Monday, August 14, 2017

The Folly Of Control

TThe literature of Alcoholics Anonymous says as alcoholics, " Our egomania digs two disastrous pitfalls. Either we insist upon dominating the people we know, or we depend upon them far too much.  If we lean too heavily on people, they will sooner or later fail us, for they are human, too, and cannot possibly meet our incessant demands. In this way our insecurity grows and festers.  When we habitually try to manipulate others to our own willful desires, they revolt, and resist us heavily.  Then we develop hurt feelings, a sense of persecution, and a desire to retaliate.  As we redouble our efforts at control, and continue to fail, our suffering becomes acute and constant.  We have not once sought to be one in a family, to be a friend among friends, to be a worker among workers, to be a useful member of society.  Always we tried to struggle to the top of the heap, or to hide underneath it.  This self-centered behavior blocked a partnership relation with any one of those about us.  Of true brotherhood we had small comprehension."
         It is in the letting go of self and trusting in God that allows us to accept others as they are and to relinquish control. One of the greatest gifts from the program of A.A. is to have true and honest relationships with those around us. We can learn how to interact with others through our interaction with God in the Eleventh Step.  We can learn how to love and how to allow ourselves to be loved   We can learn how not to interact with other personalities, which we can like or dislike, but rather to interact with the part of them that is good - the part of them that is God.
       It is in the letting go of self and the trusting in God that allows us to accept others as they are (and ourselves as we are).  This allows us not only to relinquish control but to have no need or desire to control at all.

Written by Armand

4 comments:

  1. This comment Is From A Gratefully Recovering Alcoholic
    Armand,




    AnYthing less than the "complete surrender" of our ego, that is, our personhood and spirit to the Person of God in the 4th and 5th step continues the delusion that we still somehow possess the leverage to negotiate the "terms and conditions of our surrender" allowing us to carry on with our lives as though alcohol or any other substance abuse issue was our only problem and that were it not for "daemon rum" life would and could be just dandy.

    As long as this recovering alcoholic entertains any thought or imaginings that God desires me to climb back into the drivers seat and continue to direct life's tour would easily come under the definition of insanity and the continued mental meanderings of a megalomaniac. It reminds me of the bumper stickers I've seen that say "God is my Co-Pilot". At one time I agreed. Today I want to run up to the driver and fervently encourage them to pry their fingers off the "wheel" and quickly swap seats. Although that type of thinking provides a form of spiritual walk it provides none of the Power. Thankfully, God loves us far too much to encourage His spiritually immature children to walk alone, blindly and boldly into the rush hour traffic of the limited access highway of life.

    Just for today I can face the three most troublesome struggles of life. First, by thanking the Lord for helping me overcome the struggle with my human nature. When I admit the impossibility of changing myself with resolutions and self-improvement disciplines, You take control and perform the continuing miracle of making me like Yourself. Second, You free me from the struggle of being humanly adequate. I know I am insufficient for the demands of life, but I also know of Your all-sufficient adequacy. I can't imagine any problem You cannot help me to solve, any person You can't love through me and any challenge You can't give me strength to tackle. Third, I don't have to struggle with worries over what the future holds. I can relax. Whatever I face today will be an opportunity for new dimensions of Your character to be formed in me."

    Simply put, Serenity, is a gift of God to all who "humble themselves and seek His face and turn from their wicked ways", For then His eyes shall be open and His ears attentive to our prayers. And thus, He says, "I shall grant you a time of refreshment". That, my brother, is serenity.


    A Gratefully Recovering Alcoholic.

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    1. A Gratefully Recovering Alcoholic How true it is that when I struggle with different situations in Life it just drives me closer to the Lord...Thanks...Armand

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  2. What a circle to nowhere! Incessant unmeetable demands, growing festering sores, useless and soul-siphoning manipulation, resentments and fears - all wrapped in angry thin skin with a desire to retaliate. The quest for control yielded no self-control, and finally no self. Only alcohol enabled me to enable my folly. I was a drunk. The miraculous transformation available to any alcoholic with a genuine desire to recover is grounded in The Big Book and in The Twelve Steps. Yes, I had to let go of myself in order to find myself. And I had to trust that by letting go, I would find what I had always been looking for - me through The Power Within me and nowhere else. Today my life is easier, my relationships are real, my desire to control has been given to The Power Within me.There is no folly. I don't live hurt.

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    1. Michael a life lived in self can only fuel discontentment.
      A life free of self is a life of joy...Thanks...Armand

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