• Are we setting people up by overselling 12-step recovery? (bhpalmbeach.com)
  • 12-Step recovery programs have become an integral aspect of maintaining sobriety post-addiction. (drugabuse.com)
  • 6 Once an individual has dedicated themselves to the process, they will begin working the 12-Step philosophy to maintain sobriety. (drugabuse.com)
  • As the AA website notes [2] , "Both men immediately set to work with alcoholics at Akron's City Hospital, where one patient quickly achieved complete sobriety. (cornerstoneofrecovery.com)
  • During its first decade, the members of Alcoholics Anonymous couldn't conceive of their newfound sobriety as anything more than a personal solution to their own alcoholic dilemmas - in other words, no one had any expectations that AA would grow into a worldwide organization with more than 2 million members in 180 countries, according to Time magazine [3] . (cornerstoneofrecovery.com)
  • AA was well established by the 1950's and growing in popularity for its success with helping alcoholics achieve sobriety. (12steprecovery.com)
  • AA's primary purpose is to help alcoholics to achieve sobriety. (aa-louisiana.org)
  • Members use the Twelve Steps to maintain sobriety. (aa-louisiana.org)
  • We know our own sobriety depends on connecting with other alcoholics. (aa-louisiana.org)
  • The steps are a path to sobriety, and the traditions comprise the structure of the program to protect its primary purpose: to promote the sobriety of the members of Alcoholics Anonymous. (alcoholicsanonymous.com)
  • It reminds the AA members that they are part of a larger fellowship that shares a common goal: stay sober and help other alcoholics achieve sobriety. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • I've heard several people involved in Twelve Step work say that the Twelve Steps are AA's gift to the Church, and that the Twelve Traditions are the Church's gift back to AA. (ministrymatters.com)
  • AA's Twelve Steps are a set of spiritual principles. (aa-louisiana.org)
  • These traditions aren't rules or laws but suggestions for practicing AA's primary purpose and principles in all aspects of life. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • It is clear by his own words that Wilson, who wrote the 12 Steps, AA's "Big Book" titled Alcoholics Anonymous , and Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions , was not a Christian. (pamweb.org)
  • As it was completed, Cheever continues, it was circulated among various members of AA, including veteran journalists, who made edits that tempered any overtly religious language and shaped the Twelve Steps into what would be published in 1939 as "Alcoholics Anonymous," also known as the Big Book. (cornerstoneofrecovery.com)
  • First published in 1939, its purpose was to show other alcoholics how the first 100 people of A.A. got sober. (aanoc.org)
  • The readings at various 12 Step recovery meetings are plentiful, regardless of the fellowship - but newcomers often listen to one of the longest and find themselves asking, "What are the Twelve Traditions? (cornerstoneofrecovery.com)
  • In addition, Cocaine Anonymous publishes its own text, Hope, Faith and Courage: Stories from the Fellowship of Cocaine Anonymous. (recovery.org)
  • Narcotics Anonymous is a worldwide fellowship of addicts who meet regularly to help each other stay clean. (12steprecovery.com)
  • In the 1990's a small group of Iranian addicts returned to Iran from California and established what could be the largest Fellowship outside of North America, with over two thousand groups holding eighteen thousand weekly meetings (as of 2012). (12steprecovery.com)
  • Alcoholics Anonymous is a fellowship of people who come together to solve their drinking problem. (aa-louisiana.org)
  • The recovering alcoholic attends AA meetings and is mentored by other members of the fellowship who have practiced the Twelve Steps and applied the AA principles to their own lives. (aanoc.org)
  • If you are new to Alcoholics Anonymous, here are some links and literature that will help you take advantage of all the A.A. Fellowship has to offer. (aanoc.org)
  • First published in April 1953, Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions was written by Bill W., with the benefit of hindsight and experience, to offer an explicit view of the principles by which A.A. members recover and by which their Fellowship functions. (philosophy-question.com)
  • We welcome you to the __________ Al-Anon Family Group Meeting, and hope you will find in this fellowship the help and friendship we have been privileged to enjoy. (google.com)
  • The Al-Anon Family Groups are a fellowship of relatives and friends of alcoholics who share their experience, strength and hope in order to solve their common problems. (google.com)
  • The Alcoholics Anonymous philosophy centers around community with others. (drugabuse.com)
  • The groups can also cooperate with other groups and AA service centers through voluntary contributions, participation in service committees, etc., but without giving up their autonomy or identity. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • To this end, no AA group should lend their name or endorsement to any related facilities, such as treatment centers, hospitals, clubs, etc., even if they serve alcoholics. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • 8. Cocaine Anonymous should remain forever nonprofessional, but our service centers may employ special workers. (caarizona.org)
