41st Woman To Woman Conference
San Diego, CA: 41st Woman To Woman Conference.
San Diego, CA: 41st Woman To Woman Conference.
Kalispell, MT: Montana Fall Roundup. [email protected]
Lake Pleasant, AZ: 26th West Valley Roundup. www.westvalleyroundup.com
Powell River, British Columbia: 68th Powell River Rally. [email protected]
Greenbo, KY: 29th Fellowship by the Lake. [email protected] www.fellowshipbythelake.org
Rome, Italy: EURYPAA 2015 (All Europe Young People in AA). www.eurypaa2015.org
Atlanta, GA: 2015 International Convention. www.aa.org
Pitman Center, TN: Great Smoky Mountain Recovery Campout. [email protected]
Ashland, NE: Pockets of Enthusiasm Roundup. [email protected]
Louisville, KY: EACYPAA XIII (Eastern Area Convention of Young People in AA).
Old Fort, NC: 32nd Women's Esse Quam Videri. [email protected]
Acton, CA: 20th Messengers of Recovery Anniversary www.messengersofrecovery.com
St. Cloud, MN: St. Cloud Roundup.
Oakhurst, CA: 30th Serenity in the Sierras. www.serenitysierras.com
Perrysburg, OH: 32nd Midwest Woman to Woman Seminar. [email protected] www.midwest-wtw.org
“Success and failure share a common denominator ... both are temporary.”
“Today’s disappointment, viewed six months hence, may turn out to be one of the best breaks we ever got.”
“Coincidences are merely a manner in which God protects his anonymity.”
“If each sufferer were to carry the news of the scientific hopelessness of alcoholism to each new prospect, he might be able to lay every newcomer wide open to a transforming spiritual experience.”
“My desire to drink became a desire not to.”
“My drinking career was all about running away. I could pack up and vanish in a flash. Now, I can make commitments and become part of something. I can let myself belong.”
“The smile from my face traveled to my heart.”
“My inner feelings boil down to a handful of things – fear, anger, self-pity, shame, and feelings of inadequacy and low self-esteem. These are the things we need to talk about in AA.”
“You’ve got one life to live. Don’t screw it up with a lot of maybes, what-ifs, and could-have-beens. Focus on what you have.”
“When I call my sponsor, my friends, someone on my home group’s phone list, or someone who scribbled their number on a napkin after a meeting, I make progress ... If we just call, we help one another stay sober, one call at a time, one connection at a time.”
“Like every AA member I have a definite responsibility to become a citizen of the world around me; to channel into it the experience of living and working which has been mine in our Fellowship.”
“Not picking up a drink creates infinite possibilities for me ... When I wake up in the morning I pray for what I need to get through the day sober. I also smile and say to myself, Who knows? This could be the greatest day of my life!”
“My group included almost every type of alcoholic that old-timers feared most ... The amazing thing is most of us stayed sober, despite all the dire predictions. Why? Because the two things we had in common were more important than all our differences. We were alcoholics and we believed in the program of Alcoholics Anonymous.”
“If faith without works is dead, willingness without action is fantasy.”
“Experience has taught us that simplicity is basic in preservation of our personal sobriety and helping those in need.”
