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Alcoholics Anonymous

308,582 Views | 1180 Replies | Last: 8 hrs ago by aggiejim70
Maroon Boomslang
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AG
Is there an AA group in CStat that someone would recommend?
aggiejim70
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AG
bropine83 said:

Is there an AA group in CStat that someone would recommend?
N
A&M United Methodist Church
417 UNIVERSITY DRIVE, RM 131,
Sunday
11:00 am
College Station, TX, 77840
Aldersgate Methodist
2201 EARL RUDDER FWY
Monday
08:00 pm
College Station, TX, 77845
Christ United Methodist Church
4203 HWY 6 SOUTH
Thursday
07:30 pm
College Station, TX, 77845
A&M United Methodist Church
417 UNIVERSITY DRIVE, RM 131,
Wednesday
12:00 pm
College Station, TX, 77840
A&M United Methodist Church
417 UNIVERSITY DRIVE, RM 131,
Saturday
08:30 pm
College Station, TX, 77840
Aldersgate Methodist Church
2201 EARL RUDDER FWY
Saturday
10:30 am
College Station, TX, 77845
A&M United Methodist Church
417 UNIVERSITY DRIVE, RM 131,
Tuesday
12:00 pm
College Station, TX, 77840

The person that is not willing to fight and die, if need be, for his country has no right to life.

James Earl Rudder '32
January 31, 1945
Maroon Boomslang
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AG
Thanks
Tumble Weed
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bropine83 said:

Is there an AA group in CStat that someone would recommend?

I go to happy hour on wildflower at 6:30.
2702 Ste C Wildflower Dr

Here is the full list. Would love for you to join us. I will be there Sunday.

http://www.bvig.org/BCS-AA-meetings.htm


aggiejim70
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AG
You're most welcome. If you have some questions or concerns, please join us this evening at 7 central time.

Scroll back two pages for the link.
The person that is not willing to fight and die, if need be, for his country has no right to life.

James Earl Rudder '32
January 31, 1945
pinkdog
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Yes, yes, we are attracted to tasks that require a certain amount of perfectionism.
Paul Dirac
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In the big book twice the phrase "recovered" alcoholic is used. Why is it that we always seem to hear people refer to themselves as recovering alcoholics? I know the answer but….. What is a recovered alcoholic?!!! I have my answer but it does NOT mean one is able to do controlled drinking or normal drinking. I'd I love to hear what others think about what it is to be a recovered alcoholic.

I think a crucial element is learning how to have fun without the reliance on any substance (one that quickly changes mood - antidepressants are okay) or an addictive behavior such as gambling or porn. There is a very big lie that if you no longer drink you will NOT have fun in life or that yeah maybe you'll have fun but you won't have as much fun. That is a lie!!!! It will no doubt take time to learn how to have healthy fun and it's not rocket science but it takes effort and faith.

Working the 12 steps is not a lesser plan that we have to settle on, it's a wonderful hidden philosophy that will become your greatest joy. You and everyone around you will benefit.
aggiejim70
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AG
Army, I couldn't agree with you more. I'm somewhere north of 5000 meetings, and in virtually every one of them, someone reads the phrase "If you have decided you want what we have and are will to any length to get it-then you are ready to take certain steps.'' The "we'' they're talking about is not the people in the meeting, the State of Texas, the USA or anybody walking the face of the Earth today. The "we'' they're talking about is (are?) the founders, the people that wrote the Big Book. They very first thing they claim to have done, is to have recovered from alcoholism.

Please join us this evening at 7.
The person that is not willing to fight and die, if need be, for his country has no right to life.

James Earl Rudder '32
January 31, 1945
pinkdog
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Happy 4th of July!
ptothemo
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AG
Quick programming note that we will not be meeting this evening and will pick back up Thursday evening.

Reposting the zoom link as it's been a few pages since it was last posted
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/4922070133?pwd=QmRNQmI2NndFc0h4TmJaZXF3d3lqQT09

We meet Thursdays and Sundays at 7:00 pm central. We keep a casual discussion-based environment, and anyone in any stage of sobriety/recovery (or exploration of those things) is welcome to join.

