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Now that I have spent some time raising hell. I am finding that this

list is not quite everything I imagined at first. I have read a few

things I just cant argue with. There is much more breadth of

experience here than I first thougth and some of you have really

thought about this stuff long and hard. Maybe you have some valid

points but I am also finding still that there is a lot of bias

against anything AA may have to offer. Maybe I have seen some reasons

for this in some of the things I have read about here. I could

probbaly tone it down a littel and hear you all out but I still

believe AA is the best plan. It concerns me that one member of this

list announces tonight that she is now drinking, opening up that

option again. Its an old tale and you may not like th e saying but it

seems to sum up a lot 'Once an alcoholic always an alcoholic'. Why

play with fire if you got burnt before? This disease is insidious in

that way. People think themselves out of AA and then in a matte of

time they start thinking about drining. It happens a lot, and then

they come back to AA scratching they heads. It is unbelievable to

watch it happen...sad too. I have a lot to think about here. The big

book does say hats off to people who can do the about face and drink

normally and that we dont have a monolpoly on therapy for alcoholics.

Okay my sponsor just reminded me of that, I just got off the phone

with her. I think that more than one person here has told me to call

my sponsor, well she called me but we did talk about this stuff.

But for the grace of God,

Kay T.

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But at 17, how could she ever have gotten burnt? Why must it be fire she is

playing with? What if she was never truely an alcoholic? Could someone

become a memeber and never really be ab alcohlic? Nothing is impossible.

>From: kahn_troll@...

>Reply-To: 12-step-free

>To: 12-step-free

>Subject: I asked my sponsor and...

>Date: Fri, 02 Nov 2001 07:23:15 -0000

>

>Now that I have spent some time raising hell. I am finding that this

>list is not quite everything I imagined at first. I have read a few

>things I just cant argue with. There is much more breadth of

>experience here than I first thougth and some of you have really

>thought about this stuff long and hard. Maybe you have some valid

>points but I am also finding still that there is a lot of bias

>against anything AA may have to offer. Maybe I have seen some reasons

>for this in some of the things I have read about here. I could

>probbaly tone it down a littel and hear you all out but I still

>believe AA is the best plan. It concerns me that one member of this

>list announces tonight that she is now drinking, opening up that

>option again. Its an old tale and you may not like th e saying but it

>seems to sum up a lot 'Once an alcoholic always an alcoholic'. Why

>play with fire if you got burnt before? This disease is insidious in

>that way. People think themselves out of AA and then in a matte of

>time they start thinking about drining. It happens a lot, and then

>they come back to AA scratching they heads. It is unbelievable to

>watch it happen...sad too. I have a lot to think about here. The big

>book does say hats off to people who can do the about face and drink

>normally and that we dont have a monolpoly on therapy for alcoholics.

>Okay my sponsor just reminded me of that, I just got off the phone

>with her. I think that more than one person here has told me to call

>my sponsor, well she called me but we did talk about this stuff.

>

>But for the grace of God,

>Kay T.

>

_________________________________________________________________

Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp

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Kay:

I found the hardest thing in AA was to accept when another person chooses to use alcohol again. I tried to detach. Two women I knew even died. One drank herself to death after being 10 months sober, it was very sad. Her mother was sober in AA and also went to Alanon. It did not affect her as horribly as the group. That was an extreme case, the lady who drank again (28) had pacreatitus and was a candidate for a liver transplant. I blamed the group. In one summer, three young people died.

Anyway, needless to say I started a resentment against the program, I even thought about calling the central office and complaining about the place where I went to meetings. What I needed to do was stay focused on me. That is very hard to do. I think you can do it though, and you might subconsciously be seeking alternatives to AA. I'm glad you have helped generate such an interesting discussion. I respect your dedication to your sobriety and yes, maybe this group is a splinter but it does no harm. People are allowed to say that they want to and do drink again here and are accepted, in AA they are shamed. Guilt and shame are too negative, I hope your group you attend is a healthy one, incorporating views from every walk of life. And, also, as Abaddun pointed out, there are many good things about AA. I'm glad you chose to visit this site. Thank you. L

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> Now that I have spent some time raising hell. I am finding that

this

> list is not quite everything I imagined at first. I have read a few

> things I just cant argue with. There is much more breadth of

> experience here than I first thougth and some of you have really

> thought about this stuff long and hard. Maybe you have some valid

> points but I am also finding still that there is a lot of bias

> against anything AA may have to offer.

