The Brentwood Workshop in Brentwood, CA
Help
me
welcome
tonight's
speaker,
a
great
friend
from
Sedona,
AZ
JS
Evening
friends.
My
name
is
Jay
Stennett
and
I'm
an
alcoholic
and
God's
doing
for
me
today
what
I
couldn't
do
for
myself
because
it's
running
on
730
on
a
Thursday
night
and
I
haven't
had
anything
to
drink
yet
today,
which
is
very,
very
odd
occurrence
for
an
alcoholic
in
my
variety.
I'd
like
to
thank
Dan
for
inviting
me
down
and
it's
delightful
to
spend
time
with
me
and
his
wife
and
I'm.
I'm
always
enjoy
being
surrounded
by
people
that
I
had
the
great
fortune
to
learn
about
this
thing
that
we
call
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
listening
to
and
seeing
friends
that
I
haven't
seen
in
a
while.
I
came
to
you
on
the
second
day
of
May
in
1979,
and
although
I
found
it
necessary
on
a
lot
of
occasions,
I
haven't
taken
the
front
drinks,
sniffed
any
glue
or
done
any
of
those
other
things
that
I
found
to
be
so
consoling.
So
I
just
want
you
to
know
that
it
is
possible
to
stay
here
a
moment
at
a
time.
If
that
be
your
story,
it's
great.
And
if
it's
not,
no
big
deal.
But
this
moment
is
the
moment
that
we
share.
This
is
the
moment
that
we're
sober,
so
I
was
living
in
my
Pinto.
For
the
younger
folks
here,
It
was
a
Smart
car
that
Ford
made
in
the
70s
for
Alcoholics.
It's
highly
flammable,
just
like
its
occupant.
And
I'd
been
arrested
again.
It
was
the
third
time
in
a
nine
week
period
I
was,
I
was
arrested
for
operating
a
motor
vehicle
while
intoxicated.
Now
that
was
not
special.
I
was
always
intoxicated.
But
and
I,
I
got
out
of
jail
and
my
father
was
kind
enough
over
a
vodka
rocks
to
say
to
me,
do
you
think
you
have
the
disease?
And
I
looked
at
him
and
that
still
small
voice
inside
of
me
said,
pay
really
close
attention,
he
might
pay
for
the
lawyer.
So
I
said,
and
he
said,
well,
I
got
somebody
I
want
you
to
talk
to.
And
so
he
said,
you
can
stay
with
my
mother.
So
I
went
to
my
grandmother's
house
in
in
El
Segundo
and
two
days
later
I
met
this
guy
at
the
Howard
Johnson
at
Culver
City.
And
he
said,
meet
me
there
at
7:30
in
the
morning.
Don't
have
anything
to
drink
and
don't
smoke
any
of
that
crap
either.
How
did
he
know?
And
I
sat
there
and
he
started
talking
about
himself
and
talking
about
himself
and
talking
about
himself.
He
had
fired
into
his
life
and
he
met
Alcoholics
Anonymous
and
he,
you
know,
and
maybe
he
didn't
have
any
problems
anymore.
And
he's
talking
about
himself
and
talking
about
himself
and
talking
about
it.
I
just
couldn't
stand.
After
about
25
minutes
I
realized
he
wasn't
closing
me
and
so
I
figured
I'll
give
him
a
prompt.
I
said
do
I
need
psychiatric
treatment?
Do
I
require
religion?
I
said
do
I
need
hospitalization?
And
he
looked
at
me
and
he
said
listen
kid.
He
said
a
hospital
program
will
cost
about
3
grand
if
you
or
your
family
can
get
a
hold
of
$3000.
My
suggestion
is
is
that
you
go
out
and
drink
that
money
up
and
when
you're
done,
call
Alcoholics
Anonymous.
They
do
it
for
fun
and
for
free.
Now
this
blew
my
mind
and
I
and
then
he
got
up
and
he
said
if
you
want
a
A
it's
in
the
white
pages
of
the
phone
book.
Good
luck
kid.
Go
after
it
the
way
you
went
after
your
drugs
and
your
alcohol.
And
he
left.
He
didn't
take
me
by
the
hand
and
walk
me
into
the
rooms
of
Alcoholics
and
omnilies.
It's
just
like,
if
you
want
a
kid,
go
find
it.
And
I
went
home
to
my
grandmothers
house
and
I
made
myself
a
drink.
It
was,
it
was
a
water
glass
full
of
Davies
County
Old
Fashioned
Kentucky
bourbon
with
three
ice
cubes.
And
I
knocked
that
puppy
down
and
I
called
Alcoholics
Anonymous
and
that
was
the
2nd
day
of
May
in
1979.
Now
it's
interesting
to
me
that
that
guy
didn't
take
me
to
a
meeting.
He
didn't
bring
me
out
and
introduce
me
to
you.
He
talked
to
me
in
a
language
that
I
understood
very
direct
and
not
very
emotionally
involved.
Later
on,
I
found
out
that
that
man
had
10
years
of
sobriety
at
one
point,
and
at
another
point
he
had
15
years
of
sobriety.
