All Speakers › Funny and Hilarious

Funny and Hilarious

In the archives of Alcoholics Anonymous, the Funny and Hilarious category serves as a vital emotional release and a powerful tool for recovery. Humor in AA is rarely about entertainment; rather, it is a mechanism for processing the absurdity of the alcoholic experience. By utilizing self-deprecating humor, speakers transform their darkest moments—from public embarrassments and professional failures to the chaos of active addiction—into bridges of connection with others. The significance of this topic lies in its ability to strip the disease of its power to shame. The core principle is the balance between pain and laughter; as these recordings suggest, humor lightens the heaviest burdens, making the path to sobriety more accessible and less daunting for the newcomer. By laughing at the wreckage of the past, the alcoholic moves from a state of isolation and desperation toward a shared sense of gratitude and hope. Listeners can expect to hear vivid, unfiltered anecdotes of rock bottom, including absurd social mishaps, the irony of the alcoholic mindset, and the contradictions of early sobriety. These tapes feature speakers who use wit to contrast the clinical jargon of psychiatry with the raw reality of the struggle. From stories of professional disasters to the hilarity found in service work, these recordings illustrate that laughter is often a precursor to spiritual awakening. Ultimately, these tapes demonstrate how the fellowship transforms tragedy into a shared victory, proving that while the struggle is grave, the recovery process can be joyful.

413 tapes

All Tapes

Ted B.
Ego Writes Its Own Commandments and Calls the Violations Resentments – Ted B.
★★★★★No ratings
Bill White
A Painter, a Barber, and a Carpenter Walked Into the Bar — That Was All Higher Power Needed – Bill W.
★★★★★No ratings
Joe H.
Page 52 Describes Exactly How I Felt at Ten Years Old Before I Ever Took a Drink – Joe H.
★★★★★No ratings
Jimmy T.
Under My Administration I Was a Respected Member of a Locked Ward
★★★★★No ratings
Mary Lee H.
I Set Out to Drink Men Under the Table as My Irish Birthright and Achieved My Goal – Mary Lee H.
★★★★★No ratings
Mary L.
I Want to Never Have Another Expectation — Only Great Expectancy That a Higher Power Will Meet My Needs – Mary L.
★★★★★No ratings
Don N.
I Got Nothing That I Asked For but Everything I Had Hoped For – Don N.
★★★★★No ratings
Walter O.
I Got Nothing I Asked For But Everything I’d Hoped For – Walter O.
★★★★★No ratings
Liz B.
I Got the Monkey Off My Back But the Circus Is Still Going On – Liz B.
★★★★★No ratings
Larry K.
Step 6 Happens When the People Who Should Reject You Accept You Instead – Larry K.
★★★★★No ratings
Joe K.
Sobering Up to a Failed Life Was the Problem — Not the Alcohol – Joe K.
★★★★★No ratings
Jack Q.
White-Knuckle Sobriety as the Most Insane Period of an Alcoholic’s Life – Jack Q.
★★★★★No ratings
Paul O.
Admitting Accepting and Approving — Three Phases of Acceptance From an 18-Year Physician – Paul O.
★★★★★No ratings
Dennis N.
Self-Sponsorship as the Alcoholic’s Shortcut to the Next Blackout – Dennis N.
★★★★★No ratings
Charlie P.
I Found Higher Power’s Name Written Four Times Directly and Four Times Indirectly in the Twelve Steps – Charlie P.
★★★★★No ratings
Charlie L.
Acceptance as the Thing the Alcoholic Has Been Starving For Long Before He Ever Picks Up a Drink – Charlie L.
★★★★★No ratings
Bill G.
You Nurse a New Man Along and Watch Him Grow and You Don’t Have to Worry About Higher Power Anymore – Bill G.
★★★★★No ratings
Angie D.
You Cannot Plug Your Higher Power Into Another Human Being – Angie D.
★★★★★No ratings
Ray O.
Step 1 Is Not Saying You’re an Alcoholic — It’s Admitting You Have No Power at All – Ray O.
★★★★★No ratings
Sandy B.
Alcohol as Reverse Insurance — You Pay Today for a Guarantee That Tomorrow Will Stink – Sandy B.
★★★★★5(1 vote)
Tom W.
Why the Hardest Step Is the Second One and How Meetings Carry You There – Tom W.
★★★★★No ratings
Sterling H.
I Was Looking for the One Religion That Would Let Me Be a Complete A**hole and Still Get Into Heaven 😂 – Sterling H.
★★★★★No ratings
Bill G.
What Destroyed Me a Little at a Time Rebuilt Me the Same Way – Bill G.
★★★★★No ratings
Phil P.
It Isn’t the Direction of Change That Terrifies an Alcoholic — It’s the Fact of Change – Phil P.
★★★★★No ratings
Bob E.
Self-Acceptance and What Love Actually Means to an Alcoholic Who Grew Up Without It – Bob E.
★★★★★No ratings
1 13 14 15 16 17