  • 8. Alcoholics Anonymous should remain forever nonprofessional, but our service centers may employ special workers. (caarizona.org)
  • The two books primarily used are called Alcoholics Anonymous (the "Big Book ") and Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, explaining AA"s fundamental principles. (cnn.com)
  • This is an Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) text, but the two programs share the same core beliefs and principles. (recovery.org)
  • Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions explains the 24 basic principles of Alcoholics Anonymous. (aanoc.org)
  • Chapters provide an interpretation of these principles for personal recovery and the organization of the group. (aanoc.org)
  • As you could have thought, the Victorville, California 12-step program includes in itself 12 different spiritual principles and standards that ought to be used by various support groups to help its members overcome their issues. (pathwaytorecovery.com)
  • As you could have thought, the High Point, North Carolina 12-step program consists of in itself 12 different spiritual principles and standards that need to be used by various support groups to help its members conquer their issues. (pathwaytorecovery.com)
  • 12. Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these steps, we tried to carry this message to addicts, and to practice these principles in all our affairs. (caarizona.org)
  • 12. Anonymity is the spiritual foundation of all our Traditions, ever reminding us to place principles before personalities. (caarizona.org)
  • Although the 12 steps are based on spiritual principles, many non-religious people have found the program immensely useful. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • Cocaine Anonymous is a 12-Step recovery program designed to help those facing current or past addiction to substances such as cocaine and speed, and all other drugs. (recovery.org)
  • While Cocaine Anonymous is not affiliated with Alcoholics Anonymous , the organization uses the AA text, Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions. (recovery.org)
  • The 12 steps of Cocaine Anonymous are the same as those of Alcoholics Anonymous, but Cocaine Anonymous chooses to focus specifically on applying the steps to addiction to cocaine and other similar narcotics . (recovery.org)
  • The motto of Cocaine Anonymous is "Hope, faith and courage," something that many cocaine addicts can relate to well. (recovery.org)
  • The 12-step program has actually become quite popular these days amongst people with some dependency problems, and although originally it was produced by Alcoholics Anonymous for individuals with alcoholic abuse as a progressive health problem, the 12-step program in Victorville, CA that we now understand is used more widely within various substance abuse recovery groups, Narcotics Anonymous or Cocaine Anonymous for individuals with illicit drug use problems, and others. (pathwaytorecovery.com)
  • There are many 12-step programs for a variety of addictions and compulsive behaviors, ranging from Cocaine Anonymous to Debtors Anonymous, all with the same 12-step methods. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • Clutterers Anonymous replaces "powerless over alcohol" in the First Step of the Twelve Steps originally developed by Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) with "powerless over our clutter. (wikipedia.org)
  • 3 For those struggling with substance use disorders (SUDs), peer drug and alcohol support groups can provide advice on coping skills and addiction treatment . (drugabuse.com)
  • If you or a loved one is struggling with alcohol misuse, you may be wondering, is Alcoholics Anonymous free? (alcoholicsanonymous.com)
  • The path of recovery through the 12 Steps supports you in recovering from alcohol misuse and gives hope where hope didn't exist before. (alcoholicsanonymous.com)
  • This also implies that each group should avoid getting involved in other issues or causes unrelated to its primary purpose, such as politics, religion, or social or alcohol reform. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • Step 1 in AA and Al-Anon Programs Is Honesty "We admitted we were powerless over alcohol-that our lives had become unmanageable. (philosophy-question.com)
  • After many years of denial, recovery can begin when with one simple admission of being powerless over alcohol-for alcoholics and their friends and family.Step 2: Faith. (philosophy-question.com)
  • What Are the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous?Step 1: We admitted we were powerless over alcohol-that our lives had become unmanageable.Step 2: Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity. (philosophy-question.com)
  • Explains how substance abuse treatment works, how family interventions can be a first step toward recovery, and how to help children in families affected by alcohol and drug abuse. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • The 12 Steps were created by the founders of Alcoholics Anonymous to establish guidelines for overcoming an alcohol addiction. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • The 12th and final step is to use the spiritual awakening gained from the other steps to help other addicts and maintain a newfound state of health and freedom from addiction in daily life. (recovery.org)
