Quote November 21, 2016
“Until today, at least, I am getting further away from that first drink, which is the one that inevitably leads me to complete disaster.”
“Until today, at least, I am getting further away from that first drink, which is the one that inevitably leads me to complete disaster.”
“For all its usual destructiveness, we have found that fear can be the starting point for better things. Fear can be a stepping-stone to prudence and to a decent respect for others. It can point the path to justice, as well as to hate. And the more we have of respect and justice, the more we shall begin to find the love which can suffer much, and yet be freely given. So fear need not always be destructive, because the lessons of its consequences can lead us to positive values.”
“The Twelve Steps are deceptively simple but provide limitless spiritual growth for anyone with the patience to stay the course.”
“We sense that here in AA this shared darkness has become a shared light.”
“I ask the newcomer to help me wash the coffeepot, or put chairs away, because service was, and still is, my key to belonging.”
“I was amazed at the things I was grateful for: those painful situations that served to show me my character defects; the ability to accept and share my pain with others; the opportunities to do things I was afraid to do which gave me strength and confidence.”
“To be happily sober, we must be active -- and this does not necessarily mean group activity. The Loner is part of a much larger group of people in far distant places, all members of AA with the same problems, fears, and happiness to be shared ... I may not be in face-to-face contact with other AA members, but my real friends in AA are too many to enumerate, and I find there aren’t enough hours in the day to do all I should.”
“Recovery is giving it away. If you don’t give it away you can’t have it ... Be part of the pipeline.”
“Difficult times bring us to new degrees of acceptance and humility because we learn on a deeper level how close we really are to our next drink. If we hang on, we learn how the grace of the Fellowship and the principles of the program carry us through the tough spots as well as the times of joy.”
“I began to find ... a more centered, purposeful life, at least in the sense that my body, mind, emotions, and soul were all more or less heading in the same direction. I was riding one horse instead of four.”
“Laughter is one of God’s greatest and most beneficent gifts to us. Laugh with him sometimes at yourself.”
“Suffering is no longer a menace to be evaded at any cost. When it does come, no matter how grievously, we realize that it too has its purpose. It is our great teacher because it reveals our defects and so pushes us forward into the paths of progress. The pain of drinking did just this for us. And so can any other pain.”
“Happiness is not a station we arrive at; it’s a way of traveling.”
“I number among my friends stars and lesser lights of stage and cinema; writers are my daily diet; I know the ladies and gentlemen of both political parties; I have been entertained in the White House; I have broken bread with kings and ministers and ambassadors; and I say, after that catalog ... that I would prefer an evening with my AA friends to any person or group or group of persons I have indicated.”
“The best way to appreciate AA is the same way you appreciate a stained-glass window: Look at it from the inside.”
