The Varying Percentages Of The Third Step

Yesterday I spoke in general about the 12 Steps and how they can be very invaluable for someone trying to find healing from various addictions, compulsive behaviors, and mental health issues. But today I would like to talk about one of them specifically that I believe is the cornerstone to living a much happier life and that’s the 3rd Step. As originally laid out by Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith, the 3rd Step was written as:

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

Earlier this year I wrote about this very step expressing something quite similar, but I wanted to revisit a point I had made within it. The level of success that one has when using the 12 Step method is directly proportional to the percentage of how much of their will and their lives are turned over to the care of God. Saying that statement right now makes complete sense to me, but years ago, it didn’t make much sense to me at all. That’s only because I was living back then with a tremendous about of self-will and thought I could run my life just fine without too much of God’s help.

Let me explain this in a much simpler way.

During the years I was actively drinking and drugging, I rarely turned over any percentage of my will and life to God. That meant that I lived almost 100 percent of the time by self-will.

In the first twelve years of my sobriety from alcohol and drugs when I was mostly a dry drunk, the best I ever gave God was probably no more than 20 percent. That meant that I lived almost 80 percent of the time by self-will.

When I finally began pursuing the 12 Step method of recovery, the most I initially offered God was maybe 60 percent. That meant that I lived almost 40 percent of the time by self-will.

Eventually, I got tired of being in pain and decided I’d give it a whirl to give God 100 percent of myself. That meant that I started trying to live 0 percent of the time by self-will.

What’s interesting to note is that until I gave God 100 percent, I kept creating a considerable amount of drama in my life. And I started noticing that all of my drama I was creating was generating all of that pain I was feeling. But since I starting giving God 100 percent, the only drama in my life has been coming from people around me still creating their own and my levels of pain have become much less.

While I know I’ve been talking about all of this in terms of percentages, let me explain what I mean by using my real-life situations. I knew when I was drinking and drugging excessively that it was unhealthy for me. But I kept on doing it anyway. I knew when I was driving under the influence of either, that it was probably not the best thing for me to be doing. But I kept on doing that anyway too. I knew when I got sober from both that I needed to follow the 12 Steps and attend meetings regularly but I didn’t do either and ended up falling into other addictions and unhealthy relationships. I knew when I began the 12 Steps that I needed to end connections with those who didn’t want recovery. But I kept hanging on to those toxic people doing toxic behaviors anyway and experienced a lot of depression and anxiety because of it. In each of these things, I made the decision to retain large portions of my will and life instead of letting God guide me through them. And I remained very sick because of it.

I don’t feel so sick anymore nor do I experience those crazy highs and lows like I once used to. I believe that’s only because I start each day now turning over my entire will and life to God. I continue that throughout the day and stop to pray if I find I am drifting away from that. And I end each day thanking God for guiding my entire life. It’s really that simple and so far, it appears to have changed my life completely for the better. I listen to that small voice inside my spirit now instead of following my ego’s desires and the results are a thousand times better than what I used to experience in every facet of my life.

Turning my entire will and life over to the care of God was not an easy thing to do especially when I had lived most it not doing that fully. At first I had to give up a lot of things that I thought I needed in my life and my ego complained incredibly when it lost each of them. But I have found the more I let those things go, the more it became easier to live this way and follow all of the 12 steps. I am now able to dedicate 100 percent of myself to each of them and am finding the quality of not only my recovery work but also my life are improving greatly day by day.

Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith never did say in that 3rd Step that a person had to make a decision to turn over 100 percent of their will and life to God, but I really wish they had. I have found that it is the key to living a much happier life. They instead left that it for each person to discover for themselves, but maybe that’s a good thing. Because I learned a very important lesson each time I gave varying percentages of my will and life to God and that 3rd step. And that was seeing how each percentage I kept for myself was directly related to the misery I manifested time and time again. Thankfully, I’ve learned this lesson and now give 100 percent of myself to both God and that 3rd Step. I know my life has greatly improved because of this and it’s my hope others following the 12 Steps will start doing the same…

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

What Exactly Are The 12 Steps?

There are many people in this world who actively suffer from various addictions, compulsive behaviors, and mental health issues. Unfortunately, a large majority of them don’t ever find the healing for those things because they never give the 12 Step method of recovery a chance.

What originally began in 1939 as a tool to help those suffering from alcoholism, the 12 Steps have evolved beyond this by continuously being adapted through fellowships of people trying to recover from just about everything. For the longest time, I was one of those who never gave this tool a chance. I knew about it and I understood that it had helped many others, but I had decided it wasn’t for me. That was solely because I knew the 12 Steps were based around developing a closer relationship with God and upon hearing the word “God”, my first thoughts were of religion and cult-like behavior.

The word “God” has been used as a judgmental tool towards many people throughout history to oppress them. And being a gay male, I’ve been one of those. Many churches and religious people have used God’s name to tell me that it’s a sin to be homosexual. This became one of the primary reasons why I steered clear of all 12 Step recovery programs. What I never understood though was that this tool can help a person find a Higher Power of their understanding and not of someone else’s. It took me quite awhile to wrap my head around this fact and the idea that the 12 Steps could guide me to finding a Higher Power who not only loved and accepted me for my sexuality, but also who created me to be this way. But once I did, I began to see the benefits that 12 Step recovery gave me for my alcohol and drug addiction, sex and love addiction, codependency behaviors, and various other things I’ve been afflicted with throughout my life. Thankfully, I’ve come to see today how I can apply the 12 Steps to just about anything I ever feel powerless over.

Here are the 12 Steps as they are laid out in most recovery programs, where ______ represents the malady one is suffering from:

1. We admitted we were powerless over ______ and that our lives had become unmanageable.

2. Came to believe that a power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.

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

4. Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.

5. Admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human being the exact nature of our wrongs.

6. Were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of character.

7. Humbling asked Him to remove our shortcomings.

8. Made a list of all person we had harmed, and became willing to make amends to them all.

9. Made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others.

10. Continued to take personal inventory, and when we were wrong, promptly admitted it.

11. Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as we understood Him, praying only for His will for us and the power to carry that out.

12. Having had a spiritual awakening as a result of these steps, we tried to carry this message to ______, and to practice these principles in all our affairs.

It is usually the goal of every person who follows a 12 Step recovery program to eventually reach the twelve step itself. There, a recovered person can begin to spread their message of experience, strength, and hope to those still suffering from the malady they once suffered from themselves. But even more importantly, if one follows the 12 Steps diligently, they will experience a spiritual awakening where their life becomes filled with a lot more love and light. That’s when they can the begin to practice what they’ve learned in those 12 Steps throughout their entire life. This means demonstrating that love and light in things such as at work, at home, or out and about in social gatherings. In fact, this is the main reason why I write what I do in this blog each and every day.

The 12 Steps have greatly changed my life. Without them, there’s a good chance I would have never grown closer to my Higher Power. My relationship with God today is much in part due to following this invaluable tool. I can assure you that if you are suffering from any type of malady that you are feeling powerless over, whether it be an addiction or something else, that the 12 Steps can help you. There’s a good chance as well, that a program already exists out there which uses them. There you will find others just like you who have found healing from your malady by working these 12 Steps. And in case you were wondering, a current list of all those available groups can be found at the following link:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_twelve-step_groups.

The important thing to remember though in all of this is that there is always hope out there, and one avenue that I know that works is the 12 Steps.

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

“Once A Cheater, Always A Cheater” – Part III

As I continue to heal and work on practicing forgiveness with my partner over his infidelity, I have been thinking a lot about the other party involved in his indiscretion. Through several of our discussions, my partner told me that he had informed those he was about to cheat with that he was in a relationship and monogamous. Now I know it might seem ludicrous that my partner said those words prior to committing the act of cheating, but I believe there was a spiritual reason for him saying those words in those moments. Nevertheless, it was the actions of the other party upon them hearing those words that reminded me so much of my past.

Many years ago when I met a man through the rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous, I was single and felt a pretty serious attraction to him. Within a short period of time of getting to know him, he informed me he had been married for a very long time but also was extremely attracted to me. He also told me that he had committed many acts of indiscretion on the side with other men while his wife was oblivious to it all. In that moment, a person living with spiritual love and light in their lives and following a higher calling, would have taken a much higher road than the one I took. But sadly, I wasn’t filled back then with much love and light in my life nor was I allowing myself to heed any type of higher calling. The result was me beginning a serious engagement in regular sexual relations with this married man, which was no different than those who participated in my partner’s infidelity.

I want to provide you with a simple fact about infidelity. Whether it’s the one doing the act of cheating or the one on the sexual receiving end of it, there is no love and light involved in the act for either. It’s just pure lust. I remember those moments quite clearly still to this day when that man from the AA meeting looked at me and said he was married. I know I had a tremendous amount of lust in my eyes then and it didn’t matter to me that he was saying those words. Today, I am convinced that him telling me his marital status was his soul’s last ditch attempt to prevent the act from occurring. But neither of us were living with much love and light in our lives so the inevitable happened between us.

Most people on the sexual receiving end of those that are cheating often tell themselves that it’s ok to be engaging in the act solely because their ego tells them it’s ok. Back when that married man told me he wanted to be with me sexually, I allowed my ego to tell me just that because I was single. I also made the excuse in my brain that it was the married man who was making the poor decision and not me. The reality was that we both were but this wouldn’t be true for me today. If I were single right now and someone I found extremely attractive approached me with a desire to be with me sexually and told me beforehand that they weren’t single, I wouldn’t do anything with them. That’s only because I am living by a higher calling now and am not willing to engage in any lustrous behavior. I know now that doing so would compromise my spiritual position in life and only add more darkness to that other person engaging in it with me.

I feel sad for the couple my partner engaged in this sexual connection with because it’s clear to me that they are living in the same darkness like I once was. They ignored my partner’s last ditch attempt at maintaining his monogamy and proceeded to use him sexually for their own self gratification. There was no love involved in what happened in this indiscretion and while my partner is now living with shame and guilt because of it, they have moved on to anyone else willing to be an orifice for their sexual satisfaction.

While I know my partner did try to make that last ditch attempt at stopping himself from going through his act of cheating, it was already too late for him at that point as his lust and ego had full control. For those on the sexual receiving end of it, they too had the ability to stop it from ever happening, but they didn’t because their lust and ego had just as much of control over them as well. I know all too well what that feels like and what it did to me in the long run when I kept doing it. I also realize now how I was just as much of a sick person as that married man from AA I once was regularly being sexual with.

The bottom line for all those who are on the sexual receiving end of those that are cheating on their partners is that they are no different than the ones doing the cheating. They have every ability to stop it and yet they don’t because their lust and ego drives them to keep doing it. The only solution I have ever found to preventing myself from either cheating or being on the sexual receiving end of someone cheating is to draw closer to my Higher Power. Through that, I have been able to see the ugliness that comes from those types of low vibration sexual acts where very little love and light, if any at all, is ever present in them.

I pray that my partner truly realizes just how much he allowed himself to be used by that other party who engaged in the indiscretion with him. For that other party’s sake, I also pray that they may one day realize how spiritually sick they are. I was once both in their shoes as well as my partner’s and it’s a very dark place to be in. Thankfully, my Higher Power has completely freed me from having the desire for any of that behavior. And I know that as long as I keep that connection close to my Higher Power, I’ll never go back to those dark lustrous and ego based actions ever again…

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson