Recovery Meditations ~ Good Days Bad Days ~ One Day at a Time ~ May 10, 2011

~ GOOD DAYS BAD DAYS ~

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Most of the shadows of this life are

caused by standing in one's own

sunshine.

Ralph Waldo Emerson

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Thank You, God, for always loving and

accepting me right where I am, and

working with me, even when I am not

willing to give You much to work

with. It is so comforting to know that

wherever I am, whether I am willing and

open, or have once again shut myself off

from the Light of Your Spirit, You will

meet me there and provide whatever is

necessary for me to keep on.

Thank You for forgiving me those times

when I am not willing enough to put

forth any effort--some days I just want

to skate, God--some days I just want to

wallow in it. Why else would I resist

changing into what You would have me be?

Some days I am lazy and comfortable just

where I am.


ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


God, Help me to be willing to reach out


to You, good day or bad. Keep me mindful


that my conscious contact with You makes


even the best day better, and the worst


day tolerable.

Recovery Meditations ~ Positive Thoughts ~ One Day at a Time ~ May 9, 2010

~ OPEN MINDEDNESS ~

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Let go of your attachment to being

right, and suddenly your mind is more

open. You're able to benefit from the

unique viewpoints of others, without

being crippled by your own judgment.


Ralph Marston

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Before joining this program much of my

life was taken up with defending myself

against those who would hurl abuse. I

kept everything and everybody at arm's

length in a bid to protect my

increasingly fragile and sensitive

self-assurance. As time marched on, and

my disease became parasitical, the walls

around me grew higher and isolation drew

me inwards.

Ironically, the fortress I was building

didn’t protect me from myself and I soon

became my own worst enemy. My

self-loathing and my unceasing search

for perfection led me deeper into a

self-induced state of

depression. Keeping everybody out and

locking myself in became an exhausting

exercise.

On entering the 12 Step program I soon

realized that the fortress I had so

carefully built to protect myself

against the outside world was also

preventing any kind of light, warmth and

love from entering in.

As my journey of recovery progressed,

brick by brick the walls came down and

afforded me the nourishment I needed to

blossom and grow. In learning to accept

myself, I found that what others thought

of me paled into insignificance. I

learned that there was a wealth of

experience, strength and hope which

would help me along the journey. I

learned that I could take what I needed

and put down the remainder, without the

resentment, anger, fear or pain, which

previously would have sent me running

for cover.


One Day at a Time . . .


I aim to be willing to keep my mind


open, to accept what I need to continue


my journey, and to leave the rest.

Recovery Meditations ~ Positive Thoughts ~ One Day at a Time ~ May 8, 2011

~ POSITIVE THOUGHTS ~

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"I’ve always believed that you can think

positive just as well as you can think

negative."

James Arthur Baldwin

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What did I think about before I was in

recovery? I worried about what others

thought of me. I thought of what and

when I could eat next. I picked apart

the way others' bodies looked, while

being jealous of them. I didn't know

that thinking of negative things brought

my energy level down. I thought

self-discipline meant disciplining

myself -- which meant mentally beating

myself up.

My Higher Power has shown me a way of

thinking that was new to me, but is age

old -- positive thoughts. Thinking

positive brings me to a level of

serenity. When my mind wanders, I can

bring it back. When I find myself

obsessing over something negative, I can

work the first three steps with it. I am

powerless over negativity. I have a HP

who can remove it from me. I choose to

let my HP direct my thoughts. And then

let myself to think of something else.


ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


I choose to think positively. The result is serenity.

Recovery Meditations ~ Understanding ~ One Day at a Time ~ May 7, 2011

~ UNDERSTANDING ~


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Understanding is the wellspring of life.

The Bible, Book of Proverbs

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rly on in my recovery I became aware that understanding myself and my disease was going to be a tool of success. For many years I lived day after day in my addiction, bemoaning it, suffering in it, struggling against it, and adopting the world view of my condition. I came to believe that losing weight was the answer to all my problems ... if I could stick to a diet. Because I couldn't, the thoughts of worthlessness, ignorance, shame and guilt were repeatedly reinforced.