  • The Twelve Traditions, on the other hand, have to do with how those groups of recovering addicts govern themselves. (ministrymatters.com)
  • In 1953 a group of addicts met and an established Narcotics Anonymous as it exists today, with a single group holding regular meetings in Southern California. (12steprecovery.com)
  • It is sad that countless addicts and alcoholics have rejected 12 Step recovery because the G_d word is up on the wall and included in prayers and literature. (enableelearn.com)
  • 12-Step programs were developed as a mutual aid effort to provide community-based resources to people who are recovering from addiction . (drugabuse.com)
  • The first step in the program requires participants to admit they are powerless over their addiction and their lives have become unmanageable. (recovery.org)
  • The fifth step is admitting to a higher power, oneself and others the specific acts of wrongdoing that resulted from the addiction. (recovery.org)
  • In the eighth step, the addict must make a list of all the people harmed by their addiction and become willing to make amends. (recovery.org)
  • The ninth step builds on the eighth step by requiring the person to go out and actively make amends with the people their addiction has harmed, as long as doing so would not cause them more harm. (recovery.org)
  • To clarify, the Twelve Steps are tools an individual uses to help them find recovery in dealing with an addiction. (ministrymatters.com)
  • Step one prescribes that 'we are powerless over our addiction' and takes the focus away from substances. (12steprecovery.com)
  • Additionally, if you have a loved one with an addiction, you can participate in 12-Step programs such as Al-Anon or Alateen, also free of charge. (alcoholicsanonymous.com)
  • 7 The 12 Steps of AA are a spiritual solution that aids in healing from addiction, as well as recovery from the struggles that led to addiction in the first place. (alcoholicsanonymous.com)
  • The twelve traditions define the main objective of each AA group this way: to share the experience, strength, and hope of recovery with other alcoholics who are still struggling with their addiction. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • The program was successful enough in its early years for other addiction support groups to adapt the steps to their specific substance or addictive behavior. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • At a minimum, the 12-step model provides support, encouragement and responsibility to people who truly want to overcome their addiction. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • Are you interested in finding a 12-step program that can help you overcome your addiction? (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • Narcotics Anonymous meetings usually include readings such as "Who Is an Addict? (cornerstoneofrecovery.com)
  • The birth of Narcotics Anonymous has been recorded as October 5, 1953. (12steprecovery.com)
  • Minor changes to Alcoholic Anonymous 's twelve steps and twelve traditions resulted in Narcotics Anonymous being a much different program than AA. (12steprecovery.com)
  • By the 1970's, Narcotics Anonymous was an estimated 200 meetings worldwide in 3 countries. (12steprecovery.com)
  • Narcotics Anonymous coined the term "one is too many, a thousand is never enough," when referencing how the craving can take over. (enableelearn.com)
  • Using the tenets of the Oxford Group, a Christian organization that was a precursor to AA, Wilson "began writing," according to Susan Cheever, a columnist for The Fix and author of the Wilson biography "My Name Is Bill": "'I relaxed and asked for guidance,' he recalled later. (cornerstoneofrecovery.com)
  • This tradition protects the Alcoholics Anonymous program from being associated with or influenced by any external organization or institution that may have ulterior motives or agendas. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • Due to the anonymity of the program and the lack of formal research available, it is difficult to say how effective the 12-step model is. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) originated the idea for the 12-Step model in 1938, when founder Bill Wilson wrote out the ideas that had been developing through his experience with and vision of alcoholism. (philosophy-question.com)
  • At some meetings, CLA members read directly from both books and may replace the word "alcoholic" with "clutterer. (wikipedia.org)
  • It has become a worldwide movement spread out with over 100,000 groups with 2 million members in 150 countries. (cnn.com)
  • 5 Many members maintain atheism and work the steps, viewing their higher power as a way to get back in touch with themselves. (drugabuse.com)
  • Both fellowships, and a number of others, emphasize the importance of the Twelve Steps … and likewise the Twelve Traditions, but by the time those are read aloud, many newcomers (and quite a few experienced members) are impatiently looking at their watches (or phones), ready for the meeting to get fully under way. (cornerstoneofrecovery.com)
  • The Cleveland group of only twenty members was deluged by countless pleas for help. (cornerstoneofrecovery.com)
