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Self-Centered Fear

In the archives of Alcoholics Anonymous, the topic of Self-Centered Fear represents the intersection of ego and anxiety. It is the driving force behind the alcoholic's need for performance, facade, and control. As evidenced in these recordings, this fear often manifests as a desperate need to appear successful, macho, or competent to mask a profound sense of inadequacy and a perceived moral deficiency. The core principle explored in these tapes is the transition from a self-centered existence—characterized by being a taker—to a life of service and surrender. Recovery requires dismantling the delusions of rationalization and the unbearable burden of extreme self-consciousness. This is achieved not through grand revelations, but through the grinding, daily discipline of the fellowship and the painstaking work of the Sixth and Seventh Steps to chip away character defects. Listeners can expect raw, honest accounts of lives spent in wreckage, ranging from the chaos of addiction and incarceration to the emptiness of professional prestige. These speakers detail the psychological shift from seeking external validation through performance to finding internal peace through humility. By sharing their experiences of emptying the self and embracing the role of a giver, these speakers illustrate that the path out of fear is found in connection, service, and the acceptance of one's true self.

71 tapes

All Tapes

Earl H.
Apparently There Are 24 Things in Alcoholics Anonymous and I Cannot Remember a Single One 🤣 – Earl H.
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Don M.
Three Frogs on a Log and the Third Step Is Still Just a Decision – Don M.
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Chris S.
Fear Is an Evil and Corroding Thread and I Based Every Decision on It – Chris S.
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Betty L.
Comparing Insides to Outsides: Pride Masked as Confidence for Decades – Betty L.
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Blind Dave A.
Set Your Sails Every Morning and Let Higher Power Steer – Blind Dave A.
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Barb C.
The Fog Lifting: What She Wrote at Six Months and Thirteen Days Sober – Barb C.
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Peter M.
The Vital Sixth Sense – Peter M.
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Clancy I.
Alcohol Reduced the Crowd in His Head to One Voice, a Bad Voice, but One Voice – Clancy I.
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Chris S.
The Scared Kindergartner Was Still Inside Him Until the Steps Knocked Down the Wall – Chris S.
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Tom I.
The Spiritual Dilemma That Laid the Seedbed for His Alcoholism – Tom I.
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Frank M.
The Attrition: Where Did Everybody Go and Why – Frank M.
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Beth H.
The AA Child: Watching Recovery at Home and Drinking Anyway – Beth H.
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Blind Dave A.
The Picture Puzzle Analogy: Unless You See the Whole Picture You Will Never Properly Connect the Steps – Blind Dave A.
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Earl H.
Less Self and More Higher Power, Repeated Daily, Is the Whole Formula – Earl H.
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Bob D.
A Priest Who Prayed All Day Could Not Get What the Bums in AA Had – Bob D.
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Barb C.
“One Drink Fixed My Fear of People, So I Had a Thousand More” – Barb C.
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Edie C.
A Doctor Said She Was in the Chronic Stages and Did Not Have Long – Edie C.
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Peter M.
“The Thinking Mind Throws a Party Every Night With Ego as the DJ” – Peter M.
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Peter M.
“My Sex Inventory Was in Tiny Handwriting, Everything Else in Capitals” – Peter M.
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Mark H.
They Tricked Me: I Came for Alcohol but the Problem Was Me – Mark H.
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Father T.
Step 4: Only Resentments Could Break Through the Fear – Father T.
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