The forgotten experience of our members

“With the help of our sponsor or spiritual advisor, gradually we learn to trust and depend on our Higher Power.”

Basic Text, Sixth Edition, Chapter Seven – Recovery and Relapse, page 86

Such is the last sentence in our Seventh Chapter, Recovery and Relapse. I read this sentence a few times, I think, before I started to question it. As someone who subscribes to being spiritual but not religious I was met with a bit of surprise, and as I compared it with the Grey Book I found that last sentence wasn’t there.

Of course there have been many changes to the text since then. I figured it was a priest or a guru, and although I found the sentence stood out, to me, I understood it. If we need spiritual guidance from outside sources to better trust my Higher Power, as I myself have sought, then why discourage it?

The idea of this blog post came to me again when a close friend raised the idea of a spiritual advisor, mentioning to me that’s he’s both had some and been one in the program. I hadn’t considered that the sentence could also apply to other members; members who help us live spiritually, help teach us how to connect to our Higher Power, and help us learn what our spiritual life means to us.

With that said, I don’t have a specific member I go to outside of my sponsor to help me live a spiritual life. I feel like I really learn a lot from all of my friends, and I surround myself with members whose guidance and spiritual programs I trust. Don’t take advice from someone if you don’t want their life, you know? (Not to discount how God speaks through all members in the true spirit of anonymity; often new members too, both at meetings and outside of them).

“Our sponsors and friends can advise us on how to work the steps.”

Basic Text, Sixth Edition, Chapter Five – What Can I Do?, page 57

This was the second line in our Basic Text that immediately sprang to mind when I thought of other lines with forgotten experience I don’t really apply, or that isn’t endorsed the same way anymore. I haven’t had a friend advise me on how to work a step… or have I? My sponsor was one of my friends before I asked her to be my sponsor, and I consciously asked a friend to be my next sponsor because I wanted someone I trusted and felt safe with, whose program I had a good understanding of, and whose life I also gladly was involved in. I’m able to share my experience with my sponsor today, too, which I didn’t with my previous sponsor, making it more of the equal dynamic a group of people would create. Because the word sponsors stands out, too.

I’ve understood that before the traditional one-on-one we’ve got going on today, sponsorship, at least for many, was more based off of learning from a group of people. I know many people who are clean today who worked early sets of steps in groups, which adds to the understanding of why this line highlights both friends and sponsors. Those are roots we’ve evolved further and further away from today.  I haven’t tried it the other way and don’t think I ever will, because having one person I know I can rely on, and having my support network separate from the vulnerable, bloody insides of my step work, works for me and makes me feel safe.

But I have learned a lot about the steps from my friends or in meetings. Some of the most valuable discussions I’ve ever had have been with friends sharing their experience of whatever step I’m working on, or have been on. It’s really led me to incredible insights and helped me feel so supported in whatever I’m growing through in that moment, and I couldn’t encourage it more.

The closest I’ve come to doing step work in any kind of group is sharing my Tenth Step. I do a daily Tenth Step and gratitude list, still, which I’ve recently tailored more towards God consciousness, but a couple years ago I was asked to join a Tenth Step circle with a group of women. We ended up sharing our Tenth Steps with each other for about a month and were able to draw from what was working for others, and allowed us to build a form of daily intimacy with each other that I found to be really valuable. I couldn’t compare my insides with other people’s outsides when I was seeing all of our insides.

Nowadays I still share it, but only with my sponsor, which still has offered me a lot of support and insight into my character.

“Sponsorship for newcomers is also the responsibility of the group.”

Basic Text, Sixth Edition, Chapter Five – What Can I Do?, page 57

Lastly, this.

I’ve seen this sentence interpreted in two ways: the first being that it is our responsibility as a group to direct newcomers to available sponsors, for example by asking available sponsors to raise their hands during our meetings so that newcomers know who to approach, and the second being that the same way a group used to help and sponsor each other we should sponsor and help the newcomer by freely sharing our experience. I don’t believe either interpretation to be wrong, necessarily; the most important thing is that a newcomer is learning about our message of recovery, however that may be. But I do think it’s easy to forget, sometimes, that we should be available to newcomers in this way, or that we potentially are sponsoring newcomers every time we share.

