in AA, asking my wife to marry me had to be second best because we all know that for an AA member, joining Alcoholics Anonymous is hands down the most important thing they've ever done. To think otherwise is to put yourself in a dangerous situation. Niwittery like this is the reason I left.

You can join me in frustration knowing that one trip to the bookstore could have made six years of a difference in my life, not in drinking time, but time spent in AA. It's not that I was never in the bookstores, quite the contrary. But my first attempt to seek help, three years before my last drink, instilled in me a belief that when alcoholics were finished drinking they joined AA. This "help" never suggested other options. What they did was drive into me knowledge about drinking so I'd know when it was time to quit and join AA. So when I decided to quit, that's exactly what I did. It never occurred to me to just quit. Alcoholics can't do that. Did you know that? I also didn't look into SMART Recovery, Rational Recovery, SOS, or any of the others. I simply took it as a matter of faith that AA was it.

Concerning addiction, treatment, and recovery, I have learned that a person who wants to take control of their own life had better do his homework.

I've got a web site, www.sobrietyfrontiers.com where I talk about AA in more detail. See you around this list.

Nate

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"The AA Box" ..... Nice. Don't know how I managed to miss that link before. Is it the first time you've posted it Nate?

-----Original Message-----From: Nate s Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2001 4:38 PMTo: 12-step-free Subject: Re: An introduction (long)

I've got a web site, www.sobrietyfrontiers.com where I talk about AA in more detail. See you around this list.

Nate

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"The AA Box" ..... Nice. Don't know how I managed to miss that link before. Is it the first time you've posted it Nate?

-----Original Message-----From: Nate s Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2001 4:38 PMTo: 12-step-free Subject: Re: An introduction (long)

I've got a web site, www.sobrietyfrontiers.com where I talk about AA in more detail. See you around this list.

Nate

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"The AA Box" ..... Nice. Don't know how I managed to miss that link before. Is it the first time you've posted it Nate?

-----Original Message-----From: Nate s Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2001 4:38 PMTo: 12-step-free Subject: Re: An introduction (long)

I've got a web site, www.sobrietyfrontiers.com where I talk about AA in more detail. See you around this list.

Nate

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At 06:25 PM 2/18/01 -0600, Arroyo wrote:

> " The AA Box " ..... Nice. Don't know how I managed to miss that link

before.

> Is it the first time you've posted it Nate?

I read over Nate's site a coule months ago, and I must say he has

some good original metaphors. Another one is " get rid of the coin "

under the link " What you won't find in AA " .

I think these metaphors work well for " deprogramming " , to help one

get out of the maze the same way they got in [gee, there's my own

metaphor] - AA uses metaphors as one of many techniques to " program "

people, to get its beliefs instilled in newcomers.

Sometimes the most powerful words are those that aren't spoken. I

attended Al-Anon after a relationship with an AA woman ended. Speaking

about this woman, an Alanon said " Alcoholism is a disease " . It didn't

seem logical that her or my negative actions were always caused by

" this disease " , especially since we both were sober a few years. If

the Alanon had not been so forceful about the " alcoholism is a disease "

thing, I would not have so quickly thought to question it.

But back to Nate's site, it should be obvious that the common business

slogan " thinking outside the box " is NOT an AA slogan. :)

When I first saw sobrietyfrontiers.com mentioned here I read a page

or so and remember thinking it was a little odd (I'm not sure why, maybe

the writing style or something). But since then I've read the whole site,

and as I say above, I like it. Also, he wrote most of this before reading

other anti-AA sites (or at least before subscribing to this list), so I

see it as more 'indpendent verification' of what we all know about AA.

I think we need more sites like this. Good work, Nate.

> Re: An introduction (long)

>

> I've got a web site, www.sobrietyfrontiers.com where I talk about AA in

more detail. See you around this list.

>

> Nate

>

-----

This post (except quoted portions) Copyright 2001, Ben Bradley.

http://listen.to/benbradley

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At 06:25 PM 2/18/01 -0600, Arroyo wrote:

> " The AA Box " ..... Nice. Don't know how I managed to miss that link

before.

> Is it the first time you've posted it Nate?

I read over Nate's site a coule months ago, and I must say he has

some good original metaphors. Another one is " get rid of the coin "

under the link " What you won't find in AA " .

I think these metaphors work well for " deprogramming " , to help one

get out of the maze the same way they got in [gee, there's my own

metaphor] - AA uses metaphors as one of many techniques to " program "

people, to get its beliefs instilled in newcomers.

