I went to one of my old home group meetings last night. Cuyahoga Falls Sat. Night; a meeting that I went to rather regularly back in the day. Okay pretty much weekly for well over a decade. My bff/sponso Kat and a new friend Em (sup girls) were kind enough to go with me. After TWO Starbucks pit stops and some clothes shopping we made our way there.
Everything had changed of course; I hadn’t been there in years since moving a bit more southernly. But the ONE thing that hadn’t changed was the people. There was still a Hicken there (42 years sober. love you Tom) and several other people I’ve known since I was 19 and came into AA. (Gary and George. SO love you and it was great to see you) I was on top of the world… felt like I’d come home again. Felt like “this is the way AA is supposed to feel”, welcoming, kind, loving, accepting. The speaker was a beautiful spirit of a girl who’d been through hell and then back again… when we left all three of us were like “wow”.
And I then proceeded to rant on about how meetings weren’t the “same” where we lived. How it didn’t have the same zest or appeal or mindset.
What a fucking moron I can be.
My sponser type bff Kat and I started a conversation about “things” from the past. She turned to me and said… I remember what you were like after you relapsed. After 15 years of sobriety fell away from you and when you came back over three years ago. I remember. Look at how far you’ve come.
Dammit.
Have I? Instead of railing about what “we” don’t have in our 12 step fellowship “down here”… why am I not focused on how I can make a difference? What can I do to create that welcoming environment? What am I doing to make it better? Bitching never did anything except get my panties in a bunch. And it certainly never helped a newcomer.
Instead of focusing on what’s wrong with the world I need to focus on what needs to be changed with me and my attitudes. (Thanks Dr. Paul – you know the “acceptance is the answer paragraph? yeah) And really I found a woman (my sponsor) who has loved me unconditionally from day one, treated me with kindness, that I’ve been completely open and honest with from day one. I NEVER had that “up in Akron”. There was always a part of me that I held back.
I did my stepwork like I was told. I listened. I followed directions. Cleaned house. Helped others. Sponsored oodles of girls. Was a circuit speaker at meetings all over Northeast Ohio. Big book thumper from hell. Step thumper even worse. Which isn’t a bad thing. But as far as sponsors went… I did what they said and that was the extent. Which really is what the main purpose of a sponsor is… to follow the directions to stop drinking.
But what I found in Kat? Yeah. She saw me when I was (literally) beat up from the feet up. Broken and bruised and unable to see the true from the false. I got sicker in the six month relapse than I ever thought possible. I suppose it didn’t help being in an emotionally cruel marriage for 7 years either. I’ve never had a stronger friendship than with this woman. No-matter-what-ism. She’s taught me more than I could ever begin to mention here. And I’ll be eternally grateful.
So last night I remembered. Remembered where I came from and what is important. And for all the pissing and moaning I’ve done about the meetings down here? Well I got to meet a woman who showed me how to live again. I’d say that’s pretty fucking spectacular and I wouldn’t change it for anything.
Now. To focus on what I can do to be the best possible member of this 12 step fellowship. Right. I love recovery.



Chin up hey.
when I used to complain about a meeting my old sponsor would ask, and you were at that meeting? I would continue again the same question. I continue again the same question… after he would ask 10 or twelve times I would get it. I was there… I was at the meeting. Why don’t I do something? haha. I like the part of Vision for You that says we can create the fellowship we crave. hugs…
I moved 40 miles away from my support group of 19 years and have had trouble making new connections here. Today I WILL call a newer contact.
Great post. I have had two major geographical moves in recovery over the past 22 years. It sounds to me like going “home” just raised a whole lot of love and gratitude for what you had left behind. I bawl my eyes out whenever I go back to either of my two earlier fellowship areas, but today I really do love my new recovery home beyond comparison (it took a while).
You are so…not…a moron. Keep on keeping on. You have so damned much to give. And receive.
Bless – Bless – Bless the men and women who sponsored our unlovable, unknowing, ungrateful asses. I do point that finger at myself and if you got to the rooms and identified yourself as a ‘real’ alcoholic the description fits you too – saying this with love, ya know. Early in recovery,(30 years ago), I also made a call to my sponsor to bitch about the awful meeting I had just been too. She listened, then asked – ‘So what did you contribute?” Damn! I am ALWAYS either part of the problem OR part of the solution! No matter what it is. Thanks Amy for another great post.
!!! Keep coming back !!!