Sunday, October 11, 2009

It is more difficult to keyboard these days so I am sending part of a talk I gave to an open AA meeting. I am working on a health up date and hope to get it done in a couple of days. Happy reading.



The Successful AA Journey


Bob Zimmermann

July 29, 2009


I have come to believe that a successful AA journey takes us through three phases of thinking. The first phase is compliance. No one comes to AA because the day was so great and they were feeling on top of the world. One way or another, as it says in step one of the 12 and 12, we are driven to AA by one force or another: conscience, fear, the law, threats, curiosity.


If we comply by staying away from the first drink; if we go to a meeting rather than taking the first drink; if we take advice from a sponsor; if we follow the suggestions, we are in compliance. If we successfully comply with the principles of AA, we usually find that life is changing for the better. We do not have to lie anymore; a feeling of interpersonal honesty begins to come over us.


Our initial commitment (compliance) to attend AA meetings and engage in AA activities begins to take on a new meaning. We don’t go to meetings and do AA things because we are supposed to (compliance); we go to meetings because we enjoy the fellowship. We hear how others stay sober; we go for many different personal reasons. There is something about the AA meeting that appeals to us, changes us, comforts us. We feel good after a meeting. We are comfortable around AA talk and AA types. In other words we now identify with the AA program and AA way of life. We develop AA habits. Meetings are sought-out events as are social gatherings with AAs. Volunteer work and participation in the governance of AA takes on meaning--making coffee, cleaning up, going to outreach meetings. AA’s are my kind of people.


This middle stage Identification works as long as other AA’s and AA reminders are around. But what of those incidents when we are far from AA, when we may be the only AA in the midst of a typical alcohol culture: school reunion, out-of-town company party, a sporting event, first hunting trip since being sober (one won’t hurt, for old time’s sake). That is, identification alone will not protect us, our support group is not there.


How do we handle it alone, a long way (mentally and physically) from our AA support? We can handle it alone when we have internalized the AA way of life. It is where we have taken the principles and values of AA as part of our very soul. The maintenance steps (10, 11, 12) are part of our daily living. I like to think that we have moved into the life of the sober culture. You feel blessed to be free to say “no thank you” under any circumstances. There is no conflict; the mechanisms for maintaining sobriety are there. As years go by, you might drift from meetings and traditional AA activities, but the soul of sobriety stays with you. The values of sobriety are as natural as the principles of the good life: do unto others, charity, honesty, fairness, these ideas are a natural part of your very existence. You don’t have to think sober, you are sober.


How it worked


If someone were to ask me “What was the secret to your lasting and joyful sobriety? “I believe I would have to list the following;”


1. Commitment to a meaningful AA meeting schedule. Go to meetings that meet your needs and help you grow.

2. Stick with or model yourself after the winners. Get rid of your losers.

3. Share honestly with a trusted sponsor.

4. Be involved with your home (or multiple home) group.

5. Outreach--attend institutional, jail or other group meetings, help alateens, volunteer at the central office. Be prepared to make 12-step calls. Travel out of town to other AA meetings.

6. Attend meetings when you travel. We found a Friend of Bill meeting while we were on an Alaskan Cruise Ship.

7. Most important, find yourself a sober culture. There are many social organizations and groups that do not put getting drunk as a priority to having a good time. All boaters do not need to load up on alcohol in order to enjoy their boats. It is the same way with campers, hunters, dancers. You may not be threatened by the presence of booze but who wants to be around a bunch of drunks. Put it the other way, how many drunks want to have a sober person hanging around (unless he/she is the designated driver).

My final first step


My quest for a serene sober life is just about over. I celebrated my forty third anniversary on November 2008. I am at peace with the world of sobriety. What would a drink do for me? The serenity of my sober life is too precious. I want to leave this earth a sober person.


But my serenity of life has recently been shaken. I am now back at the first step, not about alcohol, but about life. I am in dire need of developing acceptance that I am powerless over life itself. I have been diagnosed with stage 3 esophageal cancer and the operation that could have removed the cancerous tumor cannot be performed because of the size and extent of the cancer in my stomach.


In other words I am dying of this cancer. I have joined a palliative Hospice program and will let mother nature take its course. I am tube fed at night so I don’t have to force food down an angry stomach. At present I am self sufficient enough to stay at home. However, I am dependent on the love of my life and my full-time caregiver (Marian) to feed me, change my bandages, and help me get dressed. Her love is a daily reward.


I am truly in the position that I must live one day at a time and cherish the experience of each day. To help me with this task I have reworded the first three steps so they apply to “Living in the light of dying.”


1. I admit that I am powerless over the course of life itself.

2. I believe I must look beyond my personal resources for help in order to restore manageability to my shortened life.

3. By turning my life over to the power of natural consequences I will find the serenity in dying that I have found in my sober life.


With these steps and the serenity prayer I hope to leave this world a sober, happy and serene man.


6 comments:

  1. Hi Bob Z thanks so much for writing.Specially enjoyed reading about all your different Jobs.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Bob, I'm sorry about the people above who feel their beliefs will work for you. You go your own way, and do what works best for you. Don't waste money on insubstantiated "cures" that are not, according to the FDA liability statement, "intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease."

    Hope things are going well for you.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I m truely sorry if it was i who offended anyone Colleen, i certainly didnt mean to at all.

    My reply i had hoped was made in honesty and with great respect,and i am thankful for being able to have had the chance to read and learn things from people like Bob Z.And do find his post about the diifernt places he worked to be very interesting.

    Anyway of course like yourself Colleen i wish Bob well.With Love

    ReplyDelete
  4. Gandolf-- nooo not you! lysdexia up there with nothing positive to say, it seems.

    I appreciate your comments!

    ReplyDelete
  5. The cures were not insubstantiated but proven and documented in journals and news, and the something positive were these. When I gave him the materials to spare his life, you say it's nothing positive—shows how wicked and blind you accommodationist are. Maybe your research skills are nouht. Whoever took off my frank criticism of shyster medics and their nurses who sap money from the gullibil public in treatments over cures had long been conditioned/brainwasht to recur in dishonest editorialising found in the fakethful many, here in Commonwealth. Rather than care about wriht and wrong, and be the most learned and armed, you bruke delusion and let good sufferers die—which is contrary to Hippocratès.

    ReplyDelete
  6. This comment has nothing to do with the post it goes with, or at least it wasn't meant to. I wished to thank you for a comment you made on a post of mine, which was about a book by Alister McGrath, which book criticized The God Delusion, by Richard Dawkins. You gently chastised me for a claim that I made about Dawkins' book, when I had not read it. I have since read the book, and, although I do not believe that Richard Dawkins and I are soul-mates, the claim that I made was incorrect, and I have said so. Thanks again.

    I am so sorry for your troubles, which I didn't know anything about until I followed the RBH link in your comment.

    ReplyDelete