In working the Steps, the idea of recovery through understanding myself was born. Through knowledge of my Higher Power, and by His guidance, the understanding of my past and my present have given me keys to freedom from compulsive overeating. I welcome working the Steps because they have opened doors of my heart to mend the past and receive hope for the future. Understanding who I am and why I'm like I am, allows me to be abstinent and to develop new ways of coping with the stresses of life.

Understanding the disease frees me from guilt and shame and releases self- acceptance.


ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


I continue to seek knowledge and understanding as a way to recovery.

Recovery Meditations ~ Expectations ~ One Day at a Time ~ May 6, 2011

~ EXPECTATIONS ~


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"The best thing about the future is that it only comes one day at a time."

Abraham Lincoln

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Being a rational, logical person I have always worked from the premise that If I did something then the following would be the outcome and maybe in the scientific world that may have been true. But in the real world of relationships and people it certainly doesn't work like that as I have discovered since coming into program. As it says in the Big Book "serenity is inversely proportional to one's expectations" and I know now how true this is. Just recently after having set a boundary with my son I was expecting all sorts of repercussions and imagined him talk me out of my decision and the result was that I lost my serenity and became really anxious. Of course the truth was nowhere like I had imagined and the situation ended very differently from what I had expected. This was a lesson to me once again that things don't turn out the way we expect them to the way they are meant to.

ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


When I let go of any expectations I have of how a situation is going to turn out, I get to keep my serenity and the situation turns out the way it's supposed to.

Recovery Meditations ~Acceptance ~ One Day at a Time ~ May 5, 2011

~ ACCEPTANCE ~



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Until you make peace with who you are, you will never be content with what you have.

Doris Mortman

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Through abstinence and recovery, I can begin to accept myself. I can pay attention to my likes and my dislikes as I continue to grow and learn about me. Learning about myself is a new adventure. There are so many layers that have been hidden under years of food abuse and weight obsession. Exploring and discovering the new me requires a lot of acceptance. There are parts of me that I do not like, and there are
also wonderful surprises. By accepting all parts of myself, I am honoring my Higher Power and demonstrating spiritual recovery.


ONE DAY AT A TIME ...

I will accept myself. By learning to accept myself, I will find myself growing in my acceptance of others.

Recovery Meditations ~ Unconditional Love ~ One Day at a Time ~ May 4, 2011

~ UNCONDITIONAL LOVE ~

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The ultimate lesson all of us have to learn is unconditional love, which includes not only others but ourselves

as well.



Elizabeth Kubler-Ross

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I don't think I knew what unconditional love was before I came into the program. After all, I had always felt that my mother had only loved and accepted me conditionally, and that in order for me to receive approval and love from her, I had to be the best at everything I did. I had to be at the top of the class, win prizes for ballet and in general be a credit to her, so that she could bask in the reflected limelight. Perhaps that was only my perception. But as a result, I wrote a script for myself that, in order to be loved, accepted and loveable, I had to excel at everything. I became an overachiever academically, I had to be the best wife, best mother, best cook, in short, the best everything. No wonder I had to eat to cope with all this self-inflicted pressure.

The unconditional love and acceptance I received when I first came into these program rooms was something I had never experienced before. "Let us love you until you can learn to love yourself," they said. This was something totally foreign to me. How could I be loveable when I was fat and bloated? How could they love me when I hated myself for all the secret eating that caused me to feel totally miserable? But love me they did, and that was the beginning of my healing. At one stage fairly early in my recovery, one of my daughters accused me of being so busy going to meetings and doing courses and learning to love myself, that I was too busy to love them. How wrong she was! It was only when I had learned enough self-love and approval of myself, exactly as I was, that I was able to love all my children fully and unconditionally.

I am now able to love and accept all my children exactly as they are. None of them are perfect, as I am not, but they are special in their own right, and I love them for who they are and not for anything they do or don't do.

ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


I practice being warm and accepting of all those I love, as I accept and love myself for being who I am today -- a child of God.

Recovery Meditations ~ Step One ~ One Day at a Time ~ May 3, 2011

~ STEP ONE ~

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"The cause is hidden, but the result is known."

