Step 11

Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as we understood God, praying only for knowledge of God’s will for us and the power to carry that out.

Step 3 is me letting go of my own will, and step 11 is seeking God’s will.  In step 3, I stop drowning myself with my own horrible ideas to where I’m just floating there.  Step 11 gives me a positive direction from God so I can start moving in a direction that’s aligned with His amazingly frightening will.

Of course God’s will scares me to death.  How could it be any other way?  I’ve already tackled all the easy stuff that I’m not afraid of.  All that’s left is the stuff that petrifies me with fear.  I am bound by that fear, and fear is not from God.  So it’s got to go.  And the only way to get rid of fear is to face it.  When I’m working my program well, I include steps 1, 2, 3 and 11 in my morning prayer.  I will add step 12 to that too some day.  I’m slow.  So I talk to God about the things I’m powerless over, then I express my faith in His ability to help me with these things, and then I give them all to Him to figure out and only then am I ready to follow His will.  My will is usually too noisy to hear anything from God.  So the steps are in order for a purpose.  I have to let go of the wheel and let Him guide me through my day, asking for the courage, power, and clarity to align my rebellious self with His will.

He loves me and wants me to get stronger and freer.  And I’m giving Him permission to do that, so I need to stick with it when He starts me down a path toward something I fear.  It’s like I’m working out a weak muscle and God’s my spotter and I’ve agreed to be here doing this and then the pain gets to be more than what I expected.  Then instead of working through it, I’m tempted to run out of the gym to avoid the pain.  But that just puts me back where I was before.  If I can build up a little more trust in Him each day, each week, it helps me to put up with the pain and fear, knowing that it will be better afterward.  Like going to the dentist.  If I thought the dentist was my enemy, I’d run as soon as I saw the needle.

My daughter came to me with a sliver in her finger.  She trusted me enough to help her get it out.  She knew it was going to hurt worse than what she was enduring right now, but she and I have built up a trust that I love her and will do what will give her peace and happiness in the long term.  So she comes to me when she needs relief from the pain – even if it means more pain for a time.  Afterward, the pain subsides and her faith and trust in me is increased a little bit more.  So it is with me and God.  He is my father after all.

Meditation (or pondering) has also helped me seek God’s will and get rid of my own defective parts of my will.  There are a few different methods I have used.

One method is to focus on breathing and nothing else. If my mind drifts, I don’t get frustrated, I just bring it back to my breath. That method quiets my mind down and gets rid of the noise.

Another kind is observational meditation where I simply observe my mind’s activity without holding on to any particular thought. That’s a lot more difficult for me because I grab the thoughts and run with them.  This helps me become more aware of my thoughts and decreases my self-condemnation, which allows more thoughts to come to the surface.  The more awareness I have, the more freedom I get to make choices about my thoughts and feelings instead of them silently running me.

Another kind of meditation is when I visualize a flame in front of me with a huge empty space around the flame.  I focus on the flame and my breathing.  As I breathe in through my nose, I imagine the air soaking into parts of myself physically (like into pain in my back or tension in my shoulders or neck) or emotionally (into lust, anger, stress, etc.).  I hold it in for a second and then let it out through my mouth and imagine the pain, tension, lust, anger, stress, etc. going into the flame and burning up. I repeat for a few minutes. I’m visual so this one works well for me and gives my mind something to imagine while I’m doing it. And it really helps a lot.  I have no idea why it helps, but I don’t really care.  I found this technique in the Wheel of Time book series, but I believe the author Robert Jordan might have gotten it from somewhere else.  I do it as described above, which is slightly different than what is described in the book. The lust and anger and stress tend to get visualized coming from my heart or entire body depending on how intense it is. And with each breath the emotion seems to get less and less until there isn’t anything left to feed the flame. It’s strange, but it has worked really well for me. More on this here.  Sometimes I can feed images into the flame (like I do with Christ in Step 3) and those might be coming from my brain. So breathe in through the nose and visualize the breath going up into my brain and soaking up the images, then breathing out of my mouth those images from my brain into the flame. And I do this with my eyes closed. It can even be just a couple of breaths at my desk.

The “Lust Balloon”

When I entered the program, I acted out almost daily. As I progressed, I would act out weekly, every two weeks, every month, etc.  It seems to me as though I have some sort of capacity to hold lust within me – I’ll call it a lust balloon. Once I have filled this balloon with lust, I feel compelled to resort to my addiction by acting out my addictions physically.

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Surrender

Surrender is a word that is used a lot in 12-step meetings.  They talk about surrendering our lives and wills to God in Step 3, for example.  Here’s an analogy that has helped me to understand how surrender works.  It has a lot to do with admitting the truth about my situation and letting someone who really knows what they’re doing be in charge.

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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.

Step 3

Step 3 – Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood Him.

The verb in step 3 is not “surrender,” even though that’s what people talk about when they talk about step 3.  The verb is “Made a decision.”  A decision to do what?  To turn my will and life over to the care of God.  When I first got into addiction recovery, I found that there were a few things I could turn over to the care of God.  So I did that.  People often call this “surrender.”  It seems that turning things over to the care of God, letting things go, and surrendering are similar, if not identical.  It’s strange to come into a program where they tell me to surrender when I’ve been fighting for decades.

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The Three Lists

I was talking to someone in my recovery group the other day, and they had been recently consumed with worry about a lot of things in their life and the following idea popped into my head to help with that. It had to do with emptying my head of all worries by writing them down and separating them into three lists. This idea comes from the three kinds of things mentioned in the serenity prayer:

God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
Courage to change the things I can,
And wisdom to know the difference.

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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.

Continue reading “The 12 Steps – An Overview”