”Loneliness is
painful; solitude is peaceful. Loneliness makes us cling to others in desperation;
solitude allows us to respect others in their uniqueness and create
community.”
Henri Nouwen
|
Spending holidays without my kids puts
some of my past into perspective. It’s a reminder of the cost my addiction.
But it was also a time for reflection, and where I noticed that I am better
able to be alone. As my group’s promises state, “reaching out in trust and
connecting with others will come easier, dispelling our sense of isolation
and loneliness.” This is something that I have begun to notice in my life,
that my loneliness is indeed transforming into solitude.
My addiction was lonely, and being alone
was indeed painful, which led to my wanting to find some way to soothe the
suffering. My medication was to act out, and I can see how so much of that
past behaviour stemmed from desperation.
Solitude comes from the serenity I
experience in recovery. The fact that I no longer feel driven by my
addiction, but that I know I can rely on my Higher Power, my group, friends,
family, and even myself, has shown me the power of community. I have finally
come to find peace within, and that is the best gift I could ever hope for.
|
Affirmation
I
will enjoy the tranquility of life, the quiet moments to simply sit and just
be. I do not need external things to distract me from being alone.
|
These thoughts are part of my personal journal - reflections of where I am and have been in my recovery, but also where I want to be. My words come from my heart, and moments of clarity when I am best connected with my Higher Power. May God grant you serenity in reviewing my humble beginnings and my continuing path of recovery.
Book Sales
My first print run of 100 copies sold out, but I have had a second printing of an additional 250 copies done this year. So more are available, now at a cost of $20 CAD. My second book, Twelve Steps for Everyday Living, is now available for purchase for $15 CAD. It is my attempt, based on my experience and those who've been a part of my recovery journey, to transform the 12 Steps into a tool for anyone to use to navigate the challenges and trials of life.
In Serenity,
Scott Email: sastewart74@gmail.com
Review it? Do you have a copy and enjoy what you have read? Can you help me promote it by leaving a good review at Goodreads (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/21939460-lean-on-me)? Thanks for your support.
In other news, after a long debate and some peer pressure, I have started a second blog, along the same vein as Lean on Me, but in my second language. You can check it out here - Tomber dans l'appui.
Tuesday, 31 December 2013
December 31
Thursday, 26 December 2013
December 26
”All we have to
decide is what to do with the time that is given us.”
J. R. R. Tolkien
|
Some days I am really discouraged with
myself, and with how little I am doing to take care of my needs. It happens
on days when I go to get dressed and can’t find clothes that fit properly and
I am reminded that I have not been exercising as much as I would like, or
eating as healthy as I should. It happens on days that I pick up my pen to
write and realize it’s been days or weeks since I last put an entry in my
journal. It happens when I go to a meeting and have to look at the calendar to
recall the last time I sat around the table with my brothers and sisters in
recovery.
Staying focused on my recovery takes
effort. It’s a set of new habits, many of which still do not come naturally
to me. I have to set reminders, and have others check up on me to ensure that
I remember to follow my program. I need to establish a new routine that
includes my new tools to help me progress in my recovery. The more I find
excuses to put something off, the easier it is to forget and the harder it is
to find the resolve to get back on track.
Being sober gives me back the power to
choose what to do with my time. However, I need to make the effort to plan my
time accordingly, to put recovery work into my daily routine, or my old
habits will work their way into squandering my time.
|
Affirmation
Recovery
has a lot do to with recreating myself, and that means putting new and
healthy habits into my routine to reinforce my sobriety.
|
Wednesday, 25 December 2013
December 25
”I wish we could
put some of the Christmas spirit in jars and open a jar of it every month.”
Harlan Miller
|
I think this is true of many things,
patience, love, kindness – it would be nice when we have an excess to be able
to take some and store it away to be available when we are in short supply. I
imagine having a little pantry with a bunch of glass jars, filled with lights
of various colors for all these attributes I wish could be stock-piled,
waiting for the day when I need a little boost.
The truth is that I have something in my
life now that has an endless supply. My recovery program is teaching me that
I am no longer alone, that I have the accompaniment of a Higher Power, who is
omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent – all powerful, all-knowing, and
always present. I am learning that on my own I am not able to walk this path
before me, but that in surrendering to the will of my Higher Power I will
also be granted all that I need to succeed. Therein in lies my infinite
supply of whatever is required to live the life I am meant to have.
Prayer and meditation are my ways to ask
and receive what I need most. When I seek guidance to know the will of the
God of my understanding, I am asking for the tools and capabilities to follow
through with His plans. So I can have a little bit of Christmas with me every
day of the year, as long as I ask for it.
|
Affirmation
My
Higher Power will provide me with everything I need if I but ask, and seek to
know the path I am to follow.
|
Monday, 23 December 2013
December 23
”Each day is a
loan, spend it wisely.”
Anonymous
|
Time is a precious gift, and something I squandered
too easily in the past. It is still something I struggle with, having too
much time and trying to make good use of it. Having time on my hands doesn’t
mean that I always have to have it planned out; spending free time relaxing,
meditation or reflecting is healthy. But there are many ways I can simply
waste it.
I’ve come to realize that lure of my
addiction was the lure to escape. And the result of all that running away is
that I kept hiding from myself. This is most apparent in those times when I
am alone and when I feel uncomfortable, like having an itch I can’t find to
scratch. It’s at those times I wish I was anywhere else, or doing anything
else, than being stuck with only myself.
These are the times when I need to slow
myself down, to reassure myself that I am safe all by my lonesome. I have to
remember the simple things, like breathing. Or like focusing on the thoughts
that are preoccupying my attention, recognizing they are there, and letting
them go. I need to remain grounded and focused on the present to make the
best use of my time.
|
Affirmation
Time
is a gift, one that I am learning to value. Time with myself is something to
treasure, and a healthy part of my sobriety.
|
Friday, 20 December 2013
December 20
”When the road
ahead is dark, And you don’t know where to go, Take another step, take
another step, Trust God and take another step”
Stephen Curtis
Chapman
|
The light at the end of the tunnel has not
always shone brightly, if at all sometimes. There have been many times, in my
active addiction as in my recovery, where the situation has seemed bleak and
without much hope. The hardest thing has been to keep pushing forward, to
trust that my Higher Power would take care of me.
Standing still does nothing to move me
towards change. Many steps in recovery have been taken in blind faith, with
the hope of those who have gone before me that it was the right thing to do.
Leaning on other’s wisdom and advice has not come naturally, and surrendering
my own will has not been easy. But I have made much more progress in changing
my life and moving away from my past by allowing myself to be guided in this
way.
As the Steps show me, turning my life and
my will over to the God of my understanding is something I need to do in
order to heal. This act of surrender frees me from the burden of guilt and
shame that has kept me trapped for so many years. And it loosening the grip
of my dark shadow makes taking each step that much easier.
|
Affirmation
“In
God I Trust” is a good slogan to help me surrender my will and allow myself
to be open to the guidance of my Higher Power.
|
Wednesday, 18 December 2013
December 18
”Only one may
enter here, one whose worth lies far within. A diamond in the rough.”
Quote from the
movie “Aladdin”
|
I was walking in the winter snow recently,
down a side street where the plows had passed and spread out their sand and
salt. Most of the snow was no longer white as a result, but as I watched, the
sun came out and to my surprise; the snow still sparkled in its brilliance,
even under all the dirt. I found this metaphor quite suitable for my life.
I believe that my life has been more like
that dirty snow, mixed up with a bunch of things that have not kept me pure
or on the right path. Yet, when the sun shines, or better when my purpose is
alit by my Higher Power, it reveals that the beauty and potential is still
there, even when I didn’t see it. The things I need to succeed in life have
already been provided to me, I just have to work with them in spite of all
the dirt around me.
