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Unity

Unity is a cornerstone of the Alcoholics Anonymous recovery framework, serving as the essential bridge between individual sobriety and long-term sustainability. While the Twelve Steps focus on personal recovery, Unity—governed by the Twelve Traditions—provides the structural and spiritual blueprint for how members coexist and support one another. It represents the critical transition from the isolation of active addiction to a profound sense of belonging. The core principles of Unity center on the common welfare, humility, and the unconditional application of love and service. These tapes emphasize that unity is not merely a social convenience but a spiritual necessity. It requires the dismantling of ego, the rejection of self-sufficiency, and the removal of barriers such as race, creed, and language to ensure the message remains simple, accessible, and focused on the collective good rather than institutional growth. Listeners can expect to hear seasoned members describe the initial shock of finding a community where they truly belong and the subsequent struggle to overcome self-deception. The narratives trace a path from emotional and financial ruin to a design for living built on the three pillars of recovery, unity, and service. Speakers discuss the practical application of the Traditions in preventing the movement from becoming big business and explain how rebuilding relationships with others is integral to a permanent personality shift. From the foundational addresses of the 1950 Cleveland Convention to modern recovery festivals, these recordings illustrate that unity is the act of surrender that allows a recovering alcoholic to stop fighting the world and start living within it.

40 tapes

All Tapes

Wesley P.
All You Need to Start a Group Is Two Resentments and a Dozen Donuts 🤣 – Wesley P.
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Tom I.
Step 10 Says Deal with It at Once Then Immediately Turn Your Attention to Someone You Can Help – Tom I.
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Dave D.
Higher Power Shows Up as the Gap Between a Thought and an Action — That’s What the Sixth and Seventh Step Gave Me – Dave D.
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Paul M.
The Aer Lingus Cabin Crew Were Like Sherpas Pushing Drink Carts at a 45-Degree Angle – Paul M.
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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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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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Clint H.
Spiritual Death at Twenty Years Sober and Starting the Steps Over from Scratch – Clint H.
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Earl H.
Apparently There Are 24 Things in Alcoholics Anonymous and I Cannot Remember a Single One 🤣 – Earl H.
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Jane
Stop Mourning Your Wasted Years — Higher Power Doesn’t Waste Anything — Jane – Jane
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Homer D.
The Night Bill W. Wrote the Twelve Steps in Thirty Minutes and the Arguments That Nearly Killed Them – Homer D.
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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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Earl H.
The AA Triangle: Unity Service Recovery Mapped to Mind Body Spirit – Earl H.
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Earl H.
Less Self and More Higher Power, Repeated Daily, Is the Whole Formula – Earl H.
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Don M.
How AA General Service Works and Why It Matters – Don M.
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