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Emotional Honesty

Emotional honesty is a cornerstone of lasting recovery in Alcoholics Anonymous, serving as the essential bridge from isolation to connection. As illustrated in these speaker tapes, the path to sobriety requires more than abstinence; it demands the courage to dismantle the facades of performance, status, and rationalization that alcoholics often use to mask deep-seated fear, inadequacy, and desperation. The core principles of emotional honesty involve surrendering the need to control one's personal narrative and recognizing that self-will is often bankrupt. These tapes emphasize that true clarity arises only when a person stops minimizing their experience and begins to embrace vulnerability. This shift allows for genuine identification—the shared recognition of a common, unfixable struggle—which is the primary engine of healing within the fellowship. Listeners can expect to hear raw, first-hand accounts of the transition from a life of performance to a life of authenticity. The narratives detail the humbling experience of having facades seen through by sponsors and peers, the realization that perfectionism and material success are often shields against anxiety, and the profound relief that comes from admitting fault. These speakers demonstrate that true strength is not found in macho resilience or the curation of a public image, but in the honest admission of one's faults and the willingness to be seen in one's entirety. By moving past the delusion of self-sufficiency, these individuals find a sustainable peace rooted in service, connection, and the simple act of showing up as their true selves.

156 tapes

All Tapes

Marie L.
The Disease of Alcoholism as an Elevator – Marie L.
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Bob Z.
Why Atheists and Professors Can Make It in AA – Bob Z.
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Angie D.
The Madness That Only a Higher Power Could Quiet – Angie D.
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Tom O.
Living Sober and the Peace of Mind That Spills Out – Tom O.
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Chris C.
The Fourth Column and the Cure for Resentment – Chris C.
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Barney M.
Living Sober and the 60-Yard Dash of Early Recovery – Barney M.
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Tom F.
The Magnetic Pull of a Man with a Solution – Tom F.
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Bob P.
Getting Off the Defense and Onto the Offense – Bob P.
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George G.
The Difference Between Truth and Feelings in the Inventory – George G.
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Pat Y.
Pat Y. on Self-Obsession, the Big Book, and Living Sober
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Tom S.
The Delusion That He Was a High-Bottom Drunk – Tom S.
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Sandy N.
The People-Pleasing That Kept Her a Different Person to Everyone – Sandy N.
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Jack G.
Step 3 and the Agnostic Dropping to His Knees – Jack G.
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Sandy B.
Sandy B. on Staying Sober and the Trap of Intellectual Meetings
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Don H.
Don H. on the Thinking Disease, Step 2, and Early Sobriety
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Josh S.
Willingness and the Shift in Step 3 – Josh S.
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Pat Y.
Pat Y. on Grief, Amends, and the Rigid Direction of Sponsorship
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George G.
Humility vs. Humiliation in the 12 and 12 – George G.
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Tom W.
Step 5 and the Connection He Had Always Been Looking For – Tom W.
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Patsy R.
The Sobriety That Was Worth Every Day of the Wait – Patsy R.
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Sandy B.
The Experiment of the Four Zeros – Sandy B.
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Sandy B.
The 15-Pound Telephone and the Ego – Sandy B.
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Sandy B.
Step 3 Removed the Management of His Life From an Idiot – Sandy B.
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Johnny H.
He Wanted to Be a St. Louis Cardinal But He Was an Alcoholic – Johnny H.
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Tom O.
Honesty as Freedom from Self-Deception – Tom O.
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