Recovery is teaching me that I have much
worth that has lain far within for far too long. As I shed the skin of my addiction,
push away that filth that I attracted for too long, I too, can be a brilliant
snowflake to shine in the light of my Creator.
|
Affirmation
My
potential to follow the path of the God of my understanding is always there,
I just need to be reminded to shine from time to time.
|
Tuesday, 17 December 2013
December 17
”Being deeply
loved by someone gives you strength; loving someone deeply gives you courage.”
Lao Tzu
|
Love is a part of my life that I have only
begun to understand correctly in my recent recovery. It is not about seeking,
about getting what I want, or about having things I deserve. Rather, love is
about sharing, about spreading the joy I have inside with others, about
wanting to put someone else before me. I love not to be loved in return, but
simply because I am filled with it and I need to pass it along.
I now have people in my life who love me
deeply, some who always have but I never recognized it, like my parents, and
others who are a more recent addition. Nonetheless, knowing that others care
strongly for me gives me strength to want to continue in this new life, to
keep on progressing in becoming a better person.
I am also learning how to love deeply, to
be fully committed to other people, to be truly intimate and to be part of a partnership.
Relationships may be based on give and take, yet I can half participate, only
giving when I know that I will get something in return. Nowadays, I give
simply because I am able, and I am less expectant of what might come back as
a result. I have more courage to face the world because of the depth of my
love of others.
|
Affirmation
May
God grant me all the love I need today to share with others, to spread joy and
happiness, and to propel me along my path of recovery.
|
Monday, 9 December 2013
December 9
”Success is
walking from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm.”
Winston Churchill
|
Some days I certainly feel more like a
failure than others. There are many things from my past that I am not proud
of, poor choices I made, or things I have done that were not very good.
My past can serve me in a couple ways. First,
it is a reminder now of how I used to be, and motivation to continue along my
path of recovery as I no longer wish to be the person I was. My failures are
also a way for me to connect with others who suffer like I used to. It’s a
show of empathy for the pain and darkness that they have lived through that
only another addict truly understands.
I used to move from mistake to mistake
falling further into a pit of despair, fully under the power of my addiction.
In recovery I know that my mistakes are a part of the journey and places for
me to learn and seek improvement. I can keep my enthusiasm to follow the new
path because I know my Higher Power is with me every step of the way.
|
Affirmation
Failures,
like success, are just parts of life. There is something to learn from
everything, and I can make it through it all with the help of my Higher
Power.
|
Sunday, 8 December 2013
December 8
”A happy family is
but an earlier heaven.”
George Bernard
Shaw
|
Family means a lot of different things for
me these days. It’s a reconnection to my parents after years of ignoring
them. It’s a loss of family through my separation and divorce, and unfortunately
some of my kids. It’s been an increased in time with some the rest of my
children, and a relationship that is being nurtured and making up for past
neglect. And it’s also newness as I have moved into a new partnership with
additional children in the picture.
So I suppose that I shouldn’t be too
surprised to find my feelings a little mixed up most of the time. There have
been a lot of changes in my life the past couple of years, and family has
been something central to those changes. I am content that in many respects,
my family is moving towards a happier and stable aspect. Yet there are still
moments it is bittersweet as I cannot forgot what was lost to bring me here.
Change still means letting go of things,
having the willingness to acknowledge that certain paths in my life have
drawn to a close. Dealing with loss can still be a challenge, and
relationships are something that have an emotional impact. Yet I know that in
my recovery I am moving in a better direction in all my interactions and that
I am a better person to share my life with others.
|
Affirmation
Bonds
can be strengthened or broken, but the ones that remain as I live my recovery
can only benefit by my continuing work.
|
Saturday, 30 November 2013
November 30
”Of all the words
of mice and men, the saddest are, ‘It might have been.’”
Kurt Vonnegut
|
Some of my greyest days are those when I
find myself wishing that things had been different, regretting choices I made
or the roads I took. My thoughts can trigger these episodes, or can things
around me. Running across some old photos, having someone around me reminisce
about a past event, or simply running into someone I haven’t seen in a while.
It can be challenging to pull myself back
into the present, to stay current. Letting go of the past, in many ways
Letting Go and Letting God, is required to leave behind what can no longer be
changed. But I do recognize that I need to face some of these issues in order
to have some finality with them and move on. There are lessons to be learned.
My ability to choose is a much greater
gift than I have considered in the past. So many things I do have
repercussions days, weeks, months or even years later, and I cannot always
appreciate that in the moment. It behooves me to see guidance, to surrender
to the will of my Higher Power, to make good choices today that will lay the
foundation for a better and brighter future.
|
Affirmation
Coulda,
woulda, shoulda thinking will not change the past. Let me focus on what I can
do today to make good decisions that support my recovery.
|
Wednesday, 27 November 2013
November 27
”Shame occurs when
you haven't been able to get away with the 'who' you want people to think you
are.”
Carl Whitaker
|
I like the definition, but for me it needs
to go a small, but important step further. More than not being able to get
away with the persona I tried to portray, it is fundamentally that this
façade I wanted people to accept not being in harmony with my own values,
beliefs and morals. The person I was seeing in the mirror and trying to get everyone
else to believe was based on lies, deceit, and dishonesty all meant to
distract them from the hidden life of my addiction. So for me, shame is about
living a life where I am not being true to myself.
I recall in therapy coming to the
realization that I hadn’t taken an honest look at myself in the mirror in a
long time. It was only ever a cursory glance to make sure that the “mask” was
in place. I’ve made a point since to take a moment to truly look myself in
the eyes and to see the person who is gazing back. In my addiction I could
not do that as I wasn’t happy with who I was, even before I would have
admitted it.
So shame was a part of the makeup I
applied on a daily basis to cover up the darkness of my compulsive addictive
behaviours. Guilt was woven into the clothes I wore. Lies bedecked me like
rusted jewellery. And I thought no one would notice. I wasn’t as good at
hiding as I imagined, but more fortunate that people didn’t know how to
react, or simply preferred to ignore it so they wouldn’t have to deal with
it. In the end, I reached a point where the disguise no longer sufficed and
had to be thrown away, the shame left in the past, the guilt tucked back in
the closet, and the lies thrown in the trash. It’s so much easier just being
me.
|
Affirmation
I
no long live to “get away” with things. Secrecy leads to shame and guilt.
Honesty is required for me to be at peace with who I am, and how I interact
with the rest of the world.
|
Tuesday, 26 November 2013
November 26
”Gossip and anger
are like drinking poison and expecting someone else to die.”
Anonymous
|
I think I can relate guilt and shame into
a similar context from my past. Guilt and shame were the poisons that I used,
and that I expected would excuse me from my behaviours by making everything
someone else’s fault. It gave me the 1001 excuses to write off my poor
choices and actions.
I have found a cure, and it was the
12-Steps that brought it to my attention. The answer – no more secrets.
Honesty is the key to my recovery. My addiction thrives in the darkness, and
flounders in the light of the truth. Only through rigorous honesty, first and
foremost with myself, do I have a chance of regaining sanity and a life that
is worth living.
I choose to avoid poisoning myself.
Honesty allows me to admit my mistakes, to ask for forgiveness, and to seek
to make true amends for the hurt and damage I have caused. I know too well
that holding on to the guilt and shame, nurturing them and helping them grow,
was a path to my own destruction. The truth is building a new road to the
future, even if it needs to be lain one brick at a time.
|
Affirmation
I
need to let go of the weights of the past, the guilt and the shame, that held
me captive in my addiction. Honesty is the breath of fresh air that will lead
me from my prison.
|
Monday, 25 November 2013
November 25
”Time is what we
want most, but... what we use worst.”
