Daily Recovery Readings - November

    11/22

    Daily Reflections

    ONLY TWO SINS

    . . . . there are only two sins; the first is to
    interfere with the growth of another human being,
    and the second is to interfere with one's own growth.
    ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS, p. 542

    Happiness is such an elusive state. How often do my
    "prayers" for others involve "hidden" prayers for my
    own agenda? How often is my search for happiness a
    boulder in the path of growth for another, or even
    myself? Seeking growth through humility and acceptance
    brings things that appear to be anything but good,
    wholesome and vital. Yet in looking back, I can see
    that pain, struggles and setbacks have all contributed
    eventually to serenity through growth in the program.
    I ask my Higher Power to help me not cause another's
    lack of growth today - or my own.

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    Twenty-Four Hours A Day

    A.A. Thought For The Day

    I have got rid of most of my boredom. One of the
    hardest things that a new member of A.A. has to
    understand is how he can stay sober and not be bored.
    Drinking was always the answer to all kinds of boring
    people and boring situations. But once you have taken
    up the interest of A.A., once you have given it your
    time and enthusiasm, boredom should not be a problem
    to you. A new life opens up before you that can be
    always interesting. Sobriety should give you so many
    new interests in life that you shouldn't have time
    to be bored. Have I got rid of the fear of being bored?

    Meditation For The Day

    "If I have not charity, I am become as sounding brass or
    a tinkling cymbal." Charity means to care enough about
    your fellow man to really want to do something for
    him. A smile, a word of encouragement, a word of love,
    goes winged on its way, simple enough it may seem,
    while the mighty words of an orator fall on deaf ears.
    Use up the odd moments of your day in trying to do
    some little thing to cheer up your fellow man.
    Boredom comes from thinking too much about yourself.

    Prayer For The Day

    I pray that my day may be brightened by some little
    act of charity. I pray that I may try today to overcome
    the self-centeredness that makes me bored.

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    As Bill Sees It

    Spirituality and Money, p. 324

    Some of us still ask, "Just what is this Third Legacy business anyhow?
    And just how much territory does "service" take in?"

    Let's begin with my own sponsor, Ebby. When Ebby heard how serious
    my drinking was, he resolved to visit me. He was in New York; I was in
    Brooklyn. His resolve was not enough; he had to take action and he had
    to spend money.

    He called me on the phone and then got into the subway; total cost, ten
    cents. At the level of the telephone booth and subway turnstile,
    spirituality and money began to mix. One without the other would have
    amounted to nothing at all.

    Right then and there, Ebby established the principle that A.A. in action
    calls for the sacrifice of much time and a little money.

    A.A. Comes Of Age, pp. 140-141

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    Walk In Dry Places

    Too smart to stay sober
    Humility
    "I've never seen anybody who's too dumb to stay sober. But I've met a few people who were too smart." These wise words by an older member sum up what we sometimes see.... people who feel turned off by the program because it seems to simple and involves so many people of ordinary education and backgrounds.
    Alcoholism is much like other diseases in the way it strikes all people. Diabetes, for example, victimizes people of all intelligence and education levels. We could never believe that being smart would give us an advantage in dealing with such an illness.
    In the same way, the very smart person, has no edge over others in gaining sobriety. In fact, pride in such gifts can be a stumbling block. It can be a barrier to the simple acceptance and surrender needed for success in the 12 Step Program.
    We do have many very smart people in AA. They are also wise enough to know that nobody can outsmart John Barleycorn.
    We can feel grateful for mental abilities and education that halp us get along in the world. Our sobriety, however, is a separate type of gift that we did not create.

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    Keep It Simple

    We are healed of a suffering only be experiencing it in full. ---Marcel Proust
    We must never forget our past. We need to remember the power that our illness has over us. Why? So we can remember how our recovery began. So we can remember we’re not cured. So we can tell our stories.
    We must remember how we acted. Why? So we don’t act and think like addicts. Most of us had a poor relationships with friends, family, and ourselves. We need to remember how lonely we felt. That way, we’ll make recovery grow stronger One Day at a Time.
    Prayer for the Day: Higher Power, help me always remember how my illness almost destroyed me. Help me face the pain of these memories.
    Action for the Day: I will talk about my past life with those who support my recovery. I will tell them what it is that I must remember about my past.

