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Self-Will

In the archives of Alcoholics Anonymous, the topic of self-will is addressed as a primary barrier to sustainable recovery. While willpower is often mistaken for a solution, these recordings emphasize that the self-centered drive to control one's narrative, maintain a facade of strength, or manipulate circumstances is often the very engine of the addiction. The core principle explored here is the transition from self-reliance to spiritual surrender, recognizing that a bankrupt self-will must be replaced by a reliance on the program, a higher power, and the support of a community. Listeners can expect raw, first-hand accounts of the failure of the ego. From the collapse of macho projections and professional facades to the exhaustion of trying to manage life's chaos through deception, these speakers detail the moment they realized their own will was their greatest obstacle. The tapes provide insight into the humbling process of stripping away the ego—described by some as a painstaking sculptural process of removing defects—to reveal a more authentic, vulnerable self. Through these narratives, the listener will hear how abandoning the need for control and embracing humility allows for a profound shift from isolation to connection, ultimately leading to a peace that willpower alone could never achieve.

71 tapes

All Tapes

They F.
I Am Addicted to Talking Sh*t About Other People 🤣 – They F.
★★★★★No ratings
SANDY B.
Steps 6 & 7 – Sandy B.
★★★★★No ratings
SCOTT L.
AA Circuit Speaker Shares His Story on the Solution – Scott L.
★★★★★No ratings
BOB D.
Step 4 , Fear & Sex at Woodstock of AA, Cocoa Beach FL – Bob D.
★★★★★No ratings
ANTHONY H.
Union Park Group in Orlando – Anthony H.
★★★★★No ratings
ADAM T.
Funny Recovery Share – Adam T.
★★★★★No ratings
LOCAL S.
An Irish-Born Storyteller Finds Her Recovery in America – Local Speaker
★★★★★No ratings
JOE H.
Unblocking the Power – Steps 4 – 9 – Joe H.
★★★★★No ratings
JOE H.
Finding the Power – Steps 2 & 3 – Joe H.
★★★★★No ratings
JERRY J.
The Nature of Alcoholic Self – Centeredness, Resentments, and Steps 3 – 5 – Jerry J.
★★★★★5(1 vote)
Russell S.
The Steady State of Sobriety Remains the Same Whether the Bank Account Is Full or Empty – Russell S.
★★★★★No ratings
Russell S. Step 6 Devastating Weekness , turning away from God .4th D Club
Danny’s 6,000th “You Don’t Remember My Name” Roast and My Step 6 Brain Freeze 🤣 – Russell C.
★★★★★No ratings
Michael R.
My Sponsor Wouldn’t Let Me Touch the Fourth Step Until I’d Done a Higher Power Inventory First
★★★★★No ratings
Jeremy M.
Steps 10 Through 12 Are Not Maintenance — Every Sober Year Needs New Brakes – Jeremy M.
★★★★★No ratings
Tim R.
Higher Power Kept Me Sober Until I Started Keeping the Credit Myself – Tim R.
★★★★★No ratings
Jacque O.
It’s Not the Drug of Choice — It’s the Drug of No Choice, and That’s Step One
★★★★★No ratings
Bob A.
Losing What You Have or Not Getting What You Deserve — the Two Fears Step 7 Names – Bob A.
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Ira J.
Breathe In Acceptance, Breathe Out Judgment — The Whole Program in Six Words
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Bob A.
Daily Reprieve Means the Alcoholic Mind Gets Treated in This Exact Moment – Bob A.
★★★★★No ratings
Sandy B.
Higher Power’s Will for You Is to Abandon Your Will — Yeah Cool, What Exactly Does That Involve?
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Sandy B.
Until You Have This Experience, Higher Power Is Just a Three-Letter Word That Rhymes with Odd
★★★★★No ratings
Sandy B.
Sandy Implores: Study About Spirituality in Any Way You Wish — It’s the Absolute Best Thing You Can Do for Your Sobriety – Sandy B.
★★★★★No ratings
Jack S.
When You Know Every Day Will Be Exactly Like Today — That’s When You Become a Hopeless Drunk – Jack S.
★★★★★No ratings
Matt B.
A Suburban Version of Scarface Driving an 87 Honda Accord with Busted Headlights – Matt B.
★★★★★No ratings
Don M.
I Thought Being Told I Was Too Intelligent for AA Was a Compliment – Don M.
★★★★★No ratings
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