A GUIDE to the TWELVE STEPS of ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS OF GREATER DETROIT 380 Hilton Road Ferndale, Michigan 48220 Phone 541-6565 |
Actual pamphlet measures approximately 3.5 x 7.5 inches.This copy clearly states on cover it was put out by AA of Greater Detroit. It’s been said that the pamphlet was originally written and distributed by the Akron group sometime in the 1940’s. The line breaks in the text of the pamphlet has been preserved for those that that matters to. In the pamphlet, the text is ‘justified’ = smooth margins right and left, which have been recreated here.
Note: Printing this document will not produce smooth margins as seen here.
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INTRODUCTION A GUIDE to the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics The Twelve Steps are the logical process by 1
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whipped and had a genuine desire to QUIT FOR GOOD. 2. We asked and received help from a power greater than ourselves and another human (NOTE: In almost all cases that power is called God. It is, however, God as WE UNDERSTAND HIM. For purposes of simplification, the word God is used in this pamphlet, meaning whatever higher power you choose to accept. In the case of the agnostic, the atheist or any unbeliever it is only necessary that he recognize some power in the universe greater than he is. He can call it God, Allah, Jehovah, the Sun, a Cosmic Force, or what- ever he chooses. He is almost certain to admit that we live in an orderly world, a world where night invariably follows day, where spring follows win- ter, where corn ripens at a certain season, where the young are born on an invariable schedule, where the planets and other heavenly bodies main- tain an orderly course. So it is only logical that there is some greater power behind this orderli- ness. Such an admission is all that is necessary.) 3. We cleaned up our lives, paid our debts, righted wrongs. 4. We carried our new way of life to others desperately in need of it. The Twelve Steps follow a logical sequence, one that has been used almost universally by suc- cessful members of AA. They were carefully thought out by the founders of the organization and are as true and as necessary to successful re- covery from alcoholism today as they were when they were written. over alcohol—that our lives had become unmanageable. WITHOUT the first step there is no chance of recovery. It has been demonstrated over and over again that a person becomes sober and stays sober only when he is doing so for himself and himself alone. He may become sober temporarily for the sake of some person, fear of some sort, because of his job, but unless he is sincerely, genu- 2
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inely determined to sober up for himself, his days of sobriety are numbered. It is a difficult step to take. It is a step in which no assistance from an outside source is possible. The prospect must make it alone. It is not easy to admit defeat. For years we have said, “I can stop drinking any time I want to.” For years we have believed that sobriety was “just around the corner.” Tragically enough, we never rounded that corner; and we suddenly discovered, much to our dismay, that we could not quit. We were like rabid baseball fans who still hope for a miracle when the home team goes into the final inning trailing by half a dozen runs. So we finally came to the fork in the road. We either honestly admitted that we had a problem or we continued sinking deeper and deeper into the bog of alcoholism, resulting in loss of mind or death. Until the admission is made, to ourselves, that our alcoholic problem has gone our to control we have on inspiration to stop drinking. But once that admission has been made the was is cleared. It is at this point that Alcoholics Anonymous can step in and lend a helping hand in the re- mainder of the program. The remaining steps are automatically made easier. The symptoms of alcoholism are clearly defined. There are scores of them, but among the major ones are: The inability to stop drinking after taking one drink. The necessity for a drink in the morning to “straighten up,” that morning drink developing into another drunk. Getting drunk at the wrong time. That is, get- ting drunk when every instinct tells us that the occasion is one calling for sobriety. Inability to sleep without the use of alcohol. Loss of memory during a drunk and the dead- ening of memory even when sober. The prospect will doubtless recognize many symptoms as his own when he listens to the stories of members of the group. When he recognizes them, it is imperative to impress on him that even if he isn’t an out and out alcoholic he is 3
