Episode Transcript
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Spencer (00:01):
How is participation
a key to harmony in our
activities, in our relationships?
Welcome to episode 433of the Recovery Show.
This episode is brought toyou by Tony, Alba and Shira.
They used the donationbutton on our website.
Thank you Tony, Alba and Shirafor your generous contributions.
(00:22):
This episode is for you.
We are friends and family members ofalcoholics and addicts who have found
a path to serenity and happiness.
We who live or have lived with theseemingly hopeless problem of addiction
understand as perhaps few others can.
So much depends on our ownattitudes, and we believe that
changed attitudes can aid recovery.
Sara S (00:43):
Before we begin, we would like
to state that in this show we represent
ourselves rather than any 12 step program.
During this show, we willshare our own experiences.
The opinions expressed here are strictlythose of the person who gave them.
Take what you like and leave the rest.
We hope that you'll find something inour sharing that speaks to your life.
Spencer (01:04):
My name is Spencer,
I am your host today.
And joining me today is Sara.
Welcome back to the Recovery Show, Sara.
Sara S (01:10):
Thank you.
Spencer (01:11):
You were last here for episode
417, Creating a Personal Higher Power.
Today our topic is Concept Four,which I think it's the shortest
of the concepts of service.
Five words.
Sara S (01:25):
I think it might
be the shortest of all.
Spencer (01:28):
Yeah.
It says participationis the key to harmony.
Sounds great.
But what does this mean?
We're going to be reading, fromthe book How Al-Anon works,
the chapter on the 12 concepts.
In particular, the section onconcept four, which is on page 132.
Concept four, participationis the key to harmony.
(01:49):
For many of us.
Participation is not the key toharmony in an alcoholic home.
Involving ourselves in actionsor discussions usually leads
to conflict and discord.
As a result, some of us learnedto pick fights, while others
isolate and stuff our feelings.
How does that match up withyour experience, Sara?
Sara S (02:10):
It rings very true.
isolation while trying to manipulatean outcome was my strategy, and I
didn't really recognize this until,
really, just working through this
concept, which I started in April.
I'm working through the conceptseach month with a book study.
I remember as a very littlegirl and my mom tells a story.
(02:32):
It's a good memory for her, and I don'treally have feelings one way or the other.
I used to think it was funny.
So I used to get mad whenI was, three and four.
My punishment would be, I would tellher, I'm not gonna come for dinner.
I thought that would be somekind of punishment to them.
And my mom said, of course, Ialways sidled up to the table.
So I can see how I was wiredto use my presence as currency.
(02:56):
Like, I thought if I participated,I might get my own way, and if I
didn't, then I could make others,
jump through my hoop, so to speak.
But, it didn't work andit's led me to isolate.
But I can see how that patternhas continued in my life.
I've done both in personalrelationships and in work.
(03:16):
If I don't like the conversation or if Idon't think they're going to agree with
me, or if they're not gonna validate what
I'm saying, I just don't participate.
I either leave the room, leavethe relationship, leave the job.
After a certain amount oftime, it kind of builds up.
I used to think that if I did that,and it was some sort of passive
aggressive behavior, that they would
come to my rescue, they would see
that I wasn't participating and
they would want me to participate.
(03:43):
So they would come and ask mewhat was wrong or try and fix
whatever it was I didn't like.
But now that I have this awareness as anadult, and going through this, I realize
I can ask my higher power for help.
I don't have to know what the nextsteps are, what the tools will be.
I just have to be aware that I'mdoing this and it's not serving
me how I want it to serve me.
(04:05):
That's what my experiencehas been with this.
It's very new awareness, andturning this over to my higher
power to see how I can change and
what tools will serve me better.
Spencer (04:15):
I'm also an isolator,
somebody who steps back rather than
participate in conflict of some sort.
Or, as you were saying about, I'm notreally interested in this conversation.
Sometimes, I'll just, stand there andhope that it'll come around to me.
to something that I am interestedin, but not really participating.
(04:38):
Just this week, there's a group ofpeople that I regularly lunch with.
We were chatting after we hadeaten, and I started a thread of
conversation and somebody else came
in and started a different thread.
and the, conversationwent off on that thread.
And I'm sitting here saying, youknow, I was gonna say something.
I, and finally I said, you know what?
It's time for me to leave.
(04:59):
Because it became clear that I wasprobably not gonna get back in there.
It says something about me too.
That I didn't, um, I don'tknow what I could have done.
And I'm sure there's somethingthat if I was a little more
assertive, I could have done.
But I do tend to let people go inwhatever direction they're going.
Sara S (05:17):
Yeah, I really resonate
with what you're saying.
That's exactly what I have donefor the first 55 years of my life.
It's just, kind of swallow it.
If I start a conversation similarto what you just shared and then the
topic goes a different direction, part
of me is angry that we didn't get to
talk about what I wanna talk about.
And that shows, in mybelief, my immaturity.
(05:38):
and I've been learning from watchingother people to see how they respond,
ask questions, and then bring it
back to what they were talking about.
So to me, it's just a learning curve, butI know for myself that I don't feel good
when I just decide to not participate.
Then I do feel very isolated and unheard.
(06:01):
And not a part of.
And that's something I'm reallyletting go of in 2025, is that
thinking that I'm not a part of.
It reminds me of a story of mycousin when she was a little girl.
She came home from school andshe was crying and said the
kids wouldn't play with her.
And her mom, was very upset, youknow, was sad because she thought
they were picking on her little girl.
(06:23):
And she said, well, tell me more about it.
And she's like, well, theywon't play what I wanna play.
And I think that's my mentality is ifyou're not gonna play what I wanna play or
talk about what I wanna talk about, then
I'm gonna say, you're not being my friend.
That's not what I want to be true now.
So I'm really willing to look at thisover the next, however long it takes
to gain better and different tools.
Spencer (06:48):
You wanna read
the next paragraph?
Sara S (06:49):
Yes.
Through Al-Anon, however, wediscover new ways to participate
and be a part of the world around
us, rather than being apart from it.
Just as concept three encouragesmutual trust, concept four,
concerns mutual respect.
When we honestly respect ourselvesand those around us, we begin to
look at everyone as equals, not
as our inferiors or superiors.
(07:13):
Without this respect, participationcan be the key to chaos.
Spencer (07:18):
Oh, key to chaos.
Love that.
Mutual respect.
You know, I hadn'tthought about it that way.
It's hard to have, creating a, a placein which everyone can participate, I
think is what I'm trying to get at.
In order to do that, one ofthose things is to have respect
for everybody and vice versa.
(07:40):
And of course, I can only do me.
I can't do other people.
Sara S (07:46):
Yeah, and I think what, when
you were sharing also what I thought
of is, that mutual respect piece.
I think it's almost moreto have respect for myself.
I'm the youngest of three girlsand I was five years younger.
My sisters are just one year apart.
So they're kind of two peas in a podand they were very close in age, so I
just always saw them as knowing more.
(08:10):
My words didn't really have any weight.
And I can see how that wouldhappen in that scenario when, like
you're at the table, we'll say,
and I'm five and they're 10 and 11.
Of course the conversation'sgonna be a whole lot different.
I remember, really wanting tomake my parents laugh because they
would laugh at my sister's stories.
I would say my stories and ofcourse a five-year-old story, is
not that entertaining typically.
(08:34):
but I took it, I think, as my wordsaren't funny, my words don't have meaning.
Nothing they did, it just happenedas my birth order, I think.
and how I was wired.
I don't really believe inpointing fingers at my upbringing,
my birth order, anything.
I think it all contributes.
But I also think I came wired witha lot of these defects anyway,
as a way to come to my higher
power and know that I need help.
(08:59):
I can see, how that experience when Iwas a kid, led me to believe this way
or think this way, or use these tools.
And I took this into adulthood.
I can remember, I didn't enter theworkforce until I was in my forties for
various reasons, but I always assume
my coworkers know more, my bosses
knew more, and I would just take it.