Change in recovery

“We change every day.”

Basic Text, Sixth Edition, Chapter Four – How It Works, page 37

This sentence in our Seventh Step is one of my new favorite lines. I really, really, love it, the simplicity and at the same time the complexity of it. Even though we don’t reflect on it, we do change every day. Every day, we start our day with yesterday’s experience and yesterday’s growth, even though I’d really say my daily spiritual growth is microscopic. That’s not to say that I don’t have spiritual experiences or revelations, I just can’t always see the impact they have on my life going forward, but each time I look back at where I was a year ago I can see definite growth in how I participate in society and in my relationships, in my relationship with God, and in my relationship with myself.

Putting this sentence into the context of the Seventh Step, I felt myself really change and grow this Seventh Step on a daily basis, on another level than I normally feel myself growing. That’s not to say I don’t work a Seventh Step and pray for my defects to be removed when I’m not writing a Seventh Step, but I can definitely feel the impact of the spiritual process of the steps in my life as I go through them, in a more intense way than I’m able to feel other forms of growth in my daily life.

If I reflect upon how recovery is an uphill journey, up a hill that we start sliding down without effort, it also adds the perspective of a continuous duality to our recovery; we’re either changing and growing, or we’re moving backwards. That’s not to say that mistakes can’t be one of our greatest teachers, because they definitely are and they definitely have been for me. Mistakes are also the unavoidable part of being human that I’ve had to learn they are.

“Change also involves our greatest source of fear, the unknown.”

Basic Text, Sixth Edition, Chapter Nine – Just for Today– Living the Program, page 95

But why am I always so scared of change, even if I can see the good it does me? Because I’m unable to deal with life, with or without drugs, and need God’s strength to get through my daily life. I’ve found that having a daily program always helps me feel I’m anchored to something. And yet, I fear change, in my overthinking ways.

This round of steps I saw instant and unexpected growth in one area of my life: I became much less of a perfectionist when it came to my university assignments, because I’ve always been a perfectionist in a way that brings a lot of internal, emotional pain and manifests, through my disease, in endless, obsessive ruminations. Even though this was growth I was both surprised by and saw as a beautiful, divine gift, I still felt some worry that not worrying about my assignments and ruminating as much as I used to would make me a worse student.  

Our Second Step also talks about how, as we learn to trust this Power [God], we begin to overcome our fear of life. Change is a big part of life, as nothing is constant. Since my default setting is a fear of life, and an unwillingness to accept change or anything outside of my control, even reality, the way to overcome it is to trust that I’m taken care of and that everything is the way it needs to be.

“On a practical level, change occurs because what’s appropriate to one phase of recovery may not be for another.”

Basic Text, Sixth Edition, Chapter Ten – More Will Be Revealed, page 105

It’s a natural change, with God giving us what we need and not what we want. I probably needed to be relieved from my perfectionism, although I wasn’t relieved from some other, deeply ingrained character defects. It wasn’t time for those yet.

A friend of mine has told me that they believe the progression of recovery is slow because the progression of the disease is slow. Every day, like our Seventh Step says, we change, a little, both depending on our actions and God’s grace. But when faced with something my ego doesn’t feel I want, I also try to remember that everything I go through will help me carry the message to someone else in the future.

The Twelve Traditions and Narcotics Anonymous conventions?

I’ve been reflecting on the standards we set for our conventions. Conventions aren’t NA, this we know and have been told. There’s an uproar recently regarding the registration for the World Convention in D.C., but regarding the price of a convention alone there isn’t a lot of merit for discussing any other tradition besides our Fifth Tradition. As someone who has registered to go, I will say there’s a virtual newcomers’ bucket to donate to. 

Last year I went to a convention where the convention committee announced that they struck deals with restaurants and cafés to get a discount, while another convention committee for a separate convention refused a ‘good deal’ because the organization said they could have the convention space for a discounted price if they let them do a presentation for our members about why they should become members of their organization. The second seems like something to obviously refuse, but why not the first? Because it’s saving us money and clearly benefiting our members?

