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It’s life. Deal with it.

March 12, 2017 By David Palmer Leave a Comment

When you think about it, we really don’t have much choice in life than to deal with things. There is no time out in life. Everything counts. Every day. Every minute.

We cannot afford to waste it.

On the advice of a friend I recently read Thornton Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize winning play, Our Town, which opened on Broadway in 1936.

A major theme of Our Town is that we too often waste much of our brief lives on things that don’t matter. It is a perspective provided by the characters, citizens of Grover’s Corners, New Hampshire, who have died and can come back for a day if they choose. Those who make the choice are grief stricken by the loss of precious time they behold.

The lesson is that there is no time out in life. Everything counts. Every day. Every minute. We should make the most of it.

Many years ago, Dr. Robert Lewis, a pastor at Little Rock’s Fellowship Bible Church and founder of the international Men’s Fraternity program, gave a sermon about the fruitful life of the prophet Abraham and about his death at a very old but still active age. Dr. Lewis said that when Abraham died he was “satisfied,” and he said it with passion.

At the time, I underestimated the power of the message, but now as I approach the age of Abraham and look back on nearly 40 years of recovery from alcoholism, I am thankful.

Those who seek recovery will encounter obstacles, of course, many of them self-inflicted. Our denial hampers the identification of an addiction, and an unwillingness to deal with the problem and blaming others prevents recovery.

But it’s really not that complicated. Little Rock’s Wolfe Street Center used to have a caretaker (we called him Dr. Bob) who had boiled down his program of recovery to three words, “just don’t drink.” Not drinking opened up a world of opportunity for Dr. Bob.

Here are five principles that have worked well for me in my recovery. They are based mainly on the biblically based 12 Steps.

  1. Trust God

In the first of their 12 Steps the founders of Alcoholics Anonymous call upon us to surrender to a power greater than ourselves. In this it differs from many programs which, instead, begin with seeking power. The first step rejects the notion that we are capable of doing life on our own but gives us considerable latitude in naming that power. I chose God, supreme ruler of the universe, as I believe most do, and later named Jesus Christ as my Lord and Savior.

  1. Clean House

Among mankind’s addictive behaviors, drug addictions, including alcoholism, have been particularly destructive and require special diligence when it comes to cleaning up. This includes stopping the behavior, admitting our mistakes and making amends to those we have harmed.

  1. Help others

Helping others through sponsorship, and other activities, is an essential requirement of AA and most other 12 Step programs. Rightly so. I didn’t warm to the idea at first but did what my sponsor and others told me and registered with the AA central office in Little Rock. I listed myself as someone willing to offer help, no matter what the hour.

The hour turned out to be midnight.

His name was Wardell, and he lived out by the airport. He was young, he was big, he was black and he was very drunk. I was old (about 50), medium build, white and newly and excruciatingly sober. Wardell seemed grateful that I had come when we shook hands on his front steps. We talked a little. I gave him a Big Book, told him to not drink and to meet me at the Wolfe Street Center the next morning to begin work on his program of recovery.

Darned if he didn’t show up. Wardell got sober, I stayed sober, and the world became a better place. After a couple of years, Wardell, still clean and sober, moved away, and we lost track. I pray that he is safe and well.

  1. Reject resentments

Resentments will damage your serenity and ultimately shorten your life. There is a popular AA saying, “Harboring a resentment against someone is like drinking poison and hoping the other person dies.”

  1. Live one day at a time (tops)

Taking life one day at a time is a concept well known to people in recovery from alcohol and other addictions. Newcomers to 12-Step programs are told by old-timers to make no more than a daily commitment to sobriety—maximum—lest they be overwhelmed by contemplating a lifetime loss of their alcohol, pills and powders.

The late Joe McQuany, a devout Christian and an authority on alcoholism, said, “I look at the battles that go on in life, and I look at the resentments and fears, guilt and remorse, and how things block us from God and shackle us to the self. Then I look at love, tolerance, patience, courage and wisdom. These qualities have come from God and they are always with us. In our outer and inner conflicts, we can see the powers of self contending with the powers of God.”

On a closing note, I do not find that self-esteem, especially when it is unearned, is of much help in building character. As my friend at the Thanksgiving retreat in Georgia many years ago said about flattery, “It’s okay if you don’t inhale it.”

  1. Pray

Most 12 Step meetings close with the short version of Reinhold Niebuhr’s Serenity prayer, which is:

“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.”

Here is the rest of it:

“Living one day at a time; enjoying one moment at a time; accepting hardships as the pathway to peace; taking, as He did, this sinful world as it is, not as I would have it; trusting that He will make all things right if I surrender to His will; that I may be reasonably happy in this life and supremely happy with Him forever in the next. Amen.”

 

 

 

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