Jump to content

Is Alcohlics Anonymous run by christians?


Recommended Posts

I watched the video - see # 60 - MrY.

It is OK by me except doing it alone/solo.

The support mechanism/not doing it alone is, to me, a BIg +!

Could I have done it alone? It does not really matter. I do know that I felt very alone during the first 12 months in AA. I finally telephoned another member. Within 5 minutes, another member telephoned. That matters!

The video advises details of the "competition" to AA. However, if you live in LOS, it is on the internet or not at all (to the best of my knowledge).

When I arrived at AA, most of the "gurus" were not bible bashers - they were "go to meetings" bashers. You cannot go to too many meetings" bashers. On many occasions I went to meetings, I had little else to do anyway. At least, for the duration of the meeting, it is highly likely that you will not be drinking.

After a meeting, I tended to sleep better.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 108
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

I would like to access the info on "success" rates of expats living in LOS - TV members - those who got sober in their home countries.

My "wild, uneducated guess" - 33%! Any other guestimates on offer? A fruitless exercise on my part but I am interested anyway! (I do not know how to do a survey on TV).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I would like to access the info on "success" rates of expats living in LOS - TV members - those who got sober in their home countries.

My "wild, uneducated guess" - 33%! Any other guestimates on offer? A fruitless exercise on my part but I am interested anyway! (I do not know how to do a survey on TV).

What is success in a daily recovery?

I have 5000 days and got sober here in Thailand through the grace of a higher power and many members of AA.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Neeranam

Congrats on >5000 days! - "one day at a time".

Where I reside in LOS, there are a number with >30 years (self included) - "one day at a time". Not that important to me - living by example does matter (to me), helping others (inside & outside the Fellowship), beng considerate to others (wife included), being honest in all my affairs, living the 12 Steps - "quality" matters.

Curiousity killed the cat re my post! I little musing? Why not? Life is short! Life is not that serious? Is it?

Cheers - my "boss" is calling!

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

AA success statistics are pretty easy to find, but rather misleading. (At least this is the way they did it back when I was more plugged in and active)

They know how many desire chips were minted and sent out (to be offered for free to every new member at his/her first meeting)

They know how many 30 day chips they sent out, they know how many 1 year (and 50 year) chips they sent out (to be given for free to members celebrating milestones)

Simple division tells you what percentage of newcomers picked up a 30 day chip and what percentage picked up a 50 year chip, 50 years later.

Previous posts have discussed how the numbers are skewed by the folks going to AA for purposes other than staying sober, and with a little imagination anyone can come up with many other reasons the statistics can be misleading.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hello All, if there was anything related to religion involved with AA or NA,

I wouldn't have 24 years sober. I've been in churches with 12 step groups,

some churches let us use a room to have a meetings, but that's a far as it

goes.

rice555

Do 30 meetings in 30 days, if AA is not for you, we'll gladly refund your misery.

Keep coming back, it works if you work it!

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

And if you've got 30 minutes to spend, here is funny but factual take on the subject:

Penn & Teller: Bullshit - Alcoholics Anonymous

Not funny IMO. Factual, my arse!

I would like to access the info on "success" rates of expats living in LOS - TV members - those who got sober in their home countries.

My "wild, uneducated guess" - 33%! Any other guestimates on offer? A fruitless exercise on my part but I am interested anyway! (I do not know how to do a survey on TV).

What is success in a daily recovery?

I have 5000 days and got sober here in Thailand through the grace of a higher power and many members of AA.

...and in your profile it says "Anonymous Member". How unexpected!

Looks like I kicked where it hurts...

Misspelling corrected.

Edited by MrY
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I would like to access the info on "success" rates of expats living in LOS - TV members - those who got sober in their home countries.

My "wild, uneducated guess" - 33%! Any other guestimates on offer? A fruitless exercise on my part but I am interested anyway! (I do not know how to do a survey on TV).

What is success in a daily recovery?

I have 5000 days and got sober here in Thailand through the grace of a higher power and many members of AA.

...and in your profile it says "Anonymous Member". How unexpected!

Looks like I kicked where it hurts...

Misspelling corrected.

I assure you, nothing you say could hurt me. Sorry as that probably is your motive.

You sound a lot like some old friends of mine who are alcoholic and constantly trying to find fault at what I'm doing(not drinking). They have been to AA but refuse to admit they are beaten by alcohol.

Sadly, at least 2 of them will probably die soon due to their alcoholism, but at least they weren't "weak-willed" and forced to rely on God or AA.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I assure you, nothing you say could hurt me. Sorry as that probably is your motive.

One of the first things I took away from AA: What other people think about me....is none of my business.