And
the
day
that
he
and
I
had
breakfast,
he
was
not
a
member
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous.
And
then
it
had
not
been
for
a
couple
years
and
he
never
came
back
to
Alcoholics
Anonymous.
But
that
man
saved
my
life.
It's
the
message,
It's
not
the
messenger.
And
I
ended
up
at
a
noon
meeting
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous.
I
showed
up
there
fashionably
late
and
everybody
in
the
meeting
started
talking
at
me.
Now
I
couldn't
understand
why
they
were
talking
at
me,
but
when
I'm
busy,
my
fingernails
are
all
about
out
to
here.
My
hair,
when
it's
long,
I
kind
of
look
like
the
Sphinx.
And
I
had
the
sub
Subs
'cause
I
hadn't
had
enough
to
drink
yet.
And
the
third
guy
that
talked
was
a
guy
by
the
name
of
Butcher
Joe
Joe
Hacker.
He
was
a
butcher
named
Hacker
and
you
can
always
tell
Butcher
Joe
and
he
talked
about
when
the
family
left,
how
he
cried
the
big
crocodile
tears.
And
inside
he
goes.
Yes,
now
we
can
drink
and
there
isn't
anybody
that's
gonna
get
in
our
way.
And
I
understood
that.
And
then
he
talked
about
knowing
just
how
deeply
to
cut
himself
at
work
so
they
could
stop
and
get
him
the
drink
that
he
needed
on
the
way
to
the
hospital.
And
I
understood
that
and
he
looked
right
through
to
me
and
he
said
you
don't
ever
have
to
feel
the
way
that
you
feel
about
yourself
ever
again
if
you're
willing
to
do
the
things
that
I've
done.
And
that's
why
I'm
here
from
Sedona,
just
to
carry
that
message
that
you
don't
ever
have
to
feel
the
way
that
you
feel
about
yourself
ever
again.
Now,
I
know
that
most
of
the
folks
here,
we
got
a
lot
of
time
and
all
that
great
stuff.
And,
and
my
experience
is,
is
that
over
the
course
of
my
sobriety,
that
there
have
been
times
that
it
has
been
really
important
for
me
to
acknowledge
that
I
felt
really,
really
poorly
about
myself
because
of
other
behaviors
that
were
going
on
at
one
time
or
another
in
my
life.
And
that
I
was
able
and
graced
to
find
groups
of
women
and
men
who've
had
recovery
in
those
areas.
And
so
if
you're
sitting
there
and
you
got
something
that's
kicking
your
ass
and
I
don't
care
if
it's
food
or
porn
or
you
know
what,
whatever
the,
you
know,
the,
the,
the
problem
du
jour
may
be,
you
don't
ever
have
to
feel
that
way
about
that
problem
ever
again.
And
you
know,
it
was
very
interesting
to
me.
The
only
direction
I
ever
got
financially
from
my
old
man
was
you
take
30%
of
what
you
got,
you
save
it
and
30%
and
you,
you,
you,
you
spend
it
on
your
rent
and
the
other
30%
you
play
with.
And
of
course,
he
never
did
that.
I
mean,
money
in
my
home
was
a
source
for
violence
and
and
yet
I
found
a
group
called
Men
and
Money
that
met
Brentwood
for
a
year
and
they
talked
about
stuff
like
that.
Really,
really
helpful.
Really,
really
helpful.
So
anyway,
I
I'm
at
this
meeting.
This
guy
nails
me.
And
after
the
meeting,
something
remarkable
happened,
something
miraculous
in
in
in
my
way
of
thinking,
There
were
four
guys
that
were
going
down
to
the
Strand.
This
was
at
the
club
in
Manhattan
Beach
to
play
cards
and
watch
girls
go
by
on
roller
skates,
and
they
invited
the
Newman
along
for
entertainment.
And
they
explained
to
me
everything
that
I
needed
to
know
about
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
that
this
is
a
A,
but
we
don't
use
no
dope
here.
I
was
horrified.
I
didn't
know
that.
And
we
had
a
that
afternoon.
I
learned
everything
that
I
needed
to
know
about
Alcoholics
Anonymous
in
that
very
first,
first
afternoon
on
the
beach.
And
I
started
going
to
meetings
and
I
came
in
on
a
Wednesday,
all
day
Wednesday,
Thursday,
went
to
the
meeting
Friday,
Friday
night
at
the
old
Manhattan
Beach
Club.
It's
not
the
old
Manhattan
Beach
Club.
It's
just
a
club
that
was
in
Manhattan
Beach
and
they
had
a
dance.
I
don't
know.
I'm,
I
remember
some
of
you
from
the
dance
at
Hollywood
and
up
at
the
Woman's
Club.
And
anyway,
so
we
had
this
dance
and
the,
I
walk
in
there
and
there
are
girls
and
they're
like
the
women
that
are
here
tonight.
Most
of
them
had
showers
and
they're
smiling
and
they're
swinging
their
hips
and
I
realize
that
I'm
24
years
old
and
I'm
never
going
to
get
laid
again.
And
I
went
back
into
the
went
back
down
into
the
Pinto
that
I've
been
living
in,
and
I
start
driving
to
the
stick
and
Stein
not
to
not
going
to
drink,
mind
you.