(09:19):
I would take their word as Bible, likewhat they say is right and I'm wrong.
What has happened now that I look backon it, is I can tell there was a part
of me that didn't really like it, but
I would just take it, take it, take it,
and then my solution was just to leave.
I would just go find a different job.
I didn't want that job and Ididn't know I was doing that until
truly the job I'm in right now.
Spencer (09:43):
How does that line up
with also coming into recovery?
Sara S (09:47):
A lot later.
I've been in recovery for like 20 years.
Spencer (09:51):
Oh.
Sara S (09:51):
I guess you learn as you go.
I didn't really discover myhigher power until last summer.
I was raised in a pretty strict religionand I had the God that religion gives you.
I didn't like that God, he scared me,I thought I was always in trouble.
So I can see where I wasn't willingto give it up because I didn't trust
that I had a higher power that would
actually help me or take care of
the problem or show me another way.
(10:16):
But now that I do, itmakes all the difference.
Spencer (10:20):
I'm thinking about
myself here, obviously.
I'm the oldest in my family.
My brother came along two years later andmy sister came along four years after him.
So, the three of us had a similarsort of age gap as you experienced,
but I was at the other end of it.
I certainly exhibit a lot of what youmight call typical firstborn behaviors.
(10:41):
But when you started talkingabout work, I think about the,
final 28 years of my work career.
I was working on thesame thing for 28 years.
It kept changing, soit stayed interesting.
Early on I was very much a myway or the highway type person.
(11:02):
Some of that came from my personality.
Some of that came from thefact that I basically built the
first version of this thing.
There were a couple other peopleinvolved, but a lot of it was my
direction, my ideas, my, shaping.
As the company got larger,because we had success, and
when you have success, you grow.
(11:26):
And we went from five peopleat the beginning to over 400
people by the time I retired.
Sara S (11:34):
Wow.
Spencer (11:35):
yeah, a good startup
Sara S (11:37):
That's awesome.
Spencer (11:38):
right
Sara S (11:39):
Mm-hmm.
Spencer (11:39):
Somewhere in the middle
there, not necessarily before I
came into to Al-Anon, I was still
trying to assert my way on things.
In some cases I activelysuppressed participation by
others because I had the way.
and needless to say,that not lead to harmony.
Sara S (12:02):
No.
Spencer (12:03):
In the last episode, I
related a story where I had a conflict
with a coworker that caused him to
walk out of a meeting in a huff.
I had to make amends for it, obviously,is why we were talking about that
in our step eight conversation.
That was like more than 10 years afterI'd started in Al-Anon . I thought
I had, I mean, maybe I had gotten
better, but was still this thing like,
I don't agree with you and you're wrong.
Sara S (12:31):
Yep.
Spencer (12:31):
I know I was making changes
in the way I interacted with coworkers
during that time because this was
a time when there was some really
rapid growth going on and a lot
of separation into smaller teams.
Rightfully so, because it had to.
I remember an interaction I hadwith another person during that time
period who was not exactly a boss.
(12:55):
I think she was a project manageror something in that realm.
We struck a lot of sparks with each other.
And I finally felt like, this is not good.
This is not the relationship Iwant to have with this coworker.
I said, Hey, can we go have a cup ofcoffee outside the office, and just
talk about what's going on here?
(13:19):
And we did.
And we were each able to say howwe felt about the ways in which
we'd been interacting and things
got a lot better after that.
I take that as I was tryingto apply the principles of the
program there, and it worked.
Sara S (13:36):
Yeah, I was gonna say, as you
were sharing that story, it sounds exactly
like participation is the key to harmony.
Instead of burying your head inthe sand or ignoring the problem
or hoping it would go away, which
is easier to do a lot of times.
You didn't, you participated, you guyswent out for coffee and you did exactly
what it says here, like mutual respect.
Spencer (13:57):
Yeah.
Sara S (13:58):
Curiosity over like criticism,
which I think is so key for me.
Participating is, you know, ask a questioninstead of voicing your criticism,
get to know their position better.
So yeah, that
Spencer (14:15):
That reminds me, I think
this is one of the seven habits
of highly effective people.
Sara S (14:20):
I was just gonna say.
Spencer (14:21):
Seek to understand
before being understood.
Sara S (14:24):
I remember that exactly.
This happened for me just this week.
In my profession, it requirescertain licenses that you can lose
if you don't behave appropriately.
Something came up thatI needed to take action.
And so I reached out to my office andlet them know, Hey, this has happened.
(14:44):
And they didn't handle it quitethe way I thought that they should.
And instead of just thinking,oh, they know better, I am the
inferior, I'm the little sister.
I was like, Hey, wait, this is mylicense that's on the line and I
do need to participate in this.
And I don't need to be rude.
I don't need to be anything but justto state what I want to be done.
(15:05):
I don't think it waseven an issue for them.
I think they're like, oh yeah,that, that is what should be done.
But for me it was a little bit scaryto speak up and to participate,
but I felt like I did it well
and didn't let it just slide.
Like I've let it, so many times justnot wanting to participate for fear
of doing it wrong or for fear of
being wrong or not being validated.
(15:27):
I just have all these fearsthat stop me from participating.
In this instance, and somethingthat would affect my profession and
could truly make an impact on me.
That's kinda what I learned thisweek is to be brave enough to speak
up and then to trust my higher
power that it's going to be okay.
(15:49):
One thing I think that concept four goeshand in hand with is two of our sayings,
let go and let God and live and let live.
Live and let live because I'mliving my life and letting others
live theirs and not looking for
validation and not judging them.
Saying what I wanna say and hearingwhat they have to say, and then
the letting go and let God is:
okay, we've both spoken our piece.
(16:12):
I'm gonna let the chips fall where theymay and trust it's all going to work out.
But if I don't participate, I can't reallysee how those slogans are going to apply
in my life as well as I want them to.
Spencer (16:25):
I love that.
and what you wrote here, I get tospeak up and stand up for myself
respectfully and not in dominance,
and listen to others respectfully
and not in judgment or criticism,
and then I get to let go and let God.
I love that.
Sara S (16:42):
Yeah, it's hard for me
to remember the dominance part.
It's hard for me to remember to sayit once and let it go because there's
still that defect in me that wants to
control the outcome because I think
my outcome is the one that will work.
And that's not often the case.
Spencer (17:00):
The next paragraph
says, participation is not
the same as interference.
It is not an excuse to meddle.
We learn to offer our help ratherthan insist that we know best.
If our time, energies, or opinions are notinvited, we gracefully allow others the
right to handle things in their own way.
(17:22):
When we ask others to do a job, evenin our own homes, we learn to release
our desire to either micromanage
or take the job back if it isn't
being done the way we would do it.
Woo.
A lot in there.
Sara S (17:36):
That is a lot in there.
Meddling.
I like to meddle.
And it doesn't ever get me anywhere.
Spencer (17:45):
This sentence about we
ask others to do a job even in our
own homes, has been a continuing
learning experience for me, I guess.
In particular as I'm gettingolder, my wife's getting older.
The energy that we used to have to doeverything ourselves is diminishing.
(18:05):
I think our willingness to hire somebodywho has the energy, the time, the
expertise to do things, also is a factor.
We bought this house that we'reliving in more than 30 years ago.
It had a really dark and dingykitchen that I think had last
been remodeled in the 1950s.
(18:30):
We knew that was the firstthing that we wanted to work on.
And of course we had grandiose visionsof actually expanding the footprint
of the house to make a bigger kitchen.
That didn't happen.
We couldn't afford it.
but we did totally redo it.
We took it out to the bare walls,actually in some cases, to the studs.
We hired somebody to put in a bay window.
(18:53):
So we have a nice big windowlooking out over the backyard,
just above the kitchen sink.
We did all the rest of the work ourselves.
Taking out the old cabinetsand appliances and flooring.
Putting in a new tile floor.
Putting in new cabinets.
I guess we hired somebody toput in the counter because that
was beyond our ability, but
everything else we did ourselves.