Sometimes the most powerful words are those that aren't spoken. I

attended Al-Anon after a relationship with an AA woman ended. Speaking

about this woman, an Alanon said " Alcoholism is a disease " . It didn't

seem logical that her or my negative actions were always caused by

" this disease " , especially since we both were sober a few years. If

the Alanon had not been so forceful about the " alcoholism is a disease "

thing, I would not have so quickly thought to question it.

But back to Nate's site, it should be obvious that the common business

slogan " thinking outside the box " is NOT an AA slogan. :)

When I first saw sobrietyfrontiers.com mentioned here I read a page

or so and remember thinking it was a little odd (I'm not sure why, maybe

the writing style or something). But since then I've read the whole site,

and as I say above, I like it. Also, he wrote most of this before reading

other anti-AA sites (or at least before subscribing to this list), so I

see it as more 'indpendent verification' of what we all know about AA.

I think we need more sites like this. Good work, Nate.

> Re: An introduction (long)

>

> I've got a web site, www.sobrietyfrontiers.com where I talk about AA in

more detail. See you around this list.

>

> Nate

>

-----

This post (except quoted portions) Copyright 2001, Ben Bradley.

http://listen.to/benbradley

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" Gaston C. " wrote:

> I'm a 'show me' kind of guy. Anyone here who has left

> AA, and continued to lead a successful, non-drinking,

> life; please tell me all about it. I need, right now,

> to know you exist... if only for my own piece of mind.

> Even if I stay in AA, I need to know you exist. So I

> can tell a scrared, confused, newcomer who doesn't

> think that he/she can do AA, that he/she still doesn't

> have to drink... there are other ways.

>

> Thank you for tolerating my blather, and I look

> forward to reading this list.

>

> Sincerely,

> Matt

Hi Matt and list,

I understand your fear about leaving a group (some would say cult) that

seems so central to the new life you have built for your self. AA counts on

this fear to keep people from questioning the basic irrational principles you so

eloquently describe in your introduction post. Compounding this fear mongering

is the constant ascertain that you will go right back to your old behavior if

you leave the group. This is complete crap. You, and only you, can decide how

you are going to live your life. As you are becoming aware, the fact that you

stopped drinking destructively at the same time you started attending AA

meetings is mostly coincidental.

If it is of any help to you I have been abstinent for over 11 years, 7 of

them after leaving NA.

Peace,

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" Gaston C. " wrote:

> I'm a 'show me' kind of guy. Anyone here who has left

> AA, and continued to lead a successful, non-drinking,

> life; please tell me all about it. I need, right now,

> to know you exist... if only for my own piece of mind.

> Even if I stay in AA, I need to know you exist. So I

> can tell a scrared, confused, newcomer who doesn't

> think that he/she can do AA, that he/she still doesn't

> have to drink... there are other ways.

>

> Thank you for tolerating my blather, and I look

> forward to reading this list.

>

> Sincerely,

> Matt

Hi Matt and list,

I understand your fear about leaving a group (some would say cult) that

seems so central to the new life you have built for your self. AA counts on

this fear to keep people from questioning the basic irrational principles you so

eloquently describe in your introduction post. Compounding this fear mongering

is the constant ascertain that you will go right back to your old behavior if

you leave the group. This is complete crap. You, and only you, can decide how

you are going to live your life. As you are becoming aware, the fact that you

stopped drinking destructively at the same time you started attending AA

meetings is mostly coincidental.

If it is of any help to you I have been abstinent for over 11 years, 7 of

them after leaving NA.

Peace,

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" Gaston C. " wrote:

> I'm a 'show me' kind of guy. Anyone here who has left

> AA, and continued to lead a successful, non-drinking,

> life; please tell me all about it. I need, right now,

> to know you exist... if only for my own piece of mind.

> Even if I stay in AA, I need to know you exist. So I

> can tell a scrared, confused, newcomer who doesn't

> think that he/she can do AA, that he/she still doesn't

> have to drink... there are other ways.

>

> Thank you for tolerating my blather, and I look

> forward to reading this list.

>

> Sincerely,

> Matt

Hi Matt and list,

I understand your fear about leaving a group (some would say cult) that

seems so central to the new life you have built for your self. AA counts on

this fear to keep people from questioning the basic irrational principles you so

eloquently describe in your introduction post. Compounding this fear mongering

is the constant ascertain that you will go right back to your old behavior if

you leave the group. This is complete crap. You, and only you, can decide how

you are going to live your life. As you are becoming aware, the fact that you

stopped drinking destructively at the same time you started attending AA

meetings is mostly coincidental.