Ovid

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When I went to my first meeting and was

told about Step One, that I was to admit

my powerlessness, it was somewhat of a

mystery to me. I thought powerlessness

was weakness. It was obvious that the

result of my compulsive overeating could

be seen by everyone, but to me, I was

not sure that powerlessness was the

answer to the problem. As I kept going

to meetings and listening to people

share about powerlessness, read the

literature, and talked to my sponsor, I

learned that powerlessness was not

weakness. In fact, to admit my

powerlessness, was to connect me to a

power that was greater than I had ever

experienced before in my life.

The paradoxes of the program, such as we

"lose to win" "give to receive" are true

of admitting my powerlessness to find a

greater power. In The Twelve Steps and

Twelve Traditions of Overeaters

Anonymous on p. 5 it reads, "Later we

discovered that, far from being a

negative factor, the admission of our

powerlessness over food opened the door

to an amazing newfound power." What a

blessing it is to now know that I am

powerless, and have opened the door of a

newfound power through the steps, the

tools and my Higher Power.



ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


I will freely admit my powerlessness and gladly open the door to the newfound power in my life.

Recovery Meditations ~ Helping Others ~ One Day at a Time ~ May 2, 2011

~ HELPING OTHERS ~

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If I can stop one heart from breaking, I

shall not live in vain If I can ease one

life the aching or cool one pain or help

one fainting Robin unto his nest again I

shall not live in vain


Emily Dickinson

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Somewhere along the way I found myself

to be a caretaker. Injustices, pain,

discrimination, bullying; all these

things affected me deeply. I carried it

too far. It reached a point where I

truly believe I began taking better care

of others than I did myself. Was this

ego? Codependency? Altruism? Or was this

a guiltless way I found to deflect my

own problems, pain, injustices and

needs?

When I was doing my first 4th Step

inventory, I learned something very

important. As my sponsor read over one

"bad thing" I had done after another she

cautioned me to take a broader look at

myself. Finally, she made me do my

entire inventory over and for every 5th

character defect or offense to someone,

I was required to write something good

about myself. She explained that an

inventory is never meant to be focused

on just the bad ... but the good

also. After all, when a store takes

inventory on its products, it counts

bent cans of beans as well as the

perfect cans of beans and crushed boxes

of cereal as well as the perfect ones.

This helped me to see that my life's

purpose was not just to help others but

also to nurture me when my heart was

breaking, to make my own life good and

to have a nest for myself that was safe

and serene. After working the Steps, I

know that I'm not living my life in vain

and I still want to help others as much

as I possibly can, but not to the

detriment of myself ... and certainly

not to keep me from looking at my own

life and my own problems realistically.


ONE DAY AT A TIME...


May I help others who are less fortunate


than I find their way. And let me also


make my own nest as comfortable as it


can be.

Recovery Meditations ~ Sharing Our Stories ~ One Day at a Time ~ May 1, 2011

~ SHARING OUR STORIES ~


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"You leave home to seek your fortune

and, when you get it, you go home and

share it with your family."


Anita Baker

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For much of my life I tried to be

"Strong." I kept silent about my own

suffering and focused instead on others

people’s needs and how I could help

them. Though I could listen and offer

advice, I lacked empathy and

understanding.

When my stoic, stubborn, and silent

avoidance of my own struggles finally

made my life unmanageable, I entered

recovery. By listening to stories shared

by others, I have been blessed. I have

found that none of us walk this path

alone. We learn from each other and from

the strength of traditions. I have found

empathy.

I came to see that my silence was born

from weakness, not from strength. It was

shame, fear, and pride, which kept me

hiding. Now I find great joy and freedom

in sharing my story with others. I am

particularly grateful to God for the way

He used my story with my Dad.

My crisis not only drove me to seek

help, but it freed my Dad to get help

too. If I had remained silent, not only

would I have been destroyed, but I would

have robbed my Dad of the acceptance and

freedom to admit and seek the help he

needed ~ and that has so profoundly

changed his life.



ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


I will recognize that my history and my


current experiences are not to be hidden


in silence. I will share my story with


others.

Recovery Meditations ~ Goodness ~ One Day at a Time ~ April 30, 2011

~ GOODNESS ~


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Above all, let us never forget that an

act of goodness is in itself an act of

happiness.