(19:17):
We were young and we had the energyand we also, I think, didn't have
the life experience to tell us that
this was gonna be quite a task.
Which it was.
But we got it done.
Over a period of 30 some oddyears, things start to wear down.
It became quite evident thatthe finish on the kitchen
cabinets was one of those things.
(19:43):
We actually tried to hire severalpeople to do it, and finally
got a guy who not only said he
could do it, but he did do it.
He did a good job.
I have some nits to pick, but,didn't micromanage the job.
let him get on with it the wayhe wanted to get on with it.
And, he did it with, minimaldisruption to us really.
(20:04):
It was a big job.
In 1990, I would've triedto do it myself, at least.
But now I recognize thatit's not really my skillset.
It's okay to have somebody else do it, butthen I have to let him, do it in his way.
There were a couple things, likesome corner cabinets and he put
the doors back on the wrong side.
So the first one you openedwas quote the wrong one.
(20:26):
I said, no, we want it the other way.
He's oh, okay.
That's not micromanaged.
That's like, no, this isthe function that we want.
Micromanage would be, no, you need tosand this one spot a little bit more.
That's what sort of cameup for me with this.
Sara S (20:40):
I can see that, when
you hire someone to do a job
though, I do think it is tempting.
Because I remodeled a house and I guessmicromanaging, but also you are paying for
it and you do want it done a certain way.
But I, as I was reading, listeningto you and focusing on that word in
the paragraph, micromanage, now I
do remember why I wrote what I wrote.
(21:02):
When I was growing up and raisingkids, I created this chart.
We were reading some book and thechart had all these little places you
would color in to show progress on
how far we had gotten as a family.
And oh my goodness.
Talk about micromanaging.
I put the chart together, Idrew it, it was like numbers or
something, if I remember correctly.
It was on a poster board, so it was big.
(21:23):
It took a lot of time.
And I had an idea of how I wanted thiscolored, that's how controlling I was.
I remember that at the time mythen husband colored one in, and it
wasn't how I wanted it colored in.
And you know what he did after my responsewas he just didn't participate anymore.
And I don't blame him.
What I learned from that is when you'redoing a group project like this, do
I wanna focus on the end results?
(21:48):
Or do I wanna focus on memories?
I've seen this with myself in cooking.
I just recently left a relationship.
But part of what I really enjoyedtogether with that partner was cooking.
When we first got together, Iwas definitely an overseer of
making sure he is doing it right.
And I realized straight away that was notgoing to contribute to anything great.
(22:10):
No good memories.
It might have a betterend product, the meal.
The memories wouldn't be that great.
So I changed my focus and some of mybest memories, is cooking together.
Because we didn't micromanage each other.
To me that's a really good exampleof participation and doing it in
a way that did present harmony.
Micromanagement has no place if I'mgoing to want good memories and truly a
group project result versus my result,
that I want, which doesn't feed into
participation or harmony, either one.
Spencer (22:45):
Yeah.
That's a really good observation.
It takes me back to, to thinkabout when I was working.
I was leading a team.
We all were contributingtowards the end result.
And I might've been giving some directionand some structure, but each member
of the team was doing their part of the
work in the way that they were doing it.
We were building software.
(23:06):
Part of our process was that, youwrite some code and then somebody
else reads it and gives you notes.
We call it a code review.
When I'm doing that, when I was doingthat, I'm not doing that anymore.
I may look at the way in which somebodydid something and say, that's not
the way I would've done it, but it's
still a valid way to get it done.
(23:27):
In that case, I probably won't sayanything because the work they did
achieves the desired function.
Or I could go in and say, don't do itthat way, do it this other way because
I believe this is a better way to do it.
To me, that's micromanaging andthat is not conducive to group
harmony, and it's not, also not
conducive to getting the work done.
(23:49):
If I'm asking you to go back and changesomething, just because I would like
to see it done a different way, then
that's extra work that didn't have
to get done and it slows us down.
Sara S (23:59):
And then when I'm on the end of
that, when someone's micromanaging me,
that's exactly when I quit participating.
Not that that's the right answer.
But that's what I have routinely done,is either I micromanage someone else.
Or when I'm micromanaged, Ijust bow out okay, I'm not gonna
play your game anymore then.
The other thing I wanted to bring upas you were sharing and I was thinking
about cooking, is when you let other
people do it their way, you also
(24:25):
recognize talents and you get to see whoreally likes to do certain portions of
the work and who's really good at it.
In the cooking example, what we learnedis he was really great at all the stuff
to do with grilling, with the meat.
Very, very good.
While I was better at like, timing,like getting us so everything's on
the table together at the same time.
(24:48):
As a result we had a lot ofreally, really good meals.
Where we both participated andwe both really enjoyed the meal.
It really serves well toremind me to just let go.
Let go of my desire to control ormanipulate and see what happens.
And often it's better than whatI had expected or anticipated.
Spencer (25:09):
That is also true in my work
experience that if I give everybody the
space and the freedom to do things in
their own way, there have been times when
we've come up with something that is so
much better than what I would've created.
I'm a solitary cook inmy family, pretty much.
my wife sometimes will cutthings up or something.
Now I'm wondering, is that me
Sara S (25:31):
you know, it.
Spencer (25:32):
is that her?
to some extent it's her, but I betI have some contribution there that
maybe has discouraged participation.
I have to think about that.
Sara S (25:40):
Luckily one of the highlights
of this relationship is we were really
good at sharing what we thought or
felt without really getting too spicy.
Basically what he told me is,you're no fun with in the kitchen.
And so I knew how he feltand I actively worked on it.
I mean, I had to bite it mytongue and stand back and really
watch myself in the kitchen.
(26:02):
But it was possible and ittaught me a good lesson, didn't
know it at the time, but yeah,
participation is the key to harmony.
Spencer (26:11):
Okay, let's move
on to paragraph four.
Sara S (26:15):
In the ongoing growth
and development of the worldwide
fellowship of Al-Anon family groups,
all of us have a part to play.
Participation usually begins when weregularly attend the meeting we come
to think of as our home group and share
our experience, strength, and hope.
Spencer (26:30):
You know, I'm just
going to add the next paragraph
here because it's one sentence.
We participate whenever we are asked toperform Al-Anon service work, help choose
and support the group representative,
make contributions or share our opinions.
I think that kind of all goes together.
It's is different layers ofparticipation in the group.
Sara S (26:49):
Yeah.
My takeaway from that was service.
I didn't really jump into service.
I don't know why.
I think mostly 'cause I was stingy with mytime and I just was sure I wouldn't have
enough time to do all that I wanted to do.
But since then I have learned thatservice has really taught me how
to participate in safe places.
(27:11):
It has given me the playground tofail and to not be told that,
Hey, you didn't do that right.
Because I just learned on my own like,oh, I need to do that differently.
It's just shocking to me.
I was thinking about it today actually,that Al-Anon works the way it works
with no skilled or trained employees.
We all just bumble our waythrough and somehow it works.
(27:35):
I'm really grateful for my serviceand opportunity and Al-Anon.
And now I do service, try to do apretty significant role regularly
because I do subscribe to that slogan
that when I got busy, I got better.
Getting busy for me in theright things is what was key.
I can be busy meddling, I can be busyoverseeing and giving out unsolicited
advice or I can be busy in service
and to me that's where I got better is
learning how to participate in Al-Anon.
Spencer (28:07):
I really love it here
that we have participation at
so many different levels here in
just these three short sentences.
Participation begins when weregularly attend the meeting.
Showing up at a meeting is participation.
The meeting wouldn't bethere if we didn't show up.
(28:30):
I think when we talk about service, weusually think of something more than that.
Share our experience, strength, and hope.
The core of 12 step recovery, really iseach of us sharing our own experience,
strength, and hope with each other,
that we may recover together.
that's a paraphrase, I thinkfrom the aa big book actually.
(28:52):
The word service actually doesn'tshow up till the last sentence.