If it is of any help to you I have been abstinent for over 11 years, 7 of

them after leaving NA.

Peace,

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--- Nate s wrote:

> I've got a web site, >www.sobrietyfrontiers.com

where

> I talk about AA in more detail. See you around this

> list.

>

> Nate

Thanks Nate. I've actually visited your site a few

times already, just for positive reinforcement here

and there.

I've been an avid reader of the AA Deprogramming site,

and they, of course, as you know, have your link

there.

A truly inspiring site, one designed to actually help,

and offer alternatives; which I especially

appreciated.

Thanks for responding,

-Matt

__________________________________________________

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--- Nate s wrote:

> I've got a web site, >www.sobrietyfrontiers.com

where

> I talk about AA in more detail. See you around this

> list.

>

> Nate

Thanks Nate. I've actually visited your site a few

times already, just for positive reinforcement here

and there.

I've been an avid reader of the AA Deprogramming site,

and they, of course, as you know, have your link

there.

A truly inspiring site, one designed to actually help,

and offer alternatives; which I especially

appreciated.

Thanks for responding,

-Matt

__________________________________________________

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--- Nate s wrote:

> I've got a web site, >www.sobrietyfrontiers.com

where

> I talk about AA in more detail. See you around this

> list.

>

> Nate

Thanks Nate. I've actually visited your site a few

times already, just for positive reinforcement here

and there.

I've been an avid reader of the AA Deprogramming site,

and they, of course, as you know, have your link

there.

A truly inspiring site, one designed to actually help,

and offer alternatives; which I especially

appreciated.

Thanks for responding,

-Matt

__________________________________________________

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been sober 4.5 years,out of aa 3.5 years

>

> I'm a 'show me' kind of guy. Anyone here who has left

> AA, and continued to lead a successful, non-drinking,

> life; please tell me all about it. I need, right now,

> to know you exist... if only for my own piece of mind.

> Even if I stay in AA, I need to know you exist. So I

> can tell a scrared, confused, newcomer who doesn't

> think that he/she can do AA, that he/she still doesn't

> have to drink... there are other ways.

>

> Thank you for tolerating my blather, and I look

> forward to reading this list.

>

> Sincerely,

> Matt

>

>

>

__________________________________________________

>

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been sober 4.5 years,out of aa 3.5 years

>

> I'm a 'show me' kind of guy. Anyone here who has left

> AA, and continued to lead a successful, non-drinking,

> life; please tell me all about it. I need, right now,

> to know you exist... if only for my own piece of mind.

> Even if I stay in AA, I need to know you exist. So I

> can tell a scrared, confused, newcomer who doesn't

> think that he/she can do AA, that he/she still doesn't

> have to drink... there are other ways.

>

> Thank you for tolerating my blather, and I look

> forward to reading this list.

>

> Sincerely,

> Matt

>

>

>

__________________________________________________

>

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-

Thank you. Nice of you to comment.

Creating the site was the first thing I did after leaving AA in November. I wanted to get my thoughts straight because it's very easy to be defined when leaving AA. I listed it in the links section of eGroups (now Yahoo!) and throw it out every once in awhile when I post, which lately hasn't been very often. After 3 months I'm getting about 350 hits a month, most of them coming from www.aadeprogramming.com and www.aahorror.net.

Nate

RE: An introduction (long)

"The AA Box" ..... Nice. Don't know how I managed to miss that link before. Is it the first time you've posted it Nate?

-----Original Message-----From: Nate s Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2001 4:38 PMTo: 12-step-free Subject: Re: An introduction (long)

I've got a web site, www.sobrietyfrontiers.com where I talk about AA in more detail. See you around this list.

Nate

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--- rfransway@... wrote:

>

> Your post was enjoyable, Matt. Welcome to >12-Step

> Free.

>

> Best,

>

>

Thank you , most inspiring indeed.

I've been familiar with you, and your work, via the

ARAA newsgroup, AA Deprogramming, and more recently

your own AA Horror site.

I've always kept an eye on the likes of you good

people, folks who choose to think, for the past two

years.