Count Maurice Maeterlinck

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While in the disease, most of the

goodness I tried to do was for ulterior

motives. It was only in recovery that I

learned to give unselfishly and without

strings to help another. In doing so, I

have found happiness beyond measure. I

can create my own happiness in the

service of my Higher Power and other

compulsive overeaters. I can make the

promise of a "new happiness and a new

freedom" come true.



ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


I will do acts of goodness.

Recovery Meditations ~ Unity ~ One Day At A Time ~ April 29, 2011

~ UNITY ~

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Separate reeds are weak and easily

broken; but bound together they are

strong and hard to tear apart.


The Midrash, Judaic Text

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For most of my life before coming into

the program, I was a bit of a loner. I

never had a lot of friends, perhaps

because of my feelings of inadequacy,

and was never good at sports, especially

team sports. So I buried myself a lot in

books, in academic achievements at which

I excelled, mainly because I could do

that on my own. I lived in a fantasy

world where a knight in shining armor

would come and rescue me, and my life

would then be perfect. I had never even

had a serious long-term relationship

until I met my first husband, so it was

hardly surprising that I made a bad

choice and after having three children

and much heartache, got divorced.

When I first came into program, it was

the first time I had ever felt part of a

big group, and most importantly they all

spoke my language. Their experiences

were my experiences. These wonderful

people became my family. There was, and

still is, for me an incredible sense of

belonging in the fellowship. No longer

do I have to brave it on my own as there

will always be someone on the other end

of the line or in a meeting who can

identify and share with me what I am

going through. The strength that I feel

when I come into the meeting rooms or

speak to a fellow member on the phone is

a powerful sustaining force for me that

has helped me through countless

difficult situations and continues to do

so.


ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


I only need to reach out and join hands with others in the fellowship to gain the strength to do things I could never do before. It is only with their help, support and love that I am fully able to recover.

Recovery Meditations ~ God of my understanding ~ One Day at a Time ~ April 28, 2011

~ GOD OF MY UNDERSTANDING ~



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"I believe in God, but not as one thing, not as an old man in the sky. I believe that what people call God is something in all of us."

John Lennon

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Like many people, I originally came to Program primarily seeking help with my compulsive overeating. My main concern was to gain control of my weight and my appetite. I was expecting some kind of diet program, but I found something quite different. I already considered myself religious and didn't think I needed much help in this area. I also wasn't particularly interested in working on my shortcomings, but I was willing to
overlook these "problem" areas of Program because I was so desperate for help.
Well, I did get my weight and appetite under control, but I got much more than that. Program's concept of being able to work with a God of my own understanding may have been the most radical and
personally-enlightening theological tidbit I've ever had the pleasure of tripping over. It changed everything I thought I knew about spirituality and God. Through this shift in my understanding, my Higher Power began to
change me and help me with my COE by gradually removing all of my past baggage and encumbrances. Even though I've now reached my recovery goals, my purification continues daily, as does my spiritual growth. I went searching for a diet that actually worked and instead found a whole new way of life. Whoda thunk?
ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .
I will continue to nurture my relationship with the God Of MY Understanding by working the tools of recovery.

Recovery Meditations ~ Relationships ~ One Day At A Time ~ April 27, 2011

~ RELATIONSHIPS ~


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And let there be no purpose in

friendship save the deepening of Spirit.

Kahlil Gibran

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My initial experience of relationships

in recovery was one of wonder and

relief. I was so amazed to find that

there actually were other people who

understood life as I lived it! Until I

walked into the rooms of recovery, I

felt so alone and different from other

people. Finding people who had also

lived the night- mare of compulsive

eating, helped my isolation fade

away. Seeing that they had found a new

way of living gave me hope!!

As I began to share more deeply with my

sponsor and other people in recovery, I

discovered a deeper gift of friendship

in recovery. I received unconditional

love and focused guidance toward the

steps of recovery which would transform

me completely. This was the greatest

gift of relationship that I had ever

known. This was the beginning of the

transformation that invited me to share

the Spirit of recovery with others.

