I always heard that the power of positive thinking is important for a healthy mind, body, and soul. When I began developing chronic pain issues back in 2010, I struggled with being able to do that. Instead, I was constantly frustrated and had an extremely hard time not being negative about the state of my health. All that did was make my condition and my symptoms much worse. One of the things that I started utilizing to correct this was the use of a mantra. It was geared solely to improve my health and it’s actually been working. I know I am much healthier today because of it. If you are struggling with any health issue, I encourage you to start using the following mantra daily, as I know it will help your health to improve in the long run.
Month: February 2014
“Is Alcoholics Anonymous A Religious Program?”
I frequently hear people ask “Is Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) a religious program?”
There is one simple answer to this question, whether it applies to AA or any other 12 Step recovery program for that matter.
No…
Over six decades ago, Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith sought to establish a program that would help individuals suffering from alcoholism find recovery. One of their main goals was to create a process that wasn’t too religious-based. At the time, the only thing in existence that was trying to help alcoholics recover was the Oxford Group, except it was extremely Christian-centered. Bill and Bob knew they needed to move away from that if they wanted to find a lot more acceptance to their recovery program. When they created the 12 Steps, it was done in a way to help those who might be atheist or agnostic, and even those who might have turned away from religion long ago. The absolute key that solidified all this was in their second step, which guided alcoholics to find a Power greater than themselves who could restore them to sanity.
It was never specified what that Power was supposed to be. The founders of AA left that for each individual to discover in their own spiritual journey to recovery. When I first started out on my own path to that, I was both afraid and angry with God. I also had a hard time believing I was going to find a Power greater than myself who would help me find full recovery from not only my alcoholism, but all my other addictions as well. My first sponsor helped me immensely with all of this, when she said to believe that she believed there was a Power who could do that for me. So for a good while I did what she said and followed the steps by believing that she believed I’d find that Power for myself.
While I wasn’t atheist or agnostic, I was one of those who had turned away from religion long ago because of the idea of a punishing God. I also couldn’t understand how the God I was brought up with would let so many bad things happen to me. These are the reasons why I was both afraid and angry with God and why a religious recovery program wouldn’t have worked for me. Thankfully, Bill and Bob didn’t establish that type of a program and instead, I was able to find my own path to a God of my understanding who was quite UNLIKE the God I had been brought up with in church.
The God of my understanding today is an all-loving, all-accepting, and all-forgiving God who didn’t punish me or cause any of the bad things to happen to me. I learned that all those bad things that happened were because of the mass amount of self-will that runs riot in this world. Now, when I see the words “God” or “Him” or “Power” in the 12 Steps, it is the God of my understanding that I believe it’s referring to. As for any other person who is seeking recovery, they too can create their own perception of who God is.
So if you happen to be someone who is seeking recovery from an addiction, please don’t be scared when you see some words or phrases in the 12 Steps that seem too religious-based. I can attest that while those words may seem that way, they’re not. No matter what level of belief you have and no matter what your conception of God is, the only thing you need to do is be willing to believe in a Power greater than yourself. Whatever you end up choosing, as long as it’s not yourself, I know it will help lead you to find recovery from your addictions, like my God did for me.
And if somehow you find yourself still struggling with believing there is some Power greater than yourself, who can you help you find recovery from your addiction, then believe that I believe, until you do…
Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson
Finding Moderation In Life
“Give it your all!” was a statement I often heard throughout life. While I generally always did that in whatever people were referring to, I often took that statement way too far by going to the extreme. What I’ve come to understand these days though is that life is a lot more about learning something called moderation.
For a person like me, who once regularly indulged in quite a number of addictions, moderating anything was next to impossible. Instead, my normal way of thinking was that more alcohol, more drugs, more cigarettes, more porn, more sex, more spending, more traveling, or more anything, would make me feel better. But in the long run, it never did and yet I kept on doing it. By the time I found sobriety from alcohol and drugs, that pattern was well established within me in just about every aspect of my life. I didn’t begin to notice this though until meditation helped me to slow down my thinking and see things a little clearer.
That was when I started to see those extremes in various areas of my life such as working out at the gym several times a day, for hours at a time. Or instead of taking a leisurely bike ride, I would go out full force biking 10 to 15mph for over 27 miles. One very good example of this was when I used to live on an island that was close to a beach. There was a remote area on that beach that was about a 6 to 7 mile walk from the closest parking lot. It essentially was the tip of the island and the only way most people got there was by a 4×4 vehicle that can operate on the sand. One day I decided I was going to be one of the few who has walked that entire way. So I set out doing just that with just a few bottles of water in my hand. By the time I reached that point, I was out of water, exhausted, my legs were shot, and I knew there was no way I was going to make it back on foot. Thankfully, God brought someone to my rescue in the form of a fisherman who drove me back in his Jeep.
Sadly, that was the pattern I was doing in everything in my life. While meditation helped me to see this and temporarily find moderation with things, at some point I got away from doing it and that pattern quickly returned. That’s when I started pushing myself to the limits again and where I returned to my addictive behaviors. Unfortunately, all of that eventually ended up making me sick, actually very sick, when one day my body began developing one physical pain after another.
Over these past few years, my physical limitations have actually become a blessing in disguise. They have really helped me to learn how to do things in moderation. I can’t walk for long distances right now and sometimes a walk is for just a few minutes. Yesterday, I walked back out onto Lake Erie by myself as it’s still frozen over quite solid, In the distance was this island that was a good mile and a half, which normally you could only access by boat. On that particular day, my pain levels were drastically less than usual and I felt pretty good. I began walking towards that island and by the time I had gone about half way to it, this small voice within me said not to go any further. And you know what? I didn’t. The old me would have though. Instead, I lay down on the ice, with not a person in sight, and looked up in the sky and thanked God for that experience. It was breathtaking. But the best part about it? I was able to walk back home without needing any help!
The moral of this story is pretty simple. The life of an addict is one of extremes, whereas the life of a person on a spiritual journey is one of moderation. Thank God, I have learned this lesson and been able to rewire my thinking to allow for it. I know at some point my chronic pain is going to end, and when it does, I know I’ll be able to moderate myself much better in everything I do.
So if you happen to be someone like I once was, who’s known for going to the extreme, you may want to take a moment, breathe, and really try to start cutting back from that and slowing yourself down a little. Because if you don’t, at some later point, either your mind, body, or soul is going to fight back and force you to learn how to find moderation in things. While there is no moderation with addictions, there is with just about everything else in life. Try practicing it, and you’ll probably find yourself becoming a lot healthier in life.
Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson