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Career

In the context of Alcoholics Anonymous, the topic of Career examines the intersection of professional ambition and the disease of alcoholism. These speaker tapes reveal a recurring theme: the use of professional status, titles, and public performance as a mask for internal inadequacy or a misguided search for validation. Whether navigating the high-pressure environments of military aviation, law enforcement, or news broadcasting, speakers describe how the pursuit of a corporate title or a public image often mirrored their drinking—a desperate attempt to secure an external stamp of approval. The core principle discussed in these recordings is the shift from external validation to internal spiritual worth. Listeners will find that professional success is often a symptom of a deeper separation from a Divine center, and that no promotion or accolade can resolve the underlying spiritual void. The narratives emphasize that true dignity is not found in the spotlight or the accumulation of material success, but in the humble, shared work of the 12 Steps and the fellowship. Listeners can expect to hear raw accounts of self-sabotage within the workplace, the collapse of professional facades, and the eventual realization that the only sustainable success is a daily reprieve found in sobriety. These tapes provide critical insight into how recovering alcoholics transition from a life of performance to a life of service, ultimately finding a sense of purpose that transcends their professional identity.

277 tapes

All Tapes

Jeff P.
The People Who Quit Meetings and Stay Sober Aren’t Here to Tell Us – Jeff P.
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Howard P.
Wiping Out the County Wheat Crop with a Prayer — That’s an Ego Problem – Howard P.
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Doug R.
You’ve Got Alcoholism Mixed Up with Gravity – Doug R.
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Don L.
“Well, I Bet You Were in the Moment” — My Sponsor After I Was Chased by Rottweilers – Don L.
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Mary S.
Forgiveness as the Spiritual Surrender the Alcoholic Ego Cannot Manufacture Alone – Mary S.
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Steve F.
Waiting to Finish the Steps Before Helping Anyone Is Just Ego Wearing a Recovery Costume – Steve F.
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Scott R.
Eighteen Years of Psychotherapy Is Showing Up at a Gunfight with a Knife Once a Week – Scott R.
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Patty O.
Acting My Way Into Right Thinking Because Thinking My Way Into Right Living Never Worked – Patty O.
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Mary S.
Find Someone You Can Forgive and Someone You Can Love and You Will Find Higher Power – Mary S.
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Bill White
A Painter, a Barber, and a Carpenter Walked Into the Bar — That Was All Higher Power Needed – Bill W.
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Joe F.
Halfway Through the Ninth Step the Promises Kicked In Exactly Like the Book Said They Would – Joe F.
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Jay P.
Higher Power Became Personal Not Because I Believed but Because I Repeated Words I Didn’t Mean – Jay P.
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Matt J.
Art Cole Told Me It Sounds Like You Have a Problem With Living Matt – Matt J.
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Walter O.
I Got Nothing I Asked For But Everything I’d Hoped For – Walter O.
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Vince Y.
Almost Anybody’s Judgment Is Infinitely Better Than Yours – Vince Y.
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Pat Y.
Willingness as the Thing That Overrules Your Own Judgment When Your Judgment Is the Problem
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Jack Q.
White-Knuckle Sobriety as the Most Insane Period of an Alcoholic’s Life – Jack Q.
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Joe C.
I Ain’t Got the Luxury of Resentments and I Ain’t Got the Luxury of Rationalizing
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Doug M.
My Relationship With Higher Power Cannot Be Taken From Me but I Can Give It Away – Doug M.
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Don C.
A Moment of Clarity Is Grace — Action Is What Keeps You Sober – Don C.
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David B.
My Sponsor Put His Foot on My Throat in the Front Yard and Said Good That’s Step 1 – David B.
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Charlie L.
Acceptance as the Thing the Alcoholic Has Been Starving For Long Before He Ever Picks Up a Drink – Charlie L.
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Alabama C.
Lying by Intimation as the Alcoholic’s Native Tongue — the Kind of Lie You Don’t Catch Yourself Telling – Alabama C.
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Jay P.
I Can’t, He Can, I’ll Let Him — and the Amen Doesn’t Come Until Step 7 – Jay P.
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Doug M.
Recovered Appears Seventeen Times in Our Book and We Still Flinch When Someone Says It – Doug M.
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