As I carry the principles of recovery

into all aspects of my life, I find my

relationships with all people are

transformed. My character defects no

longer stand in the way of my honesty,

and fear no longer holds me

prisoner. The Spirit of recovery which

has been so generously shared with me,

continues to be shared joyously through

me.


ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


I will be carried by the Spirit of recovery into all of my relationships.

Recovery Meditations ~ Pain ~ One Day at a Time ~ April 26, 2011

~ PAIN ~

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Your pain is the breaking of the shell

that encloses your understanding.


Kahlil Gibran

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How many of us in recovery thought we

were in pain before seeking help, only

to find out recovery itself was more

painful? I know that is how my progress

in Twelve Step recovery, especially from

compulsive eating, has

been. Fortunately, pain in recovery

doesn't break my spirit as it did before

I started working the Twelve Steps.

Now, through recovery, the walls that I

had built around my inner spirit for

protection are being slowly broken down

and moved away.

This changing and renewing of my inner

self is extremely painful at times, and

if I didn't have the tools of the

program such as sponsorship, a food

plan, working the Steps and conscious

contact with my Higher Power, there

would be no understanding born out of

the pain. Before recovery, the pain

would start to fill my inner shell with

self-pity, self-disgust, and

despair. Now when the pain comes to me,

I've slowly learned to embrace it, and

hold it close to my heart. This new pain

means that I will be shown by my Higher

Power the insight and understanding

needed for me to continue this daily

recovery process. Does this mean I am

filled with joy as I see the pain

coming? Absolutely not! This means that

I now have a power greater than myself

to shield me from pain that would break

me. After feeling the pain needed to

give me understanding, I am given

healing to continue my journey. One day

at a time... I will seek to feel and

face the pain on this journey, knowing

that understanding and healing will

follow through my Higher Power's hand.


ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .

I will seek to feel and face the pain on this journey, knowing that understanding and healing will follow through my Higher Power's hand.

Recovery Meditations ~ Understanding ~ One Day at a Time ~ April 25, 2011

~ UNDERSTANDING ~

:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:

Understanding is the wellspring of life.

The Bible, Book of Proverbs

:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:

Early on in my recovery I became aware

that understanding myself and my disease

was going to be a tool of success. For

many years I lived day after day in my

addiction, bemoaning it, suffering in

it, struggling against it, and adopting

the world view of my condition. I came

to believe that losing weight was the

answer to all my problems ... if I could

stick to a diet. Because I couldn't, the

thoughts of worthlessness, ignorance,

shame and guilt were repeatedly

reinforced.

In working the Steps, the idea of

recovery through understanding myself

was born. Through knowledge of my

Higher Power, and by His guidance, the

understanding of my past and my present

have given me keys to freedom from

compulsive overeating. I welcome working

the Steps because they have opened doors

of my heart to mend the past and receive

hope for the future. Understanding who I

am and why I'm like I am, allows me to

be abstinent and to develop new ways of

coping with the stresses of life.

Understanding the disease frees me from

guilt and shame and releases self-

acceptance.

ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


I continue to seek knowledge and understanding as a way to recovery.

Recovery Meditations ~ Loneliness ~ One Day at a Time ~ April 24, 2011

~ LONELINESS ~


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Feeling our loneliness magnifies it.

Understanding our loneliness can open

doors into our self-awareness, which we

long for and need.


Anthony Robbins

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Before I found my Twelve Step program, I

felt so lonely. I was stuck in total

isolation and the feeling of loneliness

felt one hundred times worse. The

isolation and loneliness caused me to

continually eat ... and so I'd isolate

more. What a vicious cycle!

When I found my recovery program, I

still wanted to isolate. When going to

meetings, I wanted the seat with nobody

around it. I didn't want to open my

mouth to share or talk, even after the

meeting. I kept coming back even though

I felt alone, because I heard familiar

things that really interested me. I

eventually saw that most of the people

in the room felt the same loneliness I

did. I began to understand why I felt so

lonely.

When I understood that my compulsive

eating was causing me to isolate and be

more lonely, a big burden was lifted off

my shoulders. I finally felt some hope!

Then I found that there were many other

doors in the past that I should open and

become more aware of. These past

happenings were what started and fueled

this disease of compulsive eating. I

wanted to know but I was also afraid to

find out.