Seeking experience on this subject I was referred to our PR Handbook. The PR Handbook states: “When both parties are benefiting from the cooperative interaction, and are closer to reaching their mutual goals, then both parties involved equally support the relationship. NA is not to be given any special treatment by accepting this volunteer service from a nonmember.” I’d like to compare this to our Sixth Tradition: “An NA group ought never endorse, finance, or lend the NA name to any related facility or outside enterprise, lest problems of money, property, or prestige divert us from our primary purpose.” To give another line of comparison, I’ll add the dictionary definition of ‘endorse’: “to make a public statement of your approval or support for something or someone.” The other word to look into in that sentence is the word ‘public’, as well. The PR Handbook, in this instance, feels clumsily formulated and unnecessarily open to interpretation. A relationship can be mutually beneficial while in other ways being unhealthy for you, like your job that also stresses you out. We’re not necessarily harming anyone, it’s mutually beneficial, but each member who enters that restaurant with a discount will be representing NA as we live our Eleventh Tradition in our everyday lives. Will our behavior be attractive?

It’s also worth noting that the Sixth Tradition talks specifically about an NA group. But, if we say NA conventions aren’t NA as such and aren’t bound by the traditions, then conventions become a free-for-all. Where do we draw the line? If conventions aren’t NA – only the meetings within them – what standards do we set?

Discussing this with another member, they pointed out that it’s in discussing and thinking about the traditions that they come alive. An old sponsor of mine also once pointed out to me when I was stressing about the outcome of a group conscience meeting that there’s no reason to worry because we always invite God into the room. As a member I can always apply that same trust to the committee meetings, knowing that God is with us all.

Looking at the Sixth Step

I was reading the Sixth Step in our Basic Text for days, continuously. Going through this round of steps I’ve been working steps through the Basic Text with a new sponsor instead of working out of the Step Working Guides. I’m a very notorious overcomplicator and overachiever, but have found myself trying to simplify my program, lately, and through that developing an even closer relationship with our literature. This has led me to take a closer look at a few of the sentences in the Sixth Step.

“Willingness is what we strive for in Step Six.”

Basic Text, Sixth Edition

Of course, the most basic willingness form of willingness we need in the Sixth Step is the willingness to have our defects of character removed. The Sixth Step talks about “when we accept them”, acceptance being the first step on the road to surrender. Surrendering these defects to God, humbly, is what we go on to do in the Seventh Step, but we should be willing. To come to this place of willingness to surrender, we must come to a place of total awareness of these defects, and the effects they’re having on our lives. To me that’s a willingness that’s always enhanced by the writing process.

There’s also the willingness to be honest. We can use the tools of honest self-assessment found in the Fourth and Fifth Step, accessing this willingness to share and be vulnerable with another human being and God that we’ve already practiced. This willingness becomes one with our Third Step decision. The God-centeredness we strive for goes hand in hand with another line found in the Sixth Step: “Step Six helps us move in a spiritual direction.” But it’s important to take into context the paragraph it’s placed in; it’s still all about being human.

“When we are working Step Six, it is important to remember that we are human and should not place unrealistic expectations on ourselves. Step Six helps us move in a spiritual direction. Being human we will wander off course.”

Basic Text, Sixth Edition

As I’m living my Sixth Step, I find my compulsiveness, my constant fearful hurry, to be one of my biggest stumbling blocks. I’ve had a friend tell me that they know they’re in their will when something needs to happen my way and right now. But God never hurries, really. Not the same way we do as humans. And that’s important to remember when we’re looking at the concept of sanity in recovery.

“Selfishness becomes an intolerable, destructive chain that ties us to our bad habits.”

Basic Text, Sixth Edition

This sentence truly stood out to me in a different way the more I read the Sixth Step. The core of our disease is self-obsession. Our focus on our needs, our wants, our musts, our expectations, our will, is what often makes us act out on these character defects; it ties us to them.

“We find ourselves growing into mature consciousness.”

Basic Text, Sixth Edition

What does mature consciousness entail? The quote that came to me as I reflected on it was a sentence from the chapter ‘More Will Be Revealed’: “By shaping our thoughts with spiritual ideals, we are freed to become who we want to be.” God helps shape us, recovery shapes us, and the image of who we want to be shapes us. Maturity is an ability to recognize who we want to be, and how to act accordingly; something we learn to strive for in part through our Sixth Step.