Feel free to PM me if you have questions or need any additional info.
aggiejim70
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AG
Today we have a new member of the brass chip club. Happy one year birthday to Pink.
The person that is not willing to fight and die, if need be, for his country has no right to life.

James Earl Rudder '32
January 31, 1945
pinkdog
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Thank you for your patience and encouragement this past year.
Gabster43213
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Pink,

Congrats to your one year anniversary. Mine was Saturday. Feels great !
pinkdog
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Thank you and congratulations on one year! It does feel good!
John Vorster
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NWE
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ptothemo
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AG
Today is day 2000 for me.

Something about that (relatively) big even number makes me quite reflective. I'll save everyone from reading a ton of details in a story that when it comes right down to it isn't all that unique. What is important to me to share is the fact that I am grateful to be alive and healthy. I am quite confident the healthy would not be true today, and it's likely the alive wouldn't be true, if I were still drinking.

What is also important to me is all the people I have met and things I have experienced in recovery. The strongest bond that I feel with people are those who have walked through the fire of alcoholism. The community that is formed through that common experience was and is life-changing for me. The best experiences that I have are ones that are clear and true and not blunted by booze.

I am really grateful for all the people who have walked this journey with me and am grateful and excited about the opportunity to continue to pay that back in some way.

And that's my story for today, thank y'all for letting me share it :-)
dellgriffith
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AG
Congrats! Such an awesome accomplishment. The bond and common experience of sobriety is such a powerful source for good. I loved reading your post.
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aggiejim70
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AG
Congrats Ptot. It's been my honor to share the Road of Happy Destiny with you.
The person that is not willing to fight and die, if need be, for his country has no right to life.

James Earl Rudder '32
January 31, 1945
RickSawyer
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AG
Lucky 7! 7 year sober birthday for me today. I have made some wonderful decisions in my life but the decision to step away from alcohol and ask for help has been by far the best decision I have ever made!
aggiejim70
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AG
Happy birthday Rick. And thanks for giving me the opportunity to make the 1000th post.
The person that is not willing to fight and die, if need be, for his country has no right to life.

James Earl Rudder '32
January 31, 1945
aggiejim70
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AG
Howdy Army. I just want to remind you there's not enough booze in the whole world to solve the problem of Texas Aggie football.
The person that is not willing to fight and die, if need be, for his country has no right to life.

James Earl Rudder '32
January 31, 1945
Gringo Viejo
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A'int that the truth...
"Always do right - this will gratify some and astonish the rest" - Mark Twain
aggiejim70
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AG
Bump, I'm tired of looking for it every Thursday and Sunday
The person that is not willing to fight and die, if need be, for his country has no right to life.

James Earl Rudder '32
January 31, 1945
NWE
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AG
Just checking in here if anyone wants to chat. I'm on day 384 and don't plan on looking back.
aggiejim70
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AG
More than happy to chat with you. Please take it to the next level and join us tomorrow at 7p. Scroll back for the link.
The person that is not willing to fight and die, if need be, for his country has no right to life.

James Earl Rudder '32
January 31, 1945
Malibu
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Year 5 alcohol free earlier this year came and went on October 1st and I forgot. For those lurking and struggling right now, my reflection is this: sobriety can start as a difficult challenge and fizzle into something that you rarely think about nor crave, even when life's difficulties inevitably show up. I haven't once regretted my decision to stop drinking, my life is much richer without it.
NWE
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AG
Malibu2 said:

Year 5 alcohol free earlier this year came and went on October 1st and I forgot. For those lurking and struggling right now, my reflection is this: sobriety can start as a difficult challenge and fizzle into something that you rarely think about nor crave, even when life's difficulties inevitably show up. I haven't once regretted my decision to stop drinking, my life is much richer without it.


Well said. My favorite part is how I enjoy NOT drinking nowadays. Life is so much nicer without alcohol. Co big rats on 5 years!
aggiejim70
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Bump
The person that is not willing to fight and die, if need be, for his country has no right to life.

James Earl Rudder '32
January 31, 1945
CC09LawAg
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So say we all
ptothemo
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AG
Quick programming note that we will not be meeting on Thursday this week. Everyone have a safe and happy Thanksgiving.