Even at the times of my greatest enthusiasm for my own

involvement in AA, I've always felt it was healthy,

and frankly sane, for me to know that there is more,

and also that this hardly works for everyone; no

matter how " willing " , or " willfull " , they may or may

not be. I appreciate your efforts.

-Matt

__________________________________________________

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--- rfransway@... wrote:

>

> Your post was enjoyable, Matt. Welcome to >12-Step

> Free.

>

> Best,

>

>

Thank you , most inspiring indeed.

I've been familiar with you, and your work, via the

ARAA newsgroup, AA Deprogramming, and more recently

your own AA Horror site.

I've always kept an eye on the likes of you good

people, folks who choose to think, for the past two

years.

Even at the times of my greatest enthusiasm for my own

involvement in AA, I've always felt it was healthy,

and frankly sane, for me to know that there is more,

and also that this hardly works for everyone; no

matter how " willing " , or " willfull " , they may or may

not be. I appreciate your efforts.

-Matt

__________________________________________________

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--- rfransway@... wrote:

>

> Your post was enjoyable, Matt. Welcome to >12-Step

> Free.

>

> Best,

>

>

Thank you , most inspiring indeed.

I've been familiar with you, and your work, via the

ARAA newsgroup, AA Deprogramming, and more recently

your own AA Horror site.

I've always kept an eye on the likes of you good

people, folks who choose to think, for the past two

years.

Even at the times of my greatest enthusiasm for my own

involvement in AA, I've always felt it was healthy,

and frankly sane, for me to know that there is more,

and also that this hardly works for everyone; no

matter how " willing " , or " willfull " , they may or may

not be. I appreciate your efforts.

-Matt

__________________________________________________

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Hey Matt

Welcome to the list. I too got sober in NY AA. I know where your

coming from and can relate. I wanted to stop attending meetings a

long time ago. Probably five or so years ago. I always had doubts

about certain aspects of AA, and was very fearful of actually doing

it, as you've expressed. It took all that time until just about four

months ago to finally do it. Thats after over 11 years of not

drinking in AA. I still choose to not drink. I am still not committed

entirely to never attend meetings again. Not because I am afraid that

I will get drunk but because most of my dearest friends are in AA.

But that is something I have to decide on my own in my own time.

Nevertheless, its been very enlightening to hear perspectives about AA

from non-AA's. I had been so accustomed to hearing only views shared

by AA supporters as if these views were fact. I hope this list helps

you find answers which feel right for you as it has helped me. Good

Luck to you.

Pat

> Hi all,

>

> I'm new to the group here, and my apologies for not

> having waited through the arrival of a few messages in

> order to grasp the protocol. I felt leaping in with a

> quick introduction might be as good of a way as any,

> of going about things, so here I ago.

>

> My name is not Gaston, but Matt, I will, as of next

> month, have been sober for two years in AA.

>

> You folks already know, all too well I'm sure, where I

> might be going with this, as my subscribing to this

> list at all is a telling gesture. So, to not waste

> bandwidth with notions and revelations, which I'm

> sure, in the context of this list, are redundant, I'll

> give the condensed version.

>

> Two years ago, years and years of a decidely excessive

> and lethal lifestyle began to catch up with me in all

> the traditional ways; my health was deteriorating

> rapidly, I'd lost all faith in everything and

> everybody, I had become just unbearable to be around,

> I was dishonest, selfish beyond compare, filthy,

> morose, angry, mean, a leech, a thief, a liar etc.,

> etc. I hated myself and wished, very much, that I

> might die. You know the drill.

>

> I knew the booze and drugs were killing me, but It

> seemed as though I simply could not stop; you know the

> story there, as well.

>

> I was familiar with AA, perhaps more so than the

> average citizen, due to my mother having been a member

> (she's since passed away), as well as one of my

> longest-standing and closest friends having gotten

> sober there. For the many years that drinking engulfed

> my life, and thoughts of stopping crossed my mind (as

> they will), I knew that AA was probably not for me. I

> also knew that I was entirely, seemingly hopelessly,

> dependent upon alcohol and drugs; and had long been

> led to believe that the likes of me simply did not

> stop without AA. So, like any good addict, I used this

> assinine logic to justify my pursuit of a bottom

> sufficient enough for my even beginning to tolerate

> entering the world of sloganeering, powerlessness and,

> well frankly, handing one's will over to God. I

> exaggerate the process of my bottoming out, and AAs

> involvement in my thinking during that time, slightly,

> but I was fairly certain, drunk or no, that my

> drinking problem and addictions had nothing whatsoever

> to do with my atheism; I resented the implication that

> they did, deeply. So AA remained out of the question.