  • The program is based on a twelve-step model of recovery and members can maintain unity of purpose by applying twelve traditions to their groups. (12steprecovery.com)
  • Tradition three dictates that members must have a 'desire to stop using', indicating the incurable nature of the disease and helping members remain vigilant in their recovery. (12steprecovery.com)
  • Who Are the Members of Alcoholics Anonymous? (alcoholicsanonymous.com)
  • These twelve traditions are based on the experience of the early AA members who learned from their mistakes and successes. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • This tradition recognizes that any AA group is guided by a higher power, which different members can understand differently. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • Afterward, different members of the meeting read brief AA literature, "How It Works," the "Twelve Traditions" and "The Promises. (philosophy-question.com)
  • However, most 12-step programs, including those for people addicted to drugs, encourage new members to commit to those 90 meetings in 90 days. (philosophy-question.com)
  • The 12 Traditions speak to members of Alcoholics Anonymous as a group, unlike the 12 Steps, which focus on the individual. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • Some meetings take the form of study sessions, during which members take turns reading from the Big Book , or The Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions(3), and responding. (bvsalud.org)
  • A sponsor, generally someone who has already worked the 12 steps of Alcoholics Anonymous, serves as a guide or mentor to newer members, and beyond. (bvsalud.org)
  • By completing a "fearless and thorough moral inventory" (Step 4), sharing this inventory with another human being (Step 5), making a list of all persons they have harmed (Step 8), and making amends (Step 9), members are actively engaged in new behaviors that can lead to increasingly honest and healthy relationships with themselves, a "higher power," and others. (bvsalud.org)
  • We have a Step 12 opportunity available for any District 19 members who choose to participate. (southvalleyalanon.org)
  • The CLA-approved literature includes the two fundamental texts of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), Alcoholics Anonymous (the so-called "Big Book") and the Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions eight CLA-specific leaflets, and a 28-page booklet, "Is CLA for You? (wikipedia.org)
  • More information about the 12-Step philosophy can be found in the Big Book . (recovery.org)
  • The book Alcoholics Anonymous describes the AA program of recovery. (aa-louisiana.org)
  • The recovering alcoholic is also guided by the program, the Big Book, the Twelve Steps and their instructions. (aanoc.org)
  • Alcoholics Anonymous, also known as the "Big Book," presents the A.A. program for recovery from alcoholism. (aanoc.org)
  • See our book 12 Steps to Destruction . (pamweb.org)
  • That will be lifted if you correctly follow the twelve steps in the book. (enableelearn.com)
  • Traditions are defined in the Big Book, the main governing literature of Alcoholics Anonymous. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • One chapter in the Big Book is dedicated to "Working with Others," and begins with the statement, "Practical experience shows that nothing will so much insure immunity from drinking as intensive work with other alcoholics"(2). (bvsalud.org)
  • So if you are interested in learning more about the 12-step programs in Victorville, California and how they could be carried out in your own treatment programs, then you may want to continue reading this short article! (pathwaytorecovery.com)
  • Clutterers Anonymous (CLA) is a twelve-step program for people who share a common problem with accumulation of clutter. (wikipedia.org)
  • 1 A 12-Step program helps establish routine, offers support and resources, and can be an effective addition to a person's treatment plan. (drugabuse.com)
  • Please read on to learn more about what a 12-Step program is, how they work, what the 12 Steps are, and the different types of 12-Step programs available. (drugabuse.com)
  • What Is a 12-Step Program? (drugabuse.com)
  • How Does a 12-Step Program Work? (drugabuse.com)
  • The first and most difficult aspect of a 12-Step program is admitting that you have a problem. (drugabuse.com)
  • The traditions grant each group the right to manage its affairs as long as it does not harm other groups or the AA program in general. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • The Twelve Steps are reprinted and adapted with permission of Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc. Permission to reprint and adapt the Twelve Steps does not mean AA is affiliated with this program. (caarizona.org)
  • The Al-Anon program is based on the suggested Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous, which we try, little by little, one day at a time, to apply to our lives along with our slogans and the Serenity Prayer. (google.com)
  • Steps 1, 2 and 3 are considered the basis of a 12-step program and it is recommended to practice every day. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • Anonymous is dedicated to "How it Works"(2), clinicians and researchers strive to identify mechanisms of action that can help explain the effectiveness of this mutual help program. (bvsalud.org)
