The back story. Born to a family with frequent drunken bar fights in the living room (kids included) strung out by 14 rehab at 17 A drunken, broke, emotionally bankrupt, disaster at 23 Surrendered worked the steps to the best of my ability, again and again, always had trouble with step 2 but managed to stay sober for 12 years going to meetings 3-4 times a week sponsored 6-8 people over the years and been on multiple 12 steps. Well 2 years back for a reason I still do not understand I was on a business trip for I would guess the the 30th-40th time in 12 years and had a beer put in front me, I drank it without any thought. For the next several months I didn't drink and went to AA as if nothing happened. Started traveling overseas and found myself drinking nightly. It was not the same as when I was a kid but I certainly saw myself crossing lines and knew where I was headed. So with only emotional consequences I am back in AA all of 12 days.
It is difficult, I am not ashamed or embarrassed or feel like I let anyone down by myself. I know the mechanics and could offer advice but purposely just listen because clearly I missed something. I work with my sponsor read and pray daily but have to admit. I question where was god when I could not do for myself? I know I took the drink but I dont understand how I could be so active and practice yet make such a monumental error in judgment then follow it up by being as dishonest as before I ever walked through the AA door. I am still hung up on step 2. I believe in a power greater then myself but something in my gut says whatever it is does not really have a plan for me. This hung me up for 12 years and in my warped mind provided proof of what I always suspected was the case.
Obviously I am being a bit grandiose to make my point. I am actually very laid back basically accepting and happy guy in all things accept spirituality. The dilemma is whatever serenity I had seems based on bs but that doesnt sit right either since my life did a 180 and people who knew me then have no idea who I am today and I am, for the most part, a decent moral person.
Anyone ever been here and what did you do to get through step 2 the right way. I faked it for 12 years and genuinely tried but never made it I guess. How do you break through this wall?
Hello Dwallace and welcome to the board. I felt the same way that you do about HP not having power over my life or a plan. I'll elaborate on this tomorrow (it's late). Great attitude btw for not beating yourself up over your minor setback. Be kind to yourself, your childhood sounds a lot like mine and it's not fun to think about sometimes.
Aloha DW... Good thing you had the 12 years before the relapse huh? Have you wondered where you'd be right now if you were opening up the door to the 1st step?
I read your post like if I were saying it to my sponsors past. I was happy to be told that alcoholism is not a Moral issue. At that time both my exspouse and I were very well wrapped up in the disease. I thought she was bad and didn't drink right just to hurt me. Blah!! I was wrong....Good!!
The God issue and the issues with God were all about sanity for me. I was pretty well screwed up in the mental department, couldn't see the forest for the trees or the up from the down. I didn't know...and I didn't know that I didn't know so I was nursery or pre-school material. It took me 5 years of program and college courses in order to get a hold of information I could hold on to and trust in before I went to work on the steps for real. The last word of the 2nd step for me was key to my condition before I even understood what my condition was. "Lead me to Sanity" mean't helped me find the doors of recovery and that process was this;
I tried to get a hold of "Help in Emotional Problems" and they put me on hold, I next tried the "Suicide Prevention" emergency number...they were all at lunch. I next found myself looking at the hotline number for the Al-Anon Family Groups, had no idea how I got there, had tried 2 meetings months before and pretty much destroyed both and I got someone in the program that told me not to hang up because my life would depend on the information she could pass to me. I got the "rational", "helping" support from someone I would never meeting recovery put there by HP and now it was up to me to do for me what I could and would do for myself. There wasn't anything left in the house for me to drink and I was too fearful of missing the meeting the next night so I didn't drink and chose to go to the meeting. I didn't destroy that one and I didn't drink so I sat down, listened, kept an open mind and tried to act sane. I faked the sane part but pretty much everyone there knew I was trying to do something I wasn't good at. I was born and raised Catholic...In my 37 years of Catholicism I had a God but never a power greater than myself. I was crazy and a catholic and an alcoholic and much more but crazy. I needed a power greater than Jerry F and his perception of God to lead me to sanity and I got led there. It took me years to embrace sanity or even find a workable definition of sanity "The continuous, orderly, process of thought" W O R K; forcible and intentional.
I learned and accepted that I had/have never out ran God and I ran like the wind of a tropical storm and when I was all blown out and stopped I felt a gentle bump on my back and that is when my HP caught up. Ever so close and never asked for. I wasn't in the practice of asking my HP for the right thing so how could I hold God responsible for me choosing and getting the wrong thing.