But that leaves us with one big question. Why do we need God to remove them?

Because whenever we ourselves try to be rid of our character defects we layer them. I act self-righteously, so I feel ashamed and start people-pleasing to fix it. I feel scared, so I try to control the situation to make myself feel comfortable. We need divine intervention and a path to follow. To some this is applying spiritual principles but for me, a lot of times, it’s about my internal attitude. I can apply tolerance through my actions, but the intolerance I feel is a very internal stirring, and not something I can directly influence. My understanding of God is my own, but I find myself needing this God’s help for me to truly be changed.

This is also why the Basic Text warns us about something I’ve experienced firsthand: “We may fear that God won’t see fit to relieve us or that something will go wrong.” When we feel this way, as I have before, we’re still in our control and our will. The willingness we strive for is also a willingness to let go of results, to let go of absolutely everything else and to just be willing. Willing to let go, to live a new way of life. I can’t control where God wants to take me, no matter how hard I try. I can only put in the work. So, I do. And so, we do.

Q&A: Two members’ experience with writing and compiling our Basic Text

After coming to NA, we found ourselves among a very special group of people who have suffered like us and found recovery. In their experiences, freely shared, we found hope for ourselves.

Basic Text, Chapter 2, ‘What Is the Narcotics Anonymous Program?’

How long were you clean for when you participated in this endeavor?

Pete B: I had just gotten back from my only relapse, which happened after my original 3 weeks clean and lasted for a weekend. I came back to my Homegroup in Bucks County, Pa, and my friend George R. suggested I get more involved in the program. There were 2 weekly meetings in Hulmeville, about a mile from where I lived. The Sat night needed a coffeemaker, so took on that commitment. Sunday Steppers needed a Secretary, and I was willing and could type, so I took that one, as well. My first group conscience meeting, about a week later, that group decided to begin writing its own steps & traditions to be able to use NA literature (defined as anything written by addicts for addicts for the purpose of recovery). I was the group’s secretary and typist, so I typed it up and edited it for use in our meetings. So I had about 2 weeks clean when I started that activity. We met up with many on the World Literature Committee at the 1st East Coast Convention, after which I got involved in many more of the activities of the World Luterzture Committee. I had about 100 days clean then. Most of my free time, when I wasn’t working or going to a meeting, was spent working on the Basic Text project. I lived ate and breathed it for the next 2 years. When we hosted the 7th World Literature Conference in our house (George R. had just moved out, and Al R. still lived there with me), I had a year and 10 months clean. At that conference I was elected Vice Chair of the World Literature Committee, shortly after Page C. was elected chair. I was still in that role a few months later when the fellowship approved the Basic Text at the World Service Conference. We had a book! I stayed involved with world lit., and began working in earnest on the History of NA, which I did for the next 2 years, hosting history workshops at the World Convention in Milwaukee in 1982 and the world convention in NYC in ‘83. I also conducted these workshops at several other conventions, including the 2nd Volunteer Region convention in 1983 in Tennessee (there’s still a tape floating around from that workshop). In November, 1983, at the 9th World Literature Conference in Jameson, Pa, I was asked to serve as Secretary of World Lit. I did that for a few months, but was so “crisp around the edges” by then I had to step away from that level of service to pursue an opportunity I had to actually go through the 12 steps with a sponsor who had experienced all 12. By then, I desperately needed that experience, and felt that my work with World Lit was done for the time being. It was – but then I got to actually recover, which was brilliant. Very grateful for how it all played out. I think that pretty much answered the first question. I was just shy of 4 years clean when I stepped away from the literature work to begin my own journey through the 12 steps.

Marc B: I became involved in Lit ‘stuff’ well before the Text was seriously envisioned. I got to do some work on the Atlanta area newsletter, Rainbow Connection, not long after I found NA, in Oct ‘79. I can’t remember exactly when that happened, though. We started a newsletter in Ohio, also, I got heavily involved in that, with Jim Miller and some other Ohio NA ‘pioneers’. I got clean in Feb ‘79, so, it didn’t take long, probably around a year or so, clean.

