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Service

In the context of Alcoholics Anonymous, Service is a fundamental pillar of long-term recovery and a primary tool for dismantling the ego. These speaker tapes illustrate that service is the practical application of humility, shifting the alcoholic's focus from self-centeredness to the well-being of others. The core principles of service revolve around selflessness, the maintenance of boundaries, and a commitment to the collective fellowship. Rather than an act of control, service is presented as a way to find belonging and stability. The recordings highlight a spectrum of service, ranging from simple, grounding tasks—such as setting the table at a meeting—to the profound responsibility of sponsorship and guiding newcomers through the Twelve Steps. Listeners can expect to hear personal testimonies on how service acts as a safeguard against relapse and a catalyst for emotional sobriety. The speakers describe the transition from a life driven by isolation and pride to one rooted in principle-based action. From professionals overcoming intellectual arrogance to those recovering from traumatic backgrounds, these accounts emphasize that giving back to the community is not merely a suggestion, but a necessity for maintaining a sober life. By helping others, the speaker finds the strength to remain sober themselves, transforming the ache of addiction into a purposeful connection with the fellowship.

94 tapes

All Tapes

Jeff H.
Reading the Tenth Step Out of the 12 and 12 Is How I Check the Day Before It Piles Up – Jeff H.
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Patty B.
Walked Out of My Fifth Step Knowing for the First Time I Belonged in AA
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Isaac T.
Terminal Uniqueness at Seven Years Old Is How I Drank Before I Ever Drank – Isaac T.
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Tinsley E.
Making AA Itself My Higher Power — the Sentence in Step 2 That Saved My A*s – Tinsley E.
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Pat F.
Mom Said Don’t Drink Alone or That’ll Make You an Alcoholic — So I Drank Socially 😂 – Pat F.
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Vannoy S.
Put ‘I’ Into Every Tradition and They Stop Being Group Rules and Start Running Your Life – Vannoy S.
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Truck
Clean House Trust Higher Power Work With Others — The Whole Program in Nine Words – Truck
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Liz B.
I Got the Monkey Off My Back But the Circus Is Still Going On – Liz B.
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Tom W.
Do the Steps Like a Child — Earnestly and Badly
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Doug M.
My Relationship With Higher Power Cannot Be Taken From Me but I Can Give It Away – Doug M.
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Don C.
Nine Areas of Unmanageability From Page 52 and a Fifth Step for the Dark Crannies – Don C.
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Dick A.
The Twelve Traditions Are the Principles for Living With Other People and Nobody Told Me That for Twelve Years – Dick A.
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Dave N.
External Conscience as the Only Thing That Keeps an Addict Honest with Himself
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Clarence S.
Carrying the Message as the Mechanism That Finally Roots the Alcoholic in AA
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Bobby C.
A Daily Reprieve Contingent on Spiritual Maintenance — Bobby C., Philadelphia Cop, 33 Years Sober
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John C.
The Two Dangers to the Fellowship Are Personalities Ahead of Principles and Complacency – John C.
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Sterling H.
I Was Looking for the One Religion That Would Let Me Be a Complete A**hole and Still Get Into Heaven 😂 – Sterling H.
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Wes P.
I Became an Intelligentsia Which I Can’t Even Spell but It Means a Da*n Know-It-All 🤣 – Wes P.
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Tom I.
What Separates a Real AA Group from a Casual Meeting That Can Barely Save Itself – Tom I.
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Chris R. and Myers R.
If You Can Sit for a Year Without Drinking You Don’t Need What We Have
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Local AA Speakers
Steps Four and Five Showed Me Why I Drank and Step Nine Gave Me Self-Esteem I Never Had
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Jacob B.
Young People Who Think Their Story Isn’t Bad Enough for AA Yet – Jacob B.
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Chris R.
Having Had a Spiritual Awakening We Go Find Them Not Wait for Them to Come – Chris R.
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Chuck C.
AA Is Not Self-Improvement — Sobriety Is Self-Discovery – Chuck C.
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Chris R.
Why Sharing War Stories in Meetings Does More Harm Than Good to the Newcomer – Chris R.
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