Thursday, April 30, 2015

Motivation To Complete Step Nine

          The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous says, "We have a list of all persons we have harmed and to whom we are willing to make amends.  Now we go out to our fellows and repair the damage done in our past.  We attempt to sweep away the debris that has accumulated out of our effort to live on self will and run the show ourselves.  If we haven't the will to do so , we ask until it comes (a ninth step prayer).   Remember, it was agreed upon at the beginning that we would go to any lengths for victory over alcohol."   It was difficult for me to find the person to share my Fourth Step with and to share the exact nature of my wrongs with God.  However, I did, and in doing so I found a sense of relief through the power of  forgiveness.  Now, here I am at Step Nine of the twelve steps of Alcoholics Anonymous and it is somewhat daunting, yet easier, as I now have the experience of God on my side.   The Fifth Step brought a sense of relief - the beginning of a serene life. For the first time since I was a small boy I felt the presence of God in my life.  I knew then that sobriety by itself was not enough, that I desired to be recovered. I knew that the solution was and is a vital spiritual experience and having a relationship with God in whom I trust. I therefore had plenty of motivation and desire to adopt the humility necessary to make amends to the people I had harmed - Step Nine.
          I learned through the program of Alcoholics Anonymous not to consider any harm that had been done to me. Besides, it was much easier to do so at that point as I was praying for and forgiving those on my list.  In the Big Book it states, "Under no condition do we criticize such a person or argue.  Simply we tell them that we will never get over our drinking until we do our utmost to straighten out the past.  We are there to sweep off our side of the street realizing that nothing worthwhile can be accomplished until we do so, never trying to tell them what they must do."
          This is how I approached the Ninth Step.  I began with my immediate family. Life is funny. Things don't always occur in what is perceived and assumed as the proper sequence.  My father had passed before I had any consciousness that I owed him an amends.  I went to his grave and grieved over his death and our life together.   My mother was having serious cognitive problems and, although I was able to make a verbal amends to her, the amends came as she was sinking deeper into her illness and when I was actually able to care for her.  My sister, who was shocked in my attempt to make amends to her, could only say, "Really? Really?!"  And on it went.  To those I could not see and to those that did not want to see me I sent a sincere and complete letter and prayed for the best for them.  It did become easier as I moved through the list.
          In the Fifth Step I began to feel serenity and now with the tasks of the Ninth Step complete, I had extricated myself, through the grace of God, from the past - I was free, maybe for the first time in my entire life.    

6 comments:

  1. The ninth step is one that is so based on haVing the contact with your higher power. Left to my own devices, I would never have the courage to do it. I have make the concious contact as strong as possible. I still have a lot of fear in my sobriety and struggle with prayer. I simply know to my core I am not god, I believe buidling on that root principle and going through the steps, my contact with my higher power will give me the strength to make amends to those I have harmed.

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  2. After all the thinking, assessing, revealing and praying throughout the first Eight Steps, I found a somewhat different person in me than the person I was before the process of recovery began. Thus, was I not only able to make amends, I was able to make peace. In the Big Book, we are taught that The Promises can become ours if we have done the Ninth Step with the right motivation and action. Nothing is more powerful than the kind of change these Promises promise. They completely set the tone for the proper entrance into the realm of the Spirit in the remaining Steps. My experience has been that this is an area of my life where shortcuts simply won't work. For that and for the ensuing freedom enabled by this miraculous process, I am alive in body and spirit.

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  3. Paul welcome back. sounds like you are on your way. A day at a time...Thanks for commenting...Armand

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  4. Michael You said in reference to the Ninth Step "My experience has been that this is an area of my life where shortcuts simply won't work." This is why Nine comes before Eleven in the program of Alcoholics Anonymous as we can't be in the will of God if we are not right with the people around us...Thank you so much...Armand

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  5. I took hostage of those I loved. My family wept and prayed for me in my spiritual absence even when I was dragging them through the mud with me. If I loved you, I hurt you. If you loved me, you were in my living nightmare. To think that a simple amends would patch these relationships was an idea that had resulted from my thoughts mapping out my plan via my will. With this self-willed attitudeI cannot possibly carry out what God wants or receive the inspiration vital to my recovery. If I am never to get over my drinking until I do my utmost in setting relationships right than I should set things right for those that I love - because if I do not they will be harmed again...and again and again. How selfish I do feel when I'm trapped in the emptiness of me - without God and hence without love. If I want freedom, if I want everlasting life, if I want to love and be loved, I must change. I must put my relationship with Him in front of and before any and all attempts to amend any relationship. I know now that the Twelve Steps are a blessing, given through His Grace as the answer. I don't want to look back on my life and think I could have made it worthwhile, think I could've been more of a vessel for Him to use, think I could've made a change but didn't. I don't want to fear any longer. I want to live - and I can only do that with His guidance and a trust in Him that I can get through ANY amends, any situation, and every day here on. Love to all, Caitlin

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  6. Catlin In your comment you wrote "I don't want to fear any longer. I want to live. As you said and this is paraphrased, the solution to your fear is a personal relationship with God receiving and doing His will. There you will become the human being that God created you to be and there you will maximize your human nature...Thank you...Armand

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