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Step 2 — Came to Believe

Step 2, Came to Believe, serves as the critical bridge in the Alcoholics Anonymous recovery process, transitioning the individual from the despair of powerlessness in Step 1 to the active surrender of Step 3. Its significance lies in providing the hope necessary for survival; it is the psychological and spiritual pivot where a recovering alcoholic moves from being a soul at war with the world to accepting a Power greater than themselves. The core principles of Step 2 center on the necessity of a psychic change. This involves shedding the false self, abandoning the illusion of control, and recognizing that the individual is no longer the boss of their own life. Rather than a mere intellectual exercise, this step is presented as a practical requirement to unwarp the mind and open the door to grace and spiritual restoration. Listeners can expect a diverse range of perspectives in these tapes. Some speakers provide a historical lens, exploring the rigorous spiritual disciplines and Christian foundations that shaped the early days of the program. Others offer raw, personal narratives of hitting bottom and the moments of intervention that sparked their belief. Additionally, listeners will find instructional guidance on how the physical and mental allergy to alcohol necessitates a spiritual solution. From the role of a sponsor to the importance of service work, these recordings illustrate that coming to believe is an active process of dropping one's personal agenda to accept help from a source beyond human understanding. Together, these tapes offer a comprehensive roadmap for moving from total defeat to a grounded, spiritual hope.

165 tapes

All Tapes

SANDY B.
Spiritual Power of the 12 Steps – Sandy B.
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SANDY B.
Steps 1 & 2 – Sandy B.
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ASTRID H.
Excellent, Articulate Speaker! – Astrid H.
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JOE H.
Finding the Power – Steps 2 & 3 – Joe H.
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Fr. W.
My Sobriety Is A Study In Cause And Effect Not Divine Forgiveness – Fr. W.
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Jennifer F.
Spiritual Awakening I Called Bullsh*t Until the Peace Just Took Over – Jennifer F.
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Joe and Charlie
Step Two Is the Admission That You Can’t Heal a Sick Mind With a Sick Mind
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Mickey B.
Hitting Bottom Is an Inside Job Not an Outside Circumstance – Mickey B.
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Bob
Quit Arguing, Quit the Closed Mind — That’s What Step Two Actually Means
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Janine M.
An Atheist’s Step 2 — Write Down What a Power Greater Than You Would Be Like – Janine M.
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Bob
Daily Reprieve Means Right Now, Not Tomorrow’s Meditation or Next Week’s Meeting
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Jack D.
Contempt Prior to Investigation — Fourteen Months Hearing Step 2 Without Hearing It – Jack D.
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Joe and Charlie Big Book Workshop
Joe and Charlie Big Book Study – “We Agnostics” – Joe W.
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Joe and Charlie Big Book Workshop
Joe and Charlie Big Book Study – “More About Alcoholism” – Joe W.
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Joe and Charlie Big Book Workshop
Joe and Charlie Big Book Study – “Bill’s Story” – Joe W.
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Russell S.
Self-Centeredness Isn’t a Character Flaw — It’s an Addiction and You Can’t Choose Your Way Out of It – Russell S.
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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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Bill White
A Painter, a Barber, and a Carpenter Walked Into the Bar — That Was All Higher Power Needed – Bill W.
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Mary Lee H.
I Set Out to Drink Men Under the Table as My Irish Birthright and Achieved My Goal – Mary Lee H.
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Bill S.
If I Can Stay Out of the Results of My Life My Life Is Golden – Bill S.
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Cliff
You Can’t Get Stuck on Step 3 Because a Decision Isn’t a Place You Can Stand Still On – Cliff
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Jim P.
The Fourth Step Isn’t Finished Until Your Own Name Is in the Resentment Column – Jim P.
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Tom W.
Why the Hardest Step Is the Second One and How Meetings Carry You There – Tom W.
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Duke D.
Fifty Years Sober and the Alcohol Groove Is Still Burned Into My Brain – Duke D.
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Chuck C.
AA Is Not Self-Improvement — Sobriety Is Self-Discovery – Chuck C.
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