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studying hard to be one, and the time when he will be in serious trouble is not too far away. There is no known cure for alcoholism. Once a person becomes an alcoholic (he won’t recog- nize it when he crosses the border line) he is an alcoholic for life. He may go years and years with- out touching intoxicants, yet when he does, he will be back in the same old squirrel cage again. Strangely enough, case histories prove that he will be worse than he was before. So it is not only important that we admit that we are powerless over alcohol, but that we CON- TINUE to bear in mind at all times that we are alcoholics. Only complete sobriety can make us and keep us normal. If, as a newcomer, you can honestly say to your AA friend, “I have an alcoholic problem; I am certain that I am an alcoholic; I want to do some- thing about it,” half of the battle is won. You are then open to teaching. Your mind is prepared to receive instructions in the AA way of life. SECOND STEP Came to believe that a power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.HAVING taken the first step we naturally ponder what we can do to receive assistance. Look- ing into the past we discover that our attempts to give up alcohol through our own will power have always failed. It is comforting to know, how- ever, that many great minds are agreed that trying to use will power is like trying to lift yourself by your bootstraps. The sincere efforts of our fam- ilies and friends to help us have been unsuccess- ful. We have fancied ourselves as rugged individ- ualists. We have liked to think “I am master of my fate, I am captain of my soul.” A little honest thinking convinces us that we have been miser- able failures as captains and masters. Many of us tried doctors and hospitals. Some of us tried religion. We found deep sympathy, but we did not find sobriety. The results were always the same—we got drunk again. Will power, help from families and friends, 4
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medicine, and formal religion having failed, there is but one place to turn. That is to God as we understand Him. This is not as difficult as it might seem. You are not asked to go to church. You are not asked to seek the advice of a clergy- man. You are only asked to quit trying to run your own life, and to keep an open mind. You are asked to accept teaching from a group of men who have ironed out the same problem that is bringing you deep trouble. Perhaps the easiest approach to the Second Step is to think back to our childhood. When we got into trouble we ran to our mother or father, knowing there was complete safety in their arms. We told them our troubles and our minds were relieved. Picture, then, God as a universal Father, ready to listen to your troubles, ready to give you the same understanding and protection you re- ceived from your parents in childhood. If your faith is not too strong at first try solv- ing it this way: Look around at your new friends in AA. The program has worked for them. Their troubles were as great as yours. They were down- and-outers morally and in many cases physically. Yet they have followed the rules and have man- aged to keep sober. It is just a matter of following the advice of your new friends. Follow the pro- gram they lay out for you. Have faith in that program. It has worked for them. It can work for you. THIRD STEP Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understand Him.ONCE having come to believe there is a Power greater than ourselves, it is not too difficult to turn our lives over to that Power. It was explained in the Second Step that as rugged individualists we were rank failures. For- ever looking into the future, we were forever dis- appointed when our plans failed. It is at this point that the Day by Day, or the Twenty-Four Hour plan comes to our assistance. We have found that by giving up planning, by 5
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letting each day take care of itself—and it al- ways will—we have been able to keep sober. We can’t control the future. The past is done and can’t be returned. And so if we can do a good job this day we are doing the best we possibly can. We start the day by deciding to stay sober for just twenty-four hours. We ask assistance from God to stay sober for that brief period. And when the day ends we thank God for the help He has given us. And on the next day and the next we follow the same program. This is the first step in turning our will and our lives over to God as we understand Him. From this small beginning we develop until we find we are no longer headstrong, we are no longer try- ing to run our own lives and making a sorry job of it.
AGAIN we come to a step that requires cour-
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To continue the inventory, we consider our physical selves, finding that health is impaired, memory is faulty, appearance is becoming more careless and slovenly, finances are at a low ebb. And having honestly taken ourselves apart we wonder how on earth people have put up with us all this time. It is a brave act to dissect ourselves thus. But we are fully compensated in the great feeling of satisfaction we experience in having at last squarely faced an issue. No man in his right senses wants to continue in this manner when he finds out what is wrong with him, so we logically come to the Fifth Step.
