Thursday, April 7, 2016

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.  Coming to Step Nine of the twelve steps of Alcoholics Anonymous was somewhat daunting, yet easier, as I then had 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. Therefore, I 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 became 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 have extricated myself through the grace of God from the past - I was free, maybe for the first time in my entire life.

Written by Armand
Edited by Caitlin Alexandra

4 comments:

  1. My life with me in charge yielded confusion, defective relationships, and mountains of debris. I came into AA in complete disarray, hung over from life, with no real understanding of what had to be done to set my life in order, let alone find and trust a Power to guide me to a new way of living. In The Ninth Step, I completed the initial efforts of addressing my character defects, and of making every amend I reasonably could in order to clear the pathway into the realm of the spirit - the certain destination for the worthwhile life of Recovery. The litmus test for me was in carefully reviewing The Promises, and assessing their presence in my sobriety as opposed to the bedevilments which preceded them. I was then able to move on to Step Ten where the vital spiritual experience necessary for Recovery in AA is experienced in full splendor. As The Big Book states, my next function was and is to grow in understanding and effectiveness. And to enjoy the peace of mind available to all those who seek it.

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  2. Michael Step Nine as all the Steps of AA is vitally important as we can't possibly be right with God until we are right with those about us...Thank you...Armand

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  3. This Is Comment Is From A Gratefully Recovery Alcoholic

    Armand,


    The touchstone to this step, as in all, is a Divinely inspired and ever expanding immersion in the very heart of God. In that moment, the Lord himself shares the pain of injured spirits and innocent lives still suffering the emotional scars left in the wake of every previous malignant encounter. We cannot help but to be overcome with an overwhelming sense of grief, married to a profound desire to clear the carnage left in an already acknowledged misspent life. This, is the birth of an incredible gift. The undeserved privilege of being a partaker in the ministry of healing that God would provide to others as He sought to heal the last scars that I, in my selfishness, had carved into the fragile spirits of too many lives.

    Every encounter must be bathed in prayer. If much time has passed we may find that some of those we believe we had harmed have long since forgiven our petulant actions and even rejoice in our newfound journey through faith. Those who are present in our day to day lives gradually experience refreshment after a sincere confession and a newly consistent display of love, value and respect for their unique personhood. Others, He places on our hearts in preparation as He miraculously brings us together. This is truly a journey that need not take a lifetime to complete and I have discovered it is the only linchpin to the full freedom and healing power contained in Step 10...

    This well worn path has been tread by all the greatest saints in history many of whom had lived previous lives of sheer malice and debauchery. King David was an adulterer and murderer, St. Paul murdered and scattered every first century christian that previously crossed his path, St. Francis once led the life of a privileged partying whore monger. The list is legion... Yet, Their earlier works are a long forgotten vapor while their walk with the Lord is universally celebrated by people of nearly every tribe, faith and nation. Their new lives weren't driven by morbid contrition nor ruled by solemn penance. They lived a joy filled life of surrender wholly at one with the Author and Finisher of their faith. This miracle only occurs because, "Jesus paid it all. All to Him I owe. Sin had left a crimson stain. He washed me white as snow. Yes, He washed me white as snow..."

    A Gratefully Recovering Alcoholic

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    1. A Gratefully Recovering Alcoholic the 12 Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous gives us the opportunity to live in the present through an awareness and trust in God. The Ninth Step gives us a way to right the wrongs from our past and once recovered to right any wrongs that we manifest so as to bring us back to an awareness and trust in God...Thank you...Armand

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