Step 5 – 12 Step Recovery

“Admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human being, the exact nature of our wrongs…”

Step 5 can be a huge relief for many people who have carried burdens on their hearts and souls their entire life. This step allows a person in safety to release all of that poison that came up on their 4th Step.

Thankfully I had a sponsor in AA who practiced old school recovery. I say this because my 5th Step was done in her living room with me reading each and every line that I wrote in my 4th Step notebook. Prior to beginning that reading, I prayed with her, admitting to God I was flawed and asked for God’s guidance as I read my 4th Step aloud. What this did was bring God into her living room so that as I read my step work, I was not only admitting the exact nature of my wrongs to myself, but also to my sponsor sitting across from me, and God who had been invited in by that prayer.

It took me two separate six hour sessions to read my first 4th Step to her. Most of the time during it, she just listened. At times though she would stop me, and ask questions for further clarification, sometimes for herself and sometimes even for me. When it was done, I can’t say that I was lofted off the ground and singing with the angels, but I can say that I continued to feel ever lighter and more determined in my recovery then how I felt after completing the 4th Step.

I’ve been more of an honest and open book type of person my whole life compared to most people I know. I’ve never really held any deep dark secretes and I’ve tried not to hide any parts of me away for I know that it will only create more pain down the road for me. Because of this, it was pretty easy and straight-forward to do and complete my 5th Step. For others, it might not be so. Many people that come into recovery have locked away deep within themselves resentments and things that have happened that they feel no one should ever know. The point of the 4th Step is to bring that poison up to the surface by writing about it. The objective of the 5th Step is to begin to release that poison by sharing it with not only themselves, but also with God and another human being.

I’m not sure if there is a better way of doing a 5th Step than the way I did mine. I know of one sponsor who doesn’t want to hear everything written in their sponsee’s 4th Step. I know of other sponsors who send a sponsee to a pastor or priest to listen to a 4th Step instead of them. What I do know is that the action of praying to God before I did my 5th Step and then reading every bit of my 4th Step work to my sponsor helped me grow in my recovery. I would do the same for any sponsee I have.

It was truly humbling to admit to God, to myself, and to my sponsor, that I was flawed, that I had many character defects, and that I lived most of my life as a resentful person. It was even more humbling to admit to all three how selfish and self-centered I lived throughout my life. But it was most humbling to realize at the end of my 5th Step that while I thought I was a really bad guy for a long time, I was just sick, lost, and God-less. The 5th Step truly did help me move beyond those thoughts and that place in my life.

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

Step 4 – 12 Step Recovery

“Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves…”

Over the years that I’ve been active in recovery programs, I’ve come to see that the 4th Step seems to drive a lot of people back out into their addictions due to fear of facing themselves. The 4th Step may sound simple in its language but upon further inspection, it really does involve a lot of work.

My first sponsor in recovery was through AA. Having worked her program in AA and remained sober for close to 25 years, she was as well versed in the Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous as a Catholic priest would be with the Bible. When I began the work and made it to this step, I was told to get a notebook and informed that I’d be doing a lot of writing. There are many ways that people might approach doing the steps but she being an old timer said I would be doing it The Big Book Step Study Method. I had no idea what that meant but I followed her advice and bought myself a nice 3-ring spiral binder and about a 100 pages of loose-leaf paper. About three months later, I finished my first 4th Step.

I believe the main reason why many people relapse with this step is due to something I call the mirror effect. When I was active in my alcoholism or any of my addictions, there were so many glaring defects of my character that I didn’t see. I was numb most of the time and while many often pointed my defects out, I wouldn’t listen, see, or pay attention to any of it. Mainly because I didn’t want to. This step exposes all of those character defects. It’s like looking in the mirror and seeing ourselves for the first time. When in addiction mode, most, including myself, don’t want to look in the mirror and point the finger at ourselves.

In the first part of doing this step, my sponsor had me writing down everything I ever felt resentful towards in my entire life up to that point. That list proved to be quite long and was the easiest part of the step for me. I wrote down the names of the people that had picked on me when I was growing up. I wrote down the names of my alcoholics parents. I wrote down the name of the man that molested me at the age of 12. I wrote down jobs I worked at that had fired me, bosses I once had that all too often yelled at me, and friends and partners that had walked out of my life abruptly. I even wrote down myself and God as I felt both had let me down over the years. By the time the list was done it was over 100 entries.

The second part of this step was a little harder in that it entailed writing down next to those entries, a description of what it was that I was resentful at with each of them. Writing the name of a person, place, or institution that basically ticked me off at some point in my life was easy for me. Putting down on paper the exact words of why I was ticked off was much harder. It meant that I had to remember and recollect a lot of pain that I went through. It brought a lot of junk up to the surface that I thought had been long gone. As I wrote, I realized none of it had ever left me. It had all been suppressed way down within me because of all the addictions I kept myself numb with. Because of this, throwing my notebook across the room became a common occurrence. I felt angry all over again at things that had happened so long ago.

When I finally moved out of the phase of recollection, I started the third part of this step which was to write down next to each of those entries whether they affected my self-esteem, security, ambition, or personal relationships. What I found is that pretty much in every case, all of them were affected. Ironically, I had to add my sponsor’s name to my resentment list at this point because she made me write over and over again each of those words next to every single entry even though I saw the pattern early on in my writing. I was grateful when I finally finished this part of the step and found myself breathing a sigh of relief. I told my sponsor I was ready to begin my 5th Step and she laughed and said I still had plenty more to do with my 4th.

And boy, she wasn’t kidding.

The fourth part of the 4th Step proved to be the most difficult for me. I have wondered often if this is the part of the step that drives people to pick their addictions back up. It’s nicknamed The Turnarounds. During it, each of the previous resentments that were written are taken into further introspection and analyzed with four words. Selfish. Self-Seeking. Dishonest. Afraid. My sponsor said it was time for me to look at each of my resentments and see where I might have been selfish, self-seeking, dishonest, or afraid in all of them. In other words, the resentment was to be turned around along with my finger pointing at all those things I resented, and I was to ask myself honestly and fearlessly, how I might have created this own resentment. It took me a very long time to make it through this part of the step. I know a big chunk of the three months it took me to do this step was in part because of this phase of of the 4th Step. I realized by the end of this part of the work this step entails, that I in fact did bring all of these resentments upon me through my own selfish, self-seeking, dishonest, and fear based behaviors in life. Something good began to happen though after completing this phase of the 4th Step writing.

I had begun to feel lighter and had more determination to keep going forward in my recovery.

The final part of the 4th Step was the sex inventory. It’s where my sponsor had me look at all the people in my life that I used or affected on some level with sex. She told me it didn’t necessarily mean I had to have been with each of those people sexually and that it could have been behaviors that were just leading towards it. I had to get really honest with myself here and it was probably a good thing that I had done such thorough turnarounds in the previous part of this step. After coming up with about 23 names, I was to answer with each of them the following questions: Where have I been selfish? Where have I been dishonest? Where I have been inconsiderate? Whom had I hurt? Did I unjustifiably arouse jealousy, suspicion, or bitterness? Where was I at fault? And finally, What should I have done instead? Thankfully, I didn’t find this part of the 4th Step taking too long. I think it really was in part due to the fact that I just wanted to be done with the step at that point after doing those excruciating turnarounds.

When all was said and done, and I said “That’s a wrap!” on my first 4th Step, I had filled almost every one of those 100 loose-leaf pages that I had purchased and about 90 days of my life had passed by. There are definitely benefits that I noticed came with doing such a thorough searching and fearless moral inventory of my life with this step. First, I realized how much I created my own drama throughout most of my life. Second, I saw how much of the craziness in my life could be prevented in the future. Third, I felt a thousand times lighter and didn’t feel as resentful towards all of those people, places, and things that I had written about. And most importantly, fourth, I truly began to feel closer to the God of my understanding and I knew that AA and 12 step recovery were going to be a part of my life until the day I die.

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

Step 3 – 12 Step Recovery

“Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood God.”

If I was to pick one step out of all 12 step recovery programs that I feel is the most important, it is this one, the 3rd Step. After coming to the acceptance that there is a Power that can restore all of us to sanity, this step emerges. I call it a pivot step because the rest of the 12 Steps effectiveness is dependent upon how fully one practices this one.

Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith discovered the key to recovery was in turning over one’s entire life to a Higher Power. Through much trial and error, in other words, living in some part of self will, they found nothing else worked. When left to one’s own devices and self will, time and time again, an alcoholic or addict would relapse back into their addictions. Even though I knew what the Third Step meant and understood what history said based upon the AA founder’s experiences, I still tried to find my own version that would work for me.

It didn’t work.

Self will is also known as free will and it’s a funny thing, especially in the minds of alcoholics and addicts. Most of my life I had heard through my religious upbringing that God gave us free will to do with our lives as we wished. I also remember words from that upbringing that said while each of us had free will, that true happiness would only come through obeying God’s will. I think to some level that is part of why my addiction based mind had me trying to trail blaze my own recovery. I always thought of God as some old man sitting above me on a throne, pointing his finger and making bad things happen so that I could learn lessons the hard way. Many addiction based people today talk about the “punishing God” syndrome which I suffered from as well. Sadly, churches have really done a number over the centuries to give the belief that God is a vengeful and wrathful God. Because I held that belief for a long time, the idea of turning my will over to God and fully practicing this Third Step was out of the question. The result was disastrous in my life. While I lived in fear of God and his supposed punishing ways, I punished myself instead and lived in a world of toxicity and darkness. I did that for 17 years sober and while I wasn’t drinking or drugging during that time, my addictive ways grew worse and I more sick.

There are two keys to this step that are important to understand. The first is turning our will over to God. I never got beyond that part of the step because of my fear of God and the thoughts of what I would have to go through if I turned my entire will over to God. Because God and the word punishing were synonymous in my brain, I misinterpreted the second part of this step. “…as we understood God.” The way I understood God was warped from my own upbringing. I never thought about creating a new image of God that was all loving, caring, and kind and not punishing, wrathful, and vengeful.

As all those long self will based years dragged on doing my own version of this step and recovery, there were percentages of how much of my life I’d give God on any given day. Sometimes it was less than 5%. Sometimes it was as high as 95%. On most days it was somewhere in the middle. The key is that I never gave God 100% because I couldn’t seem to get over my fears of God in the first place.

When enough brokenness happened in my life and when enough pain was rampant within and around me, I gave up and decided it was time to believe in something different. That’s when I decided God knew what was best for me and that God always did. And that’s when I decided to turn my entire will and life over to a God that always loved me just as I was and had a path for me to follow that would bring me ultimate happiness.

Today I start every single day off with turning my entire will and life over to the God I understand. While I once despised and loathed God for what I thought God was, today, I see things so differently. I love God. I don’t want my own free will anymore. I don’t want my own self will anymore. Living in either of those destroyed my life and never brought me peace, happiness, or joy. It only brought me more pain, more addictions, and more destructive paths. Living today in a life where I turn my full will over to God as I understand God has finally brought me that peace, happiness, and joy that eluded me all of my life.

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson