Step 9 – 12 Step Recovery

“Made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others…”

There’s a line in all 12 step recovery programs which I often hear and believe applies to this step. “Are you willing to go to any lengths to maintain your recovery?” Making amends isn’t an easy task. On the whole list of the 12 steps, the 9th Step might just be considered the hardest to undertake. It directly relates to just how willing someone is to maintain their recovery as the work in this step will have them facing their past and all the pain, harm, and damage they’ve caused others.

By the time a person in recovery makes it to this step, they should have already begun to see the damage they caused others through their own selfish, self-seeking, dishonest, and fear based behaviors. They should have already begun to be aware of the havoc their actions created from their addiction based world. There should be no doubt in their minds how much their addictions had control of them and how great the consequences came from living in each of them.

When I arrived at the 9th Step for the first time, I was more than aware of how much the chaos in my world came from my own doing. I was even more aware of how much living in my addictions created an endless stream of people I owed amends to. But I was most aware of how fearful I was to go back to all of those people or institutions and make restitution for what I had done because of living in the disease of all my addictions.

There were friends that I had used for my own sexual advantage, places I had stolen products from, gossip I had spread which hurt certain others, lies that I had told which damaged loved ones, relationships I had come in between and broken apart, promises that I had made and never kept, and so on and so forth. A list of names and places sat in front of me from my 8th Step showing me this. I knew that I owed each of them an amends that wasn’t going to be as easy as offering only an apology. I also knew that if I skipped over this crucial step, I most likely would slowly unravel at the seams and eventually go back to living in my addictions creating only a longer amends list to one day tackle.

Making an amends means a lot more than just showing up to where I caused harm and telling someone I was a sick person in an addiction and saying I’m sorry. It means being honest from a truly humble place and telling someone how I had been selfish, self-seeking, dishonest, and afraid. It means describing in detail each of those elements to where I had caused them harm or damage. It means allowing for that person to tell me how much pain I caused them, giving them the opportunity to let it out with me just listening. And the most important part comes at the end of each amends where I ask for their forgiveness and what they need to move beyond the damage I caused them. This is why I had so much fear and why so many others have the same when tackling a 9th Step.

Every one of those amends brought out fear for me before attempting to tackle them. Unfortunately, the path of every amends is different. In some cases, I made the amends and all was forgiven with a big hug. In other cases, I was told all was forgiven long before and that I hadn’t even needed to make an amends. There were cases where I was told before I even started that they didn’t want to hear the amends and to leave them alone. In those cases, I had to accept that they weren’t ready to forgive me and all I could do was give myself credit that I had been willing to try. There were even cases where I couldn’t make the amends because I had no idea where the people were and all I could do was put it in God’s hands to hopefully one day be placed in their path. I know of other cases where people have faced being screamed and yelled at. I know of even other cases where people are told they will never be forgiven for what they’ve done. Thankfully I did not have to deal with either of those situations nor did I have to deal with any outstanding warrants, or police matters. I know of people who have run from the law that turned themselves in when getting honest on their 9th Step. There have been people who have even gone back to places or people they stole great sums of money from during this step’s work. Thankfully I didn’t have to do that either. What I did have to face though was many people who had seen me tear apart their lives and cause great emotional and mental suffering. I watched many cry and sob because of my amends. I realized I had broken many hearts and torn apart many lives.

As this step says, there are times though that we can’t make amends because it might injure them or others more. In my case, there were people I had been sexual with outside of their marriages or partners, of which their other halves weren’t aware of. To make an amends to them or their family would have caused greater harm and instead I had to practice a living amends which meant never again doing those behaviors.

This step really does take a lot of willingness to complete it. It involves facing all those dark corners that have been avoided for years. It involves seeing and listening to other’s anger and rage without saying anything back. It involves being humble to those once thought were never to be faced again. But most importantly for me, it involves praying diligently to God before each of them asking for strength to complete it. And it involves praying just as diligently afterward, thanking God for having given me the strength to walk through all that fear. After all, it is because of my closer relationship to God that has made me become willing to go to any lengths to maintain my recovery and do any of these amends in the first place. Because of it, I am finding much more inner peace today.

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

Step 8 – 12 Step Recovery

“Made a list of all persons we had harmed, and became willing to make amends to them all…”

Recovery is a funny thing. The more I’ve recovered from my addictions, the more I’ve seen how many people and institutions I harmed when I wasn’t recovering from those addictions and the more its gotten clearer just how sick and toxic I was.

When I first sat down to work on this step, I came up with thirty names of people and institutions who I knew I had harmed and owed amends to. Over the years since then, the list has grown directly proportional to the growth that I’ve made in my relationship with God.

Quite often, our egos get in the way of seeing a situation more clearly where we may have caused harm. They may get bruised or they may feel twinges of fear in facing an amends that could bring about that much needed healing and growth that recovery is meant to bring. So instead, those amends may never make it on the 8th Step list and the release from that guilt and shame never comes.

Very similar to the 4th Step Turnarounds, a thorough 8th Step includes writing down where one was selfish, self-seeking, dishonest, and afraid for each of the people or institutions listed. Something that I noticed when I finished writing this step was how all of those entries showed me that I’ve been an insecure person for most of my life and through that insecurity, I acted out in addictions and caused great harm to others. In every single case, my insecurity drove me to selfish, self-seeking, dishonest, and fear based behaviors, each of which harmed someone or something.

As my self-will has decreased over the years in my recovery, I have become more willing to see where my addictions took me and the great harm that I caused to so many because of them. The more I’ve become willing to see where my addictions took me and the great harm I’ve caused to so many, the more I have become willing to write down the names of all those people and institutions I’ve harmed where I once thought they were at fault. The more I have become willing to write down all the names of all those people and institutions I’ve harmed where I once thought they were at fault, the more I have been able to recover from my addictions. The more that I’ve been able to recover from my addictions, the more I’ve been able to grow closer to God. The more I’ve been able to grow closer to God, the less I’m harming anyone or anything anymore. And the less I’m harming anyone or anything anymore, the more I realize there’s a good chance I won’t have to write a big amends list ever again.

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

Step 7 – 12 Step Recovery

“Humbly asked God to remove our shortcomings…”

For a long time I ignored this step completely. In fact I mentioned this is my previous posting, as I skipped over doing much, if any work on both Step 6 and 7 the first time I went through the steps. Today, I’m looking at this step with a very different set of eyes, and definitely a very different heart.

Next to the word God, the most important word in this step for me is “Humbly”. I looked up the definition of humble and found this one to really speak to me.

Humble – “To show a modest or low estimate of one’s own importance.”

Essentially how this step was written speaks to placing ourselves second to God and in doing so, a desire comes forward within each of us to be free of all of our shortcomings. So we then ask God because of this to remove those character defects and shortcomings. How well one does with this step, really depends on how much of one’s ego has lessened in the step work up to this point.

The first time I did Step 7, my ego was still primarily in charge of my life. The most I did for this step was to quickly bow my head and say, “Please God remove my shortcomings…” and then move on to beginning Step 8. I think it’s important to highlight at this point the same thing I did in yesterday’s entry. I realize today that if I choose to live in any part of my own self-will, that it’s impossible for me to have God remove ALL of my shortcomings. Hypothetically, let’s say that I choose to operate out of 10 percent of my own self-will giving God the other 90 percent. What that essentially is saying is “that I’m ok to handle 10 percent of my life on my own God”. So what happens then with all those things that go awry in that 10 percent of the time for me? I end up trying to still run the show, arranging it as I think it’s supposed to go, and getting more than not, disastrous results. The ego is a funny thing. My ego early on in recovery didn’t want to give up control in every area of my life to something unseen and unknown. It felt it could still operate on some level running the show, maybe for a few matinees here and there. And every time I tried to run one of those shows, my character defects came glaring out and went no where except creating more chaos around me. Thus I wasn’t able to get much benefit out of this step because I still was living in my own ego-centric world, one where my self-will was greater than God’s will and one where I wasn’t humble hardly at all.

This is why I continue to highlight how important the 3rd Step is to turning over one’s ENTIRE will to God. I know the 3rd Step doesn’t have that word in it. And maybe the steps were written the way they were for each individual to figure this out with their journey in finding God. All of I know is that by turning my entire will over to God each day I wake up, I am desiring to have God remove all of my character defects and I’m able to ask God to do just that without any reservation during my prayers.

I know all of us have free will, and free will essentially becomes self will run riot over time. I never had much success with free will and almost every show I tried to run got bad reviews. I don’t want to operate today in control of my own destiny and life. I know my happiness will only come from God being fully in charge. With that being said, when God is in charge, I see all of my shortcomings pretty clearly which brings quite a bit of humbleness out within me. And because of that, I absolutely, without a doubt, find myself asking God to humbly remove ALL of those shortcomings that may still exist within me.

Peace, love, light and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson