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The material contained herein is merely an outline of the active working step of the program and is not
intended to replace or supplant: |
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a. The careful reading and re-reading of the Big Book. b. Regular attendance at weekly group meetings. c. Study of the program. d. Daily practice of the program. e. Reading of approved printed matter on alcoholism. f. Informal discussion with other members. |
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This instruction is not a short-cut to A.A. It is an introduction - - a help - - a brief course in
fundamentals. This meeting covers the Twelfth Step. |
| that the personality change sufficient to bring about recovery from alcoholism has manifested itself among us in many forms. |
| Most of our experiences are what psychologist William James calls "the educational variety" because they develop slowly over a period of time. |
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As soon as he gets off the beam in any direction he is in danger, and he immediately tries to get back on to the beam once more. Those who believe in the All-ness of God, have a spiritual beam upon which to navigate on the voyage of life. As long as you have peace of mind and some sense of the Presence of God you are on the beam, and you are safe, even if outer things seem to be confused or even very dark; but as soon as you get off the beam you are in danger. You are off the beam the moment you are angry or resentful or jealous or frightened or depressed; and when such a condition arises you should immediately get back on the beam by turning quietly to God in thought, claiming His Presence, claiming that His Love and Intelligence are with you, and that the promises in the Bible are true today. If you do this you are back on the beam, even if outer conditions and your own feelings do not change immediately. You are back on the beam and you will reach port in safety. Keep on the beam and nothing shall by any means hurt you. - - Emmet Fox - - Stephen Grellet (1773-1855)
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