My business is keeping my side of the street clean. As long as I'm doing that, who cares what they think?

In fairness to the OP's question, every once in awhile, I'll run into a singular meeting that has a Christian flavor to it. Those meetings are rare, and they don't bother me at all. If they did, I'd just find another meeting to go to.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I would like to access the info on "success" rates of expats living in LOS - TV members - those who got sober in their home countries.

My "wild, uneducated guess" - 33%! Any other guestimates on offer? A fruitless exercise on my part but I am interested anyway! (I do not know how to do a survey on TV).

What is success in a daily recovery?

I have 5000 days and got sober here in Thailand through the grace of a higher power and many members of AA.

...and in your profile it says "Anonymous Member". How unexpected!

Looks like I kicked where it hurts...

Misspelling corrected.

I assure you, nothing you say could hurt me. Sorry as that probably is your motive.

You sound a lot like some old friends of mine who are alcoholic and constantly trying to find fault at what I'm doing(not drinking). They have been to AA but refuse to admit they are beaten by alcohol.

Sadly, at least 2 of them will probably die soon due to their alcoholism, but at least they weren't "weak-willed" and forced to rely on God or AA.

I am sure that will reassure the people who cared about them.

It says in the big book selfishness and self centerness we thought to be the root of all are problems.

Not sure if that is so but it sure describes your friends to a T.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Most chapters make you recite the Lord's Prayer at the end. So yeah, I guess.

I think the AA should get in touch with the RAC. ( religious alcohlics club )

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A lot of hogwash posts here.

AA is a Christian organization, plain and simple. Established by Christians. Run by Christians. And headquartered in and Christian religious center.

Just because they attempt to lure/accommodate people of no faith or of other religions makes them no less Christian.

IMHO, they have largely been behind the gross distortion in American views towards alcohol and addiction, leading people to think they have no control over themselves. Even if you have never been to an AA meeting, you know the mantras as they permeate the American culture.

You are powerless against alcohol and addiction.

You are worthless.

Only G.O.D. (Group Of Drunks) can help you.

Notice on the success rate of AA: It seems to make no difference whether you walk in to an AA meeting voluntarily or are ordered to do so, the success rate historically remains at or below self help. The difference is that the ones that fail after being brainwashed be AA are now even less likely to ever recover having had the remainder of their spine and balls removed by the demoralizing hammering about your worthlessness. AA publishes no figures.

God help us all.

Haha, tell us what you really feel! :)

I agree though, the whole "you are powerless and have no control" philosophy turns me off personally, others may relate to it.

I always felt that I had the power to do (or not do) anything I want. To stop drinking it took educating myself, rationally doing cost benefit analysis, and seeking to be honest with myself, which drinking was not allowing to happen.

I love a sharing community, but use the Reddit forum "http://www.reddit.com/r/stopdrinking/" to share. It is a positive community that is really there just to support one another. I get my fix by going most days and reading, replying, posting, supporting for 2-30 minutes.And no Lord's Prayer at the end of a session there!

7 months sober now, feeling great! Life is so much better without hangovers.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Most chapters make you recite the Lord's Prayer at the end. So yeah, I guess.

AA doesn't make you do anything, especially recite the lords prayer. Some meetings do end with the lords prayer, the majority of the meetings I have attended have not ended with it.

Have you ever been to AA?

The lords prayer is not as popular as it was once.

It does not mention God and it say's are father not me and I.

How ever AA does have a prayer that say's God and us and we in it.

It is not popular either. It is called the AA prayer.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Most chapters make you recite the Lord's Prayer at the end. So yeah, I guess.

AA doesn't make you do anything, especially recite the lords prayer. Some meetings do end with the lords prayer, the majority of the meetings I have attended have not ended with it.

Have you ever been to AA?

The lords prayer is not as popular as it was once.

It does not mention God and it say's are father not me and I.

How ever AA does have a prayer that say's God and us and we in it.

It is not popular either. It is called the AA prayer.

The Lord's prayer doesn't actually say 'God' but it addressed to Him.

Do you mean the serenity prayer?

Many AA meetings use a shortened version of it.

The full version is :-

God, grant me the Serenity

To accept the things I cannot change...

Courage to change the things I can,

And Wisdom to know the difference.

Living one day at a time,

Enjoying one moment at a time,

Accepting hardship as the pathway to peace.

Taking, as He did, this sinful world as it is,

Not as I would have it.

Trusting that He will make all things right

if I surrender to His will.

That I may be reasonably happy in this life,

And supremely happy with Him forever in the next.

Amen.

The prayer we us at the beginning and the end is a translation of the serenity prayer -

ขอสิ่งศักดิ์สิทธิ์ ให้ความสงบแก่ข้า(kor sing sak sid hai kwam sangob gae ka)

ให้ยอมรับสิ่งที่เปลี่ยนไม่ได้(hai yom rab sing tee bplian mai dai)

ให้กล้าเปลี่ยนสิ่งที่เปลี่ยนได้(hai glaa bplian sing tee bplian dai)

และปัญญาที่จะแยกแยะ(lae panhaa tee ja yaek yaeh)

There is no mention of the word God.

I've never been to an AA meeting where the Lord's Prayer was said.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Most chapters make you recite the Lord's Prayer at the end. So yeah, I guess.

AA doesn't make you do anything, especially recite the lords prayer. Some meetings do end with the lords prayer, the majority of the meetings I have attended have not ended with it.

Have you ever been to AA?

The lords prayer is not as popular as it was once.

It does not mention God and it say's are father not me and I.

How ever AA does have a prayer that say's God and us and we in it.

It is not popular either. It is called the AA prayer.

The Lord's prayer doesn't actually say 'God' but it addressed to Him.

Do you mean the serenity prayer?

Many AA meetings use a shortened version of it.

The full version is :-

God, grant me the Serenity

To accept the things I cannot change...

Courage to change the things I can,

And Wisdom to know the difference.

Living one day at a time,

Enjoying one moment at a time,

Accepting hardship as the pathway to peace.

Taking, as He did, this sinful world as it is,

Not as I would have it.

Trusting that He will make all things right

if I surrender to His will.

That I may be reasonably happy in this life,

And supremely happy with Him forever in the next.

Amen.

The prayer we us at the beginning and the end is a translation of the serenity prayer -

ขอสิ่งศักดิ์สิทธิ์ ให้ความสงบแก่ข้า(kor sing sak sid hai kwam sangob gae ka)

ให้ยอมรับสิ่งที่เปลี่ยนไม่ได้(hai yom rab sing tee bplian mai dai)

ให้กล้าเปลี่ยนสิ่งที่เปลี่ยนได้(hai glaa bplian sing tee bplian dai)

และปัญญาที่จะแยกแยะ(lae panhaa tee ja yaek yaeh)

There is no mention of the word God.

I've never been to an AA meeting where the Lord's Prayer was said.

I have been around area wise a lot and time wise a lot.

Yet to hear the Serenity prayer said with out the word God in it.

As I said the Lords Prayer has lost favor to the selfish me me one.

At any rate this is AA and we do have an AA prayer that says us and we.

It is in your 12 X12 Won't tell you where but will suggest you read the last paragraph in step 3

It tells you where to use the popular version of the Serenity prayer.

I like your version of the serenity prayer I had heard it was even longer than that.

There are several versions of it's origins.

In fact I had heard two versions of why it is in AA.

Funny how time changes things. If I live another 50 years I wonder what they will be saying?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's my eleventh birthday today which I shall celebrate quietly at home with my family. I was up at 0430 to go birdwatching this morning. No one had to tell me what I did last night. I didn't drive home legless. My wife and kids are relatively happy people and if they are getting support to be able to live with me then I don't know about it. I didn't wet the bed last night and the house wasn't stinking of piss and shit this morning. It wasn't like this 12 years ago. I quit drinking and have been able to stay stopped because of AA.

If they said to me today:" look Gerry there's been mistake, you're not an alcoholic, you can drink" I'd like to think I'd stay stopped cos my life is so much better.

In a forum it's easy to be rational and logical about something like alcoholism and about the choices a drunk has. Pull yourself together man/woman take control of your life. ...... just what you want to hear when you're in year six of a vodka drip and have a preference for the solitude of your own room where you can develop your negatives and piss and shit in a bucket because it's too much of an effort to go. .....

At this stage you don't care if AA is run by Al Qaeda.

AA brings people back from this and much worse. We are by no means perfect. But we are a good option if you want to try quitting drinking.

Thanks for love.

Sent from my GT-S7270L using Tapatalk

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's my eleventh birthday today which I shall celebrate quietly at home with my family. I was up at 0430 to go birdwatching this morning. No one had to tell me what I did last night. I didn't drive home legless. My wife and kids are relatively happy people and if they are getting support to be able to live with me then I don't know about it. I didn't wet the bed last night and the house wasn't stinking of piss and shit this morning. It wasn't like this 12 years ago. I quit drinking and have been able to stay stopped because of AA.

If they said to me today:" look Gerry there's been mistake, you're not an alcoholic, you can drink" I'd like to think I'd stay stopped cos my life is so much better.

In a forum it's easy to be rational and logical about something like alcoholism and about the choices a drunk has. Pull yourself together man/woman take control of your life. ...... just what you want to hear when you're in year six of a vodka drip and have a preference for the solitude of your own room where you can develop your negatives and piss and shit in a bucket because it's too much of an effort to go. .....

At this stage you don't care if AA is run by Al Qaeda.

AA brings people back from this and much worse. We are by no means perfect. But we are a good option if you want to try quitting drinking.

Thanks for love.

Sent from my GT-S7270L using Tapatalk

Great work Gerry, I also spent my 11th AA Birthday in Thailand that was in 1991. Back then there was only 2 meetings a week in Pattaya but they still helped me to stay sober.

Sobriety for the Alcoholic is a great way of life, I call it "living in Freedom"

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Most chapters make you recite the Lord's Prayer at the end. So yeah, I guess.

AA doesn't make you do anything, especially recite the lords prayer. Some meetings do end with the lords prayer, the majority of the meetings I have attended have not ended with it.

Have you ever been to AA?

The two groups I attended in the States were quite religious in nature, lots of God stuff, and everyone in the room recited the Lord's Prayer in very earnest voices. Hard for an atheistic buddhist to handle,,,,,,

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's my eleventh birthday today which I shall celebrate quietly at home with my family. I was up at 0430 to go birdwatching this morning. No one had to tell me what I did last night. I didn't drive home legless. My wife and kids are relatively happy people and if they are getting support to be able to live with me then I don't know about it. I didn't wet the bed last night and the house wasn't stinking of piss and shit this morning. It wasn't like this 12 years ago. I quit drinking and have been able to stay stopped because of AA.

If they said to me today:" look Gerry there's been mistake, you're not an alcoholic, you can drink" I'd like to think I'd stay stopped cos my life is so much better.

In a forum it's easy to be rational and logical about something like alcoholism and about the choices a drunk has. Pull yourself together man/woman take control of your life. ...... just what you want to hear when you're in year six of a vodka drip and have a preference for the solitude of your own room where you can develop your negatives and piss and shit in a bucket because it's too much of an effort to go. .....

At this stage you don't care if AA is run by Al Qaeda.

AA brings people back from this and much worse. We are by no means perfect. But we are a good option if you want to try quitting drinking.

Thanks for love.

Sent from my GT-S7270L using Tapatalk

AA never ceases to amaze me. I had no intention of replying to any thing else on this thread but I was wrong

Congratulations.

Eleven years is a long time to be living a life mostly free from problems. Chances are you would not have made the eleven years. Good Job. Keep up the good work.

If your story is like mine I have to offer your wife some congratulations for staying with you through some of those dark years.

Happy that it works for you and all. The important thing is to realize that different things work for different people. I like the support, thus I make my daily visit to http://www.reddit.com/r/stopdrinking. Lots of people there, doing AA, RR, or their own thing. Sharing there gives me strength, especially if I can help somebody else.

Allen Carr's book, the Way to Control Drinking is amazing. He does bash AA a bit for the way it forces people to feel they are helpless victims of their own disease and never able to be free of regular meetings. The book itself is amazing, it somehow created a paradigm shift in my thinking and I have never looked back. Sure I get urges, but I quell them with logic and various coping skills and diversions that are healthy choices.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If I don't like one meeting, I don't condemn the entire (time tested) program. I find another.

Have you ever tried other methods?

Why would I?

BTW, in 10 years in China, I never went to a single meeting. The closest one to me was a 4 hour round trip car ride. Kind of pokes holes in the "never free of regular meetings" claim. In fairness, I'd go to some meetings when I went back to the States every 6-12 months, so it wasn't 10 years in a row- usually 6-10 months at a time.

You tried 2 of the 10's of thousands of groups in the USA. Did you try a 3rd or 4th before condemning the program? There are lots of meetings I tried once and never went back. Other people loved them. I didn't care for them. So I found others.

Edit: I don't go to meetings out of a sense of need. I go to meetings because I love them. If I'm going back the the USA, I can't wait to get to my old meetings where I used to hang out. I look forward to them for months. I go to meet people, and catch up with friends and go out to dinner before the meeting or coffee after the meeting. I get to hear how other people have dealt with life's problems, a lot of which I've either faced, or will face eventually. I get to watch people come in bruised, battered and beaten down by alcohol and watch them grow and reconnect to estranged families, and get jobs and become pretty great people. It's hard to explain that to people who think AA is just about "putting the plug in the jug" and tolerating life without alcohol.

I'm sure it's possible to stay sober out of a book. You seem to be proof. Could I stay sober without ever going to another meeting? I did for many years, and have no doubt I could do it again if I had to. But then I would be missing out on the best part of life.

Edited by impulse
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.





×
×
  • Create New...