|
Post by majestyjo on Jan 1, 2017 21:40:14 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jan 1, 2017 21:45:29 GMT -5
January 01, 2017
Vigilance
Page 1
"We keep what we have only with vigilance..."
Basic Text, p. 60
How do we remain vigilant about our recovery? First, by realizing that we have a disease we will always have. No matter how long we've been clean, no matter how much better our lives have become, no matter what the extent of our spiritual healing, we are still addicts. Our disease waits patiently, ready to spring the trap if we give it the opportunity.
Vigilance is a daily accomplishment. We strive to be constantly alert and ready to deal with signs of trouble. Not that we should live in irrational fear that something horrible will possess us if we drop our guard for an instant; we just take normal precautions. Daily prayer, regular meeting attendance, and choosing not to compromise spiritual principles for the easier way are acts of vigilance. We take inventory as necessary, share with others whenever we are asked, and carefully nurture our recovery. Above all, we stay aware!
We have a daily reprieve from our addiction as long as we remain vigilant. Each day, we carry the principles of recovery into all that we do, and each night, we thank our Higher Power for another day clean.
Just for Today: I will be vigilant, doing everything necessary to guard my recovery.
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jan 4, 2017 21:21:53 GMT -5
The people in the rooms loved me back to good health. They loved me until I could love myself.
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jan 20, 2017 12:11:30 GMT -5
January 20, 2017 One promise, many gifts Page 20 "Narcotics Anonymous offers only one promise, and that is freedom from active addiction..." Basic Text, p. 106 Imagine how it might be if we had arrived at the doors of Narcotics Anonymous, desperate, wanting to stop using drugs, only to be met by a sales pitch: "If you just work the steps and don't use drugs, you'll get married, live in the suburbs, have 2.6 children, and start wearing polyester. You will become a responsible, productive member of society and be fit company for kings and presidents. You will be rich and have a dynamic career." Most of us, greeted with such a heavy-handed spiel, would have shrieked and bolted for the door. Instead of high-pressure nonsense and frightening predictions, we are greeted with a promise of hope: freedom from active addiction. We feel a blessed relief come over us when we hear that we never have to use drugs again. We aren't going to be forced to become anything! Of course, after some time in recovery, good things start happening in our lives. We are given gifts-spiritual gifts, material gifts, gifts that we've always dreamed of but never dared hope we'd get. These, however, are truly gifts-they are not promised to us just because we become NA members. All we are promised is freedom from addiction-and it's more than enough! Just for Today: I have been promised freedom from active addiction. The gifts I receive are the benefits of recovery.
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jan 24, 2017 16:04:25 GMT -5
Just for today, I will try to be accepting of the fact that another site is down and I am left with empty boxes. I guess I should give up and surrender and stop posting them. I love pictures as you can tell, they have a story to tell.
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Mar 31, 2017 18:47:16 GMT -5
I was "I" centered all of my life. As a sponsee once said, "I guess it wouldn't hurt to listen to my Higher Power in today. I listened to my Lower Power all of my life.
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Apr 21, 2017 20:20:34 GMT -5
NA Just For Today Traveling The Open Road "This is our road to spiritual growth." Basic Text, p. 35 When we arrived at our first NA meeting, it looked like the end of the road to many of us. We weren't going to be able to use anymore. We were spiritually bankrupt. Most of us were totally isolated and didn't think we had much to live for. Little did we realize that, as we began our program of recovery, we were stepping onto a road of unlimited possibilities. At first, just not using was tough enough. Yet, as we watched other addicts working the steps and applying those principles in their lives, we began to see that recovery was more than just not using. The lives of our NA friends had changed. They had a relationship with the God of their understanding. They were responsible members of the fellowship and of society. They had a reason to live. We began to believe these things were possible for us, too. As we continue our recovery journey, we can get sidetracked by complacency, intolerance, or dishonesty. When we do, we need to recognize the signs quickly and get back on our path — the open road to freedom and growth. Just for today: I am continuing to develop my spiritual, social, and general living skills by applying the principles of my program. I can travel as far as I wish on the open road of recovery.
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on May 14, 2017 4:19:12 GMT -5
As they say, it is a journey, not a destination. I never get there. Each day is a new beginning.
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jun 16, 2017 23:34:58 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jul 15, 2017 20:08:25 GMT -5
Relations with others
Page 205
"We made a list of all persons we had harmed and became willing to make amends to them all."
Step Eight
All human beings struggle with self-centeredness. The chronic self-centeredness that lies at the very core of addiction makes that struggle doubly difficult for people like us. Many of us have lived as if we believed we were the last people on earth, utterly blind to the effect our behavior has had on those around us.
The Eighth Step is the process our program has given us to honestly examine our past relationships. We take a look at the writing we did on our Fourth Step to identify the effects our actions had on the people in our lives. When we recognize harm done to some of those people, we become willing to take responsibility for our actions by making amends to them.
The variety of people we encounter in our day and the quality of our relations with them determines, to a great extent, the quality of our very lives. Love, humor, excitement, caring-the things that make life worth living derive much of their meaning from being shared with others. Understanding this, we want to discover the true nature of our relationships with other people and mend whatever breaks we may find in those relations. We want to work the Eighth Step.
Just for Today: I want to fully enjoy the companionship of my fellows. I will examine my relationships with the people in my life. Where I find I've harmed others, I will seek the willingness to make amends to them.
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jul 20, 2017 21:39:39 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jul 20, 2017 22:34:54 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jul 23, 2017 15:40:12 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jul 23, 2017 15:43:36 GMT -5
As I like to say, surrender isn't giving up, it is giving over to our Higher Power. My best thinking got me to the doors of recovery, why should I think it should do me in good stead without making changes in my life.
Every time a butterfly appears, it generally means transformation and change. I had two butterflies land on my dress today.
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jul 25, 2017 0:29:43 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jul 25, 2017 0:38:42 GMT -5
Just today I shared a memory with a friend. I told her of a person in my group who said, "Just because you change the color of your hair, do you think we won't recognize you." It changed from black, black and white, and as I smoked more, I had yellow in their like I had been a blond. I covered up the gray (and yellow from nicotine), with black, auburn, and then with a couple of errors with chlorine, plum and maroon, then brown, very short, short gray, blond, until the gray was mostly white. That's the story of my life! LOL! Even in recovery I went through an identity crisis until I allowed myself to be me.
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jul 27, 2017 21:14:11 GMT -5
We do recover from that hopeless state of mind and body. We have hope for a better tomorrow if we do the do things, one day at a time. One addict sharing with another addict, we do recover.
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Jul 31, 2017 20:01:27 GMT -5
What a gift. Just freedom from active addiction in and of itself is pretty awesome. When you work the Steps and apply them to your life, then life truly begins.
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Aug 2, 2017 20:20:31 GMT -5
August 1 NA Just For Today
Trusting People
"Many of us would have had nowhere else to go if we could not have trusted NA groups and members." Basic Text, p.81
Trusting people is a risk. Human beings are notoriously forgetful, unreliable, and imperfect. Most of us come from backgrounds where betrayal and insensitivity among friends were common occurrences. Even our most reliable friends weren't very reliable. By the time we arrive at the doors of NA, most of us have hundreds of experiences bearing out our conviction that people are untrustworthy. Yet our recovery demands that we trust people. We are faced with this dilemma: People are not always trustworthy, yet we must trust them. How do we do that, given the evidence of our pasts?
First, we remind ourselves that the rules of active addiction don't apply in recovery. Most of our fellow members are doing their level best to live by the spiritual principles we learn in the program. Second, we remind ourselves that we aren't 100% reliable, either. We will surely disappoint someone in our lives, no matter how hard we try not to. Third, and most importantly, we realize that we need to trust our fellow members of NA. Our lives are at stake, and the only way we can stay clean is to trust these well-intentioned folks who, admittedly, aren't perfect.
Just for today: I will trust my fellow members. Though certainly not perfect, they are my best hope. pg. 225
|
|
|
Post by majestyjo on Aug 2, 2017 20:23:32 GMT -5
|
|