  • The purpose of this brief article is to draw parallels and to provide specific, selected examples of how these therapeutic factors may express themselves in the "spiritual program of action"(2) that is Alcoholics Anonymous. (bvsalud.org)
  • Al-Anon's program of recovery is adapted from the Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions of Alcoholics Anonymous. (southvalleyalanon.org)
  • By maintaining unity, AA groups can provide a safe and supportive environment for personal recovery. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • Our Three Legacies are Recovery through the steps, Unity through the traditions, and Service through the concepts. (google.com)
  • A founding member, Jimmy Kinnon, received permission around September 1953 to adapt the twelve steps and twelve traditions from the Alcoholics Anonymous head office for this new group. (12steprecovery.com)
  • Meetings are informal such as the one started in Paris in 1960 at the American Church at 65 quai dÕOrsay for English speakers such as the US military which led to the first French speaking group 50 years ago in the same room (photo). (cnn.com)
  • There are tens of thousands of groups who meet regularly and facilitate regularly scheduled meetings worldwide. (12steprecovery.com)
  • Buoyed by the early successes of the group, other groups soon formed, and regular meetings started to happen. (12steprecovery.com)
  • By the 1980's, the number of groups was over a thousand with many meetings offered weekly. (12steprecovery.com)
  • It is not acceptable at meetings for anyone to preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ, that He is "the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me" (John 14:6) and that "there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved" (Acts 4:12). (pamweb.org)
  • It is also reported that the Bible was read during the early meetings of AA.3 However, again this does not say that AA was founded on Christianity but rather that it followed the format of the Oxford Group. (pamweb.org)
  • How does a group that began in Ohio vowing to 'never be organized,' wind up with eight English speaking meetings in Sophia, the capital of Bulgaria? (bhpalmbeach.com)
  • In 12 step meetings, Individuals who are at their first meeting or have less than 30 days of recovery may be welcomed with a hug and awarded "keep coming back" or "24 hour" coins, AA tokens, or AA chips. (philosophy-question.com)
  • In the 1930's, there were a group of individuals known as the Oxford Group who believed that a spiritual solution existed for alcoholics. (12steprecovery.com)
  • They are considered the spiritual foundation supporting the twelve steps of AA. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • This is not a dictatorship or a majority rule but a spiritual process that seeks the best solution for the group. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • These seances could have been as important to the development of AA as the other spiritual activities, such as the Oxford Group and their questionable form of meditation.2 (See our critique of the Oxford Group in 12 Steps to Destruction , pp. 100-106. (pamweb.org)
  • Only once we open the spiritual channels and begin to accept a Higher Power into our lives can we hope to find a solution to our alcoholic condition. (enableelearn.com)
  • Without such spiritual help living with an alcoholic is too much for most of us. (google.com)
  • Once you are ready, move all of your knowledge and experience to other people with substance abuse problems and, naturally, continue to practice the concepts of 12-step programs throughout your life, as your personal recovery depends upon them. (pathwaytorecovery.com)
  • The leaders of an AA group are not bosses or rulers but trusted servants who carry out the group's decisions and serve its needs. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • It also respects the individual's freedom to choose whether or not to join any AA group and whether or not to follow the twelve steps. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • Maybe the better question is why do people with a chronic, addictive disease seem to benefit from lifelong attendance at a support group like AA? (bhpalmbeach.com)
  • I have known some people in recovery from an addictive disease who have paid for an intensive group and individual and group therapy for a long time and have remained abstinent. (bhpalmbeach.com)
  • In 1970, Irvin Yalom first published The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy , in which he listed 11 "curative factors" of group therapy, later termed "therapeutic factors"(4). (bvsalud.org)
  • I'm inspired to want to share the Twelve Steps with my sister (my parents both have passed), to continue to practice detachment, and to find my own Al-Anon group back home. (southvalleyalanon.org)
  • 2 Most 12-Step programs operate with an abstinence-only approach. (drugabuse.com)
  • 12-Step programs utilize a peer support system. (drugabuse.com)
  • Most 12-Step programs are modeled after the very first one, Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) . (drugabuse.com)