Why did you decide to get involved?

Pete B: When my group decided, in group conscience, to begin writing steps and traditions. I was the group’s secretary and the only one with typing and editing skills. During those first couple years, the only times I felt calm and like I was okay was when I was doing that work. The rest of the time, my life was pretty much a shit-show. So it was a no-brainer, for me, to continue doing that work. It was my lifeline.

Marc B: I got involved in Literature stuff, because I realized that communication was the essence of that ‘one addict helping another’- and the printed word was the best venue to carry that message, without being face-to-face with someone seeking recovery. My first encounter with NA Lit was the initial 6 IPs and the LWB, and I was amazed at how direct and simple, those were. I also recognised the universality of the message, and how it was conveyed. When the ‘rumblings’ of developing our own ‘Big Book’-type of Literature, and the obvious need for further IP development became more widespread, I felt committed to that endeavour. I do feel that the level of commitment is directly proportional to one’s ability to actually recover, that is just my own personal observation and experience.

Which part of the text was the most difficult to put together?

Pete B: It wasn’t a specific part of the text. The most difficult part of the whole process was having to start from scratch after 4 world literature conferences and countless thousands of hours of work had gone into the draft of the text that came out of the 4th WLC in Santa Monica, Ca. There were a number of forces, the “old guard” of NA, who felt threatened by the work we were doing. They thought World Lit was making a power move or something. We were just trying to get the book done and out into the hands of addicts so they wouldn’t have to keep dying without knowing there was a way out. But, someone out there actually stole the manuscript – everything that had been worked on up to that point. It just disappeared. I learned about this when Al R. and I arrived in Warren, Ohio for the 5th World Literature Conference there. We just dug in and worked out tails off, ‘round the clock for 8 days straight, very little sleep involved, lots of rocket-fuel grade strong coffee, and a bank of IBM correcting selectric typewriters – first time I ever even saw an electric typewriter, but I got intimately involved with one that whole week. My fingers were practically bleeding at one point, but I didn’t care – we were determined to get that work done. After all our efforts in Warren, and then in Miami a few months later, we had an Approval Form ready to send out to the entire fellowship before the end of 1981 – a pretty remarkable comeback, after having to start over from scratch in June of that year. That was the most difficult time, in my memory.

Marc B: In my opinion, based on the process and the outcome and the consequences thereof, the Traditions portion. I am always impressed, and dismayed, that the only thing that drew enough ire and interest, to warrant altering the approved Text, was those changes to the Tradition essays. No pushback on ‘god versus higher power’, no turmoil about gender terms, no need to argue about specific drug use, just the absolute need to change the portions of the Traditions, that addressed service committee’s responsibilities and accountability, and group autonomy within the. Those changes led to the controversies and divisions within our Fellowship, since then and ongoing. I do believe our Text, and Literature overall, is dynamic, and needs to be updated and revised at certain points. We, collectively, have grown and obtained more knowledge and insight, regarding ‘what works’, and more importantly, what doesn’t work. 

Do you have a funny story about the literature process you’d like to share?

Pete B: Maybe not funny, per se, but one of those moments where I laughed in disbelief and knew there were greater forces than us helping us out, despite some of the dark forces from within the fellowship that we seemed to be contending with. In the spring 1983, I’d been working on the history for about a year, and learned a ton about the NA that existed before NA as we know it started in 1953. I wasn’t really looking for that information, but it kept finding its way to me. The one instance of that that really stands out in my memory – me and this girl I was seeing at the time we’re driving out to spend the weekend at Larry No’s cabin in West Virginia. He’d invited us out there. We’d stopped in Winchester, Virginia, for lunch, and came across this used book store. As we were browsing through the books there, I was looking for this one old book on low-blood sugar that I’d heard had a reference to early NA in it. I hadn’t been able to find that book anywhere, though I knew from my research that it existed. We hadn’t said anything about the book while we were in there, but this old guy, who presumably worked there, came up to me, reached up on the top of this shelf behind me, pulled down a book and handed it to me, with a gleam in his eye, and said “here, you might need this one.” It was the book I’d been searching for for months. The girl and I looked at each other, and it was like the theme from the twilight zone was playing in the background somewhere. I still get chills down my spine just thinking about that incident. I think I might still have that book.