HERE again we find a very logical sequence. 7
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One or two conversations like this and the new- comer will begin to unburden himself. Things that he thought he would never tell a living soul start to come out. And as he shares his secrets his mind becomes unburdened of the terrific weight he has been carrying. He literally gets his troubles off his chest, and one reason for drinking—drinking to forget— immediately disappears. It is at this point that real sobriety begins. Nor can an alcoholic be safe until he has unburdened himself. He begins to feel that he “belongs.” And after he has stood up in public, leading his first meeting, he then feels that he is a full-fledged member. The newcomer is definitely progressing, and is ready for the next two steps, which are grouped together for explanation and interpretation. SIXTH STEP
SEVENTH STEP
IT IS VERY likely that we will willingly take 8
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Instead of asking for outright help, ask for guidance. Ask merely to be shown the way, so that you can do your own part. As we said earlier in this booklet, ask for guidance for one day at a time. The days will grow into weeks, into months and into years. Yet it has been but one day at a time. Do this humbly. Humility is sometimes diffi- cult to attain. In our cups we were big shots. They were all out of step but Jim. Try to remember that regardless of who you are, you are but a tiny cog in the great universe. Look at a distant star at night. Remember that it took the light from that star a century or more to reach the earth. Remember the star on which you gaze could prob- ably swallow the sun without noticing it. Con- sider that the earth is one of the lesser planets. And then consider your own physical insignifi- cance. It will make you feel small and humble. And it is with that attitude that you should ask God to remove your shortcomings. To be humble is not to grovel before men. It is not to become a doormat for society. Yet while in the flesh we are but infinitesimal specks, always remember that the very essence of the Christian religion is that the soul of man is eternal. It is the most precious thing in the world. In the very least of us is a little spark of the divine. It is that divinity that makes us rise above the lower animals. Humility is based on the recognition that we are the children of God. It is the consciousness of the need of a power greater than our own and a willingness to let that power control our lives. Very simply put, humility is teachability, an open mind to the truth. And when we can bring ourselves to this state, our recovery is well under way. EIGHTH STEP
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THESE TWO steps are in such direct relation 10
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perhaps, but he is going to admire you more and more as time passes. There are your friends whom you have let down. A few apologies are in order here. There are those you have maligned, ridiculed, or slan- dered. As you make amends you will find yourself increasing in strength and stature. Finally there are your dear ones who tried so hard to love you, to help you. How many times have you broken their hearts? How many times have you disappointed them? How many times have you promised to quit drinking, only to break the promise within a few hours or a few days? How many times have you let them down in a crisis? And yet they have stood by you. They have nursed you back to health when the worst thing wrong with you was a bad hangover. They have paid your debts. They have protected your names and reputation. They have fought for you when you could not fight for yourself. They have put up with your lies, your subterfuges, your wanderings into extra-martial excursions, your dis- honesties, your vile morning-after disposition. And they still love you. Here is a debt that cannot be repaid by words —even though you apologize until the very moment of death. This moral debt can never even fully be repaid by deeds. But it can be reduced to a minimum. The history of AA sparkles with families reunited and happily living together. But don’t expect this miracle to happen overnight. Always remember, it took you years to become an alcoholic. Full rehabilitation cannot be expected in a day or a week or a month. The road to re- habilitation is not as long as the road to alcohol- ism, but neither is it as tough. If you have suc- cessfully made the Sixth and Seventh Steps you will fully understand this. Always remember, easy does it. We must take life and its problems a single thing at a time. The longest journey starts with but a single step. Do not minimize the importance of the Eighth and Ninth Steps. Without having taken them you will never be on firm ground. Having conscien- tiously taken the, your future is more assured. 11
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WE FIND in AA that after a few months of
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WHAT HAVE I to meditate about? This will 13
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the form of language you use. And be certain that the God to whom you pray will make it easier for you to work out your own salvation.
NOW YOU ARE on your own. Your AA friends 14
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thing puzzles you, consult an older member of the group. He most likely will straighten out your thinking in a few words. If you have gone through the first Eleven Steps you have come far. It is now time that you are carrying on the work. You owe your sponsor and your group one thing—to carry the blessings of AA to some other alcoholic in need. You will be asked to call on a prospective member. Don’t lose any time in doing so. Tell him your story. Tell him what you are trying to do. Tell him what AA has done for others. If you think you are too new, just remember that he is even newer, and if you have been sober only one day, he will look on you as a veteran. Before long you will have a “baby” of your own. Then you will really have something to live for. You will worry about him, you will try to keep sober for him, you will guide him to the best of your ability, you will almost suffer with him as he comes out of his alcoholic fog. In doing this you will be giving of yourself, and you will find new joy in living. Always keep it before you that the more you put into this work the more you will take out of it. The harder you work, the more activities you get into, the easier will be your road to sober living. There is no excuse for missing a meeting. There is no excuse for not helping someone when asked to. Always bear in mind that your alcoholic problem is the FIRST THING in your life. It comes before everything else. For without sobriety you will have nothing—no family, no job, no friends. And before too long you will have no sanity—and will lose life itself. Share this new life with others. It will repay you then thousand- fold. In conclusion, practice these steps in all your affairs. The Twelve Steps are not something to be gone through once and then forgotten. They are a set of rules for living that must be practiced at all times, never forgotten. Remember that you are an alcoholic, and but one drink away from drunkenness again. Remember that you are completely dependent 15
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on God as you understand Him. Remember to keep your thinking straight. Remember that a wrong act will prey on your mind until you either do something to rectify it or get drunk. Remember that defects will creep into your life if given half a chance. Remember that if only through gratitude, we must help others in order to help ourselves. And if at any time you feel uncertain of your- self, read the Twelve Steps carefully, applying them to yourself. You will find an answer to your problem. If the answer is not there, a telephone call or a visit to another member of AA will bring the answer.
Reprint permission for 12 Steps from
AA World Services, In |