With the holiday season upon us I thought it would be a good reminder to post the following:
1. EXHAUSTION - Allowing yourself to become chronically overly tired, often by doing too much or taking on too many tasks.
2. DISHONESTY - This may begin with indulging in a pattern of little lies and deceits with fellow workers, friends, and family. Then come important lies to yourself -- "rationalizing" - making excuses for not doing what you don't want to do, or for doing what you know you should not do.
3. IMPATIENCE - Perceiving that things are not happening fast enough. Others are not doing what they should or what you want them to do.
4. ARGUMENTATIVENESS - Particularly about petty matters, believing that you must always be right.
5. DEPRESSION - Persistent despair.
6. FRUSTRATION - At people and also because things may not be going your way.
7. SELF-PITY - "Poor me, Poor me" often leads to "Pour me a drink"
8. COCKINESS - Believing that you are cured and can handle any situation easily.
9. COMPLACENCY - Becoming blase about the program because you think you don't need it.
10. EXPECTING TOO MUCH TOO FAST "I've changed, why hasn't everyone else?" or "I've changed, why haven't all my problems disappeared?"
11. LETTING UP ON DISCIPLINES - Prayer, meditation, daily inventory, AA attendance. This can stem either from complacency or boredom. You cannot afford to be bored with your program. The cost of relapse is always too great.
12. USE OF OTHER THAN YOUR DRUG OF CHOICE - You may feel the need to ease things with a chemical other than the main one you were addicted to. For example, you may never have had a problem with chemicals other than alcohol, but you can easily set in motion the process of losing sobriety by smoking a joint or popping a pill.
13. NEGATIVE THINKING - By focusing on the negative side of things, you take away one of the primary tools of recovery -- an attitude of gratitude. Positive thinking is powerful, so is negative thinking.
14. "IT CAN'T HAPPEN TO ME" - This is dangerous thinking. Almost anything can happen to you if you get careless. Remember you have a progressive disease, and you will be in worse shape if you relapse.
15. OMNIPOTENCE - This is a feeling that results from a combination of many of the above. You now have all the answers for yourself and others. No one can tell you anything. You ignore suggestions or advice from others. Relapse is probably imminent unless drastic change takes place.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
4 comments:
Thanks, Scott, always good to keep these close by me, especially this time of year.
Scott, Thanks for that very timely reminder.
Damnit, why doesn't number 13 have a line of its own?
I am too tired to be trying to figure out where one line ends and another begins. You should have taken care of this when you typed it; it's like you always do this to me. And me only. I think I'll just skip the meeting tonight anyway because I don't need it. Instead I'm gonna take a sleeping pill because I 've never done one and I need to get sleep. Damn, I'm tired. And I haven't had a chance to eat yet today either.
@ Dave- :-) yeah, that's it.
I usually succumb to 2, 5,6,7, 9 and 11. It has gotten me EVERY time. I'm going to a meeting tonight, I just had a nap, I'm reading ...uh, wait. I haven't been reading much...thanks for the reminder!
-T
Post a Comment