Grateful Heart Monday

Welcome to another entry of Grateful Heart Monday, where I express a piece of gratitude to begin my week on a positive note, which for today is for a guy in Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) who was assigned to meet with me due to my excessive binge drinking, back when I was put on academic probation during my college years.

The year was 1994, and I was a senior at Rochester Institute of Technology, studying to get my Bachelor of Science in Business Information Systems. I was a good student, but a terrible drinker. Alcoholic to the very core, yet unbeknownst to me at the time, I continued to drink to excess on just about every night of the week. That is until I got into some serious trouble on campus one evening and was put on academic probation with a few stipulations that had to be met if I wanted to remain a student there.

The one stipulation that bothered me the most was the one I’m actually most grateful for today, yet back then I didn’t see it that way. The idea that I had to sit down and meet with a representative from AA for three several hour-long visits, felt totally absurd. My mind rationalized that everybody drank like me and I had plenty of examples of that in my fraternity to cite out. Everybody got drunk, pretty much all the time when alcohol was around, and that was exactly what I told this AA individual in each of his visits.

Yet, this man never batted an eye, never made me feel less than, never told me I was an alcoholic, or accused me of anything. He only did what Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith began such a long time ago when AA was founded, by sitting with me, and sharing his own story of alcoholism and asking if I thought I might have a problem. While I repeatedly denied that I did in each of his visits, what this man shared with me sat with me quite deeply, even long after his visits had been completed.

I’m not sure I ever actually drank in the same way again after that, as his words, his kindness, and his unconditional love and desire to help another suffering individual remained with me in every single drunken binge until June 10thof 1995, when I took my very last drink and admitted to myself that I had a problem and was indeed an alcoholic just like him.

I wanted so badly to contact this man at that point to let him know what I had discovered about myself. Unfortunately, other than the image of his face being the only thing I could remember about him and the alcohol and drug representative not having a way to contact him anymore either, I assumed I wasn’t meant to see connect with him again.

Ironically though, God in all His profound ways, saw fit to bring the two of us together one final time and by chance at that. On a random trip about six months later, my mother and I were in the middle of Texas, heading to Austin, when I asked to stop at a grocery store to get something to drink before we continued on our way. There at the entrance, as I walked in, was the very AA guy who had sat with me almost two years prior, who had given me his life story and all his humility in the process.

I knew God put him there at that very moment for one reason and one reason only, and that was for me to thank him for his words that he had imparted upon me several years prior. We embraced while I thanked him for being a conduit for God and for getting me on a Higher Path, one that I’m not sure I would have ever found if it hadn’t been for him.

I’m still sober today and while I don’t even remember this AA guy’s face anymore, his spiritual presence, unconditional love, and genuine light continues to live within me, as I now carry the same torch that he did, doing my best to pass on my experience, strength, and hope to others who may be suffering, just like I once was. And for that I’m truly grateful for a guy God put in my life to help me begin my path to sobriety and eventually recovery…

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson

Thought For The Day

Quote #1

“Forgive others, not because they deserve forgiveness, but because you deserve peace.” (Jonathan Lockwood Huie)

Quote #2

“By praying for our enemies, we guard our own heart so that we do not become like them.” (Mark Driscoll)

Quote #3

“Forgive anyone who has caused you pain or harm. Keep in mind that forgiving is not for others. It is for you. Forgiving is not forgetting. It is remembering without anger. It frees up your power, heals your body, mind, and spirit. Forgiveness opens up a pathway to a new place of peace where you can persist despite what has happened to you.” (Les Brown)

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson

Daily Reflection

“A powerful shift happens when I pray for someone. I start to see that person in relationship to God instead of in relationship to me. Instead of seeing how he annoys me or how she makes me jealous, I see how God loves them.” (Liz Ditty)

 There have been a number of people over the years who really upset me for a number of reasons. Some were friends and some weren’t and I spent many-a-day getting caught up in negative thoughts about them, almost to the point where I was wishing bad things might befall them. The only good that did though was keep me in a negative state more than not, where I struggled to see any one of them in any type of positive light. One day someone gently suggested that I might want to start praying for all those that bothered me. I initially shuddered at the thought, asking myself why I’d ever want to pray for someone that I was upset with. Although, when I began to truly see how ugly my personality had become through all my negativity and judgments of others, I decided to give it a whirl. It was then I opted to pray that the four characteristics I end each of these blogs with, “peace, love, light, and joy”, enter the lives of all those my ego was perturbed with. At first, it felt like a fruitless exercise, that is until I noticed my perception of them began to shift to one that was filled with more love and compassion. Nowadays, I make it regular practice to immediately pray for anyone I find myself having any sort of negative thoughts about. I pray to see them in God’s light, in a more positive way, and always end those prayers by sending them blessings. Doing so has ultimately helped me become a far less judgmental individual and a far more unconditionally loving being.

Dear God, the next time I find myself becoming consumed with negative thoughts about someone, please help me remember how important it is to pray for that person, as I know in doing so, I’ll be able to see far more of You in them, and far less of my ego’s opinion of them.

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson