All Speakers › Honesty

Honesty

In the context of Alcoholics Anonymous, honesty is more than the absence of lying; it is the essential foundation for spiritual and mental reconstruction. For many in active addiction, life is a performance characterized by deception, manipulation, and the creation of a false persona to mask deep-seated fear, shame, and a desperate need for acceptance. These tapes illustrate that while alcohol may be the primary symptom, the underlying disease is often fueled by a fundamental disconnection from the truth. The core principles explored in these recordings center on the transition from a facade of toughness and "macho" performance to a state of radical vulnerability. Recovery requires a rigorous honest appraisal of one's character defects. Listeners will find that true sobriety begins only when the individual stops pretending and accepts the wreckage of their past, realizing that mere abstinence is insufficient without a total overhaul of their internal honesty. Listeners can expect raw, first-hand accounts from individuals who once navigated the world as "liars and cheats." These speakers detail the cumulative weight of their deception—ranging from fabricating identities to enduring financial ruin and homelessness—and the subsequent liberation found through the structured work of the 12 Steps. These narratives emphasize that while confronting one's selfishness and dishonesty is a painful process, it is the only path to silencing the noise of the mind and achieving lasting recovery. By sharing their descent and subsequent ascent, these speakers provide a roadmap for moving from a life of performance to a life of authenticity.

129 tapes

All Tapes

Mike S.
The Seventh Step Prayer and the Defect of Trying to Look Good – Mike S.
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Dave C.
The Truth That Keeps a Sane Alcoholic Sane – Dave C.
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Glenn J.
Second Surrender and the Obsession That Was Finally Lifted – Glenn J.
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Morris B.
The Slogans as a Handrail to the Stairs – Morris B.
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Bob D.
Applying the Working Hypothesis of AA to a Broken Life – Bob D.
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John S.
Self-Centeredness as the Enemy of Sobriety – John S.
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Judith R.
Confession as a Fresh Start Instead of a Moral Ledger – Judith R.
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Steve L.
The Garden Variety Alcoholic and the Bar of Consequences – Steve L.
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Tom F.
The Power of Simplicity and Truth – Tom F.
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Bob D.
The Illusion of Being Unique and the Path to Connectedness – Bob D.
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Sandy B.
The Fatal Illness That Became a Gift – Sandy B.
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Bob D.
The Recuperative Powers of the Alcoholic Ego – Bob D.
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Bob D.
The Silent Sickness of the Mind – Bob D.
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Bob D.
Bob D. on Silkworth’s Theory of the Physical Allergy and Craving
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Sandy B.
The Personality Change Sufficient to Bring About Recovery – Sandy B.
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Bobby C.
The Difference Between a Decision and a Commitment – Bobby C.
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Mark
Mark on Steps 4 and 5 — Removing Spiritual Blocks and the Phenomenon of Craving
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Lori P.
Lori P. on the Directions and Considerations of Big Book Pages 58 and 59
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Sandy B.
Why the Fifth Step Is the Threshold of Awakening
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Fr K.
Fr K. – The Cunning Baffling Power of Church Wine – 2005
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Roger B.
Roger B. – Steps 10-12 – Practicing the Presence of a Higher Power – 2016
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George T.
George T. – Steps 8-9 Amends – The Delusion That I Only Hurt Myself – 2009
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Ron H.
Ron H. – Steps 6-7 Defects – Standing In A Posture Of Surrender – 1998
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Brian F.
Brian F. – Step 4 – Overcoming Intellectual Pride In AA – 2017
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Barry S.
Barry S. – Tradition – Unity Over Social Acceptability – 2013
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