All Addictions Anonymous

Confessions of a Big Book Sponsor

I remember asking someone in the fellowship a few years ago, "Are you working your program?" He replied, "Yes I went to a meeting today." I responded, "No, that's not what I'm talking about. Are you working with someone?" He said, "Yes, I have a sponsor." I replied, "No, that's not what I'm talking about. Are you working with a newcomer?" He said, "I'm just a few months sober. I'm only a newcomer. This is selfish program, I need to work on myself first." I never saw him again.

Who Am I?

I am a Big Book Sponsor. I practice the 12 Step Program as outlined in the Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous, the original recipe for recovery as practiced by the original 100 who recovered from a seemingly hopeless state of mind and body.

By working the Twelve Step program as described in the Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous, I have had a spiritual awakening. The obsession to drink and use has been removed. My progressive alcoholic/addiction illness has been arrested. My disease has been placed into remission. I have recovered from a seemingly hopeless state of mind and body. As a result, I am able to remain, almost effortlessly, abstinent from alcohol and all mind-altering substances. I have ceased fighting anything or anyone, even alcohol and drugs. My sanity has been returned. I am not fighting temptation, nor am I avoiding people, places and things on a trigger list. I feel as though I had been placed in a position of neutrality safe and protected. I have not even sworn off. Instead, the problem has been removed. It does not exist for me. I am neither cocky nor am I afraid. This is how I react so long as I keep in fit spiritual condition. Furthermore, by living in the disciplines of Steps 10, 11 and 12 everyday, I have a daily program of action that really works in rough going. I have way of living without alcohol or drugs.

You can recognize me at 12 Step meetings because I am the one who brings my own Big Book. To show other alcoholics/addicts precisely how I recovered is the main purpose of this book. I carry a common solution--a way out on which we can absolutely agree and upon which we can join together as brothers and sisters in harmonious action. My deportment shouts that I am a person with a real answer. I carry no attitude of Holier Than Thou. I do not talk down to the alcoholic/addict from any moral or spiritual hilltop. I ask for no payment. I have no axes to grind nor people to please. You can expect to endure no lectures from me. My only desire is to be helpful. I offer friendship and fellowship.

What I do

You will find me at 12 Step meetings armed with the facts about myself. As an ex-problem drinker/user, you will see me making an approach to the newcomer--looking for someone who needs and wants hear about our common solution--someone with an honest desire to stop drinking or using--someone who wants what I have and is willing to follow the instructions as outlined in the Big Book--someone who wants to be joyous and free of active alcoholism and or addiction.

When I find someone who really wants to stop drinking or using, we go to a coffee shop and, together we read and study the first 164 pages of the Big Book. When we come to a Step instruction, we take the Step together as instructed in the Big Book. I practice co-sponsorship--two addicts, working one-on-one, seeking a Higher Power. Because lack of power is our dilemma, we meet three to four times a week, working quickly, all 12 Steps in 30 days or less. My purpose for sponsorship is to teach others how to teach others how to work the 12 Step program as outlined in the Big Book of A.A. Therefore, once the new person has learned and worked all 12 Steps and is living in the disciplines of Steps 10 and 11 on a daily basis, I help my sponsee find a qualified addict who wants to stop and get them working together on their 12 Step journey. Thus, I conclude my formal sponsorship with my sponsee, knowing that they have a dependence, not on me, but upon their Higher Power. Moreover, I rest easy, knowing that the fellowship has one more teacher amongst its members, freeing me to commence looking for another willing, honest and open-minded addict to instruct and repeat the process.

Working with other alcoholics/addicts

I have carried the message of the Big Book to many alcoholics and addicts and rarely have I seen a person fail who thoroughly follows our path.

Untreated alcoholic/addicts are unlovely people. My struggles with them are strenuous, comic and tragic. Those who could not or would not see our way of life are often consumed by their temptations which leads them to the gates of insanity or death. Helping other addicts is the foundation stone of my recovery. A kindly act once in a while isn't enough for me. I have shared time, energy and money. My business and personal life has been interrupted by the telephone ringing at any time of the day or night. My spouse sometimes feels neglected. I have made innumerable trips to police courts, detox centers, hospitals, jails and asylums. I have counseled frantic spouses and relatives. Occasionally I have to meet such conditions.