William Penn
|
I recall one exercise as I did my 4th
Step of trying to determine the cost of my addiction. It was a bit of a
daunting task, to look back and tally up how much of my time, money, and
energy had been put into supporting that part of my life. I have heard others
share their own experiences of going through this and the realization of what
the price of this double-life can be.
As I work through my recovery, this goes
beyond how my addiction affected me, but the secondary effects that it had on
family, friends, coworkers, neighbours, etc.
My addiction was very costly indeed. The worst thief of all, still
today, is the time I lost, most especially with family. I will never regain
all those lost minutes, hours, or days spent in fantasy, lost in front of a
computer screen, or wherever else my addiction led.
And I used to worry about what I would do
with all the free time. Fortunately, life seems to fill most of that time up
with just regular day-to-day goings-on. I often wonder how I managed to keep
both lives going for so long. It is no wonder that some part of my life had
to suffer. I am grateful that I have this new lease to spend my time better
on the things that truly are important, like my kids.
|
Affirmation
Time
is fleeting and precious, and I will be careful not to waste it on things
which are not valuable.
|
Thursday, 21 November 2013
November 21
”It costs nothing
to dream, but everything if you don't.”
Rita Davenport
|
Some days my skies are gray, colours
muted, food bland, and life is dull. There feels like there is little to be
thankful for or grateful about, that life is simply continuing but really not
improving. It can be hard in these moments to find my blessings, to find
reasons to be happy about my circumstances. Usually these are the days when I
am facing some challenge of my past or my recovery from it. And usually they
are not when I am dreaming of a better future.
Let’s face the facts, recovery is not
glorious. My past behaviours and idolization of my addiction have led me down
some dark paths and have caused some serious damage. I have some serious
atonement and amends to make to start repairing what I have broken, to start
allowing myself and others to heal from the life I used to live. Some days it
just isn’t fun being in recovery.
I need to remind myself that being
recovery is good, that it is the right thing. The alternative, going back to
my old ways, isn’t a viable option. That I can be melancholy and suffer
through today is a gift, if only in the sense that it means today I am not
actively supporting my addiction. Sometimes that has to be enough to keep me
moving forward in my program. And maybe I can find the energy to dream of
when things will be brighter.
|
Affirmation
Some
days are tough, and much of my recovery is going to take hard work to make it
through. But the end goal is worth the struggle and I commit to persevering
to the finish line.
|
Monday, 18 November 2013
November 18
”If you're having
a string of failures, find a way to find the 'bless in the mess'. Embedded in the problems might be a way to
find future successes.”
Loretta Laroche
|
Life in addiction was wading through
chaos. The worst part was that when there wasn’t enough going on to keep the
cycle going, I found ways to create more chaos to keep the machine going. Life
only made sense when there was a big mess to deal with, and my acting out was
the best way to survive.
My blessing of that mess has certainly
being finding my way to the 12-Steps. Nothing has helped me more to start
finding gems from my troubles to move towards some small successes.
I think the best gift has been becoming a
wounded healer. This is the place where I can find the best from the worst of
my life. It is from my lowest points that I find connection points with
others who suffer like I have and can help shine a light for them to find the
start of their own path to recovery. My struggles, challenges, and failures
that pushed me to the edge of my own destruction are now part of a life-line
I can offer to others to offer them safety.
|
Affirmation
In
the worst there is something to learn, something that can be turned into a
positive. I will look for ways to turn things around today.
|
Friday, 15 November 2013
November 15
”Even if our tears
are for ourselves, for our ache of loneliness, for our pain of loss, they
are…sacred, for they are tears of our love.”
Jack Stern Jr.
|
Crying was not something I did during my
active addiction, not at least without an ulterior motive. Rarely was it a
genuine display of emotion and that is something hard to admit after more
than 2 decades of having behaved that way. I guess it should have come as no
surprise that while I was getting in touch with my emotions for real during
my early recovery that I was unable to readily control my first outbursts of
tears. I had forgotten how to cry.
