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The Universal 12 Steps for Freethinkers

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Old 10-21-2013, 11:26 AM
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The Universal 12 Steps for Freethinkers

The Universal 12 Steps of AA for Atheists & Freethinkers
by Dennis J. Fitzpatrick

Freethought holds that individuals should not accept ideas proposed as truth without recourse to knowledge and reason. Thus, freethinkers strive to build their opinions on the basis of facts, scientific inquiry, and logical principles, independent of any logical fallacies or intellectually limiting effects of authority, confirmation bias, cognitive bias, conventional wisdom, popular culture, prejudice, sectarianism, tradition, urban legend, and all other dogmas. Regarding religion, freethinkers hold that there is insufficient evidence to support the existence of supernatural phenomena. Wikipedia Dictionary

1. We admitted we were powerless over our addiction —that our lives had become unmanageable.

2. Came to believe that the wisdom of other abstinent members could restore us to sanity.

3. Made a decision to follow a path of recovery.

4. Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.

5. Admitted to ourselves and to another human being the exact nature of our wrongs.

6. Were entirely ready to let go of our defects of character.

7. Humbly overcame our shortcomings.

8. Made a list of all persons we had harmed and those who had harmed us and became willing to make amends and forgive them all.

9. Made direct amends and forgave such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others.

10. Continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly admitted it and forgave those who harmed us.

11. Sought through meditation to improve our integrity in all areas of our lives.

12. Having had an awakening as a result of these steps, we tried to carry this message to others addicted like us and to practice these principles in all our affairs.

Commentary:
1. We admitted we were powerless over our addiction —that our lives had become unmanageable.

Comment: I suggest that the newcomer write out three ways they know they are powerless over alcohol or drugs. An example would be: “I drink or use to passing out. I don’t know what city I might end up in. I don’t know who I will end up with.” Then I suggest that the newcomer write three ways they know their life is unmanageable which means that they have poor relationships. An example would be: “My financial condition is terrible because of the amount of money I spend on alcohol or drugs. My family and marriage relationships are strained. My relationship with the legal system ended up in an arrest.”

2. Came to believe that the wisdom of other abstinent members could restore us to sanity.

Comment: Physical sanity means not taking the first drink or drug. It is even better if I don’t want to take the first drink or drug. Relapse can happen if I want to drink or drug and am using will power to do it. It is much easier if I rely on the power of the group to stay sober when I cannot do it alone.

3. Made a decision to follow a path of recovery.

Comment: It is not necessary to believe in a denominational view of God or any view of God. If I believe in the wisdom of the12 Step group to stay abstinent when I can’t, that is enough. Most newcomers are atheists or agnostics. I filter the key parts of my life to a sober point of view: love relationships, financial problems, emotional upsets, health problems and so on.

4. Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.

Comment: Doing this step separates the tourists from those who are serious about recovery. I suggest that the inventory should be written about the damage in my key relationships: mate, ex mates and girlfriends, children, parents, brothers and sisters, other relatives, work relationships and so on. I teach that the inventory should include a one sentence answer to three questions: the story, the old behavior, and the new behavior.
1.Example of the story: I was lonely and got drunk or high on drugs.
2. Example of the old behavior: Whenever I was lonely I used alcohol or drugs to escape.
3. Example of the new behavior: I overcome my emotional neediness through helping others and relating to my new friends in my 12 Step group.
It should only take a week or two to write this inventory. It is not meant to be an exhaustive autobiographical novel.

5. Admitted to ourselves and to another human being the exact nature of our wrongs.

Comment: I read this inventory aloud to a person I trust such as a sponsor or a trusted member of the 12 step group who has done the 12 steps. In the reading of the inventory it will become increasingly clear to me that the exact nature of my wrongs is that I used alcohol, drugs and other to try to survive. The 12 step therapy of the 4th and 5th steps transforms the addict’s past from guilt to experience. Instead of feeling weak in dealing with the present, I will find strength. Instead of viewing the future with fear, I will feel hope. My history is transformed from guilt, weakness and fear into experience, strength and hope.

6. Were entirely ready to let go of our defects of character.

Comment: In the course of reading my inventory, I notice my patterns of behavior that cause me problems in my relationship with others. I make a prioritized list of my defects. For example I might list raging when I can’t get my way, loneliness that leads to self-pity, exaggerating to feel more important and so on.