I have worked hard with many alcoholics/addicts on the idea that only an addict can help another addict. I have had many failures. I once asked another Big Book Sponsor about their success rates and she replied, "I am 100% successful". Astounded, I asked how is that possible? She replied, "I'm still sober". That to me is one of the best kept secrets in our fellowship today. I often hear that this is a "selfish program", but whenever I put my sobriety first I could never stay sober. When I started showing the newcomer how to stay sober, I have found no trouble staying sober. As Doctor Bob once remarked, "strenuous work one alcoholic with another was vital to permanent recovery".

Love and tolerance of others is my code

In the 12 Step rooms I have been accused of being a Step Nazi, Big Book Thumper, a Holy Roller, a Zealot, and most recently I was called a "Steptard". I have been thrown out of groups and asked not to come back. I have been asked not to bring my Big Book into some A.A. meetings. I have been physically and verbally threatened by members of the fellowship for teaching that our 12 Step Program can be learned in an afternoon. I have been blamed for killing people with the Big Book.

When confronted with such animosity, my program tells me I have to look at my part. Have I been crusading, righteous, or critical? Have I been engaging in frothy debates or windy arguments? Have I been demonstrating an attitude of intolerance? Yes, there have been times when I have been all these things, but I claim spiritual progress not perfection and I am no saint.

I confess that I am a Big Book fundamentalist. I work my Big Book like a recipe for recovery. When I follow the 12 Step instructions as outlined in the book, it awakens my mind and I make conscious contact with my Higher Power. I must remember that when I focus my mind on what is wrong with the fellowship and the meetings today, the more I become restless, irritable and discontented. I must remember that the meetings are filled with many suffering and untreated addicts. Therefore, I practice acceptance and focus on what is good about the meetings and the fellowship. I try to see what I can positively add to the meeting--my only desire is to be helpful. Sometimes I have charged the "meeting makers" of killing people with their, "Don't drink and go to meetings" mantra. In return, they, the "Meeting Makers Make It" sect, have accused me of killing people with my Big Book thumping attitude. What I have learned is this: it is not the "Meeting Makers" that are killing people nor is it the "Big Book thumpers", it's the 20 to 30 years of abusive drinking and using that kills the alcoholic/addict. I must remember that I have no monopoly on recovery, but I do know that the Big Book solution works.

Why do I continue to work with other alcoholic/addicts?

Having had a spiritual experience, I try to practice the 12 Step principles in all my affairs. First, I take care of family, for sobriety is not enough and I am a long way from making good to my spouse, parents and children whom for years I have so shockingly treated. Second, I take care of my business, for there can be no family if I am not self-supporting. And third, in my spare time, I carry this message to other alcoholic addicts. For me, this approach, in this order, is a balanced program.

Over the years I have witnessed a fellowship grow up about me. I have watched the spirit grow in the eyes of a suffering individual and seen them recover from a seemingly hopeless state of mind and body. I have seen them make a 180 degree turn in life, only to help some other suffering addict do the same. This is the experience I would not miss. I know you will not want to miss it either. Frequent contact with newcomers and other Big Book sponsors is a bright spot in my day.

My life has taken on a new meaning and I seem to be of benefit to others. I have found a new freedom and happiness. I know serenity and peace. I continue to lose interest in selfish things and gain interest in the people in my life. My attitude and outlook on life has changed. Fear and economic insecurity is down and I know how to intuitively handle situations which use to baffle me. I realize that my Higher Power does for me what I could not do for myself alone.

A Vision For You

Thus I grow spiritually and so can you with a Big Book in your hand. It contains all you will need to begin working with the addict who still suffers. I know what you are thinking, "I'm a newcomer myself and I do not have enough sobriety time to be of use to anyone. What could I possibly offer another newcomer? Maybe I should wait a year or two." Rubbish! By working the Big Book solution, you will tap a source of power greater than yourself. To duplicate, with such backing, what I have accomplished is only a matter of willingness, patience and labour. Remember your reliance is always upon your Higher Power. It will show you how to create the fellowship you crave. Ask in morning mediation what you can do for the addict who still suffers. The answers will come if you work your program. But if you are shaky you had better work with another alcoholic/addict instead. Remember you have recovered and have been given the power to help others. You will soon find out that when all other measures fail, work with another alcoholic/addict will save the day. Give freely of what you have been shown and join us on the Broad Highway of the Fellowship of the Spirit. You will surely meet some of us as you trudge the Road of Happy Destiny.