And a quick reminder that we meet every Thursday and Sunday at 7:00 pm central. The Zoom link is near the top of this page. Any and all are welcome to join.
pinkdog
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Happy thanksgiving, ags! There is a lot to be grateful for today. Today is 15 months for me, so I will be extra reflective, for sure. I'm grateful for AA, this thread, and so many people's support along the way.
Stay safe today!
big ben
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Long time lurker of this thread and TA OB'er so I'll weigh in finally:

Been a heavy drinker since college, it worsened over time and ironically as I moved up in my career quickly with making more $$, more responsibility, higher more stressful opportunities, etc. my alcoholism grew and grew until my body decided it was enough but my mind still wasn't there yet. I drank daily, nightly, at work, etc., weekends were a blur, an average Monday night after getting home after work at 5PM was potentially a fifth of whiskey, six pack of tall boys, and who knows what else spending $1500 or more a month on alcohol alone.

The past year:
Tried pounding wine instead of pounding hard liquor...no dice
Beer instead of wine...no dice
Pot instead of all the above...no dice
NA beer instead lf all the above...no dice
Quit cold turkey in the summer, after 5 days, had a seizure at work an ended up in ER....quit drinking? Naw...no dice
Diagnosed with chronic embolism in lower right extremity in August, surgery, clot filter put in place...quit drinking by myself? ...no dice

Enough was enough, I put work on notice, got my ducks in a row and checked myself into rehab early October.

I clearly I could not beat this demon on my own as it was no longer a "preference" issue, as my body was craving alcohol daily and I needed a supervised/regimented detox program by professionals who do it every day. along with therapy to not only deal with my triggers to drink, but also deal with stuff in my past I hadn't truly dealt with in a healthy manner.

Checked in Oct. 10, 2022 at a facility here in DFW. It took two days to dry me out (I blew at .348 when I arrived with my body so pickled and used to alcohol that I was friendly, open minded, coherent, reading/filling out paperwork and discussing politics with the nursing staff as if I was sober).

The following month was intense classes throughout the day, one on one therapy, family therapy, exercise, nature walks, etc. Absolutely no phone, internet, or any contact with outside world other than a 5 min phone call every few days to my wife, and at the end of it, being unplugged WAS F***ING glorious.

I completed the portion of my program geared towards Alkys and was comfortable enough to leave and resume my life, but in a different mental state. I checked out two weeks ago today. Been doing AA daily (90 in 90 is my personal step 1), I'm on medications that make cravings non existent, my blood pressure is normal, pulse normal, skin looks normal and my eyes are back to bright blue.

I feel amazing, but for me and others although I am in the honeymoon stage fresh out of rehab, the work truly begins now with staying sober. Holidays are here, alcohol is on every corner, but thankfully after redefining my higher power in rehab, none of it is tempting. AA helps tremendously, family is supportive, and contrary to popular belief, I do not miss drinking and the people around me drinking doesn't bother me.

This is my disease for me to own and treat with the help of others. If anyone chooses to tell anyone alcoholism isn't a disease, I would gladly welcome a conversation with that person. Alcohol can knock anyone on their ass from any background if you allow it too, I did, and it is a wonder I "kept it under wraps" for so long, or so I thought. I can add more later but this story is mine; an Eagle Scout, Aggie Graduate Class of '08, Corporate Executive at age 37, that now has a greater outlook on life, better health, better attitude and is a better person.

If anyone in the DFW area has a good AA group they frequent, I live in Las Colinas but work from West Fort Worth to Rockwall and as far North as Denton and South as Midlothian so I have been hitting meetings all over but it's always nice to see an Ag, especially one battling the same demon. Post up on here and shoot me an email at aggieben08 "at" yahoo if you would like to join up for a meeting. During the week I try to hit a 6PM or 10PM and sometimes a 12PM depending on the area and have no issue driving to meet someone.

Today is my day 46, seems minute but this is the longest I have been sober since 2003 and loving every day of it.
aggiejim70
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AG
Congrats on your start on The Road of Happy Destiny. Please come join your fellow Aggies in recovery tomorrow at 7pm Central time. Scroll back to Petot's post for the Zoom link.
The person that is not willing to fight and die, if need be, for his country has no right to life.

James Earl Rudder '32
January 31, 1945
Shooter McGavin
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AG
 
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