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by giraffe_lady
230 days ago
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I used to travel for work (ending with the pandemic in 2020) so I've been to hundreds of distinct AA meeting groups. I would say at that point it was probably still 80%+ of meetings using at least one christian prayer, usually the lord's prayer. In big cities you can definitely find ones that are more careful about the higher power language but they are still a small minority and so for example if you're newly sober and trying to hit meetings every day, or at odd times, they may not meet all your needs. And if your city is big enough to have a lot of meetings like this and you want them, it probably also has smartrecovery groups which are likely a better fit for a more secular person anyway. The really interesting thing is finding the little pockets where they're catering to a different community that is a local majority. I've said traditional jewish prayers at AA in skokie il, muslim ones in dearborn mi. But regardless of your personal higher power, sincerely doing things like "turning your will over to" it or "asking [it] to remove your shortcomings" is religious practice, straightforward, no question. Some people are simply not interested in this at all, no matter how disconnected from any specific tradition. |
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That's hugely shameful when that's the third time that week, and it's only Wednesday. Processing that internally, without coming to grips that it really isn't you doing that seems impossible without "turning your will over" to the god of burritos or whatever else you want as your higher power. That doesn't absolve you of the harm you've caused yourself and others, but it does help you move on to the next step, one of which is up make amends (if it won't cause more harm).
Look, I'm not saying AA is the be-all-end-all of addiction treatment. It isn't. One of the AA things is they say there's no medication for when we're on a thread discussing medication for addiction! But the very first meeting I went to, there was a young woman who was militantly atheist but was years sober and had really turned her life around. If being in the same room as people reciting the Lords prayer will throw you into apoplectic fits, don't go. If you're suffering and need help, and are able to be in the same room though, I do honestly and fervently believe it's worth trying, if only because ozemoic isn't cheap while AA meetings are free to attend.