When it comes to this disease I don't ever take myself soooo seriously. Today I network mostly with relapsers for just the reason you sound confused. It sounds like you take the good work you did in the past as a reason you cannot ever get tripped up. When you've heard that this disease is cunning, powerful and baffling that needs to be taken seriously. Your relapse drinking sounded like one of my last relapses smoking. Yes it surprised me how fast I accepted that cigar from one of my AA buddies who was trying to stop himself but I was surprised for only a micro second and then I went about doing everything but eating that cigar knowing "for this I'm responsible". I didn't hear God complaining or saying God was not pleased with me. God hasn't or should I say couldn't get through to me when I was in my addictions. That relationship is part of the cunning...I will involve myself in and with something in spite of my awareness and experience. I went past the part of saying NO...to the part of saying Howdy!. I know how to say Howdy to alcohol I learned it way before I got to AA, I started at nine and practiced it well all phases of it and when I drink I am doing something normal for an alcoholic and nothing takes a seat before the bottle NOT EVEN GOD...GOD IS IN THE BOTTLE!!
The God of my understanding...the new one, the old one, the one who has evolved between old and new, will not do for me what I won't do for myself. When I asked for the compulsion to be lifted it was lifted then and since then I have to keeping doing what I need to do to keep the compulsion at rest. I have never lost it and I have never drank again even when I am aware that alcohol always presents itself to me as something I can conquer eventually. God has found me a person to talk to on the phone who led me to a meeting and the literature and the people and the serenity prayer and everything else and my part is.....?
Reading your post leads me to believe that for the briefest of time you said yes and the disease had another AHA!! Your 12 years isn't the 19 year relapse that resulted in a funeral of one of our past members. It doesn't matter...That you found the extra power or higher power to stop and come back here, hurt, confused resentful and whatever to look around for missing pieces, more help, greater or higher power so that your prior twelve years will go on is what matters.
My God, My Higher Power showed up at the morning AA meeting in the form of one member pouring out a brand new, freshly uncapped, bottle of vodka while 30 other drunks at the meeting had their own private reactions. I held my breath and thought the scene was insane, surrealistic, unimaginable for me (I've never poured one out or thrown one away. Although convinced I will never beat alcohol I never stopped because I've had enough. There was never enough and maybe you have that part of the disease that some alcoholics still have, like me, the thought regardless of how tempered, that there will come a day when I might drink like other men even though it has almost taken my life. Maybe. Maybe you are wrong about Higher Power or not as convinced or have never surrendered or abandoned yourself. Maybe you were the "There will come a time" man and the time came for you and you said yes in spite of all you know and have experienced. Maybe. I can tell you this, just for me and without attempting the role of a most arrogant, spiteful, asshole I used to be, that you have come back in from a relapse is the love of HP working in the life of JerryF. Your journey back in is sponsorship for me and you have one third the time I have. Time isn't anything for us who choose to live one day at a time. Years of continuous sobriety speaks alot for creating the habit of not drinking but it says nothing about the same amount of time the disease lurks and it does lurk.
God has always been there for me. I know that. I accept that. I don't have to do God's part of my sobriety. I have to do my own. Those times when beyond my own awareness of need and beyond my own ability to respond to crises that the crises didn't take me (I didn't say happen) I know I was awarded extra and higher power and I choose to call that God or in the culture I embrace Akua. In all of the times I had the awareness and the ability and the opportunity and didn't do my part that has nothing to do with God or no God. I made a bad choice, I've done it before and since and the chances are I will make poor choices again. With more practice of this program the chances for that get less and not impossible.
This is long and your post was inviting and encouraging for me. I would like to tell you about the spiritual response I got when I relapsed suddenly the last time on smoking. It took me by so much surprise like yours took you that when I sat in my next meeting and reflected on how very fast I was subdued this thought arose. "I'm glad that wasn't a Tangeuray on the rocks with an olive and an onion."
Maybe the sanity at the end of the 2nd step is gratitude that you get another run at sobriety and another 12th step (besides the one you've done with me) and that the 12 years you've done already are good years and that even if you haven't known your HP you haven't out distanced your HP.
From my lessons on faith, in recovery, "Faith is not so much believing without seeing but accepting without reservation."
I am grateful you have shared your recovery here where I can do something with it. I get to stay sane. I believe you are an instrument of my HP.
DW, Welcom to the boards of MIP. Your post speaks alot to me, and I wanted to share my thoughts. I remember trying to figure out exactly what sanity was. I looked it up, did some research, and still was confused. Then it dawned on me. I always went through my life wishing I would stop and think before I said or did something, but never was able to take that pause. This program has helped me get that "one little moment in time" to pause, take a breath and think first. In the past, I tried everything I could think of to get that moment, but never got it. My sponsor told me to accept the fact that it's a power greater than myself doing for me what I can't do for myself, and restoring some sanity back into my life. I knew I couldn't stop drinking on my own, so there must be something out there with more power than I that had done it for me. For me, not drinking is sanity. Having the ability to stop and think is sanity. Being able to decide right from wron is sanity. The thing I've come to realise in this program, is that we can make up our own minds about what things mean to us, and use them however we want or need to. If it keeps me sober, then it's the right thing. We are abnormal people trying to live in a normal world, but I've discovered that the more I live in that normal world, the more like it I become. Glad to see you back in the program after what you've been through. It takes a strong person to admit defeat and go back to doing the right thing. Keep working the steps. You may or may not get them, but someday you may just learn that they're working and accept them.
Brian
-- Edited by Reffner on Tuesday 18th of August 2009 12:36:44 PM
I read your post over and over again last night. One experience that I had that probably came close to yours was when I was 18months sober(dry drunk). I had hit a bottom in recovery. I too was sponsoring and also had a sponsor. I was attending AA meetings and skimming through the Big Book. I probably was attending about 2 to 3 meetings a day at this time. Of course I thought that I was on the right track until the bottom fell out. I was having all kinds of problems that i kept to myself and did not know how to solve them. I did not drink but i hit an emotional,spiritual, mentally and physically bottom in recovery. I found out that I never took Step 1. The mental obsession and the physical allergy is what makes us powerless. I had overlooked "that our lives had become unmanageable" part. Now I am aware "unmanageable" is part of step 1. With a sponsor and step study meetings, I was able to understand and accept Step 1 wholeheartedly.Then I moved on to step 2. I came to believe in my sponsor, the fellowship which I considered as a "Power greater than ourselves" at that time. Later on in the process of working the steps, I found a power greater than my sponsor and the fellowship. That Power is God. I appreciate you sharing your story. You have helped me in my recovery. Keep Coming Back. Keep It Simple.
I appreciate all the comments. Yep still a whacked out hard case no matter how many 24 hours I strung together. I will keep praying, talking, and reading maybe some day I will have the white light, burning bush, overwhelming grace experience I can not rationalize or explain with science or whatever. One thing about HP is its is not easy to understand
This shit is cunning baffling and powerful...and I beleive that, that little monkey sits on our shoulder...It doesnt matter if one has been sober 30 days, or 30 years..
And they are right..when they say that resentment of any kind is the number one killer..
I was sober 22 years..and pissed off with myself and a few things that were just not going my way..and was still trying to control it all..
Consequence?
I pulled into a beer store one day and went for a country drive with a six pack..and that started a spree...
Hard to give up to some kind of a Higher Power.. For some of us..and its still the same way..Some days I can..some days I cant..
But..
I sure as hell know what the consequences are..if I dont..
Another Day..Keep smilin!!
__________________
Live each day as if it were your last...because tomorrow?
It might be.
thanks Phil. It is nice to know others have HP issues even after working the steps, repeatedly. I just don't hear that, well ever, from my local groups. Great people I love'em but sometimes it seems like I am the only one who doesn't have GOD on speed dial. Wow amazing what a relief something so simple like your message could produce.
Aloha DW...Keeping an open mind about lots of recovery stuff including HP is what helped me also. When I didn't try to fit God into a box I found God outside of it. Sometimes God show's up for me in another member or person or their share or character for the moment. I pretty much agree that God isn't an old man with a long white beard wearing long white robes and grasping a long staff but that God can use that if God so chooses to get someone's attention. Like I said...God for me showed up in your post.
As a CURRENT survivor not only of relapse, but of the afflicted gray matter bouncing around in my skull, I have myself had to take a long hard look at what was "missing", post-stepwork, post-long term recovery, post-dumb decision to drink.
What I had gained from it is this: There is no one step that was missing or incomplete which led to my picking up a drink. It was a combination, which led back to a singular attitude, which was the attitude of "indifference". I can only speak for myself, but for me, it all came down to a moment of selfishness. Step One, "Admitted we were alcoholic, and...." -BUT AT THIS MOMENT I DON'T CARE. Step Two, "Came to believe that...." -BUT AT THIS MOMENT I DON'T CARE. And so on.
I knew damn well, after a length of sobriety, that there was a Power greater than myself that COULD restore me to sanity. He/It had done so for how many thousand days prior, in sobriety? But on one day, at one moment, I DIDN'T CARE. It was time for me to look at the things in my life that I DID care about now (pretty much everything), relationships/family, work/financial capabilities, freedom, health, mental stability, etc., and recognize that these moments of selfishness were a surefire way to make the whole darn thing come crashing down AGAIN.
And to make USE of a bit of "selfishness", aimed in the right direction. I am too selfish about my peace of mind, my friendships, peoples' trust in me, my trust in myself, my stability in life, to GIVE it all away to Alcoholism again.
In that moment where I didn't CARE about myself (i.e. I ventured to pick up a drink), it opened up the obvious neccessity for me to quit fooling myself (again), and be a little more selfish about my recovery. Is there any foolish emotion I am allowing myself to revel in (indifference?), that corrupts the way I hold onto what sobriety has given me?
Like you, I refused to beat the hell out of myself for it. While there was a healthy fear of returning to the old life (the "oh shit moment"), that proved to be the defining moment of a return to healthy thinking. You are doing such now, as you seek understanding and help with this choice you made.
If you feel there is a problem with Step 2 here, I honor that. You know yourself. But it sounds to me like, after 12 years sober and active in AA, you know "what's going on", and you just allowed yourself to not give a crap for a few moments.
Keep it simple. Re-leanr what you already know, and make the commitment again.
Take care and thank you so much for sharing with us. Everyone's replies here are really helpful, including your topic itself.
__________________
~Your Higher Power has not given you a longing to do that which you have no ability to do.
I agree with Phil no matter how much time, it is always there, the compulsion, like a boogy man standing right behind me, waiting for me to get into wrong thinking and thinking I am in charge, and pushing my HP out of the way.
And I feel that getting hung up on Step 2 and staying sober for 12 years is FANTANSTIC..........., from own Prespective, if I compare my own story to yours, never a good idea, but anyway, I got into AA, and got VERY stuck on the seceond half of the First Step, I knEw I had a major drinking problem, but I just did not get that my own life was unmanageable. I had a lot, and I would look at that unmanageability as people that had nothing left. Never did it occur to me that they were talking about inside stuff, not Outside stuff, so in and out I would go, get a couple of weeks, a few times a month, but would always go back to the comfort of my beautiful home, and all the amenities that were there, as well as people that loved me, as a result of my own ignorance, or brickheadedness, I was a relapser for all of 10 years, until the day when all the "things" that I had were gone, then I did get it. I now feel pretty certain that I was letting my the Disease do all of that thinking. Hindsight...always 20/20, right. But the Past is Dead and GONE.
That is when my Recovery began.
Thank you so much for this Post, it helped me understand what it was that I was hung up on.
Personally I feel that stuggling is a good thing, for when the answer comes, it is a strong, Powerful message, and more powerful it can be as a result of the struggling.
Hope to see you more of you here, sharing with us your Journey.
And almost forget to say WELCOME HOME!! my friend.
I was sitting here and re reading all the great responses, and felt that I left out my input to the HP issue...........so here goes........
In my early sobriety I just went to a meeting everyday, and yes I did read the first three steps always, never read further...I needed to do this slowly and I did.
From all of my years at Relapsing, in the very back of my mind, was this notion that the God of a particular Religion was a God that surely wanted NOTHING to go with the likes of me.
So for that first year I let the meetings be my HP, putting that old inner feeling of an HP on a shelve somewhere. And as I listened and listened to the stories, so many I could relate to, starting feeling differently about HP. Not my old way of thinking of HP, but a very Loving HP, that surely had played the major part of my staying sober.
When I first asked God to show me a different way, it was to an HP that was just there as in a theory only. Then when I reached my first year of continuous sobriety, it was truly a major awareness of a Power Greater than myself....doing for me what I Could Not Do for myself. And that awareness brought tears to my eyes, later when I was at home, after my "AA Birthday" celebration, and threw out my old ideas of an angry God, and now had a new HP that was there in my life everyday. I also had that little Black Book on 24 hours a Day, and that book was my little bible.
So I felt in my previous response I had missed the mark on what you were saying and needed to respond to you and your request for help.
Hugs to you and Welcome again, hope to see you soon.
Welcome to the forum and thanks for your post, I hope the following can help.
You asked where was God when I could not do for myself?
We obviously come to AA in the begining because we did not have the "power" to stay sober on your own. Step 1
It sounds like you are giving yourself the credit for staying sober for 12 years and you are blaming God for your relapse.
I believe the only reason I am sober today is due to the Grace of God, the people of the fellowship and the AA program, all of which are a power greater than me. So how can I not believe in step 2?
I couldn't stay sober more than 2 days on my own, so how can I give myself the credit for staying sober many years? This is proof of a power greater than myself in action.
Page 85 states, "it is easy to let up on the spirtual program of action and rest on our laurels. We are headed for trouble if we do for alcohol is a subtle foe. We are not cured of alcoholism. What we really have is a daily reprieve contingent on the maintenance of our spiritual condition."
Most of us Alcoholics are far from spiritual giants when we enter AA. I know I must keep working everyday to keep my spritual condition, it is very easy to slip away losing gratitude and giving myself too much credit.
take care,
__________________
Rob
"There ain't no Coupe DeVille hiding in the bottom of a Cracker Jack Box."