Marc B: There are several and rides and stories from the activities during that process. My favourite is the one of me, Jim Miller and May Kay W., working on the chapter ‘Just for Today’, and editing it down to an IP, during an all-night review and rewrite session. The committee decided to rework it back into a complete chapter, but retain the IP as a valid piece of work. Charles K., declaring ‘Work the Steps or Die, motherfucker’, became a rallying cry, taunt, definitive statement, and tenet, not just for the ‘Literature Movement’, but the Fellowship, overall. 

Why is the paragraph “Higher mental and emotions, such as conscience and the ability to love, were sharply affected by our drug use…” from the chapter ‘Who Is An Addict?’ repeated in the chapter ‘More Will Be Revealed’?

Pete B: I can’t really tell you why that statement wound up in both “Who Is An Addict”, and More Will Be Revealed. I guess it just fit both narratives. I didn’t work directly on the final edits of “Who is an Addict”, but the Phila Lit Committee that I was a part of did the final edit of More Will Be Revealed, the version of that that went into the Memphis Review Form (aka Gray Book). Oh, yeah; there’s kind of a funny story about that chapter. We had worked on Chapter 8 in the Bristol Lit Committee in Bucks County, and Phila had worked on Chapter 10. George R. chaired both committees and I typed everything up from both. George went to Memphis for WLC3 – I couldn’t go as I was desperately trying to hold onto a job. We were both living in Ivyland at the time. George called me when he got there and said, “Pete, I’m going to need you to come down here.” I told him I simply couldn’t, out of the question – “Why?” I asked. “I left chapter 10 on my bedside table, where I was reading it over last night. I need you to get it to me, somehow.” I promised I would get it to him. Fedex and UPS couldn’t get it there next day by then – it was too late in the day. So I drove out to Philadelphia airport, found a late flight to Memphis, found an honest looking passenger who was willing to take a package from a complete stranger (me) and deliver it to another complete stranger (George) in Memphis. That’s how chapter 10 got into the gray book. Our work in Phila Lit was thorough, and they didn’t make any other changes to it. And I didn’t need to spend 20 hours driving to Memphis to get it there.

Marc B: I’m not sure why that ‘passage’ got repeated, but it does fit well, in those places. Perhaps an elaboration on the ideas presented could be done in a future revision. I’m convinced that nothing that went into the process- whether that is the Gray Book product, the writing and compilation that occurred prior to the Grey Book creation, the Basic Text process- from beginning to ‘end’, the IP developments- was superfluous, or irrelevant. Everything had, and still has, a purpose, which is that simple, but vital, task, of carrying our message of recovery. I can only hope that future generations of members can revise our Literature with the focus on what our collective experience is. Our disease is universal, we all suffer the same result, the differences are relatively ephemeral- different ‘time lines’, different places and situations, but the ultimate ‘jails, institutions, and death’ are the harsh reality of our unchecked disease. Our recovery affords a life free from those destinations, and allows us to live a life worth living, we do recover- as our collective experiences demonstrate. We should focus on that, and avoid the outside influences of money, property, prestige, and also that of allowing compromise on our basic message of abstinence and reintegration with the society we have been estranged, removed or in conflict with, during our active addiction. The Steps lead us on that path, from desperate loners to productive members of the society. That will look different, to different people, in different places, and times, but the message is clear and simple and attainable, if we follow the path that has been defined for us, and the experience of those who came before can help us to understand and achieve that.

Do you feel participating in the literature process affected your recovery? How?

