Step 5

Admitted to God, ourselves, and another human being the exact nature of our wrongs.

In my experience, it’s important to share my 4th step inventory with my sponsor first.  This means someone who’s already been through their own 4th and 5th step and knows what it’s like to struggle with the addiction I struggle with.  They are also someone who I don’t know outside of the group. This anonymity enables me to be fully open without fear of consequences. This helps me break through fear and denial to get absolutely everything out.

With that kind of person sitting in front of me as I get everything out in the open, it’s the most similar experience to sitting with Christ that I’ve experienced.  Christ knows exactly how I feel and exactly how difficult this is.  I feel guilty for what I’ve done, and I feel shame for who I think I am. The shame is a lie and is dispelled by bringing the shameful things into the light of the most Christlike person I can find – that’s my sponsor.  Christlike in that he knows how I feel and what it’s like to be in my position and can embrace the shameful things because he’s already embraced his.  It’s a powerful shame-destroying process to get all of these things into the light of another person who truly understands and to be accepted and respected by them.  Rejection is what my shame promises, and acceptance destroys shame’s promises.

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Step 2

Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.

One of the things I was missing to be able to recover was faith. I had learned that faith comes from hearing testimony of those who have faith and also from righteousness. In the addiction, I had neither. I was isolated, so I never heard anyone testify who had any success in recovery and I really didn’t have any righteousness with my addictions.

I needed to connect with others who were in the same boat as men and see them making progress. Another form of faith that I desperately needed was faith that God loved me, warts and all and that He wanted to help me.

Working step 0 (being a part of a group) gave me all of these things and more. I got to connect with and hear the testimony of their pains and struggles that we’re just like mine. Then, over time, I heard them testify of the progress they were making. I also watched them nodding with deep understanding as I told my story. Then I saw them not turn away from me. They loved and respected me, warts and all. That gave me the faith that God could love and respect and help me too. Then I started to have faith that I could love and respect and help myself too.

This faith is the core of step 2 and it prepares me to start holding onto God instead of my addictions, one incident at a time.

Self-Respect and Love

For this topic, I offer an analogy that played out in my heart that had a profound effect on me.

Before I got into recovery, I met Christ at the door of my house. I told Him that He didn’t need to come in – I made the mess, I would clean it up, and someday my house would be clean enough for Him to come in without judging me and thinking I was stupid, slothful, and filthy. I sent Him away empty-handed.

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12-Step Meetings

I have been involved with two different 12-step addiction recovery programs for the past 19 years, Sexaholics Anonymous and the Addiction Recovery Program from the LDS church. Both work for me just fine and are based on the same core principles.  Pick one, find a meeting near you, and attend a meeting this week.  There’s nothing to be afraid of!  You’re going to find people there who are just like you in your same situation.

The inherent safety and anonymity of these meetings permits a level of honesty, humility, and faith in Christ sufficient to allow the repentance process to start working within me. The meetings are safe because everyone there suffers from the same addictions that I do. Therefore, I can have confidence that they will not gossip, backbite, judge, or condemn in the same way people might in other settings.

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The 12 Steps – An Overview

I realized that the core of 12-Step programs aligned with something familiar to me from my religious upbringing—a higher power helping me become a better person. This higher power encompassed faith, self-reflection, personal growth, and support from others. Although I had encountered similar ideas in my spiritual journey, I questioned the importance of revisiting them within the context of 12-Step programs. Previous knowledge alone hadn’t freed me from addiction, so why would exploring these principles again in the context of the 12 steps make any difference? However, I’ve found an answer, and I want to share it with you.

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