>

> Anyway, as things got truly horrible, I got truly

> desperate. I knew AA was a place where people who

> drank like me, were hanging out, not drinking. I

> figured it would not hurt to be around such people.

> And after a couple of weeks of quietly, drunkenly,

> hanging around in the back of these rooms, I did, one

> night, manage to fall asleep having not had a drink

> that day. Right there was the first truly decent thing

> that AA, as it were, had given me. Commonsense that my

> drunken ass lacked at that time; to use their language

> " you don't have to drink today " . I'll concede that I

> was, at that point, too fucked up to realize that.

>

> So, drunks not drinking, regardless of anything else

> they might be saying or doing, did help me locate the

> inner fortitude to not drink; regardless of all the

> discomfort that caused me by that point. I haven't had

> a drink since.

>

> As time has passed, some of the basic AA, good, old

> fashioned, horse-sense, has benifited me; First and

> foremost, the irrefutably sound, 'don't drink, no

> matter what'. Plus, some of the push to try to be less

> judgemental, to stop passing blame, to try and keep

> busy and to be accountable for my actions, has helped

> me immeasurably (this, of course, when these ideas

> have been applied to my own perception of right and

> wrong, not my sponor's, or my homegroup's, or the Big

> Book's or whatever); however uncomfortable I still

> remain with the superstitious, hoodoo-voodoo, somewhat

> degrading, religious, ritualistic, methodology of it

> all; I have begun, of my own volition, but due to

> these surroundings, to try and behave in a manner I

> find more palatable for myself. To be able to look in

> the mirror and not cringe. To a large extent AA, or at

> least some of the better people in it, have helped me

> do that...

>

> That being said, I now feel that feeling of this

> being, in no way, the oft bandied about, fabled,

> " Bridge back to life " , at all.

>

> Here in New York, there seem to be two types of AA

> groups, religious, Big Book thumping fanatics, are

> one. And semi-hipster, New Agey, pop-psychology

> damaged idiots, are the other (Insane over

> generalization, but I'm trying to be quick about all

> this, I apologize). Either way, it's sick people

> insisting on, and indulging in, staying sick. Be they

> the " little sunbeams of Bill and Bob " , or the " Woe is

> me, my Mommy sucks " type.

>

> This assessment of course being en masse, as many of

> them are truly decent, nay good, people; a great many

> of whom I care for dearly... But they've no patience

> for my expressing my intellectual and emotional

> trepidations and apprehensions. Most of them, even the

> very best amongst them, are giiven to your standard

> " This too shall pass " or, the particularly offensive,

> " you think too much " .

>

> I've heard more than one, beaming, oldtimer proudly

> declare that he hadn't had " an original thought in

> over twenty years " . Being judged by your ability to

> mimick, quote and paraphrase, a 60 year old book, is

> not my idea of growth. I gain nothing from this; I can

> read the book myself, thank you. Tell me something

> new. You won't find new, not in AA, I'm realizing.

> They're proud of that fact, new seems to be shunned.

>

> I'm going to stop this babbling, and I apologize if

> this is not how I should introduce myself. This was

> typed quickly and confused. So I hope it made sense.

>

> I'm entertaining leaving AA, but of course I'm scared

> to, because everyday for two years I've had it shouted

> at me that the consequences of such an action are

> positively dire. I never want to drink again, at least

> I don't ever wnat to be where was two years ago; not

> drinking seems like a small price to pay in order to

> avoid that.

>

> 95% of my social life, these days, is tied up in AA

> and... aw, screw it, you guys know the whole story,

> I'm sure...

>

> I want out, but I'm overwhelmed with self doubt about

> it. The racket in my brain right now is something

> else. I know what's right for me, and what's not; but

> for two years I've volunteered to be told I don't know

> shit...

>

> I'm a 'show me' kind of guy. Anyone here who has left

> AA, and continued to lead a successful, non-drinking,

> life; please tell me all about it. I need, right now,

> to know you exist... if only for my own piece of mind.

> Even if I stay in AA, I need to know you exist. So I

> can tell a scrared, confused, newcomer who doesn't

> think that he/she can do AA, that he/she still doesn't

> have to drink... there are other ways.

>

> Thank you for tolerating my blather, and I look

> forward to reading this list.

>

> Sincerely,

> Matt

>

>

> __________________________________________________

>

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