7. Humbly overcame our shortcomings.
Comment: I make a parallel list of my shortcomings. For example I am powerless over my character defect of raging but I can practice the opposite, my lack of patience. I am powerless over loneliness but I can practice being loving to others. I am powerless over exaggerating but I can practice being truthful. To the extent that I continue to overcome my shortcomings in the form of second thoughts, my defects of character, or impulsive first thoughts, will be removed. Eventually my old impulsive first thoughts will be replaced with new healthy first thoughts.

8. Made a list of all persons we had harmed and those who had harmed us and became willing to make amends and forgive them all.

Comment: Now I examine my relationships. I list the ones from my inventory that might call for amends. I also list those that I need to forgive. Lack of forgiveness is the engine that drives unresolved anger.

9. Made direct amends and forgave such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others.

Comment: I discuss with my step sponsor the amends I should make and those I should not. I don’t recommend making sexual amends that would harm present relationships. Also, I do not recommend making some amends that could end up in the court room. Rather, make these amends by donating my time and energy in the Big Brother, Big Sister or like programs.

I make my amends face to face, if possible. If not, then on the phone. The last choice is by mail. I want to make the amend the most direct way possible. I don’t worry if my amend is not accepted. I am in charge of my side of the street, not theirs.

In my heart, usually not face to face, and in my actions I show forgiveness to those who have harmed me. I can choose one-sided forgiveness even though I cannot forget the harm done to me. Sometimes reconciliation is not possible or desirable. I can still forgive others and release them to the restorative justice of the universe. Forgive those I am reluctant to forgive, those who have died and those offenses that still haunt me.

After completing the first nine steps, almost every 12 step member will notice that the desire to drink or use has been removed. This is truly a miracle of recovery. Anyone can stay sober and clean who does not want to drink or use. There is no pill, no advice, no prescription, there is nothing known on the planet that can bring about this change. This is why I believe Scott Peck remarked in his book, The Road Less Traveled, that he thought the two greatest advances of the 20th century were the discovery of the theory of relativity by Albert Einstein and the 12 Step program.

Also after completing the first nine steps, I recommend that the addicted one add a weekly meeting to their 12 Step schedule at ACOA (Adult Children of Alcoholics or Dysfunctional Families) or CODA (Codependents Anonymous). It is now time to learn how to improve my relationships by giving up the roles of controller and enabler (see the next chapter).

10. Continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong
promptly admitted it and forgave those who harmed us.

Comment: Steps 10, 11, 12 are steps I do daily to keep me abstinent. I do not redo the inventory. Instead I put my energy into helping
others. Step 10 is about daily self-examination. When I am wrong or owe an amend I make it so my slate is clean. When I need to forgive, I do so promptly.

11. Sought through meditation to improve our integrity in all areas of our lives.

Comment: Step 11 is about meditation which gives me the direction and energy to carry out step 12. Bill Wilson, cofounder of AA, said that the rest of the steps keep us sober but only step 11, meditation, keeps us growing.

12. Having had an awakening as a result of these steps, we tried to carry this message to others addicted like us and to practice these principles in all our affairs.

Comment: I practice principles when I carry my message of abstinence to those who are ready to hear it. I must give it away in order to keep it. Every time I help someone stay abstinent I receive double the benefit in return. Attendance at 12 step meetings is important for me to be able to encourage and uplift those who are struggling with their new lives which in turn reinforces my own abstinence.

Frequently Asked Questions About Addictions

Question 1: I don’t need 12 Step Meetings because I can stop my addictions on my own.

Answer: Every addicted person is a loner. We need daily (sometimes hourly) emotional support to stay clean. Studies show that only a very few stop the addiction on their own. But they still have emotional problems and
can relapse easily. AA is unique since it offers unconditional love and is relapse oriented. No one is judged for relapsing but is welcomed back like a long lost brother or sister.

Question 2: I am not an alcoholic or addicted anymore because I have stopped.

Answer: Stopping is not the problem. Many have stopped 1000 times. Staying stopped is the problem. The addiction is a disease that is lifelong whether I practice it or not. I am a recovering addict or a practicing addict. I need to take steps to see that I stay in remission.

Question 3: I am not an alcoholic or addict because I don’t use every day.

Answer: Only 5% are daily drinkers or users and 4% of this group are on skid row. 95% of alcoholics are called periodics. They are functioning alcoholics who hold jobs but get high on weekends, or binge drink or get drunk once a year on their birthday or vacation.