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    Alcoholics Anonymous - Fourth Edition

    Chapter 10 - To Employers

    If you desire to help it might be well to disregard your own drinking, or lack of it. Whether you are a hard drinker, a moderate drinker or a teetotaler, you may have some pretty strong opinions, perhaps prejudices. Those who drink moderately may be more annoyed with an alcoholic than a total abstainer would be. Drinking occasionally, and understanding your own reactions, it is possible for you to become quite sure of many things which, so far as the alcoholic is concerned, are not always so. As a moderate drinker, you can take your liquor or leave it alone. Whenever you want to, you control your drinking. Of an evening, you can go on a mild bender, get up in the morning, shake your head and go to business. To you, liquor is no real problem. You cannot see why it should be to anyone else, save the spineless and stupid.

    p. 139

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    Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions

    Tradition Nine - "A.A., as such, ought never be organized; but we may create service boards or committees directly responsible to those they serve."

    At this juncture, we can hear a churchman exclaim, "They are making disobedience a virtue!" He is joined by a psychiatrist who says, "Defiant brats! They won't grow up and conform to social usage!" The man in the street say, "I don't understand it. They must be nuts!" But all these observers have overlooked something unique in Alcoholics Anonymous. Unless each A.A. member follows to the best of his ability our suggested Twelve Steps to recovery, he almost certainly signs his own death warrant. His drunkenness and dissolution are not penalties inflicted by people in authority; they result from his personal disobedience to spiritual principles.

    p. 174

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    A day of worry is more exhausting than a week of work.
    --Cited in The Best of BITS & PIECES

    We all have ability. The difference is how we use it.
    --Stevie Wonder

    Forgive yourself for your faults and your mistakes and move on.
    --Les Brown

    It is in the silence of the heart that God speaks.
    --Mother Teresa

    Let us be grateful to people who make us happy; they are the charming gardeners who
    make our souls blossom.
    --Marcel Proust

    Gratitude is the heart's memory.
    --French proverb

    Real thanksgiving is thanks-living.
    --unknown

    We don't need more to be thankful for, we need to be more thankful.
    --unknown

    Life's little duties should never come before love. Make time for those you care about.
    --unknown

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    Father Leo's Daily Meditation

    OBESITY

    "Obesity is really widespread."
    -- Joseph O. Kern II

    To be fat is to be lost. It is a self-imposed isolation that keeps people sad. The fat is
    the result of an addiction to a series of chemicals in food that society finds
    acceptable; the disease of bulimia is widespread.

    But it can be changed. People can and do get well from a compulsion around food by
    surrendering to the reality of their compulsion. The people-pleasing must be seen.
    The mask must be removed. The pain in the family must be talked about. Feelings
    that have been buried behind the food for years should be expressed. Feelings are to
    be felt!

    We need not remain fat, and recovery begins when we begin to have hope; we begin to
    love ourselves; we begin to believe in ourselves.

    O Lord, You hear the prayer of all Your children help me to hear my prayers, too!

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    "I will give thanks to the Lord with my whole heart."
    Psalm 9:1

    "Enter into His gates with thanksgiving, and into His courts with praise. Be thankful to
    him and bless his name."
    Psalm 100:4

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    Daily Inspiration

    Make it your goal to be someone that you would like to spend the rest of your life with. Lord, help me approach my day interested in everything that happens so that my life will truly be an adventure.

    Through the power of God within me, I am stronger than any of my circumstances. Lord, I seek, I knock and I ask and You are always there and ready to give me the miracles that I need.
    This article was originally published in forum thread: Daily Recovery Readings - November started by bluidkiti View original post

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