Those first attempts were physically
painful, as the sadness was real, but the crying was forced, trying to
squeeze water from the desert of feelings I had created. Slowly over the
months that followed, my body recalled the way to cry. It is amazing to think
how much I damaged myself by denying such normal acts to take place.
I have had many reasons to cry, there are
many events that I simply never dealt with properly during those lost years.
And many of my first tears were for myself, for the love that had been locked
away in order to allow my addict to reign supreme. Slowly, the tears are
washing away the aches of the past, cleansing my soul for the present.
|
Affirmation
Tears
are a healthy expression of sadness, pain, and loss, but also of joy and
happiness. They are a powerful act to close chapters of our lives and to open
new ones.
|
Thursday, 14 November 2013
November 14
”Shame corrodes
the very part of us that believes we are capable of change.”
Brené Brown
|
My addict, my alter-ego, my dark shadow or
dark passenger, however I refer to it, there it is. It is the parts of me
that I no longer desire to give control to, the wolf that I no longer wish to
feed. It is the core of my shame and guilt, the black centre where my
addiction lives and thrives.
This is where those powerful, cunning, and
baffling urges originate. This is where my ability to rationalize and justify
all my bad behaviors resides. This is where my emotions come to be buried,
pushed aside, and are ignored. This is where I lose sight of all that is
around me, isolating from the world and reality. This is my toxic self.
Yet, it is only a part of me, and like
most things in this world, can only sustain itself if it is fed and given
attention. This is why my focus in recovery is on new behaviours, new tools
and methods for dealing with life, new rules and standards for me to follow,
new Steps to lead the way. In living by my program, in working all that I put
in my outer circle, the power of this shame core will diminish, restoring me
to sanity, and freeing me to see and follow the will of my Higher Power.
|
Affirmation
I
can confront my shame, face the darkness within and find my way back into the
light. The Steps and my brothers and sisters in the program can help me on
this path.
|
Wednesday, 13 November 2013
November 13
”When you listen
to somebody else, whether you like it or not, what they say becomes part of
you.”
David Bohm
|
It’s actually a relief to feel like I am a
product of other people and that my interactions with others have helped me
to become the person that I am today. If I look back over my years in my
addiction, I wanted nothing to do with anyone else unless it was supporting
my bad habits in some way. I was really only a product of my selfish desire
at that point, and I certainly was not interested in taking on bits of other
people. And I am quite certain that I wasn’t doing a whole lot of listening
either.
Life today is more wholesome. I realize
that there are many aspects to who I am as an individual. I know that there
are many people, places and things that influence who I am and that can alter
my course, positively or negatively. I also know that I don’t have all the
answers. Never did, and likely never will.
So reaching out for help was a big step.
Admitting that I couldn’t do it all on my own and that I needed, heck even
wanted, someone else to get me through this was significant. Like the third
step, this was mostly about willingness. Being humble enough to realize that
without others supporting me, I was not going to change and stay on the right
path. Thankfully I have been able to stick with this decision, and know that
I have gained a great deal from all those I have met along the way.
|
Affirmation
I
am unique, not just simply because of how I was created, but also because of
all my experiences and connections with all the people who have crossed my
path.
|
Tuesday, 12 November 2013
November 12
”Faith in small
things has repercussions that ripple all the way out. In a huge dark room a
little match can light up the place.”
Joni Eareckson
Tada
|
Delving into my past continues to bring to
light things that shaped my life, and that pushed me to the paths that I
took. One of those broad subjects is fear. I am only starting to explore this
in more detail, but I have already gained a sense that this was a bigger part
of my growing up than I ever imagined.
One simple exercise of investigating some
of the major events of my life at various ages has started to bring some
things to light. One recurring pattern is a fear of rejection which has shown
up in events from school, work and with friends over the years. Another is a
fear of abandonment, from episodes in my family and choices that I have made
throughout the past. Over time, some of this fear became irrational, and held
more power in my life than was warranted. It was one of the tools used by my addiction
to keep the cycle going.