Pete B: Working on the Basic Text had a profound impact on my recovery. It kept me clean those first two years – I don’t know if I would’ve stayed clean otherwise. Sometimes, I felt like I was being given an unfair advantage, as I got to read many of the words that went into it in their rawest form, as input that came in all shapes and sizes, written on all kinds of material. I would type it up, it would go get cut and pasted in workshops until it turned into what would be the words of the Basic Text, and I got to type it a number of times in its various forms. Those words spoke to me as I typed them. They got into my psyche, which was still bedeviled by a lot of insane thoughts and crazy notions, but those words were far more powerful than my crazy thoughts. I knew those words would save me, and save many more addicts who didn’t even know they were addicts yet, just like I didn’t know until my first NA meeting. There was a very powerful force behind the creation of that book, and I got to be a part of that force for over 2 years. I knew that I had been blessed to be in the right place at the right time with the rights set of skills to be an active participant in that process. There’s a line from a song by Paul Simon, called Duncan, where he says “I was playing my guitar lying underneath the stars just thanking the lord for my fingers – for my fingers.” That line gets me every time – I felt like my fingers allowed me to participate in something I probably wouldn’t have, otherwise. My social skills were so burnt out early on, I couldn’t really be part of a lot of the other work going on – I had a real bad case of social anxiety then – but, safe behind a typewriter, I could contribute. Thank God for my typing skills!

Marc B: The involvement in the Lit process, had me make a deeper commitment to recovery. I’ve often said that once I decided to put all my ‘eggs’ in the NA basket, I had a vested interest in how well that ‘basket’ got handled. I understood the value of the printed word, and that was an integral part of the process of recovery, at least in my observation. I had already seen the lunacy of trying to be in control of every aspect of my life, and also trying to be a diverse as possible. Once I surrendered to the fact I had to focus on my recovery, in order to live any sort of meaningful life, that allowed me to let go of the reservations and manipulations. I also made many mistakes, bad decisions, selfish choices, and created a lot of turmoil and discord, not necessarily always intentional, but always with repercussions. Once I committed to NA recovery, the need to restore the damage from the aforementioned disease-driven wreckage, had me utilising the Steps to recover from my disease and ‘right those wrongs’. I am a firm believer that an addict, seeking recovery, can demand conditions, for their unconditional surrender- that means complete abstinence, making a self-assessment, acting upon the results of that assay, making the corrections indicates and pursuing a life in the ‘real world’- and repeating that process as often as needed or indicated. There is no ‘The End’ after the Steps, no diploma or gold-leaf engraved certificate of completion. It’s simply ‘work the Steps, or die, motherfucker!’, or as some of us altered that pearl of wisdom- ‘work the Steps, and live, motherfucker!’.

What do you feel is the most important thing for people to keep in mind about our Basic Text?

Pete B: Most important thing for people to remember about our Basic Text?  As important as that text is, and it truly is, nothing is more important for that newcomer at their very first meeting than your own experience, strength and hope, in your own words. Don’t quote the basic text to them. They don’t even know what it is. I didn’t want someone quoting a book at me when I was new. When George reached out to me in my first meeting , all I knew was this cat was for real, he kindly reached out to me, he was willing to listen to me, and he shared the truth from his own experience. That got me to come back. The book is important, but to the newcomer – You Are the Book. Be authentic and honest and just be yourself. Later, they can read the book, but at first, they might not even be able to read.  So – Be the Book. Bring it to life. Live it. I hope that helps.

Marc B: The most important thing about our Literature, is to read it, and comprehend it. I don’t think there is any more succinct and direct statement I can make, about Literature. We crafted it, to be the way to carry our message, to anyone, anywhere, and that is true now, and will be for as long as I can see. Once one reads it, it should change them, if it doesn’t initially, they should read it again, and again, until it does. And then, read it again. A few more times.

A huge thank you to Pete B and Marc B for your gracious participation and contributions.

A cured addict?

As a recovering addict who’s moved to a country where going to treatment is free, there seems to be more of a desire to live drug free lives free of an NA program than I’ve seen in other groups before. It appears to me that there’s an active culture of coming to meetings but never actually working a program, and moreover, many people stop going to Narcotics Anonymous or working a program once they start feeling good. Although it’s something that happens worldwide, I’ve personally never seen it affect the culture of meetings to this extent before.

I’ve struggled understanding the phenomena of stopping when it’s working. To gain understanding I’ve previously looked at it as a part of the self-destructive nature of our disease; “Any form of success was frightening and unfamiliar”, as cited from chapter three of our Basic Text. But I was just recently discussing this with another addict who gave me a new perspective on what I’d previously seen as just a self-defeating aspect of the nature of our disease. This addict suggested to me that it actually seems to be more of a reservation; the desire to live a ‘normal’ life. This ‘normal life’ free of needing what arrests our disease would let us go to work, study, have healthy relationships, a family, the car, without needing to put in work for it. In this reservation-shaped fantasy we wouldn’t need to surrender daily, to work on our recovery daily, but the good feelings would just naturally sustain themselves without effort. Although all reservations are self-defeating, this does look more like a reservation than just a manifestation of our self-defeating character. If we aren’t fully willing to accept what we need for our disease to be arrested, we’re not fully willing to accept our disease. We’re looking at the symptom of our disease – using drugs – as the problem, not us.

Treatment centers and the ‘cured’ addict

Now, knowing myself, to be fully honest about my defects of character; I’m resistant to treatment centers, and have my own preconceived notions and judgments. It’s hard for an addict not to. I’m sure it works for people and I’m really happy it does, it’s just not a part of my experience in recovery. Largely because it isn’t, I struggle with the idea of addicts coming to the Fellowship getting confused about institutions being necessary or even the way to get clean and find a new way of life, or getting confused about NA and institutions somehow being affiliated with each other, as our 6th tradition couldn’t speak against any stronger.

In my experience, reflecting on the addicts who stop coming to NA when they start feeling good, the ones I’ve seen go through this process are addicts who’ve gone to treatment centers. I do want to say I don’t believe this reservation only comes up for addicts who’ve gone to treatment, I’m solely basing this on my experience. But it does beg the question… Does the setup of treatment centers suggest addicts can be cured?

I don’t know what addicts are taught in treatment centers outside of what’s been told to me by some, but the natural setup of a closed institution where you spend a set amount of time sets you up to believe that your problems can be solved during your stay. I believe the natural setup of this brings about an attitude and belief around the symptom of our disease, using drugs, being our actual disease and actual problem. If addicts aren’t taught what the disease actually is, it also makes reservations about what being an addict actually entails more natural to lapse into. I do know that a lot of treatment centers make addicts refer to themselves not as addicts but in terms of the liquid drug or the narcotics, putting a lot of focus on the symptom instead of the real problem. The spiritual nature of our disease also seems to get lost in treatment center conversations. And if we don’t treat a spiritual disease on a spiritual level, the solution isn’t really the full solution, and surrender becomes more of a conditional, place-based act than an unconditional attitude.

An aspect of our spiritual condition as we’re taught in the program is also keeping what we have by giving it away. For those only acquainted with treatment, the spiritual practice of this principle isn’t integrated into any kind of daily program. Many stay in our Fellowship partially to give back what they’ve received; and if you don’t perceive you got what you needed from NA, you won’t see a need to give it back. The spiritual rewards of giving back will also remain foreign to those who are unable or unwilling to open their minds to a spiritual solution, which further causes one to believe that the solution is just to stop using, not changing our actions, attitudes and lives on a deeper level.

The solution?

We don’t want addicts leaving when they feel good. We offer a proven way to live a new way of life, and there’s no set amount of time on living. Addiction can never be cured because it’s not about the use of drugs, but it can be arrested on a daily basis if we have the willingness to live the program.

I don’t believe there’s a clear-cut solution to this problem. We can’t force an addict to recover and to stay in NA, as our experience and the program tells us. What we can do is make our message clear in meetings, and make sure to pay attention to the newcomer and make ourselves available; we can show them what it’s all about. We should love and cherish every addict as a spiritual extension of ourselves and look at carrying a clear Narcotics Anonymous message as an act of love. We don’t want to lose anyone to outside ideas or their own reservations. Our own experience of the program, shared, is effective. I’ve also found meetings focused on the 6th tradition to be effective in these scenarios.  

If we let our message become lost in the whirlwind of treatment center arrivals, we’re doing everyone a disservice. I don’t believe we’ll ever see the day a fully cured addict knocks on our door, but we can make sure to keep our program clear and available for those who are willing to join us. If we reach out our hands, God will do the rest; whatever that looks like.