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
The Big Book uses very precise wording to underscore some critical points of growth. "If we are painstaking about this phase of our development" is a great example, as that language occurs following the treatment of Step Nine and before the suggested approach to Step Ten. The word "painstaking" addresses the need to be rid of the pain. Not only the pain we caused others but the pain that resides within each of us as the result of our specific dis-ease. Confrontation is inescapable in order to enable Recovery. As you point out, self-confrontation comes in The Fourth and Fifth Steps as the prelude to doing the remaining work whereby we can enter the realm of the spirit. My experience is that I was "amazed before I was halfway through." Amazed that something was occurring within me that had been dormant all my life, and that I had attempted to awaken with alcohol. My spirit was coming alive through my interaction with others as the gateway to interaction with myself. Which is where and how I came to know The Power Within me for Whom I had been unknowingly searching in every drink. I can say with certainty that The Promises have become reality for me and have replaced the bedevilments which preceded them. As The Big Book again states, "they will always materialize if we work for them."
ReplyDeleteMichael Thank you for sharing your experience. There is a reason why Step 9 comes before Step 11. We must reconcile with the world around us before we can fully reconcile with God...Armand
DeleteThis Comment Is From A Gratefully Recovering Alcoholic
ReplyDeleteArmand,
The touchstone to this step was an overwhelming sense of grief, married to a profound desire to clear the carnage left in the "wake" of an already acknowledged misspent life. I can only describe it as Divinely inspired. I was immersed, for that moment, in the heart of God. No words were said, nor could ever convey the pain I felt in the presence of injured spirits and innocent lives still suffering the emotional scars of every malignant encounter. I was, in that moment, given 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 untold lives.
Those who were near, gradually experienced refreshment after a sincere confession and a newly consistent display of love, value and respect for their unique personhood. Others, He placed on my heart in preparation as He miraculously brought us together. This is truly a journey that need not take a lifetime to complete. However, If done in the wrong spirit, I have discovered it can become the greatest single impediment to the freedom and healing power contained in Step 10...
A Gratefully Recovering Alcoholic
A Gratefully Recovering Alcoholic thank you for sharing your experience. it is possible through the 12 Steps not only to reconcile the past but to also remain that way in the present through the grace of God...Armand
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