10. Continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong, promptly admitted it.
A recent post reminded me of what it was like in those very early days of AA. The massive contrast between my lonely existence pre AA and the warm and friendly environment I found in the rooms is one of my strongest memories.
I met people with weeks, months and sometimes years of sobriety. Even the person who was sober just a few weeks was amazing to me.
My head wasnt functioning too well. Not only in the emotional sense, I was more or less running on instinct, but also in terms of logic and reasoning. Here are some examples: You go to treatment (hospital) you must come out cured! Everyone in AA is just so wonderful and well motivated! To recover requires rigorous honesty so all in AA with more than a few weeks sobriety must be rigorously honest!
I had my own concept of right and wrong. I stopped doing a lot of the wrong things and began pursuing what I thought was right, only to find later that that was wrong as well!
One suggestion that I followed was to get a sponsor and I remember him informing me that all in AA is not as it seems. Subsequent experience has shown me that people come to AA for different reasons. Many are recovered alcoholics trying to pass on what they have to others, many are alcoholics on the path to recovery, trying to help others in order to help themselves (the selfish motive behind the program), then there were some with a range of motives seeing AA as a means to overcome loneliness, as a source of entertainment and drama, as a cure for some other outside issue, and of course as a lonely hearts club. Not to mention sexual predators of both sexes. All in all a pretty good reflection of society as a whole.
So how was a little innocent like me to be kept safe? Funnily enough I was attracted to the well ones and sought out and acted on their suggestions, which involved working the steps, prayer and getting a sponsor. My number one priority was to get sober and stay that way for good.
But those instincts were also driving me, security, sex and so forth, and disregarding all advice to the contrary (as I know you guys would never do) I spent a lot of time pursuing what I thought were the right solutions to my other needs. No human power could keep me safe in this respect, because I thought I was on the right track.
God kept me unharmed. For my alcoholism I was working through the steps and had learned about step 10, putting right any new mistakes as we go along. I was making plenty of mistakes but how else was I to learn. Putting sobriety first meant each time I made a mess of things I had to put it right immediately, and I learned from the experience. I experienced a lot of pain in this process, growing pain, but I didnt have to drink over it.
Steps 4-9 were all concerned with the past, clearing the wreckage, but even in those early days I could see the logic in step 10 having cleaned up the big mess of the past, dont create a new one by letting unresolved mistakes pile up.
God bless
Mike H.
-- Edited by Fyne Spirit on Thursday 21st of February 2013 02:33:16 PM
This would have fit nicely within the conversation several of the members were having after meeting last evening. Step 10 "Continued...Promptly" great words. (((hugs)))
Thanks Mike, I can really identify with what you are saying.
In the early days I remember hearing the words "Honesty" and when wrong promptly admit it. The first thing was to honestly look at a situation and see where I was wrong.
Years of focusing on where others where wrong, justifying and rationalizing my behaviours....and all the other defense mechanisms had to slowly melt away. I was always one to try to hide my mistakes, try to drink them away and always trying to ignore the 800 lb gorilla in the room.
How we stay sober during those early days with so few tools is a real miracle. I think the honesty and personal inventory starts the monent we walk into AA, step 10 just states that we should refine and continue this practice.
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Rob
"There ain't no Coupe DeVille hiding in the bottom of a Cracker Jack Box."
Thank you Mike! It took me the first 5 years...blowing through A.A....playing (gossiping) people, huffing out of the rooms when someone said something I didnt like LOL!!, at 2 years (when I finally KNEW EVERYTHING LOL) talking for 20 minutes per meeting, so I could set these sick people straight LOL!...thinking,"Well I work the steps, and I am SOBER, I am Gods gift to the Universe and A.A."...ahhh, sigh...those (eyewwwwww) "good" ole days! It took those first 5 years, to begin seeing how sick I really was (AM on my own!) ;) Beannachtai! (blessings in Irish :) ) Love, Lady Eli
I can relate to that lady eli - thanks for the heads up - not that I think it will actually stop me... lol... I suppose it's just part of the course of mistakes I must make to get to make mistakes in later sobriety! I can not wait to know everything I will know from all of them!!! LOOKING UOOOOBER forward to it! Can't wait to be as awesomely 'full of it' as you - and I mean that literally! Hmmmmm what mistakes can I make today with God's hand in mine???? LOL
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Thanks for everything. Peace and Love on your journey.