The group that was my home group forthe first decade or so of my time in
program, had many service positions.
You could make coffee, you couldstand at the door and greet people.
This particular one hada 10 minute lead format.
Somebody would give a 10 minutelead on a topic of their choosing
and then, sharing would be open.
(29:15):
Once a month there was a30 minute first step lead.
And so there was another opportunityfor service, still just sharing
our experience, strength, and hope.
We had a monthly chair who wouldask people to do the lead for each
meeting, and they would read the
script at the beginning of the meeting.
At the beginning of each meeting,we handed out the sheets of things
that were gonna be read during the
opening, the 12 steps and so on.
(29:40):
An opportunity for serviceonce, you don't have to make
a commitment, just do it once.
And then you got the grouprepresentative, secretary, treasurer,
the literature person, and so on.
There's so many differentways to participate.
I have been also to meetingswhere it was very clear that one
or two people ran the meeting.
Sara S (30:00):
I've been to those.
Those aren't my favorite.
Spencer (30:03):
The only opportunity to
participate becomes sharing experience,
strength and hope, and I'm like,
it's not such a good experience.
I started participatingpretty early in my program.
That meeting had a half hour afterthe meeting, beginners meeting.
We'd meet from seven 30 to eight 30and then from eight 30 to nine people
who considered themselves beginners
could meet with somebody who had
some more experience in the program.
(30:26):
I took on that a few times after I'dbeen in the program only six months.
I think about how green I was, Iknew more than the people who were
coming to the beginner's meeting.
I'd started working thesteps at that point.
I had a sponsor at that point.
So, you know, was probably doing okay.
That meeting thrived and still thrives.
And I think part of it is becauseof the way in which the structure of
the meeting encourages participation
by the people who are there.
(30:54):
Including the people who come in and sitin the back row and occasionally share.
Sara S (31:00):
Yeah.
That brings to my mind thatthere's no qualifications.
You don't have to be qualifiedfor any of our service positions.
Like you just said, I had only hadsix months under your belt, but
you still felt like you were quote
unquote qualified to participate.
I think that sometimes holds back a lotof people in my experience over the years.
(31:21):
You know, they don't feellike they can be a sponsor.
They don't feel like they can do certainthings because they're not having,
don't have enough time under their belt.
And I agree more with you that,you had more than the people
who are showing up on day one.
You were familiar with atleast a couple of the steps.
I remember the language being so confusingto me when I first started, all these
references to the steps and take it to
your sponsor and it just was foreign.
(31:47):
I mean, at six months, you at leastprobably have the language at least
reeled in a bit, you know, what
they're talking about I, I agree that
participation, if it's encouraged inmeetings, really aids in recovery and
getting people to feel like they belong.
Spencer (32:04):
Yes.
Oh, for sure.
At my first meeting I felt welcomed
Sara S (32:08):
and then needed after that.
Once I started signing up to do things,it helped me get to meetings when I really
didn't wanna go to meetings, because I
took my responsibilities pretty seriously,
and if I said I was gonna do something,
I felt like I better show up and do it.
Spencer (32:22):
Yes, I actually have a
note on that when we're talking
about our lives in recovery later,
how that showed up for me recently.
Sara S (32:28):
Good.
All right.
Paragraph six.
What concept four does not do is giveus permission to intrude on another
person's area of responsibility.
Members who are already in positionsto serve the group deserve our
support, encouragement, and trust.
We may offer our assistance beyondour own level of responsibility, but
our participation depends on whether
our offer to help has been accepted.
(32:53):
Participation is essential but itis helpful to remember that the
goal is harmony, not dominance.
Oh my goodness, this hasjust recently happened to me.
because I overstepped my fellowAl-Anon in a meeting just last week.
In our in-person meeting in our town,and I live in a small town, so it's
always a lot of the same people.
we recently had some changes in servicepositions and so there's been changes in
the format and we've added, timed shares.
(33:21):
Part of that means we ask for avolunteer to be the timekeeper
in the beginning of the meeting.
Then the person who's leading themeeting gets to choose a format of that.
There's a kind of a choiceof format you can go with.
And Yep.
Guess who took over?
Me!
The person who was supposed to bethe timekeeper either forgot or was
off in lala land, I like give her a
tap on the leg or something, which
is not my lane, not my business.
(33:47):
And then, the person who was leadingwasn't really sure what format to choose.
And so of course I just piped right up.
Luckily I see these ladies on apretty regular basis and I saw both
of them outside of meetings, thank
goodness, a couple days later.
And I was able to make my amends.
Hey, sorry for being so bossy
(34:07):
.But the goal is harmony and I have
to remember that not dominance.
Spencer (34:12):
No kidding.
it reminds me of mymeeting just yesterday.
We're reading through thebook, How Al-Anon Works from
beginning to presumably back.
We just started earlier this year.
We read a chapter or someportion of a chapter depending
on how big the chapter is.
Yesterday morning we're reading along andI'm like, this is a really long chapter.
(34:35):
So, at one point I said, maybe weshould stop after the next paragraph.
We read that paragraph, which wasthe end of a section, and there was
another section coming after that.
And then I said, do y'allthink we should stop here?
Kind of backing up fromsuggesting to asking.
And everybody's likeyeah, we should stop here.
We're doing something newand we're really enjoying it.
(34:57):
I had not read that book,really read it, for a long time.
I dip into it here and there now.
It's been really good.
We all shared on that section and we'relike, we've still got a half an hour
left, so let's read the next section.
And off we went.
Everybody participated, right?
But also, I found myself trying to bedirective and tried to back up from that
when I recognized that I was doing that.
(35:23):
I guess that's the pointI was trying to make here.
So a little bit of hope or something.
Sara S (35:27):
I think some of these
defects just came hardwired in me.
And, my proof, here's my proof.
I remember a family member callingme a buttinski, that was her word.
I was little.
I was probably four.
And I didn't really know what that meant.
I think as a little girl, Iliked to just be very bossy.
Somehow I stifled that bossinessin some areas, like with people
who I think are smarter than me or
bigger than me or older than me.
(35:53):
But if I think it's somebody who Ican manipulate, then I am very bossy.
And I don't know where my mindmakes that distinguish, like where
I distinguish between, Hey, this is
an area I can be bossy, versus, oh,
this is an area I need to back up.
I guess it's just how I perceivemyself around whatever company I am.
And then the other thing that'sfunny is, in my, first grade, we
lived, grew up in a real small town
and they always had a yearbook,
an annual at the end of the year.
(36:21):
And it did the whole school K through 12.
It was that small of a school.
So we'd all get the same yearbook.
And I remember coming home from myfirst grade year and they misprinted my
name instead of Sara, they put Sarge.
My older sisters, I didn'tunderstand why they thought that
was so funny, but I understand now.
(36:41):
I think it all just feeds intowhat the tools are that we pick up.
So I definitely have it in meto be very bossy, domineering,
and kill participation that way.
But I also have it in me to bevery silent, passive, bury my
head in the sand disinterested.
And that also killsparticipation and harmony.
Spencer (37:02):
okay, I need to
read this paragraph again.
Members who are already in positionsto serve the group deserve our
support, encouragement, and trust.
Yes.
Okay.
I had, for about three years,position as group records coordinator
in my district, which covers
roughly the county that I live in.
(37:25):
This started in 2021, maybe20 20, 20 21, right in the
middle of the pandemic, anyway.
so there were a lot of changes happening.
The meetings were going online and so on.
People would change their Zoom IDbecause, I don't know, they got Zoom
bombed or something, or maybe they
switched to somebody else's Zoom account.
(37:46):
Whatever happened.
So there was a lot of changes goingon, and I maintained a meeting
list that we posted as a PDF on the
website so people could download the
latest version of the meeting list.
It wasn't like a huge thing, but I hadthis responsibility and I did my best to
keep up with what was happening and, back
and forth communication with the district
representative and the person who was
in charge of the Al-Anon phone number.
(38:14):
We had a cell phone that differentpeople would carry, but they had to
have up to date information about
meetings because somebody's calling
and say, I'm looking for Al-Anon.
you wanna be able to tell 'em abouta meeting that actually exists.
So there was a lot to that and I feltlike I was doing a pretty good job.
You know, I was contributing.
And then, we encouragerotation of service, right?
(38:36):
So that everybody has a chanceto participate, in the ways that
would like to and that they can.
I was like, I've been doingthis for about three years.
I think it lined up approximatelywith the term of the person who
was district rep and she was at
the end of her three year term.
I figured I'm at the endof my three year term.
So I handed it over to somebody else.
(38:56):
I said here's the spreadsheetthat is the meeting list.
Here's what I do with it right now
Sara S (39:01):
to,
Spencer (39:01):
like, update it on the website.
This is yours now.
The next time I got an emailabout a meeting update, I
forwarded it to him to make sure
he got it, but I didn't touch it.
It wasn't hard, but it wasalso something that I had to
consciously and deliberately do.
To be hands off, to not touch itanymore, to close the tab in my browser
that always had the meaning list open.
(39:25):
I gave him what I could interms of support, encouragement,
and trust by letting go.
And this, oh man, this is so important.
Our participation depends on whetherour offer to help has been accepted.
Everywhere in my life.
You know, like, here,let me do that for you.
No, no, Can I help you with that?
And if the answer is no, then all right.
Sara S (39:47):
There's a cute
reel that's around of that.
There's a little girl who's trying toget her seatbelt on, like a car seat.
And the dad keeps saying,do you want some help?
And she keeps saying no.
And then finally she's like,you take care of yourself.
It's a reminder, like thedad really wanted to help.
You could see she was strugglingand she was very persistent.
I do not need your help.
I will get this done.
(40:08):
Yeah, I have to remind myself of that too,especially when someone's taking on maybe
a position that I've held in the past.
'Cause I don't want them tohave to struggle like I did.
But that's how we learn really.
And, they'll ask for help.
If you've offered it and they wantit, they know the offer's there.
Spencer (40:25):
We're actually at the end of
the section, this was the last paragraph.
It's helpful to remember.
The goal is harmony, not dominance.
One of the things that I do in mylife and have done for the last
decade and a half or so, is work with
the teens in my church community.
When we get together, whether it's at ourregular meeting on Sunday or maybe we're
doing a, a weekend overnight or something,
we always take time to think about
and state how we're gonna be together.
(40:58):
We call that a covenant.
A covenant is a set of promiseswe make to each other about
how we're going to be together.
One of the things that I always try tohelp them do, or at least emphasize,
is to make positive statements
rather than negative statements.
To give a trivial example, mightsay don't wreck the church.
(41:20):
That's a negative statement.
Positive statement is respectthe environment that we're in.
Because when you make it negative, itfeels like a rule that I have to follow.
Whereas, if I say the goal is harmony,then that is something I aspire to.
And these promises, these covenantsare always things that we aspire to.
We recognize that we're not perfectand that we may go outside the bounds
of what we've agreed, but we have the
space to come back together, because
it's aspirational, not legislated.
(41:50):
If I said the goal is to notdominate or don't dominate,
well that feels like a rule.
And it also doesn't give me as goodguidance towards how to achieve that goal.
There's a whole bunch of things not todo, but it doesn't tell me what to do.
If I say the goal is harmony, thenI can start thinking about, how
do I behave in such a way that
we are together harmoniously?
(42:16):
It's a personal thing, but Ireally like making aspirational
goals rather than legislation.
Sara S (42:23):
I think you could even just
shorten it to not even add, not dominance.
Just remember the goal is harmony.
Spencer (42:32):
Yeah,
Sara S (42:32):
I like that.
I like that how you separated thatout and brought that to, to light
that, you don't even really need
to mention the negative part of it.
If the goal is harmony, then that's whatwe'll aspire to achieve, and dominance
is never going to find its way into that
statement, if you're seeking harmony.
Spencer (42:54):
I think so.
And I feel like this is something thatat least I have grown in recovery?
I didn't come into working withthe youth until I had been in
recovery for four or five years.
My kids turned into teenagers and I waslike, Hey, I actually like teenagers.
How about that?
(43:15):
who knew?
A couple years later, I made a commitmentto myself to work with them, to maybe
help somebody avoid what happened to
me, which is, I left the community
that I grew up in when I turned 18because I didn't understand why I
would wanna be there as an adult.
But, I also came to justreally enjoy our time together.
(43:38):
And so I can't say, I wouldn't havehad this goal of stating things
positively, before I came into recovery
because I never had the chance to
figure out if that was the case.
But I honestly believe that thethings that I learned participating
in Al-Anon, the traditions.
I had spent some time lookingat the traditions and seeing how
they worked in our meetings to get
things done when nobody's the boss.
(44:01):
It's just amazing.
You got anything you wannaclose with, on this concept?
Sara S (44:06):
I think we've covered it.
Spencer (44:08):
Okay.
The goal is harmony.
There we are.
Sara S (44:10):
There we go.
Spencer (44:12):
After a short break, we will
continue with our lives in recovery,
where we talk about how recovery works
in our daily lives and in our meetings.
And we're gonna take a littlebreak from the work here and talk
about the first song you chose.
Which is
Sara S (44:25):
Brave by Sarah Bareilles.
I remember hearing the song earlyin recovery and really liking
the message because it reminds
me to be brave in speaking up.
And that's something we've been talkingabout today and the reasons why either
I overspeak or don't speak at all.
I like these lines.
(44:46):
You can be amazing.
You can turn a phraseinto a weapon or a drug.
You can be the outcast or be thebacklash of somebody's lack of love.
Or you can start speaking up.
Say what you wanna say,and let the words fall out.
Honestly, I wanna see you bebrave with what you have to
say and let the words fall out.
(45:08):
For me, as we've discussed and shared,I was either afraid to speak my truth,
so I would hold it in until I exploded.
Or I couldn't hold it in anymore.
And then I would, say things thatreally weren't at issue, they were
petty grievances, and I was still
afraid to address the real issue.
I just like how that reminds me to,it's basically what we talked about
before, letting go and letting God.
(45:33):
Speak up and say what youneed to say then let go of it.
As long as you
say what you mean, mean whatyou say, and don't say it mean.
I want to get to a point where I dospeak up instead of either ignoring it,
swallowing it, just not participating
or speaking in dominance, where
I'm just out of control and angry
and not speaking even to the issue.
Spencer (46:06):
In this section of the podcast,
we talk about our lives in recovery.
How have we experienced recovery recently?
I was thinking about, serviceactually before we started talking
about service, and the importance for
me personally, of having a service
commitment get me to meetings, sometimes.
I have one meeting.
(46:27):
It's a good meeting.
I've been going to it for a long time.
I was group representative for a while.
It's Sunday evening and by the time I getto Sunday evening, I'm not feeling it, but
I'm one of the two or three people that
has a key to open up the church to get in.
(46:47):
So I either have to make arrangementsfor somebody else to do it, and one
of the guys who has a key is now
hundreds of miles away with his wife
taking care of his brother-in-law who
had knee surgery, so he can't do it.
I have this commitment to get inthere, open the church, get out the
literature cart and all that stuff.
and I'm happy to do that and I'mreally happy that it gets me there
because when I get there and when
everybody comes in and when we start
the meeting, I'm glad I'm there.
(47:16):
It's just that getting overthat hump of getting in the
car and driving and, you know.
It's not every Sunday,but it definitely happens.
And so having that commitment isreally important to me to get me there.
I talked about giving up thisresponsibility as a group records
coordinator at the district level.
so I don't need to go into that one again.
There's a related thing tocommitment, which is accountability.
(47:39):
I have a commitment tomyself to stay healthy.
I'm gonna turn 70 this year andI want to continue to be healthy.
I want to continue to beable to go out and do things.
I have some medical conditions that it'sa good idea for me to get various kinds
of exercise because it helps to reduce
at least the impact of the condition.
(48:01):
All those are likeself-motivating things, right?
But one of the things thatreally gets me to go to the gym
regularly is being accountable.
And I could be accountableto myself, but that's harder.
So I'm accountable to a trainer who I'mseeing now once a month, but he's gonna
say, so how did you do last four weeks?
(48:22):
and I can say, I am,try to go twice a week.
And it was one week where I misseda day and, and, but can see this
exercise, I'm doing more reps or I'm
doing more weight or whatever, so I
can see and look, I can stand on one
foot for 30 seconds now instead of 20.
I could do those to me, buthaving somebody outside me
really helps to motivate me.
(48:46):
Maybe this is a crutch to get meto the point where I'm like, if
I don't go to the gym, I feel it.
I feel like I'm leavingsomething out of my life.
I've heard that can come.
We'll see.
This is the self-examination, the selfunderstanding that the steps gave me.
To understand that I actually needto be accountable to somebody in
order to get certain things done.
(49:08):
Okay, then let's do that.
I'm accountable to my dentistfor keeping my teeth healthy.
Sara S (49:14):
Yeah, that's a good point.
I mean that, I don't know how many ofus would do as good if we didn't know
we had to go own up every six months.
Spencer (49:21):
Just thinking about
my life recently and a couple
of inputs that I've had.
I read a letter in the previousepisode, number 4 32, about step eight.
The person who wrote in was asking,there's a lot of stuff going on the world
right now that is really affecting me,
and I don't know how I can talk about
this within the context of the traditions
because it's about politics and stuff.
(49:49):
And we don't talk aboutpolitics, which is a good thing.
I don't know, some people would considerthe fact that the things that are
happening around me affect my wellbeing,
my peace, my serenity, and they
might consider that an outside issue.
And maybe it is, but we aresupposed to practice these
principles in all our affairs.
So I have to think about how do Iapply my steps, my traditions, and
all the tools that I've learned
in Al-Anon to the rest of my life.
(50:17):
When my peace, my happiness, my serenityis severely affected by what's happening
outside of me, outside of my family,
then I think at least asking or sharing
how program tools are helping me deal
with it can be not an outside issue.
Okay.
Having said that, you know, this weekthere was another school shooting.
(50:39):
What the hell?
why are we at a point wherethis is like an ordinary thing?
I don't understand it, and it reallymakes me angry and sad at the same time.
And I have to take a breath or five.
I have to recognize that this is somethingthat is totally outside of my control.
(51:00):
and I have to ask my higher powerfor the peace and serenity to have
the acceptance that it happened.
No matter how much I don't likeit, no matter how much I think
that it shouldn't ever happen.
I don't know.
It's tough.
It is tough.
The other thing that happened thisweek was, I was listening to a
podcast, Barb N who was on this
podcast a while ago, about boundaries.
(51:29):
3 96 Boundaries Revisited.
She has her own podcast called Fragmentedto Whole, and her most recent episode
was about how she has for her own
peace of mind and sanity, decided that
she is not going to follow the newsand she's been doing this for several
years and how it's working for her.
(51:52):
and I was like, wow, that is aconcept that I don't think I could do.
I have set some real boundarieson how much, and on how I
consume news these days.
Because if I dive in, even when it'snews about something I agree with, it
can still cause me to get off balance.
(52:14):
I can read it because if I'm reading itand it triggers me, I can put it down.
I can say I'm not gonna read anymore,or I'm not gonna read anymore right now.
If it's coming at me, on a streamingmedium, like radio or tv, it's harder
I can't put it down and come back to
it later because then it's not there.
Anyway, I'm glad I have these tools,and also the tools of like enjoying the
moment, like what's happening right now.
(52:36):
Right now, today it's a nice sunny day.
It's a little chilly, butit's really beautiful outside.
And I can look out the window andsee the sun shining on the trees,
which are starting to leaf out.
And that's a good thing, and havinggratitude for the moment is something
I definitely learned in my recovery.
And with that, I think I will pass.
Sara S (52:55):
Thank you.
so what my recovery has lookedlike lately is, as I mentioned,
recently, my partner and I decided
to end a relationship of four years.
as you can imagine, it's beenhard, it's been fraught with a lot
of emotion, as grief tends to be.
And I've definitely experienced somany emotions over the last four weeks
of this, anger, sadness, compassion,
frustration, bargaining, self-doubt,
(53:22):
freedom, happiness, relief, and thenthey just cycle like, you think, you're
like, all right, I'm outta the woods.
I'm feeling good, happy, I feel free.
Then the next day you wake up andyou're just, angry or super sad.
so anyway, one day this week I wasjust feeling a lot of compassion.
I feel compassion for both of us.
(53:43):
I just want us to be friends.
and we have discussed that, that we justwanna be friends, but it, that takes time.
And the timing on that dependson each other's recovery and
healing and space needed.
I had the email queued up.
I was ready to like email and say,Hey, I hope you're doing well.
I just wanna be friends and,have that type of a conversation.
But instead of pulling the trigger likeI am prone to do, especially when I feel
like I'm triggered to an act of like love
or compassion or nice behavior, instead
I decided to take it through the program.
(54:15):
You know, call someone reason it out.
Get a different perspective.
And what came up is, what's your motive?
what's your motive?
Like, why are you feeling this today?
Why are you wanting todo this at this point?
And I hadn't thought about it, butafter some probing, it was because
I wanted to tidy up loose ends.
I didn't like that discomfortof unsettled or not knowing.
(54:38):
Tidying up the loose endswould make me feel better.
And that my true motive was notreally to check on my partner,
like that was a part of it.
But definitely I just was,I wanted this tidied up.
So I paused and I sat with my motiveand this thought came: the ninth step
teaches us that amends should never
cause harm to ourselves or others.
(55:00):
So my friendly gesture that I wasthinking was so great and full
of love and altruism could risk
reopening wounds, either his or mine.
it's, it is recent.
four weeks is not much time really toheal from a relationship of length.
And then I like this.
I can hold the intention of friendship,but I don't have to act on it right now.
(55:23):
I can let this sit and happen organically.
, Time is a powerful clarifier.
If the friendship is meant toevolve, it will happen gently
without me needing to force it.
That gets down to, I thinkI wanna get things done.
I like checklists, I like checkingthings off a list, and I don't like to
wait for things to happen on their own.
(55:47):
I get trigger happy.
I just recently heard this andI love it: if you're feeling
triggered, put down the gun.
I'm like, that is for me.
One thing I've been trying to do isgive it at least 24 seconds, and if I
can get to 24 seconds then I go to 24
minutes, and if I get to 24 minutes,
I'm like, I bet you can do 24 hours.
(56:10):
And then, I rarely evenremember it in 24 hours.
But I'll tell you what, if it'ssomething that needs to be done.
I'll remember it in 24 hours.
And so that's been a really goodtool for me to not pull that trigger.
Especially if I think it's a nicebehavior, like something I should
do, but that wasn't my motive.
(56:30):
And so I'm really grateful for theclarification that you can get when you
reason it out with someone in Al-Anon.
Spencer (56:38):
Wow.
That's great.
Sara S (56:40):
It was pretty powerful for me.
Like I really thought,wow, what an eyeopener.
and I guess the good thingis I'm at ease with it now.
Like, before, thosethings used to needle me.
If I felt like, you should write a thankyou or you should do this, it never
occurred to me to check my motives on the
good, quote, unquote actions I wanna do.
Spencer (57:02):
Yeah.
That, what are my motives question hasbeen really powerful for me at times too.
Moving forward, we've got,steps 12 through nine.
We're still on the steps.
gonna finish 'em.
Later this week I'll be recording,step nine with, another guest.
We welcome your thoughts.
You can join our conversation.
(57:22):
Please leave us a voicemail or send usan email with your feedback or questions.
And you put in some thoughtquestions for those steps here.
Sara S (57:32):
Step nine
Question, am I making my amends withhumility and sincerity, or am I seeking
to protect my ego or control the outcome?
Step 10, continued totake personal inventory.
And when we were wrong,promptly admitted it.
(57:53):
Question, what patterns in my thinkingor behavior have I noticed lately?
And how can I respond to themwith honesty and self-compassion?
That one's big for me because,I don't have self-compassion.
That's why I don't wanna do apersonal inventory sometimes of
the situation that I've done.
'cause I'm, I'm used tobeing hard on myself.
(58:15):
Step 11 sought through prayerand meditation to improve our
conscious contact with God.
Question, how am I stayingconnected to my spiritual path?
This one's actually really good today.
'cause today, you and I had scheduled todo this, but I really wanted to go skiing.
And so I asked my higher power last night,should I just ask to reschedule this?
(58:35):
or what?
And the thought came, just go aheadand prepare for it then take this up
tomorrow and you'll know what to do.
I started to prepare for it last night.
And, it was really, a goodspiritual connection to go through
the concept four, and to figure
out what I wanted to say today.
It brought to my mind just focusmore on my spiritual path versus
getting out there and doing things.
(59:01):
There's needs to be a balance for me.
So it was really nice to not giveinto that desire to go play versus,
focus on doing something that
would increase my spirituality.
And then 12, step 12.
Having had a spiritual awakening,try to carry this message to others.
Question, in what ways can I share myexperience, strength, and hope with
others without trying to fix them?
Spencer (59:27):
All wonderful questions.
Whether you might wanna be theguest talking about the step, or
send in your own share, they're
all great questions to consider.
Thank you for that.
And Sara, how canpeople send us feedback?
Sara S (59:43):
You can send a voice memo or email
to feedback at the recovery dot show,
or if you prefer, you can call and leave
us a voicemail at 7 3 4 7 0 7 8 7 9 5.
You can also use the voicemailbutton on the website to join the
conversation from your computer.
(01:00:04):
We'd love to hear from you.
Share your experience, strength, and hope,or your questions about today's topic
of concept four or any of our upcoming
topics, including steps nine through 12.
If you have a topic you'd likeus to talk about, let us know
if you would like advanced noticefor some of our topics so that
you can contribute to this topic.
(01:00:26):
You can sign up for our mailinglist by sending an email to
feedback at the recovery show.
Put email in your subject lineto make it easier to spot.
Spencer (01:00:37):
Our website is the
recovery dot show when we have all
the information about the show.
Mostly the, show notes for each episode,which include links to the books or book.
I think we only read from one book today.
Videos for the music that Sara chose.
And, there's also, there are some linksto other recovery podcasts and websites.
(01:00:57):
What is your second, songselection for us, Sara?
Sara S (01:01:00):
It's Man in the Mirror by
Michael Jackson, and I'm sure a lot of
people have probably loved this song.
it's just a reminder to bethe change you wish to see.
And it reminds me that it reallydoes start with me, and that does
require participation in life.
For me, what it resonates isit requires participating where
it may not be comfortable.
(01:01:23):
Having an open mind with thosethat are different from me.
My participation requires me to sometimesbe kind where it would be easier to
walk away, also to stand up for others,
even when it's not the popular choice.
That for me is really something strongthat I like to do when I'm in a situation
where I feel like the person or people
or a group is largely not able to stand
up for themselves for various reasons.
(01:01:52):
I really feel like that is an areawhere my participation, especially if
I'm in a position to speak up, that
I should, even if it's hard or it's
going against the grain, so to speak.
And then the last one that helpsme is speaking up and being
vulnerable and risking criticism.
That I think is largely what has stoppedme in many conversations is I don't
want criticism, I only want validation,
and that is not really participation
(01:02:22):
because that's me only wanting tobe around people who think and say,
and do what I think and do and say.
I love the line, if you wanna makethe world a better place, take a look
at yourself and then make a change.
Spencer (01:02:43):
An announcement
before I get to your feedback.
I will be attending the AA InternationalConvention in Vancouver, Canada this July.
If you are also attending, pleaseemail me feedback at the recovery show
so we can connect at the conference.
I think that would be fun.
(01:03:04):
Rachel left a comment on episodetwo 10, living with death.
I just sat and cried and cried andcried listening to this episode.
My mess of feeling seems too entangledand mixed up to unravel right now,
but I know there is some catharsis
in hearing my own deepest fear that
my alcoholic will die, reflected back
at me through the words of others.
(01:03:26):
I cannot thank you enough for yourshow and this episode in particular.
Thank you, Rachel, for that response.
It's a tough topic, but it isone that I think is important
for us to confront, maybe a word.
Berta left a comment on episode18, step four, doing the inventory.
(01:03:48):
So this is our first timethrough step four in the
podcast back in, 2013, I think.
Yeah, she writes, I wanted to say that Idiscovered you about six months ago and
am beyond words in gratitude that I did.
This episode especially, there areother earlier ones, but this particular
one is where I am at in my life and I
clearly can see with all that you shared
that it's just for me and it's time.
(01:04:13):
I did a lot of Googling before I foundthis recovery show, and I use it.
I need it.
I love it.
Every single day.
I appreciate every one of you and all theguests that I've heard up to this point.
I also appreciate the music.
Thank you.
Thank you, thank you.
Well, thank you Berta.
And this is one of the reasons thatI keep all the episodes up there
because they are still important.
(01:04:35):
They are still helpful,they're still relevant.
Pete has written earlier about whatand whether, and how, I guess, to
share about how the uncertainty in our
country, our society has affected her.
She recently let me know thatshe said this in a meeting.
(01:04:55):
Quotes.
I am struggling withthings larger than myself.
Which, I think is abeautiful way to put it.
I'm often struggling with things largerthan myself and maybe I don't have to go
any deeper than that in a meeting context.
As she says elsewhere in her response,this is why alapals are useful, because
we can go deeper, we can talk about things
that, in a meeting, would be outside
issues, but are not in our personal life.
(01:05:23):
Terri writes, hi.
I have really appreciatedlistening to your podcast.
I think it is very well done,and the format structure is
professional and approachable.
I've grown to respect you and yourguest host's perspective and opinion.
I was wondering if you have anycontent related to changing the
wording in readings during meetings.
(01:05:44):
It has become a controversialtopic in our area.
Specifically related to changing theword him to God in reading the steps and
adding the words to the opening statements
and addicts following alcoholics.
Have you covered this topic?
Can you let me know the episode number?
Thanks Terri C
Terri, no, we have not, as faras I can recall, talked about
these topics on the podcast.
(01:06:09):
I dug into the World Service Conferencenotes and I found on page 17 of the
2024 World Service Conference summary,
which you can find on the Al-Anon
dot org website, on the members menu.
Slide down to World Service Conference,parenthesis WSC, and then either click on
WSC summary for the most recent one, or
WSC summary archive to find all of them.
(01:06:38):
I think back to 1960 something.
Anyway, in the 2024 WSC summary, there'sa section titled Gender Neutral Policy
Discussion on page 17, which leads with
this question that was submitted to
the policy committee of the conference.
Quote (01:06:55):
Is the gendered language
in the steps and traditions in
alignment with Al-Anon legacies.
End quote.
They apparently had a discussion.
The indication in the summary isthat there was not going to be
a decision made at that point.
That the discussion was to helpinform the policy committee
for further consideration.
(01:07:16):
I thought at one point I hadfound records of policy committee,
deliberations, but I can't find it now.
So if one of you knows wherethose are, let me know.
In other words, there is currentlyno official guidance from the WSC
on the question of God language.
So without that, I think that agroup could, under tradition four,
decide to permit it or forbid it.
(01:07:42):
So there's that.
I also recently heard a Muslim memberof AA in a podcast state that in Islam,
Allah is neither male nor female,
and therefore it is counter to his
religion to use the words he and him
when referring to Allah, i.e. God.
So that's an interesting one from thepoint of view of accessibility of the
program, to people who, are not adherent
to a Christian religion, I think.
(01:08:13):
Anyway, there's a lot of questions there.
There's also the stringent policythat in order to officially change the
wording, it requires a vote of three
quarters of all of the Al-Anon groups.
So it would be really, really hard toofficially change it, but to say, you can
use the word God instead of the word he,
when you're reading them, I don't know.
(01:08:34):
it's a tricky one.
As to this question of adding addictsin the opening, the Al-Anon pamphlet,
Al-Anon spoken here, is pretty clear
about keeping the focus on alcoholism.
The Al-Anon, FAQ, which you canfind at, Al-Anon org slash newcomers
slash FAQ has this question.
(01:08:56):
My friend slash lovedone is a drug addict.
Can I go to an Al-Anon meeting?
The answer is, the primary purpose ofAl-Anon is to provide support to the
friends and families of alcoholics
in a recent membership survey, 35%
of our members said they joined ourprogram because of a loved one's drug
addiction and that their lives had
improved since attending meetings.
(01:09:19):
There is another program Naranon,which is for people affected by
a loved one's drug addiction.
You can visit theirwebsite at Naranon dot org.
You're also welcome to try Al-Anonmeetings, then decide if the Al-Anon
program might be helpful to you.
So the official policy is we sayalcohol, we don't say drugs or addicts,
but it's also true that many Al-Anon
members are in the program because
of an addiction to something other
than alcohol in their loved one.
(01:09:49):
So that's the way I readAl-Anon's official position or
no position on these questions.
Thanks for writing.
it's a tricky one, and I can seewhere there would be controversy.
Ezra wrote Spencer, I so enjoyedthe deep dive into step eight and
the discussion between you and Pat.
So he's talking about the most recentepisode 4 32, about step eight with Pat.
(01:10:11):
Let me start over.
I so enjoyed the deep dive into step eightand the discussion between you and Pat.
It was most enlightening.
I'm glad that the two of you mentionedthat just because someone doesn't like
what I did, it doesn't necessarily
imply that I caused them harm.
That was a valuable lesson forme to learn early in the program.
It goes along with, what another personthinks of me as none of my business.
(01:10:33):
Still, it does make sense to look atthose things just to make sure there
isn't something for me to improve.
One technique that works for mein making a step eight list of all
persons I have harmed is to write down:
One, any person who I would avoidif I saw them walking on the street.
Two, any person who I used to associatewith and am now estranged from.
And three, any institution or organizationthat I used to attend or participate
in and am now actively avoiding
because of resentment or discomfort.
(01:11:03):
These three categories provide me withplenty of names to put on my step 8 list.
Making amends to institutions requiressome creative thinking on my part.
Thanks again for your service.
I appreciate your podcast very much.
thank you Ezra for that.
I don't know if I said it during theconversation with Pat, but definitely
people that I feel uncomfortable meeting,
are people that I need to think about
whether they belong on that list.
(01:11:30):
Hadn't thought about yourother two categories, but that
could be very helpful, I think.
Yeah.
Dan left us a voicemail.
Dan (01:11:37):
Hi.
I was recommended to this site tolisten to a Tom W talk about recovery.
I think it was episode 1 98 and I wastold that he talks on others and I tried
to do a search, but nothing came up.
Could you please send mesome information on that.
(01:11:59):
I'd love to hear more Tom W.
Spencer (01:12:01):
I have uploaded two
of his talks into the podcast.
You talked about number 1 98, andthere's also an episode two 50, and I
think one of those is a Al-Anon talk,
and one of those may be an AA talk.
I would've to actually go back and listento them to be confident, which is which.
he is a member of bothprograms and does talk from the
perspective of both programs.
(01:12:26):
There are definitely more talks, probablymany available online, sites such as
x a-speakers.org and also on YouTube.
If you search for FatherTom w they should show up.
Chris writes, hi Spencer.
First thank you for your podcast.
I've been a member ofAl-Anon for about a year.
Very early on, I realized that the Godaspect was going to be challenging for me.
(01:12:49):
And in searching for options, I cameacross a couple of your podcasts
where other members shared how
they found solutions for this.
These were extremely helpfuland gave me a way forward.
So thank you and those guests.
I was trained as a pet behaviorcounselor, and I'm fascinated by
the parallels to our own behavior.
I tend to describe it asmy blessing and my curse.
My blessing, because I have thebackground knowledge that helps
me understand what is going on.
(01:13:13):
My curse, because it gave me another wayto beat myself up for not doing the right
thing when quote, obviously I knew better.
Allowing myself to makemistakes is a work in progress.
I am enjoying working my way through yourback catalog and have listened to some
of your reflections about retirement.
In particular, your frustrationsabout making plans, and then
losing a morning, and my brain
interjected, rebound behavior.
(01:13:36):
Rebound behavior is when a suppressedbehavior comes back stronger.
When the suppression is removed.
The classic is the dog that barksall night because it is punished
for barking during the day.
The presence of the owner suppresses thebarking during the day because the owner
has been associated with punishment.
But at night, the owner sleeps,the suppression is removed and
the barking comes back worse.
(01:13:56):
I guess at work we are normallyquite controlled in what we do and
when, and what I heard you describe
was someone enjoying doing what
they wanted, when they wanted.
Could this be a rebound behavior?
I couldn't help wondering ifthis might be a fundamental
need that was being expressed.
How often do we get to relaxwith no deadline and no demands?
I know that I myself find thatkind of activity very hard not to
interpret as quote, wasting time.
(01:14:17):
And I'm having to learn that, of course,self-care is never a waste of time.
If this is not helpful, thenplease take it or leave it.
Of course, human behavior is not petbehavior, and I could be totally wrong
Sometimes my fascination with the
parallels takes me places I shouldn't go.
I love your podcast and thecare you demonstrate for others.
You deserve to spend yourretirement however you wish, Chris.
(01:14:39):
Well.
I hadn't thought about that, Chris, thatlike I had spent 50 years with my schedule
being controlled and now I have my freedom
and I'm really, taking advantage of it.
Interesting ideas.
Of course, when it means that Idon't get the podcast out when
I wanted to, that requires some
self-examination and possibly,
asking my higher power for some help.
(01:15:04):
And that's it for today.
That's what we got from you.
Keep those cards and lettersand voicemails coming.
Sara, thank you again forjoining me today for this real
deep dive into concept four.
I feel like we, we did a good job on it.
Sara S (01:15:19):
Yes, I did too.
I liked the conversation.
Spencer (01:15:22):
Thank you.
You got one more song?
Sara S (01:15:25):
The last song is Follow
Your Arrow by Casey Musgraves.
It's just a great song, which has remindedme that it doesn't matter what you do,
you're not gonna make everyone happy.
Someone will like what you do and there'sanother group of people that are gonna
find what you did inappropriate or
not something that they agreed with.
And here's how the artist puts it (01:15:43):
if you
save yourself for marriage, you're a bore.
You don't save yourself formarriage, you're a horrible person.
If you can't lose theweight, then you're just fat.
If you lose too much,then you're on crack.
You're damned if you do andyou're damned if you don't.
So you might as well justdo whatever you want.
So make lots of noise, kiss lotsof boys, or kiss lots of girls.
(01:16:07):
If that's something you're into.
Just follow your arrow wherever it points.
To me that just says, you've gottarisk not being loved or approved
or validated by everyone when you
choose to participate in your life.
I do wanna participate in my lifeand I wanna do it in a way that is
respectful of myself and of others.
(01:16:28):
And I think that's possible.
You can do things that people don't agreewith and still, I think find harmony.
So long as there's no dominance,you're not trying to force your
way onto them, and they're not
trying to force their way onto you.
Spencer (01:16:47):
Thank you for listening.
Please keep coming back.
Whatever your problems, there arethose among us who have had them too.
If we did not talk about a problem you'refacing today, feel free to contact us so
we can talk about it in a future episode.
May understanding, love and peacegrow in you one day at a time.