Trust God, Clean House, Help Others.

Cameron F.
Toronto, ON

Are you a Big Book Sponsor? Tell us about your experiences.


Comments (Comment Moderation is enabled. Your comment will not appear until approved.)
Beautifully put. THE message that Bill Wilson gives us in the big book Alcoholics Anonymous is that we can recover and stay recovered by helping other alcoholics/addicts to find and pass on the same solution that we were shown.

I too have a 100% success rate with sponsees. Of all the addicts and alcoholics I have tried to help find God, I haven't picked up a drink or drug once. It works, it really does.
# Posted By david s | 4/24/10 5:39 PM
I get excited every time I take a Newcomer through the Big Book and after 8 years, I still get a kick out of it. The Big Book contains the 12 steps, the Step 3,7 Prayers, the forgiveness prayer, how to pray and meditate in Step 11, an entire chapter on Working with Others, and a template for working out a half decent 4th. It says to do step 5 immediately and page 76 has steps 6, 7, and 8 all on one page, how wonderfully convenient for the teacher!

There is no 12 step program other than the Big Book and those poor souls who get hurt or threatened by the Big Book need to be taken through the Big Book to take a look at that and get it on paper.

To all the Big Book sponsors, we know we are doing the right thing, and that's good enough for me,

God Bless you and Keep you until then!
# Posted By Scott A. Finan | 5/3/10 3:30 PM
Since I found this sharing, I keep reading it for many reasons. To stay focused on what I should do and what I shouldn't do; to remember there are others out there who followed BB's path, achieved an spiritual awakening, and are sharing with others, and experiencing different reactions to that. Those are my experiences, nowadays.

My recent one: a former protegee who I worked with the first 3 chapters asked me for guidance about accepting God's will. I remembered him I only had my experience and what BB says, and shared. He listened half my story, started processing information, diagnosed me about what I should have done, and told me about the information in otherr fellowship's books. I surrendered to God every minute since it was a rough time for me to stay, listen, share my experience and BBs content at every question he had. There I found I can't even share if the other can't or is not willing to listen with open mind, follow the clear cut instructions, and keeps mixing the rest of literature and sponsors and fellow's experiences. It was a nurturing experience, showed me how I was in my own path, how powerful and protective God is, and my need of inventory myself (I'm no savior, no truth-bearer), keep following those instructions, and look for a willing one who wants to give it a try.

Thanks for being there, God bless you.
# Posted By Lupe P. | 8/15/10 12:21 AM
Thank you so much for writing this and for this site in general. Any resource which reminds us of what the first 100 did to recover from a seemingly hopeless state of mind and body is an exciting find for me and countless other real alcoholics around the world. "We recover by the Steps we take, not the meetings we make."
# Posted By Jeff C | 4/18/11 2:54 PM
My name is Bruce. For years I have been taking people through the twelve steps and have stayed sober and happy. About 8 months ago I stopped.I was having a big life change and the program of AA became secondary, then non-existant. As a result the inevidble happened. I am now back for 8 days. I have gone to Big Book meetings and step meetings. I will only go to meetings where the solution (The 12 steps, and of course God) is discussed. I will recover again if I DO THE WORK.
# Posted By bruce z | 8/11/11 2:24 AM
By the Grace of God, the Program and the Fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous I haven't had to, needed to or wanted to take a drink { or a drug } today and because of that I have a life... It it that simple.. For me Gratitude is a VERB !..Love and may your God go with you Ian S..
# Posted By Ian S | 10/22/11 11:31 AM
Ok to a great extent you are right, and I was encouraged to reach out to new people on a regular basis, and it still works. As Bill relates (Big Book pages 14/15)Working with others is the one thing that works when everything else fails. However, you can not "transmit something you haven't got....".."see to it that your relationship with him (God)is good..." Therefore an 'unrecovered' alcoholic might do well to work steps 1 to 9, and practice 10, 11, and 12 to grow. Step 7 is about being useful, and that means service, loving kindness to everyone, and humility to ask for help.
# Posted By Nigel | 2/9/12 5:26 AM
I sponsor guys with the work in the Big Book. 30 years ago I had pigeons falling from the sky as soon as I started Step 9 in the Big Book..It went like that for years.6-10 Guys sharing the path with me everyday in some form or another some reading some writing, appointments for in depth 5th's, some were making amends and some were ready to fly or die with new men themselves....I wouldn't change places with anyone as my experience is my own..

