Where To Find A.A.

A.A. help is available without charge or obligation.  There are groups of us in many cities, villages, and rural areas throughout the world.  Look for “A.A.” or “Alcoholics Anonymous” as listed in the community telephone directory.  Information about local meetings may often be obtained…

A New Dimension

There was a time when many of us believed that alcohol was the only thing that made life bearable.  We could not even dream of a life without drinking.  Today, through the A.A. program, we do not feel that we have been deprived of…

Will A.A. Work For Everyone?

The A.A. program of recovery from alcoholism, we believe, will work for almost anyone who has a desire to stop drinking.  It may work even for those who feel they are being prodded in the direction of A.A.  Many of us make our first…

We Made A Decision

All of us now in A.A, had to make one crucial decision before we felt secure in the new program of life without alcohol.  We had to face the facts about ourselves and our drinking realistically and honestly.  We had to admit that we…

What We Have Learned About Alcoholism

The first thing we have learned about alcoholism is that it is one of the oldest problems in history.  Only recently have we begun to benefit from new approaches to the problem.  Doctors today, for example, know a great deal more about alcoholism than…

The 24 hr Plan

For example, we take no pledges, we don’t say that we will “never” drink again.  Instead, we try to follow what we in A.A. call the “24-hour plan.”  We concentrate on keeping sober just the current twenty-four hours.  We simply try to get through…

Alcoholism – an illness

Today we are willing to accept the idea that, as far as we are concerned, alcoholism is an illness, a progressive illness which can never be “cured”, but which, like some other illnesses, can be arrested.  We agree that there is nothing shameful about…

Staying Sober

How, then, do we manage to stay sober in such an informal, loosely knit fellowship?  The answer is that, once having achieved sobriety, we try to preserve it by observing and following the successful experience of those who have preceded us in A.A.  Their…

A.A. and Alcoholism

Alcoholics Anonymous is a world wide fellowship of men and women who help each other maintain sobriety and who offer to share their recovery experience freely with others who may have a drinking problem.  The program A.A. suggests consists basically of “Twelve Steps” designed…