All Speakers › Long-Term Sobriety

Long-Term Sobriety

Long-term sobriety in Alcoholics Anonymous represents more than the mere passage of time; it is the manifestation of a fundamental spiritual and psychological transformation. These archival recordings, featuring speakers with two to three decades of continuous sobriety, illustrate that enduring recovery is predicated on moving beyond simple abstinence toward a complete redesign of one's life. The core principles highlighted in these tapes center on the transition from delusion to reality. Speakers emphasize that alcoholism is a disease of perception and a spiritual dilemma that requires total surrender rather than a conscious choice to stop drinking. Key themes include the action-thinking-feeling chain—where right action precedes emotional change—and the necessity of rigorous honesty during the step-work process, particularly the daunting nature of the Fourth and Fifth Steps. Listeners can expect a raw and authoritative exploration of the recovery journey. These tapes provide critical insights into the attrition rates of the program, warning that those who treat sobriety as merely not drinking often fail. Instead, the speakers describe recovery as an adventure and a new way of life. From narratives of survival in prison to the nuances of the inventory process, these accounts offer newcomers and old-timers alike a blueprint for long-term maintenance. By sharing their experiences with a Higher Power and the vital role of the fellowship, these speakers demonstrate that the only way to stay sober is to remain active in the program and dedicated to helping others.

1,187 tapes

All Tapes

Paul M.
Surrendering to Life on Life’s Terms Without the Fight – Paul M.
★★★★★No ratings
Howard E.
Howard E. Found the Fourth Dimension by Following the Big Book Sequence
★★★★★No ratings
Beth H.
Normal Thinking as a Foreign Language in Early Sobriety – Beth H.
★★★★★No ratings
Brian C.
The Psychiatrist Who Told Him He Was Too Good at Manipulating People 🤣 – Brian C.
★★★★★No ratings
Guillermo B.
Guillermo B. Documents the Three Legacies to Stop a Recovery From Collapsing
★★★★★No ratings
Dick M.
Tearing Everything Down During Step 5 – Dick M.
★★★★★No ratings
Russell S.
Russell S. on Step 7, Humility, and the 1 in 200 Statistic
★★★★★No ratings
Tom I.
Recovery Is a Logical Design for Living – Tom I.
★★★★★No ratings
Jay S.
Willingness Found in the Fact That the Message Is Not the Messenger – Jay S.
★★★★★No ratings
Johnny H.
Self-Will Run Riot and the Crash That Follows – Johnny H.
★★★★★No ratings
Earl H.
Chapter to the Agnostic and the 24 Things in the Big Book – Earl H.
★★★★★No ratings
Gene D.
Gene D. at the Dog Retreat – 1986
★★★★★No ratings
Russell S.
Atheism in AA and the Intellectual Pride of the Skeptic – Russell S.
★★★★★No ratings
Marty M.
Marty M. on the First Women in AA and the 1930s
★★★★★No ratings
Steve L.
Low Self-Esteem and the Wall of Insulation Between Him and the World – Steve L.
★★★★★No ratings
Cecil C.
The Story of the Three Alcoholic Rabbits – Cecil C.
★★★★★No ratings
Jack S.
Stop Doing What You Want and Start Doing What You Need – Jack S.
★★★★★No ratings
Jim S.
Why Adversity Is Part of the New Way to Live – Jim S.
★★★★★No ratings
Astrid H.
Astrid H. on the Disease of Alcoholism, the Infantile Ego, and the Daily Reprieve
★★★★★No ratings
Tom F.
Step 12 and the Mental Checklist for the Newcomer – Tom F.
★★★★★No ratings
Don G.
The Phenomenon of Craving and the Physical Difference – Don G.
★★★★★No ratings
Bill H.
Bill’s Story as a Cautionary Tale – Bill H.
★★★★★No ratings
Dave P.
The Traditions as a Guide for Relationships – Dave P.
★★★★★No ratings
Mike L.
Putting a Number on the Pain – Mike L.
★★★★★No ratings
Liz B.
Liz B. on the 50th Annual Florida State Convention — Part 2
★★★★★No ratings
1 25 26 27 28 29 48