As years go by and the Government, Medical Fraternities dedicated to science, Big Pharma, treatment centers, manipulate their legal loopholes it is not as simple as a new man showing up at a meeting willing to put the drink down and pursue the psychic change with his trusted Sponsor. Many are fished out of society with bait used to catch the emotionally empty and self destructive, tasty mind soothing bait. Those with societies behavioural issues are treated with the many who believe in harm reduction who mostly agree that a Spiritual program of recovery won't pay the rent. Nevermind the many who believe the 12 Steps for the hopeless Alcoholic are in the 12 and 12 and easily applied when read thoroughly...Many are filled with facts and figures from the selfishness of Secular belief to prove the existence of a Spiritual realm ridiculous making AA secondary at best..Their primary focus should be on medication, therapy, and methods of empowerment..The AA concept of powerlessness appears weak and defeating..

Many continue to try but I feel there is no debate. Some are justified to defend AA and themselves, I can't handle the intensity. I cannot survive as an example of power even if my motives are true..I have only one alternative really to be a power of example to the new man..I am the same person coming as going. I don't throw myself at people, I stand with the God of my understanding..I practice these principals in all my affairs, 10 11 and 12..I will give you everything I have so theres nothing to steal from me.

With God first it seems the new man finds emotional security with a man who works the Book, no need to jockey for position with others creating some invisible chain of command, no need to continue to use others to create my self esteem..No matter how disturbing they may appear..Pigeons pick up on that shite..

So in the sea of Alcoholism I swim freely, I am not afraid of what I can't see. I believe in myself, I believe in my God, I believe in the message I offer to the man who suffers..The people have changed and the surroundings have evolved but the program is the same as it ever was..I work on myself to keep my own house in order and give what I get without the concern of who takes..

Stepsherpa
# Posted By Gregg G | 2/29/12 12:19 PM
Thankyou for the post. I am not a sponsor I only got sober 4 months ago after an 11 yr struggle in AA. I was all fired up wanted to pass on what happened to me, but I am not allowed to because people get angry when I try to.

I am not happy or passionate about it anymore because it took me 11yr to get it and now I'm not allowed to pass it on...was told I will kill people.

Was told I am not honest...told quoting book isn't what it's about, even though I can't ever recall quoting book just saying 2 ladies read from book to me and the answer for me came from talking to them and them reading first 100 odd pages of book and now I don't want to drink.

I feel very sad inside and am not allowed to approach newcomers told am not spiritually or mentally well enough or even well enough to so service.

AA is not what I once thought it would be if ever I got it.
Also, its ok to be only dependent on God because for the past 11 years I have been a target for lots of sick predators and abusive people around AA. However every human being needs human company, I will never knock AA real AA or the big book because it works. However, I will drink or use again because though I do all the steps and now live on Steps 10 and 11, I am not allowed to work Step 12 and I don't feel serene, happy, or joyous, in fact, today I thought about cannibas again and just forgetting AA.

I am getting to be an old old lady and I have lots other illnesses. If I stay isolated, I will drink again of course. If I use weed, but at least I won't die lonely. I had loads of friends and never without a partner pre-AA. I may well be selfish but am not allowed to be anything else in AA and I now dispute the selfish stuff being the cause of my addictions. I don't think I was totally selfish I gave away my inheritance when I was 24 years old...In pre-AA thousands and I had nothing at the time.

i gave blood i gave to charities i gave time to people i gave of myself often and pre AA i got out of addiction for years when i became a Mormon and was not selfish at that time-i left returned to addicitions -i am an alcholic addict-i fit the bill more than most i met in AA nearly died pre aa and nearly died after aa-i couldnt stop when i wanted to nad had great reason to and i couldnt control and i did tradig things when drunk got hit with a car walking along motor way-i will die in active addiction but i will also die in AA cause of lonilness isolation and not being alloed to pass it on i wish yopu all well i really do am not jealouse of any of you i dont want what you have because it isnt peace love and joy for me tajke care.
# Posted By sharron | 3/30/12 1:51 PM
Hi Sharron..AA, Alcoholics Anonymous, crazy place yeah?
I went to a AA meeting last night. More than not I needed the meeting for myself, without being all analytical or looking at myself I just noticed I was agitated at a pigeon who disappeared from the solar system a few days earlier who understood the idea of the 3rd Step and was ready to make the decision, then(poof!)gone, no launch date.. I'd been isolating, working out in the garage on some book cases and rather than ask anyone for help to move them I dropped one and scratched it good..I was really supposed to be getting the front end aligned in my truck but didn't feel like dealing with people and spending money or whatever, life on life's terms. It was easier to just hide in the garage..I can do that I thought, I'd been around for long enough to cut a deal, I'd heard about a hundred 5th Steps..I should be able to create my(make the world go away) time or me time...