The similarities, kindness and love I

found in the rooms made it easier to

look at my past. Understanding that I

was not the total reason for my

loneliness, I began making amends. I

needed to forgive others who had harmed

me and those I had harmed. I felt

lighter and more self aware, and

confidence began to emerge.

ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


I will remember that it's okay and good


to feel my feelings but they don't have


to rule my life. I don't have to let


loneliness magnify, causing me to eat


uncontrollably to solve the


problem. I've learned to turn things


over to my Higher Power and to let them


go. Looking back is the key to my self-


awareness and my recovery.

Recovery Meditations ~ Birthright ~ One Day at a Time ~ April 23, 2011

~ BIRTHRIGHT ~


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I've continued to recognize the power

individuals have to change virtually

anything and everything in their lives

in an instant. I've learned that the

resources we need to turn our dreams

into reality are within us, merely

waiting for the day when we decide to

wake up and claim our birthright.

Anthony Robbins

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I have divine origins because I am part

of my Higher Power. Whether I see my

Higher Power as a male, female or

neither; no matter if I experience my

Higher Power as a Heavenly Parent, a

Divine Friend, or a Great Spirit;

whether I find my Higher Power in a

temple, in the mountains, or in my

child's eyes ... I am connected to

something greater than myself, my

problems, and my fears. The who, what,

where, when, and how of my Higher Power

are not important. I don't have to

completely understand HP because my HP

understands me.

I have been endowed with all the things

I need to be successful in recovery and

in life. All I have to do is step up and

claim them. I have intellect, I have

emotion, and I have a spirit. All of

those things have a direct line to my

Higher Power. What I can't yet access is

given to me as a gift when I claim my

divine birthright by simply saying, "I

can't. You can. I think I'll let You."

What greater power is there than to give

our power to our Higher Power? Knowing

when I can't do it alone is a gift!


ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .

I will remember I come from royalty. I will remember my divine birthright and step up to claim it. Today I will not sell my divine birthright for a mess of pottage.

Recovery Meditations ~ Compulsions ~ One Day at a Time ~ April 22, 2011

~ COMPULSIONS ~

~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:

Compulsive urges to overeat, gorge or

purge are inadequate coping mechanisms.

Compulsion is loss of control and

continuation of the behavior despite the

consequences.

Gloria Arenson

:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:

Compulsive overeating is not a moral

dilemma; it is not a right or wrong; nor

is it a black and white event. I learned

at a pre-verbal stage that compulsive

overeating is a coping mechanism. When I

cried to be held, I was fed; when I

cried because I was wet, I was fed; when

I cried because I was in pain, I was

fed; when life was good, I was fed. Is

it any wonder I reach for food when life

is happening around me?

This program teaches me different ways

to cope with life. The Steps teach me

how to act on life rather than react to

it. I did not choose this disease, but I

do choose recovery. Through the help of

my Higher Power, the program, and other

program members I can recover. I can

live in the solution one day at a time

and one meal at a time.


ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


I will have a program. I choose recovery, health, love and life.

Recovery Meditations ~ Religion ~ One Day at a Time ~ April 21, 2011

~ RELIGION ~

~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:

Religion is for people who don't want to

go to hell. Program is for people who

have already been there.

Unknown

:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:. .:~*~:

I was religious when I came into program

and I was ready and willing to tell

everyone what the "true" faith was. I

went to church every Sunday. I was a

religion teacher. I knew it all.

The truth is I didn't know ANYTHING. It

didn't take long for me to begin to

question my own religiosity. In fact, it

began at Steps two and three. Before

long, I wondered if there was a God at

all. If there was, is God a He, a She or

an It? Then I decided, yes there was a

God, but did He/She/It care about me?

The real truth is God is who God needs

to be to work through me. There's no

right or wrong answer to my

questions. What I DO know is that God

loves me just the way I am.

The greatest gift my Higher Power gave

me came on the day I looked up to

"heaven" and told God, "I don't believe

in You!" And that still, quiet voice

inside of me asked, "Then to Whom are

you speaking?"


ONE DAY AT A TIME . . .


I don't have to have theological "proof" that there is a Power greater than myself. I just need to believe.