A new concept for me is to see fear as a
friend. In truth, a healthy fear could hold this place, as it serves as a
warning that there is danger ahead. When the threat is real, then fear is a
perfectly reasonable emotion. My challenge is to stop manufacturing fears, or
making them seem worse or larger than they are to cause stress which then
needs to be dealt with.
|
Affirmation
I
will work at accepting my fears, tempered by the reality of the situation
that they occur in. May my Higher Power grant me the wisdom to separate these
accordingly today.
|
Monday, 11 November 2013
November 11
”Life begets life.
Energy becomes energy. It is by spending oneself that one becomes rich.”
Sarah Bernhardt
|
One of the important things I did to start
taking better care of myself in recovery was to increase my physical activity
and exercise. It was apparent after a short while that burning energy
actually gave me more energy, and that I found I had more endurance to get
through the days. It also helped that I have gotten myself into better shape,
lost some weight, and rid myself of stress through sweat.
There is a flip side which can be equally
true. Laziness can beget laziness. I can easily get into a routine of doing
nothing much at all, sitting in front of the TV or computer or whatever.
Conserving energy encourages more of the same, and leads to inaction.
Sitting still reminds me too much of
moments of my “active” addiction, which was really an exercise in stagnation.
Recovery is about participating in life again, taking an active role and
working for change. It is about learning to be rich with all that my Higher
Power has provided for me.
|
Affirmation
It’s
true that in giving I receive, in working my program and spreading its power
with others that I gain for my own benefit.
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Sunday, 10 November 2013
November 10
”Life's blows
cannot break a person whose spirit is warmed at the fire of enthusiasm.”
Norma Vincent
Peale
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As one member puts it, he continues to
come to meetings to place himself amongst the coals and heat of others in
recovery, to rekindle his own flame and spark to continue working his
program. It is true I often see my meetings in a similar fashion, that
sitting with like-minded, and similar afflicted but coping people, gives me a
boost to keep pursuing my own growth and change. I may share my own
experience, strength and hope, but I also receive the same from everyone who
offers their own to the group.
Addiction taught me that no one was worthy
of trust, that I was meant to succeed in life by no one’s will and effort but
my own. Obviously, that was not a path or reality that really worked.
Recovery and the 12 Steps are teaching me that life requires the assistance
of others, that things work better when I reach out and put my faith not only
in my fellow man, but also in a Higher Power. It is in gaining a sense of
community that I will grow and find happiness.
It makes sense when my world consisted
only of me, myself and I, that life’s blows seemed the most devastating.
There was nothing and no one for me to fall back on. However, now that I know
I am not alone, that there is a team of people rooting for me and supporting
me, I can more readily face the challenges of life. I carry a seed of
enthusiasm and hope within, but I am aware that it is fueled and sustained by
those who surround me.
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Affirmation
May
my fire of recovery burn brightly, may I seek similar spirits to kindle my flame
and keep the flame of change ever-lit.
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Friday, 8 November 2013
November 8
”Suffering
produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.”
Romans 5:3-4
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My recovery has certainly been about
building character. I have done a pretty good job at destroying a lot of the
good things in my life. The best gift my addiction has given me has been the
suffering, the depths of despair that have driven me to want to change my
ways, to seek to have a better life.
Having hit bottom has pushed me to
preserve, to continue work at my recovery because I know what the alternative
is. I fear going back into my addiction, in picking up where I left off, as I
know that path leads to my eventual destruction. So this is now motivation
for me to pursue the 12 Steps at all costs, because the price of failure is
no longer acceptable.
But my recovery is not based in fear, even
if that is a motivating force. My recovery is based in hope, in the
experience and strength that I see in other members at meetings, and even
occasionally recognize in myself. I know my character is being rebuilt, and
that my suffering and perseverance are propelling me into a closer
relationship with my Higher Power.
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Affirmation
I
accept that recovery will expose me to increased suffering, but that this is
part of the cycle for me to grow stronger and closer to God.
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