The Eleventh Step is the lifeline for the alcoholic. "Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as we understood Him, praying only for the knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry it out." Prayer and meditation were not something I initially incorporated into my practices of the program of Alcoholics Anonymous. Why? I don't really know. The only answer that I can come up with is that at some level I was still defiant, egotistical and lacked the humility necessary to pray and meditate daily. I was talking the talk but not walking the walk. I had worked the previous steps well and certainly to the best of my ability. I was excited by the program of AA and all the promise it held for me but I have learned through experience that the human nature is a strong foe, unwilling to pray and meditate daily to improve on a conscious contact with God. I had taken many people through the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous. I had read the first 164 pages of the Big Book hundreds of times and attended so many meetings that I can't begin to guess how many. But prayer and meditation at the level necessary to perceive and do God's will, well that was not in my thoughts and therefore, not on my agenda.
Then one day, after a decade of sobriety, I came home from the gym and stepped out of the car experiencing such sever pain that I fell to the ground. I was unable to move for what seemed like such a long time but in reality was only a minute or so. I had suffered from back problems most of my adult life but I had never experienced such severe pain. The subsequent M.R.I. disclosed seven herniated discs, an arthritic spine, spinal stenosis, degenerative vertebrae and a degenerated left hip. This left me unable to function. I spent the next twelve months of my life incapacitated, ten months of which I was unable to sit as I had to stand or lay. The medical community offered me a solution of surgery with a 15% chance of some improvement, heavy blood loss and five to six hours on the operating table. The surgeon said that the surgery was so difficult that he would only encourage it if I could no longer tolerate the pain.
I was directed to a kind and loving doctor who has the ability to identify emotional blocks that prevent healing. After some months of treatment and with some improvement he said to me as I was lying on the table, "I am picking up energy of a resentful nature." As soon as he said this I instantly and clearly identified my mom, my dad, and my sister - all of whom I had made amends to and prayed to forgive but at some level deep down inside the cells of my body I was unable to bring about the healing needed to release this resentful energy.
When I returned home I immediately began to pray and meditate and did so on a daily basis as I was unable to function, in severe pain and incapable of complete forgiveness for my family. After several days I experienced a forgiveness for my family emanating from deep within. This experience of forgiveness, through the grace of God, was brought about by the daily practice of prayer and meditation. On the 14th of June in the year 2001, while meditating, I knew for the first time in my life that my life was worth something. I had never had that feeling before. At the age of 54, after 11 years of sobriety, I had self esteem. My prayer for you is that if you haven't already you will incorporate daily prayer and meditation into your life.
Through a series of circumstances very different from yours, I learned after almost three decades of sobriety that I was "spiritually blocked." Hearing those words for the first time awakened me to the source of my malady, a malady that had been with me for my entire life. My spirit was blockaded by my ongoing will and the demands of my human-only nature. As a result, "of real happiness I knew none at all". On-paper success, economic status, educated children, upward career trajectory, meetings galore, multiple marathon medals - they were all somehow lessened, tainted by an unmovable spirit. It took those two simple words - spiritually blocked - to immediately ascribe the problem of which alcohol abuse was merely a symptom. Through a knowing sponsor and The Big Book directed program of recovery, I readily discovered that having a vital Michael experience wasn't the same as having a vital spiritual experience. I am forever grateful to The Power Within me to whom I was awakened by incorporating The Steps into my life in a way that they became my life. That Power is The Experience - only kept fully awakened by giving it all away. Now, in this moment.
ReplyDeleteMichael 'sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God," a relationship with God in this moment," praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry it out," as my nature will never do the will of God. If an alcoholic or anyone will pray and meditate daily they will come to an awareness of God which is necessary to recover...Thank you...Armand
ReplyDeleteArmand, thank you for sharing your experience with the 11th Step. While our stories are all so different, you can see the hand of God and work helping us slowly but surely our progress of building a relationship with us. I believe like the father in the prodigal son parable, God desparately desires a relationship with us. God waits for us as we learn our lessons the hard way. He takes advantage of our pain to open the door for us to get to know Him intimately. We all share the pain and powerlessness of being an alcoholic. While being an alcoholic might be enough for most people, I had to start losing "things" like money, employment, etc. In your case your mobility. It just seems all the pain we needed to experience was necessary for us to turn to God for his protection.
ReplyDeleteJim thanks so much for commenting. The last few sentences of your comment is the basis of the blog "i don't know if its a good thing, I don't know if it's a bad thing."...Armand
DeleteArmand, thank you for sharing your experience with the 11th Step. While our stories are all so different, you can see the hand of God and work helping us slowly but surely our progress of building a relationship with us. I believe like the father in the prodigal son parable, God desparately desires a relationship with us. God waits for us as we learn our lessons the hard way. He takes advantage of our pain to open the door for us to get to know Him intimately. We all share the pain and powerlessness of being an alcoholic. While being an alcoholic might be enough for most people, I had to start losing "things" like money, employment, etc. In your case your mobility. It just seems all the pain we needed to experience was necessary for us to turn to God for his protection.
ReplyDelete