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Women in Recovery

The topic of Women in Recovery addresses the unique intersection of gender, trauma, and addiction within the Alcoholics Anonymous fellowship. These narratives underscore the significance of breaking intergenerational cycles of alcoholism and overcoming the specific societal pressures that often mask a woman's descent into the disease. Core principles highlighted in these tapes include the necessity of total surrender to a Higher Power, the critical role of female sponsorship, and the practical application of the Twelve Steps to resolve deep-seated resentments and family-of-origin trauma. The accounts emphasize that recovery is not merely the cessation of drinking, but a holistic transformation involving the establishment of boundaries, the practice of confidentiality, and a commitment to service. Listeners can expect raw, authentic accounts of diverse bottoms, ranging from corporate collapse and homelessness to near-fatal overdoses. These tapes provide profound insight into the transition from a life of emptiness and isolation to one of spiritual wealth and community. From the struggle to move past intellectual admission to the courage required for Step Nine amends, these speakers illustrate the incremental nature of sobriety, often described as taking it one square of carpet at a time. Ultimately, these recordings serve as a testament to the resilience of women in recovery and the enduring power of a fellowship that holds its members through life's most volatile crises.

208 tapes

All Tapes

Becky
I Memorized the Big Book Like a Chemistry Formula and Couldn’t Tell You What It Meant
★★★★★No ratings
Mildred F.
I Married My Psychiatrist Which Isn’t a Terribly Smart Thing to Do 🤣 – Mildred F.
★★★★★No ratings
Jane
Stop Mourning Your Wasted Years — Higher Power Doesn’t Waste Anything — Jane – Jane
★★★★★No ratings
Beth H.
Even the Committee in My Head Was Getting Sober – Beth H.
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Sally R.
I Hid Bourbon Inside the Vacuum Cleaner and He Thought I Was Cleaning the House – Sally R.
★★★★★No ratings
Harriet R.
I Took the First Three Steps Before AA Then Spent Seven Years Avoiding the Rest – Harriet R.
★★★★★5(1 vote)
Candice E.
Without Conscious Contact the Physical Sobriety Goes Too – Candice E.
★★★★★No ratings
Diane O.
Step 6 Means Doing It, Not Just Wanting It – Diane O.
★★★★★0(1 vote)
Astrid H.
Step Zero Before Step 1 – Astrid H.
★★★★★No ratings
Vickie C.
Removal of Obsession: The Seventh Principle’s Demanded Action. – Vickie C.
★★★★★No ratings
Crickett R
The Thorazine Shuffle: How AA Taught Me to Walk, Talk, and Live. – Crickett R
★★★★★No ratings
Taryn
A Pursuit of Tranquility: When the Illusion of Control Collapsed. – Taryn
★★★★★No ratings
Betty L.
Every Time I Help Him, He Helps Me, the Twelfth Step Loop – Betty L.
★★★★★No ratings
Betty L.
Comparing Insides to Outsides: Pride Masked as Confidence for Decades – Betty L.
★★★★★5(1 vote)
Billie S.
The Dry Drunk Years: Pulling the Shade Down on Every Feeling – Billie S.
★★★★★No ratings
Edie C.
For the First Time in Her Life She Was Not Ashamed – Edie C.
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Barb C.
The Ism Stays After the Alcohol Goes – Barb C.
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Barb C.
The Fog Lifting: What She Wrote at Six Months and Thirteen Days Sober – Barb C.
★★★★★No ratings
Polly P.
If I Take the Right Actions the Feelings Will Change – Polly P.
★★★★★No ratings
Alabama C.
I Carried On Conversations With Alcohol Before I Found Out It Can’t Talk – Alabam C.
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Ethel C.
The Terror of Step 4, and What Happens When You Do It Anyway – Ethel C.
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Cathy B.
Dangerously Antisocial Without Alcohol: Dangerously Social With It – Cathy B.
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Alabama C.
She Had Set Good Standards for Herself and Then Could Not Live by Them – Alabam C.
★★★★★No ratings
Allyson K.
Step 8 After Three Relapses: When Any Lengths Finally Means It – Allyson K.
★★★★★No ratings
Ann P.
The Inventory That Could Not Be Written: Willingness Mattered More Than Literacy – Ann P.
★★★★★No ratings
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