So I get ready for the meeting and notice I have aftershave on and some jewelery and my dress watch and even though it's kind of odd I just keep going..Usually I would just jump in the truck and go without all the hoopla..I decide to make sandwiches as I always do and more strangely put extra ham on them..So I get to the meeting and feel kind of like the square peg, people that I was thinking about seem to walk right by..I was excited to be there and they were in their own world of AA that didn't include me like I was invisible..Didn't they know how much effort I put into my AA? My years of service? I deserve better..

I began to notice the guy who had drank a week before was supposedly doing good this week but I knew different, how could he be happy with one week of sobriety? The chairperson seemed like he was his control freak self sharing his story once again as practically a continuance of last weeks dominance..I noticed a new guy who sat almost next to me and nobody shook his hand or welcomed him and by now I certainly wasn't going to, I'd had enough of these grand AA powers of example with their selfish behaviour so I got up and left..I did it real slow in protest so everyone could see me leave. I objected to the meeting and everyone's lack of patience love and tolerance..

I got out in my truck and sat for a minute, I was lost and alone..AA sucks I thought. It's not what it used to be, I tried to comfort myself like I always did with self reliance, I'll try harder with my arrangement of people..They're screwed up and I'm not.I know what AA is supposed to be and they certainly aren't it...

As I searched my people worshiping confusion for some validation or self esteem it was clear I was trying yes, but I was the only one who would think my motives were good, my selfishness would make sure of that..Then the thought came to me like it was hiding in the corner of my mind. My old Big Book Step Sponsor many years ago saying 10 11 and 12, when you are in emotional trouble you're in Spiritual trouble, it's all about where you are with 10 11 and 12..My first thought on this was yup, Mr Spiritual speaks, but then I got a moment of clarity..

I thought for a minute and began to pray (Step11)..God why am I so freakin whacked out? How come I....It hit me, self-pity, I was full of self-pity..I kept praying. I could atleast see that I was full of self(Step10)..I knew enough to keep praying for direction.

I never did pause earlier in the day when I was agitated(Step 11), I thought I could handle it and kept going(Step 10)..I thought I was doing the right thing but I was not thinking about God only people and how I measured up for my self esteem..If they liked me, I liked me(Step6)..Damn, I with all I knew about sobriety was again an example of self will run riot and didn't think so, I laughed at myself..

I sat in the truck and prayed for direction(Step 11)stopping to laugh at the insanity that can come over me in my selfishness trying to be normal..I'm not normal, probably never be normal(Step 1)..Once again proving I don't even know what normal is?

I went back in the meeting still in my how do you like me so far costume complete w/ rolex and dress shirt and sat next to the new guy I scoffed at earlier(Step12)..When the meeting was about over and the chair said anyone with a burning desire I raised my hand. I said I was grateful the meeting was there for me tonight and was once again reminded that I'm the problem, the Steps are the solution (Step 7)..I am not the director, I am just another actor in this grand play of life and grateful for the chance to be part of it..(Step 3)

I was reminded of Step 10, continue to watch, not continue to wait till you get caught..I fell on my face, I'll try to focus more on the Higher Powers direction and the willingness to continue to grow in understanding and effectiveness(Step 11)..

As I drove home I thought about the 100 forms of fear, The selfish self centeredness, The victim of the delusion(Step 4)..Yes I was certainly a poster boy for whacked out Alcoholics but look at what I have to show for it.I have a actual program of recovery that has proven to work If I'm willing to continue it for my lifetime(Step 12). What everyone else is doing is good for them, I know my psychic change does not revolve around my relationship with people, it's my relationship with the Higher Power (Step12)..

Anyway, Sharron..Don't give up on yourself..If you want the Book, search out those who are willing to live it..They're around, pray for direction, eliminate yourself as the middle man (Step2)...
# Posted By Gregg G | 4/1/12 10:31 AM