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
Written By Armand
In truth, prayer and meditation were meaningless to me - more a source of irritation than inspiration. In my self-centeredness even the effort felt hypocritical.It was only by integrating all Twelve Steps (as spelled out in The Big Book) into my life that I was able to locate the presence of The Power Within me. That Power changed everything - from effort to outcome. Prayer and meditation have been completely redefined as a natural inclusion of The Power Within. That certainty presents itself each day in the form of an ongoing awakening of the spirit wherein both prayer and meditation have become one. I have been granted a gift that amounts to a new level of consciousness and being. As promised.
ReplyDeleteMichael love when you wrote "from effort to outcome."...Thank you...Armand
ReplyDeleteYour 11th Step reminded me of Elijah fleeing to the mountain of Horeb where violent winds, earthquakes and fire passed without the presence of God, but found God in a soft whisper. That soft whisper was your moment in meditation.
ReplyDeleteI also found God in the 11th Step. I was initially inspired by old film clips of Billy Graham from the 1950s and 1960s. His message that I could have a PERSONAL relationship with God. A personal relationship with God, if I surrendered my life (will) to Him. I couldn't watch enough of Billy Graham, and even went to visit his museum in Charlotte, NC. With a foundation from AA, I than realized in order for me to trust someone I needed to know and like them. In order for me to know and like someone, I needed to spend time with them. So I started a practice of prayer and meditation each day combining the tools of AA and my religon. Today I consider myself still in my infancy learning the language of God in my life. All I can tell you is that I haven't drank alcohol and my relationships with those I live is immensely better. There are so many tools AA and our religious faith has offered us, but we have to MAKE TIME each day a priority if we want to trust in the Lord.
Jim time to pray and meditate on a daily basis is the best investment an alcoholic can make...thank you...armand
DeleteSpot On ! In the Big Book on pages 86,87,88 Bill W. does a very good job in describing the daily practice of prayer and meditation. The Oxford Group called the morning time you spend with God QUITE TIME. Armand, I also was late to daily player and meditation but today it is the center of my program. Best, John
ReplyDeleteJohn the 11th Step is the life blood of an Alcoholic...Thank you...Armand
ReplyDeleteEvery step is in the order it is for a reason and Step 11 is no exception. All are written in the past perfect tense and form of a collective testimony of those pilgrims who came before us and experienced the absolute relief from their condition that no human hand could have provided. This collective yet personal journey of sobriety, in all things, becomes the destination inspired and ultimately, through Gods grace, fervently desired. It is; in its entirety, God's gift to everyone who is willing to embrace the immutable truth of His Word and undeniable Presence of His Person the moment we make a decision to turn our will and lives over to the care of God as we understand Him. Remarkably, it is He who empowers us to seek out and complete the rest through power and grace that is surely not not our own..
ReplyDeleteIf we do this, we soon discover that our old desires are being systematically swept away as a new life begins to unfold. Step 11 recognizes my new inner thirst to nurture and surrender to this ongoing and ever broadening relationship with the Creator, Maintainer and Lover of my soul. I am becoming His new creation. I begin to recognize that I'm no longer my own. Amazingly, I discover that not only have I been accepted by God but that, wart's and all, I've been called to become a disciple, that is, a follower of the One who initiated this divinely desired relationship.
Moment by moment I discover my outlook is no longer hemmed in by space and time. And although it was always a part of His great plan, I realize that my personal epiphany began the instant I first admitted I was an alcoholic, my life had become unmanageable and made a decision to completely turn that life over to God and that; as the poet has written, "has made all the difference." I am convinced that the Creator of All continues to lovingly conform every aspect of this life into His perfecty holy personal prayer and eternal vision for all who come to him with a broken and contrite heart.
Any past personal confusion over the principal priority for my life dissolves as His ultimate plan and purpose is made immediately clear within in the very core of my being. Having once and forever been saved I'm now called to be a disciple, and yes, an evangelist, that is, a witness to the Source of Eternal Truth and Saving Grace to all those still trapped inside the insatiable, desperate loneliness of a life without hope and a world without love to the only true Source of endless eternal serenity, peace and rest. "That one is God, "and through his son Jesus Christ may you find him now.
A Grateful Recovering Alcoholic
A Gratefully Recovering Alcoholic Thanks for sharing your experience. Ultimately without the disease of Alcoholism I may not have surrendered my nature in the sense necessary to recover from Alcoholism...Thank you...Armand
ReplyDeleteI often feel I do not have the "time" for prayer and meditation, and then I wonder why my life has gone off the rails yet again. One thing that helps is the wording on p. 85 of the Big Book: "To some extent we have become God-conscious. We have begun to develop this vital sixth sense. But we must go further and that means more action." ACTION! This reminds me that prayer and meditation are actions, vital parts of a program of action. They are essential for conscious contact with the God of my understanding, so I must make time for them. The morning meditation and nightly review that the Big Book recommends as part of the Eleventh Step are necessary, if I want to get an honest view of my spiritual condition for that day, and the steps I need to take to correct my course.
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