  • Aside from the 12 standards explained above, twelve-step programs likewise consist of 12 customs that are gotten in touch with the company of Alcoholics Anonymous groups in general and not with the process through which each of their participants is going through. (pathwaytorecovery.com)
  • Alcoholics Anonymous must not have an viewpoint on any outside matter so that the name of the groups and their treatment programs would not be utilized in public confrontations. (pathwaytorecovery.com)
  • Alcoholics Anonymous need to not have an viewpoint on any outside matter so that the name of the groups and their treatment programs would not be used in public conflicts. (pathwaytorecovery.com)
  • Use of the Steps in connection with programs and activities which are patterned after AA, but which address other problems, does not imply otherwise. (caarizona.org)
  • Why 12 step programs work? (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • The arguments that AA is Christian are based on the fact that AA was connected with the Oxford Group in its early beginnings and on the possibility that Dr. Bob Smith was indeed a Christian. (pamweb.org)
  • We do this by practicing the Twelve Steps, by welcoming and giving comfort to families of alcoholics, and by giving understanding and encouragement to the alcoholic. (google.com)
  • There has been a substantial growth of recovery mutual aid groups that adopt non-12-step philosophies. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • CLA Tradition 3 states, "The only requirement for CLA membership is a desire to stop cluttering. (wikipedia.org)
  • In Alcoholics Anonymous, a safe, supportive, and respectful environment may promote the development of more secure and assertive behaviors, rather than overly aggressive, passive, or passive-aggressive posturing. (bvsalud.org)
  • Better understanding how these groups work can provide more options for people with substance use disorders and inform both doctors and policymakers to support people seeking recovery. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • A lot of people object to the word "alcoholic. (bhpalmbeach.com)
  • The meeting begins with the chairperson reading the AA Preamble, then leading a group prayer, the Serenity Prayer (short version), which about 80% of the people recite. (philosophy-question.com)
  • The final source of wisdom comes from within: the recovering alcoholic must create a hopeful vision of the future, and find the determination to make it true. (aanoc.org)
  • We, too, were lonely and frustrated but in Al-Anon we discover that no situation is really hopeless and that it is possible for us to find contentment and even happiness, whether the alcoholic is still drinking or not. (google.com)
  • In fact, most participants find that as they grow in their recovery, they will need to review some steps or even tackle more than one step at a time. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • With more than 50,000 Alcoholics Anonymous groups across the country (and thousands of other anonymous groups for various addictions), you're sure to find one that works for you. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • Clutterers Anonymous is not associated with Messies Anonymous, a support group founded by Sandra Felton, which uses her copyrighted publications. (wikipedia.org)
  • Both AA and Al-Anon are support groups. (philosophy-question.com)
  • The findings of this study suggest that these newer groups can support change in many of the same ways as 12-step groups. (12steprecoverynews.com)
  • Consider the fact that, while mainline churches have been in steady decline for decades, Twelve Step groups continue to flourish, largely without money, property, or staff. (ministrymatters.com)
  • We celebrate congregations engendering their own group identity, networking the churches together through loose regional and national structures that act more as resource providers rather than authoritative governing bodies. (ministrymatters.com)
  • 2. For our group purpose there is but one ultimate authority - a loving God as God may express God's self in our group conscience. (ministrymatters.com)
  • Each group has but one primary purpose-to carry the message of recovery to the addict who still suffers. (12steprecovery.com)
  • 6. "An A.A. group ought never endorse, finance, or lend the A.A. name to any related facility or outside enterprise, lest problems of money, property, and prestige divert us from our primary purpose. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • The groups should focus on their primary purpose and maintain independence and integrity. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • Reprinted with permission of Al-Anon Family Group Headquarters, Inc., Virginia Beach, VA." Compliance with Al-Anon Family Group Headquarters, Inc.'s copyrights and trademarks is required. (google.com)
  • Over the years, groups have spread and found success in many parts of the world. (12steprecovery.com)
  • I remember when I was 12 years old, my mother used to deprive me of coke, sweets and fast food. (who.int)
  • Each group can decide its AA meeting format, literature, rules, and policies if consistent with the twelve traditions and steps. (nuviewtreatment.com)
  • The twelve traditions ensure that each AA group is financially responsible for its expenses and activities, such as rent, literature, coffee, etc. (nuviewtreatment.com)