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will acquire a quiet courage, the kind that isn't tensionridden. He can look at "failure" and "success" for what these
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really are. Problems and calamity will begin to mean his
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instruction, instead of his destruction. He will feel freer and
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saner.
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The idea that he may have been hypnotizing himself by
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autosuggestion will become laughable. His sense of purpose
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and of direction will increase. His anxieties will commence to
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fade. His physical health will be likely to improve. Wonderful
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and unaccountable things will start to happen. Twisted
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relations in his family and on the outside will improve
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surprisingly.
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GRAPEVINE, JUNE 1958
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Easy Does It -- but Do It
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Procrastination is really sloth in five syllables.
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"My observation is that some people can get by with a
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certain amount of postponement, but few can live with
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outright rebellion."
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"We have succeeded in confronting many a problem drinker
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with that awful alternative, `This we A.A.'s do, or we die.'
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Once this much is firmly in his mind, more drinking only
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turns the coil tighter.
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"As many an alcoholic has said, `I came to the place where it
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was either into A.A. or out the window. So here I am!'"
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Groping Toward God
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"More than most people, I think, alcoholics want to know
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who they are, what this life is about, whether they have a
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divine origin and an appointed destiny, and whether there is
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a system of cosmic justice and love.
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"It is the experience of many of us in the early stages of
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drinking to feel that we have had glimpses of the Absolute
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and a heightened feeling of identification with the cosmos.
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While these glimpses and feelings doubtless have a validity,
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they are deformed and finally swept away in the chemical,
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spiritual, and emotional damage wrought by the alcohol
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itself.
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"In A.A., and in many religious approaches, alcoholics find a
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great deal more of what they merely glimpsed and felt while
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trying to grope their way toward God in alcohol."
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Spirituality and Money
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Some of us still ask, "Just what is this Third Legacy
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business anyhow? And just how much territory does
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`service' take in?"
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Let's begin with my own sponsor, Ebby. When Ebby heard
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how serious my drinking was, he resolved to visit me. He
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was in New York; I was in Brooklyn. His resolve was not
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enough; he had to take action and he had to spend money.
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He called me on the phone and then got into the subway;
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total cost, ten cents. At the level of the telephone booth and
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subway turnstile, spirituality and money began to mix. One
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without the other would have amounted to nothing at all.
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Right then and there, Ebby established the principle that A.A.
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in action calls for the sacrifice of much time and a little
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money.
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A.A. COMES OF AGE, P. 140-141
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Humility Brings Hope
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Now that we no longer patronize bars and bordellos, now
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that we bring home the pay checks, now that we are so very
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active in A.A., and now that people congratulate us on these
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signs of progress -- well, we naturally proceed to
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congratulate ourselves. Of course, we are not yet within
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hailing distance of humility.
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We ought to be willing to try humility in seeking the removal
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of our other shortcomings, just as we did when we admitted
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that we were powerless over alcohol, and came to believe
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that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to
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sanity.
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If humility could enable us to find the grace by which the
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deadly alcohol obsession could be banished, then there
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must be hope of the same result respecting any other
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problem we can possibly have.
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Welcome Criticism
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it not been for its strong critics, A.A. would have made
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slower progress.
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"For myself, I have come to set a high value on the people
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who have criticized me, whether they have seemed
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reasonable critics or unreasonable ones. Both have often
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restrained me from doing much worse than I actually have
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done. The unreasonable ones havetaught me, I hope, a little
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patience. But the reasonable ones have always done a great
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job for all of A.A. -- and have taught me many a valuable
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lesson."
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Three Choices
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The immediate object of our quest is sobriety -- freedom from
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alcohol and from all its baleful consequences. Without this
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freedom, we have nothing at all.
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Paradoxically, though, we can achieve no liberation from the
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alcohol obsession until we become willing to deal with those
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character defects which have landed us in that helpless
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condition. In this freedom quest, we are always given three
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choices.
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A rebellious refusal to work upon our glaring defects can be
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an almost certain ticket to destruction. Or, perhaps for a
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time, we can stay sober with a minimum of self-improvement
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and settle ourselves into a comfortable but often dangerous
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mediocrity. Or,finally, we can continuously try hard for those
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sterling qualities that can add up to fineness of spirit and
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action -- true and lasting freedom under God.
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GRAPEVINE, NOVEMBER 1960
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A New-Found Providence
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When dealing with a prospect of agnostic or atheistic bent,
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