All Speakers › Identification

Identification

Identification is a cornerstone of the Alcoholics Anonymous recovery process, serving as the bridge from profound isolation to sustainable sobriety. In the context of AA, identification is the shared recognition of a common struggle—the "unfixable" malady of alcoholism—that allows a newcomer to believe recovery is possible. It is the psychological and spiritual mechanism that breaks the delusion that one is uniquely broken or different from others. The core principle of identification is that lived experience is more powerful than clinical theory or professional advice. While speakers may debate labels or the specific "type" of alcoholic they are, the consensus is that the singular bond of the shared problem is the only common ground necessary for healing. Identification occurs not through external success or material similarities, but through the admission of shared desperation and the profound moment one alcoholic looks at another and says, "I understand." Listeners of these tapes can expect to hear raw, personal narratives that trace the progression of the disease across diverse backgrounds—from childhood trauma and professional failure to the depths of state hospitals. These recordings highlight the contrast between the isolation of the "habitual drunkard" and the liberation found in the rooms of AA. The tapes emphasize that identification is the primary tool for reaching the most desperate members of society, illustrating that the most effective catalyst for hope is the presence of a peer who has walked the same path and survived. Through these stories, the listener discovers that identification is not about finding a mirror image of their life, but finding a mirror image of their struggle.

108 tapes

All Tapes

Taryn
A Pursuit of Tranquility: When the Illusion of Control Collapsed. – Taryn
★★★★★No ratings
Clancy I.
If I’m an Alcoholic, My Problem Cannot Be Alcohol – Clancy I.
★★★★★4.5(2 votes)
Blair A.
No Dramatic Bottom: Just Thirty-Three Years of Slow Erosion Until Nothing Was Left – Blair A.
★★★★★No ratings
Betty L.
Comparing Insides to Outsides: Pride Masked as Confidence for Decades – Betty L.
★★★★★5(1 vote)
David A.
Three Descriptions of an Alcoholic and None of Them Mention How Much You Drink – David A.
★★★★★No ratings
Duke D.
What Old-Timers Carry That Newcomers Cannot Learn From a Book – Duke D.
★★★★★No ratings
Edie C.
For the First Time in Her Life She Was Not Ashamed – Edie C.
★★★★★No ratings
Barb C.
The Ism Stays After the Alcohol Goes – Barb C.
★★★★★No ratings
Barb C.
The Fog Lifting: What She Wrote at Six Months and Thirteen Days Sober – Barb C.
★★★★★No ratings
Jim P.
“Leo Told Me to Go Drink Arsenic and Stop Bragging” – Jim P.
★★★★★No ratings
Bill C.
Two Miracles at His First Meeting: He Understood and He Believed – Bill C.
★★★★★No ratings
Chris S.
The Scared Kindergartner Was Still Inside Him Until the Steps Knocked Down the Wall – Chris S.
★★★★★No ratings
Alabama C.
I Carried On Conversations With Alcohol Before I Found Out It Can’t Talk – Alabam C.
★★★★★No ratings
Brian P.
Gaming the System: Signing Slips and Missing the Point of AA – Brian P.
★★★★★No ratings
Buttermilk S.
A Sad-Looking Hillbilly with Eight Years and the Funniest Story in AA – Buttermilk S.
★★★★★No ratings
Cathy B.
Dangerously Antisocial Without Alcohol: Dangerously Social With It – Cathy B.
★★★★★No ratings
Charlie C.
Alcohol Gave Me the Satisfaction of a Job Well Done Without Having to Do a Da*n Thing – Charlie C.
★★★★★No ratings
Beth H.
The AA Child: Watching Recovery at Home and Drinking Anyway – Beth H.
★★★★★No ratings
Billie S.
When You Block Every Feeling You Block Your Life Force, a Nurse Learns to Feel – Billie S.
★★★★★5(1 vote)
Bob B.
A Run-of-the-Mill Drunk with a Straightforward Old-School Message – Bob B.
★★★★4(1 vote)
Gene D.
“You Only Go Around Once: Grab All the Living You Can” – Gene D.
★★★★★No ratings
Earl H.
Less Self and More Higher Power, Repeated Daily, Is the Whole Formula – Earl H.
★★★★4.3(4 votes)
Jack B.
“They Fired Me From the Mob for Blacking Out at the Wheel” – Jack B.
★★★★★No ratings
Jack S.
Untreated Alcoholism Without Booze Is Still Misery – Jack S.
★★★★★No ratings
Edie C.
A Doctor Said She Was in the Chronic Stages and Did Not Have Long – Edie C.
★★★★★No ratings
1 2 3 4 5