Question 4: All I hear is whining at 12 Step Meetings.

Answer: Go to better meetings. The best are “12 & 12” meetings that study the 12 Steps and Traditions. Also, Big Book Meetings study the answers to addiction. Men’s or Women’s Stag meetings are also great. There are also non-smoking meetings.

Question 5: I wake up depressed every morning.

Answer: This is not unusual with addictions since dopamine levels have been exhausted. Going to a 12 Step Meetings and getting emotional support to stay clean and sober will overcome these feelings.


Question 6: Do alcoholics and addicts need counseling in addition to 12 Step meetings?

Answer: Absolutely. Once the addictive activity has been stopped, in addition to continuing 12 Step meetings, attention must be directed to learning to use the second thought and how to handle conflict or relapse is likely to occur. 12 Step groups are designed to help a person stop their addictive activity. They are not counseling groups although most meetings model better behavior.

Question 7: Can I become addicted to 12 Step meetings?

Answer: Yes. It takes years of emotional development for the addictiveness to disappear. Other issues must be addressed. Most likely the addictiveness will transfer to other areas in the beginning. What is better: to become addicted to going to meetings while staying abstinent or practicing one’s addicted to drugs or alcohol?

Question 8: What can I say at parties when I am asked what I want to drink?

Answer: Don’t go to drinking parties unless you have a business or other important reason to be there. It is difficult for the defensive self-centered abstinent one to realize that no one cares what you drink. You could simply order Perrier or any sparkling water with a piece of lemon. Now it is fashionable to be a member of AA.

The Universal 12 Steps for Freethinkers
May be freely copied and shared for any noncommercial purpose.
© 2011 by Dennis Fitzpatrick. See
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Old 10-21-2013, 11:32 AM
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Your attitude, not your aptitude, will determine your altitude
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Did a web search and found the Freethinker 12 steps.

I like a lot of what Dennis Fitzpatrick wrote. One addict helping another is unparalleled in my book of logic .
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Old 11-28-2013, 08:42 PM
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This is an outstanding thread. I gone to many an AA meeting without fully subscribing to the spiritual aspect of the group and its teachings. I will still occasionally go as I am willing to separate the information and take from it what works for me. Without issue, I have been successful in living in solution for a year and a half.
This thread is an example of what I try to convey to people who ask about alternative recovery methods as the unattractive spiritual aspect of AA is understandably a turnoff to many. Thank you for posting this and I look forward to seeing more of your writing.
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Old 12-28-2013, 11:02 PM
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i like this. It keeps the principles of the 12 steps intact while providing a wording more suitable to Atheists. I don't really trip up over the wording of the steps in meetings, but I know a lot of people who do, and providing an alternative wording would really help many of them in becoming willing to do the work without tripping up on how to do these steps as an Atheist.
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Old 01-01-2014, 02:04 PM
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This God-conscious recoveredcrackhead not only respects and admires your program, but also wishes all the doorknob worshipping members of AA would join you.

Happy New Year.

Be Well,
Larry
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Old 01-19-2014, 04:04 PM
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Your attitude, not your aptitude, will determine your altitude
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Hi Larry. I have followed your journey here at SR just a bit. I admire you and all that get out of addiction, G*d conscious or not. I no longer make distinguishes between those that have G*d or not. Its just people making the effort to quit drinking.

Originally Posted by Larry
...admires your program, but also wishes all the doorknob worshipping members of AA would join you.
LOL
It is the doorknob worshiping members of AA that offer one great contribution of AA that I admire. I would not like them moved anywhere that the chair they earned in AA.

Be well.
Sincerely Will G.
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Old 01-19-2014, 04:09 PM
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Thanks for that Zencat!
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Old 01-19-2014, 06:19 PM
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I like alternative versions x
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Old 02-17-2014, 03:49 PM
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I'm not anti-god, but the idea of a higher power doesn't really work for me, and so I was having a hard time figuring how to practice the 12 steps. This resolves it. Thanks!
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Old 03-21-2014, 06:31 AM
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So happy to have found this today. I have been finding the support I get at AA meetings completely invaluable - I wouldn't have made it this far (a whole week!) without them. But I don't believe in God and I find the concept of a higher power problematic. I do believe that we are more powerful as a group than individuals though, and this sums it up succinctly.
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