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

Harold L.
The Difference Between Watching AA Happen and Making It Happen – Harold L.
★★★★★No ratings
Danny T.
The Voodoo of Alcoholics Anonymous – Danny T.
★★★★★No ratings
Geraldine D.
The Family Disease That Put Her in a Nut Factory – Geraldine D.
★★★★★No ratings
Eddie C.
The Truth About the 45 Pages That Guarantee Recovery – Eddie C.
★★★★1(1 vote)
Eve M.
The Egotistical Sickness of Inferiority – Eve M.
★★★★★No ratings
Dave M.
The Sponsor Who Told Him to Pull His Head Out of His A** – Dave M.
★★★★★No ratings
Art L.
He Pulled the Distributor Wire to Stop His Wife from Going to Meetings – Art L.
★★★★★No ratings
Adam T.
Step 2 and the Recovery Disk for a Corrupt File – Adam T.
★★★★★No ratings
Carla R.
Step 7 Prayer Became Her Mantra – Carla R.
★★★★★No ratings
Jim W.
He Thought He Could Drive Through a Quick-Fix Recovery Window 😂 – Jim W.
★★★★★No ratings
Johnny H.
The Restlessness of an Emotional Misfit in Recovery – Johnny H.
★★★★★No ratings
Sandy B.
He Needed a Sponsor in Kindergarten – Sandy B.
★★★★★No ratings
Mike L.
He Tried to Be His Own Lawyer Fifty-Seven Times – Mike L.
★★★★★No ratings
Lila R.
The Higher Power She Found Through Substitution and Redefinition – Lila R.
★★★★★No ratings
John H.
Sponsorship and the Sponsor Who Told Him to Shut Up – John H.
★★★★★No ratings
Brian H.
Step 5 Brought Him a Major Spiritual Experience – Brian H.
★★★★★No ratings
Bob F.
Why He Needed a Sponsor Who Spoke a Foreign Language – Bob F.
★★★★★No ratings
Earl H.
The Best Financial Decision He Ever Made Was Buying a House – Earl H.
★★★★★No ratings
Pat Y.
The Magic of Alcohol Stopped Working – Pat Y.
★★★★★No ratings
Lyle P.
The Airline Pilot Who Found Recovery in a 28-Day Treatment Center – Lyle P.
★★★★★No ratings
Pat Y.
Pat Y. on Early Drinking, Rigorous Honesty, and the 30-Year Secret
★★★★4(1 vote)
John K.
Step 4 and the Depressive Type Who Felt He Got a Raw Deal – John K.
★★★★★No ratings
Stevie B.
The Disease of More – Stevie B.
★★★★★No ratings
Mickey B.
Why the Big Book Says ‘Fully Concede’ – Mickey B.
★★★★★No ratings
Stevie B.
Stevie B. at the Illinois State Conference of Young People in Alcoholics Anonymous – 2026
★★★★★No ratings
1 3 4 5 6 7 17