33rd Wichita Fall Roundup
33rd Wichita Fall Roundup.
33rd Wichita Fall Roundup.
76th Laurel Highlands Conference.
42nd Woman to Woman San Diego Conference.
42nd Lubbock Caprock Convention. [email protected] www.nwta66.org/events
St. Cloud Roundup. [email protected] www.stcloudroundup.org
65th Southern California Convention. www.aasocal.com
7th Woman to Woman New England. www.womantowomannewengland.org
MSCYPAA XX (Massachusetts State Convention of Young People in AA) www.mscypaa.com
Summer Hummer. www.aacentralofficeofswmo.org
26th Heart of the Ozarks Roundup. www.heartoftheozarksroundup.com
Serenity in the Sierras. [email protected] www.serenitysierras.com
60th Florida State Convention. www.60flstateconvention.com
Road to Detroit. www.roadtodetroit.org
75th Buffalo Fall Convention. www.buffaloaany.org
71st Duluth Roundup. www.duluthroundup.org
“My past sobriety is not a ticket to future sobriety. I have to pay that fare and make the decision to recover daily.”
“I don’t need to project the future or cry about the past. Just live to the best of my ability, one day at a time.”
“By admitting where I was at fault, I was given the ability to forgive ... With forgiveness came a freedom that I had not anticipated. The amends had required nothing but courage, and a faith that my Higher Power would carry me where I had been too afraid to walk alone.”
“I had a really good reason for working Step Nine and making amends to my family and friends. I didn’t want a parade of people at my funeral singing, ‘Ding, dong, the wicked witch is dead!’”
“AA is spiritual, is the eye of the hurricane, is my refuge and my comfort.”
“My Higher Power works incognito, defying definition and requiring faith.”
“I felt myself move with a new power, courage, and faith that, by the grace of God, I have acquired as a result of working the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous.”
“The individual must sometimes place the welfare of his fellows ahead of his own uncontrolled desires. Were the individual to yield nothing to the common welfare there could be no society at all – only self-will run riot; anarchy in the worst sense of the word.”
“I am feeling much better now, and I thank God for AA and my good friends. I have learned how to accept their help.”
“When I’m willing to pay the price for top-shelf sobriety, ‘action’ is still the magic word.”
“We who live in the haven of AA cling together with an intensity of purpose which the outside world seldom comprehends. The anarchy of the individual melts away. Self-love subsides and democracy becomes a reality. We begin to know true freedom of the spirit.”
“Alcoholics Anonymous has given me something of real value that I can share with others.”
“Ever so slowly, I could feel myself changing. Things that had seemed important were no longer important. There was inside me a warming, a softening, a stirring, as the petals of a rosebud stir almost imperceptibly into a blossom.”
“I am learning how to cope with life, people, and situations, not as I want them to be, but as they really are.”
“The way our ‘worthy’ alcoholics have sometimes tried to judge the ‘less worthy’ is, as we look back on it, rather comical. Imagine, if you can, one alcoholic judging another!”