I am the one who told you that maybe you needed to work

your " program " and to call your sponsor rather than continue

to 'raise hell' over here. You sound as if your are proud of your

behavior! If you truly do believe in the AA way of life that you

follow, your actions only showed your 'character defects' of trying

to control other people and to force your 'will' on others. AAers

are always saying how they cannot control other people and

how 'acceptance' of others is important. I guess that only applies

to others since most AAers really do not practice what they preach.

From my own experience with the years I spent in AA and NA, I have

found that the members mean that other people than themselves are

supposed to practice acceptance when others do not agree with them or

seem offensive.

It is really not your problem that many of us are biased against AA.

Our experiences are as valid as yours. I remember one program cliche

that maybe you should take to heart: " Keep your own side of the

street swept. " I could understand your reasons for your 'raising

hell' over here if we were going into AA/NA meetings trying to drag

people out or trolling on Twelve-Step clubs/e-groups blasting

the " program " . I was a member of AA and NA for a little over eight

years and I also participated on internet Twelve Step sites. Instead

of 'raising hell' at the meetings or the internet clubs when my

feelings changed about the " program " , I simply stopped going to the

meetings and cancelled my internet AA/NA club memberships. It was

really that simple, Kay. I did not have to act in the fashion that

you did and I don't even need steps or sponsors to know how to act in

a respectable manner.

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Finding Rational Recovery ( www.rational.org ) is what got me out of a ten year career in AA. As I look back that ten year career was just as sad (even though I didn't drink), and in some ways worse, than the ten preceeding years of my chemical dependency.

Take just a few minutes to stop everything and imagine as hard as possible whether you would REALLY like it or not if you could eliminate all recovery group activity in your life forever and STILL never drink/drug again.

DT

I asked my sponsor and...

Now that I have spent some time raising hell. I am finding that this list is not quite everything I imagined at first. I have read a few things I just cant argue with. There is much more breadth of experience here than I first thougth and some of you have really thought about this stuff long and hard. Maybe you have some valid points but I am also finding still that there is a lot of bias against anything AA may have to offer. Maybe I have seen some reasons for this in some of the things I have read about here. I could probbaly tone it down a littel and hear you all out but I still believe AA is the best plan. It concerns me that one member of this list announces tonight that she is now drinking, opening up that option again. Its an old tale and you may not like th e saying but it seems to sum up a lot 'Once an alcoholic always an alcoholic'. Why play with fire if you got burnt before? This disease is insidious in that way. People think themselves out of AA and then in a matte of time they start thinking about drining. It happens a lot, and then they come back to AA scratching they heads. It is unbelievable to watch it happen...sad too. I have a lot to think about here. The big book does say hats off to people who can do the about face and drink normally and that we dont have a monolpoly on therapy for alcoholics. Okay my sponsor just reminded me of that, I just got off the phone with her. I think that more than one person here has told me to call my sponsor, well she called me but we did talk about this stuff.But for the grace of God,Kay T.

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At 09:28 AM 11/2/01 -0600, Dave Trippel wrote:

>Finding Rational Recovery ( www.rational.org ) is what got me out of a ten

year career in AA. As I look back that ten year career was just as sad

(even though I didn't drink), and in some ways worse, than the ten

preceeding years of my chemical dependency.

>

>Take just a few minutes to stop everything and imagine as hard as possible

whether you would REALLY like it or not if you could eliminate all recovery

group activity in your life forever and STILL never drink/drug again.

Dave, if I remember right, you never bought into most of the AA

ideas and beliefs. I did, and what you suggest would have scared me

when I was in AA and starting to question it, as I had no friends outside

AA. Looking back with the definition of friend I now use, I had no

friends in AA either [well, not strictly true, but the two or three

friends I had left AA before I did].

I needed to find a social outlet outside of 12-step groups, and

started searching. I even went to a protestant Christian denomination

for a while, but decided I couldn't be there and still be true to what

I believed (I already had that problem in AA). I found a UU congregation

which helped a lot, but I think most anything to be around " earth

people " in a non-coercive atmosphere helps.

----------

http://listen.to/benbradley

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> really that simple, Kay. I did not have to act in the fashion that

> you did and I don't even need steps or sponsors to know how to act

in

> a respectable manner.

I will do my utmost to follow your sterling example. Thank you. I

have been thinking about getting a new sponsor. You sound like a good

candidate.

Kay T.

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>

> > really that simple, Kay. I did not have to act in the fashion

that

> > you did and I don't even need steps or sponsors to know how to

act

> in

> > a respectable manner.

>

>

> I will do my utmost to follow your sterling example. Thank you. I

> have been thinking about getting a new sponsor. You sound like a

good

> candidate.

>

> Kay T.

I don't sponsor people and I am not an AAer so I am hardly your

candidate.

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