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Meetings

In Alcoholics Anonymous recovery, meetings serve as the primary entry point and a vital source of structure for the alcoholic. They provide a sanctuary where the newcomer can transition from isolation to fellowship, offering a consistent environment to surrender the need for control and begin the process of rebuilding a life. However, these archival recordings emphasize a critical distinction: the difference between attending meetings and working the program. A recurring core principle across these tapes is that meetings should not become a social club or a place for passive auditing. Instead, they are intended to be catalysts for rigorous Step work and the study of the Big Book. The speakers argue that while fellowship is supportive, true sobriety is found not in the act of sitting in a chair, but in the active application of spiritual principles and the willingness to carry the message to others through service. Listeners can expect candid accounts of the pitfalls of complacency and the dangers of intellectualizing sobriety. The speakers describe the shift from using meetings as a temporary shield against anxiety to using them as a launchpad for genuine spiritual growth. These recordings offer a cautionary yet hopeful perspective on how to move beyond the surface of fellowship to address the mental obsession and spiritual malady at the heart of addiction, urging a return to the disciplined practice of listening and the rapid application of the Twelve Steps.

279 tapes

All Tapes

Micki B.
Step 4: You Made Your Bed and Now You Have to Change the Sheets
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Mark H.
Step 1: If Alcohol Was Your Real Problem, Detox Would Have Worked – Mark H.
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Mari G.
Steps Six and Seven: Chipping Away the Parts That Are Not David
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Liz B.
We Had to Fight for Women to Be in Alcoholics Anonymous – Liz B.
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Kent C.
Having a Sponsor Is Good but Being Sponsor-able Is the Requirement – Kent C.
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Katie P.
Step 4: Identifying the Old Ideas That Make You a Pain in the A*s – Katie P.
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Casey R.
Step 1: The Hopelessness is Not How Bad Life Is, It’s Thinking It Ain’t That Bad – Casey R.
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Jim B.
My Sister Caught Me Peeing in the Dishwasher and I Said the Sink Was Full – Jim B.
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Jeff P.
The People Who Quit Meetings and Stay Sober Aren’t Here to Tell Us – Jeff P.
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Jane D.
Don’t Put a Question Mark Where a Higher Power Put a Period – Jane D.
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Julie H.
Alcoholism Is Not a Behavioral Problem: The Physical Allergy Explained – Julie H.
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Howard P.
Wiping Out the County Wheat Crop with a Prayer — That’s an Ego Problem – Howard P.
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Frannie S.
Amends Is a Change in Conduct, Not an Apology for Hurt Feelings – Frannie S.
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Eddie W.
At Fifty Years Sober I Don’t Have Issues—I Have Subscriptions 🤣
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Doug C.
60% Liver Function and the Liter of Jager That Finished the Rest – Doug C.
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Sheila A.
Ninety Days. Two Jobs. No Car. Pages 86 Through 88. – Sheila A.
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Nick M.
Ethanol Drip Saved My Body. Step 3 Saved the Rest. – Nick M.
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Cliff W.
We Wouldn’t Trade the Worst of These 35 Years for the Best of What Came Before – Cliff W.
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Peggy M.
Knowing the Words Without the Music Is the Difference Between Dry and Sober – Peggy M.
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Pat Y.
So Busy in the Solution That When the Problem Left I Didn’t Notice It Go – Pat Y.
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Matt G.
Not Saints. Just Drunks Who Do the Deal – Matt G.
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Larry T.
Fronting the Program Means Wanting the Results of Step 9 Before You Do Step 1 – Larry T.
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June G.
Feeling Everything Since Age Five and Building an Entire Identity to Prove You Feel Nothing – June G.
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Ted B.
Ego Writes Its Own Commandments and Calls the Violations Resentments – Ted B.
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Joe H.
Page 52 Describes Exactly How I Felt at Ten Years Old Before I Ever Took a Drink – Joe H.
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