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Traditions

As a cornerstone of the Alcoholics Anonymous fellowship, the Twelve Traditions serve as the organizational framework that ensures the longevity and unity of the recovery community. While the Twelve Steps focus on individual transformation, the Traditions govern the group's interaction with the world and its internal harmony. Within these speaker tapes, the significance of the Traditions is explored through the lens of practical application and spiritual survival. A key principle highlighted is the commitment to neutrality on outside issues, a boundary that prevents political or social conflict from fracturing the fellowship and distracting from its primary purpose. However, the archives also reveal a nuanced perspective on these guidelines; some speakers argue that the true strength of the program lies not in rigid, perfect adherence to the Traditions or the literature, but in the raw, shared identification between members who suffer from the same unfixable struggle. Listeners can expect to hear personal narratives that contrast the structural necessity of the Traditions with the organic, spiritual connection required for sobriety. These accounts provide a comprehensive look at how the balance between organizational order and the human element of identification allows the AA community to remain a safe haven for those seeking a way out of alcoholism. By exploring these tensions, the tapes illustrate how the Traditions protect the space where the miracle of recovery can happen without interference.

121 tapes

All Tapes

Jeff P.
The People Who Quit Meetings and Stay Sober Aren’t Here to Tell Us – Jeff P.
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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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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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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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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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Tom W.
Why the Hardest Step Is the Second One and How Meetings Carry You There – Tom W.
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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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Tom F.
My Gooficity Level Was High — Your Steps Have Considerably Lowered It – Tom F.
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Scott R.
Chapter Five Diagnosed a Soul Sickness That Eighteen Years of Jungian Analysis Couldn’t Name – Scott R.
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Clancy I.
Ninety-Five Percent of Alcoholics Die Drunk in an Era with More Resources Than Ever — Why? – Clancy I.
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Julian R.
Don’t Look for the Spiritual Part of This Program — Stay Sober and It Will Find You – Julian R.
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Harriet R.
I Took the First Three Steps Before AA Then Spent Seven Years Avoiding the Rest – Harriet R.
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Dick B.
The Akron Genesis and the Pioneer Program That Predates the Twelve Steps – Dick B.
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Tom I.
Traditions as Operational Tools: Common Welfare, Singleness of Purpose, and Autonomy With Responsibility – Tom I.
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Myers R.
Step 6 and 7: The Daily Work of Practicing Opposites. – Myers R.
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Don M.
How AA General Service Works and Why It Matters – Don M.
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Sandy B.
Every Step Is Just a Different Way of Letting Go – Sandy B.
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Jim P.
Jim P. Leads a Step 1 Study Through the 12 and 12
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Father T.
Step 4: Only Resentments Could Break Through the Fear – Father T.
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