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Post by majestyjo on Nov 1, 2014 11:54:57 GMT -5
Such a big part of early recovery, and a big part of working the Steps and growing in recovery.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 2, 2014 9:20:43 GMT -5
learn to be gentle with others and myself We can be hard on ourselves at the best of times, we need to e more caring and sensitive to our needs and that of others. We don't know where they are coming from, and as the saying goes, "We haven't walked in their shoes."
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 3, 2014 13:55:19 GMT -5
For me, one of the things that kept me sick for a long time. Those things I didn't want to face, the things I didn't want to admit to that I kept buried. If I didn't remember, they didn't happen and I didn't have to deal with them. As they say, we are only as sick as our secrets.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 4, 2014 14:18:50 GMT -5
Anger is a normal emotional and a normal part of the grieving process. It is allowing myself to feel the emotion and expressing it in a healthy manner, instead of acting out and taking it out on others.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 5, 2014 19:54:39 GMT -5
Had problems because of old tapes with this. My mother use to say, ĂŒf you can`t do it right, don`t do it at all.` So I either didn`t or I did it over and over again, beating myself up because I was feeling less than.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 6, 2014 15:47:46 GMT -5
So true, if I am not enjoying myself today, I have to ask myself, "What didn't I do to cheer myself up?" I have my afternoon shows I like to watch, before they were "You have to watch these, they were must have to my day." Now I enjoy them and I don't like missing them, especially 'The Chew' and yet it doesn't spoil my day if I miss it. My whole life evolved around my TV shows and I had to take my thinking and turn it over to my thinking over to God. A lot was associated with food and drink, my relationship to others, and events seemed to go together. This is a spiritual program and I applicable to all areas of my life.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 7, 2014 7:50:36 GMT -5
Amen
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 8, 2014 8:03:14 GMT -5
It is so easy to get pulled in all directions, especially if we try to please everyone and do what we THINK we should do, rather than what we know what we should do to be true to ourselves. When I read this it reminded me of an old hymn we sang many years ago, "Trust and obey, for there is no other way." Over the years, especially when I was caught up in my addiction, I didn't do a very good job of it, but the words stayed with me, and for that I am grateful. www.hymnsite.com/lyrics/umh467.sht
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 9, 2014 5:53:48 GMT -5
One thing I had to learn to accept was that a relationship wasn't always 50/50, sometimes it was 40/60 or 70/30, depending on where a partner was at in the moment.
Communication is something that is so important and it was something I didn't have, I was just told to shut up and I didn't accept that too well, that is why it took me two husbands to get ten years of marriage.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 10, 2014 10:18:32 GMT -5
So much of life is old tapes. So much more, is our life is our attitude toward it.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 11, 2014 2:31:41 GMT -5
My sponsor told me, we are where we are in today as a result of decisions made whether it was prior to recovery or in recovery. Whether it was made yesterday or in today.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 12, 2014 6:26:36 GMT -5
This is such an important lesson. Jumping the gun and jumping into things just because we want it done and over with, just doesn't cut it. The old way of doing things no longer work. The same goes for procrastination, as they say, a five syllable word for sloth. Sloth conjures up such an ugly picture in my mind, I don't want to go there and yet I do, more often than not. That is when I need to bring out the Step Seven prayer, knowing the defect is there is one thing but being willing to do something about it is another. I have to find that willingness. To say is not always to do and to keep doing.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 13, 2014 2:44:18 GMT -5
Giving to ourselves what we give to others. Putting my name on the top of the list, topping myself up so that I am not draining myself of energy and ruining my own health. You can't give away what you don't have. This disease affects us mentally, emotionally, spiritually and physically.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 14, 2014 8:51:10 GMT -5
Anger is an emotion like all others although it does more damage to us than most, especially when internalized. It is a real danger to us and to others when not expressed in healthy ways, it eats us up and can be abusive and can turn into other addictions such as piercing, cutting, sexual and eating disorders, to name just a few.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 15, 2014 8:16:08 GMT -5
Like to think of it as the person who came into recovery is no more, not recognizable in word and deed, unless I slip back and chose not to work and live my program any more. Then I become that screaming shrew, first class b*tch, and nagging old gray mare, who ain't what she use to be. Not a pretty picture, don't even want to get a glimpse of her in today.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 16, 2014 2:37:34 GMT -5
My sister use to play act out this little scene, with her hand on her forehead, palm and fingers outward, with a swan song, fainting attitude and say, "Oh woe is me, I am oh so hard done by." You had to be there to really appreciate it." She did it well, you almost believed her.
The scary part is that some people do feel that way and so many think the world owes them a favour without having to work for it, especially those caught up in addiction who try to beat the system. These people make it difficult for those who do have a hard time due to circumstances in their life. There is no shame in asking for help. We are so often the victim of other people's choices. That doesn't mean we have to stay there. The help is out there. Just because we are there or were there, doesn't mean we are worthy of being in a better place.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 17, 2014 22:24:46 GMT -5
Amen!
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 18, 2014 8:02:35 GMT -5
This is what I did yesterday and felt guilty because all my readings were late. The old saying comes to mind, "After me, you come first." That sounds more like my disease talking than any thoughts of nurturing.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 19, 2014 6:38:10 GMT -5
I was told to not discount them. I didn't always have to act on them. I did have a right to validate them, process them, and if need be, let them go, but in order to do so, I had to feel them and process them.
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Post by majestyjo on Nov 20, 2014 7:29:26 GMT -5
As a friend said many years ago and as I have share many times, "Put it out to the Universe and see what you get back." I have found that sometimes we limit God by thinking small, other times, we get so full of ourselves, we are never satisfied. God does meet our needs, and our wants and desires too. Have found myself with things I didn't know I needed, wanted, or desired.
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