I'm
just
going
to
find
a
woman
who
understands.
And
on
the
way,
on
the
way,
the
miracle
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous
happened
for
me.
The
little
voice
inside
of
me
said,
this
is
not
a
good
idea.
Turn
the
car
around.
And
I
did
and
I
did.
And
I
went
back
and
I
grabbed
the
guy
and
I
said,
talk
program
to
me,
please.
And
this
man
stopped
what
he
was
doing,
got
somebody
else
to
take
the
tickets,
and
got
me
a
copy
of
the
book
Alcoholics
Anonymous.
And
I
went
home
that
night
and
I
started
reading
it
and
I
didn't
understand
it,
but
there
were
pieces
that
got
my
attention.
And
the
main
piece
that
got
my
attention
was
at
the
end
of
the
story.
And
we
agnostics
the
end
of
Chapter
4.
And
it's
the
story
of
Fitz
Mail.
It
was
the
number
three
guy
to
come
in
in
New
York.
There's
a
line
in
there
and
it
says,
who
are
you
to
say
that
there
is
no
God?
I
understood
that
and
I
understood
what
he
did.
He
got
down
on
his
knees
and
he
said
a
prayer
and,
and
he
had
this
incredible
experience
and
he
never
drank
again.
And
so
I
did
that.
I
got
down
on
my
knees
and
I,
I,
I
said
my
prayer
and
my
prayer
was,
I
don't
know
from
Jesus
or
Buddha.
I
don't
know
the
Talmud,
the
Torah,
the
Lupani
shots.
Just
please
get
me
the
top.
I'll
do
whatever
these
dried
up
old
geeks
say
to
do.
Just
please
help
me.
And
there
wasn't
any
burning
Bush,
no
white
light.
But
I
didn't
drink
that
day.
And
I
believe
at
that
moment
I'd
finished
the
first
three
steps
of
the
program
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous.
There's
a
perfect
prayer.
I'm
with
you
tonight.
The
next
day
I'm
withdrawing.
I'm
sweating
on
a
naugahyde
couch,
smoking
and
A
and
a
woman
walks
through
the
clubhouse
and
she
says,
oh,
young
man,
you're
new,
aren't
you?
How
can
you
tell?
She
says,
I
can
tell
you
the
secret
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous
in
four
words.
What
are
they?
Find
God
or
die.
Oh,
not
that.
Please.
Oh
please
not
that
35
years
later
I
can
tell
you
the
secret
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous
from
4
words.
Find
God
and
live.
Live
wondrously.
Live
openly
and
when
I
say
God,
please
don't
hang
on
it,
what
it
is
that
you
might
think
it
is
that
I'm
saying.
All
that
I'm
trying
to
do
is
use
a
short
word
to
describe
an
experience
that
I've
had
in
this
thing
called
Alcoholics
Anonymous.
I
got
a
sponsor
at
that
meeting.
Why?
Because
I
needed
protection
from
people
like
that.
And
we
started
getting
together,
and
when
I
was
22
days
sober,
I
did
my
first
inventory.
Ah,
was
it
a
fearless
and
thorough
moral
inventory
using
all
four
columns?
No,
it
was
the
greatest
hits.
You
know
what
needs
to
be
on
that
first
inventory
is
the
stuff
that
goes
around
and
around
and
around
and
around
in
your
mind.
If
there's
something
deep
and
dark
there,
it
will
get
in
contact
with
you
later.
You
don't
have
to
wait
for
it.
Deal
with
what's
there
and
present
now.
And
I
sat
there
and
I
couple
days
later
and
I,
I,
I
did
it
with
my
sponsor.
We,
we,
we
went
through
it.
And
when
we
were
done,
we
burned
it
and
set
a
couple
silly
prayers.
And
I
was
a
fully
vested
member
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous.
You
know,
he
sent
me
out
to
start
making
amends.
I
had
the
first
guy
asked
me
to
sponsor
him
when
I
was
28
days
sober.
I
called
my
sponsor
up.
I
said
what
do
I
do?
He
said.
Jay,
if
they're
sick
enough
to
ask
you
for
help,
you
can't
hurt
them.
That
is
my
experience.
It's
no
big
deal.
There's
something
that
happens
far
greater
than
us
when
two
of
us
are
together
for
the
purpose
of
sobriety.
We
don't
have
to
worry
about
it.
It's
all
on
the
job
training.
I
mean,
one
of
the
great
things,
if
you
haven't
read
Doctor
Bob
and
the
good
old
timers,
just
see
what
they
used
to
do
to
each
other
in
those
days.
I
don't
think
any
of
us
are
that
creative
anyway.
So,
and
so
I
launched
off
into
this,
this
thing
that
we
call
a,
A,
you
know,
this
is
rush
season
in
Alcoholics
Anonymous.
You
know,
rush
season
starts
the
the
second
Monday
of
November
and
it
lasts
through
the
Super
Bowl.
And
this
is
a
marvelous,
marvelous
time
of
year
if
you
be
alcoholic.
Because
each
and
every
man
and
woman
in
here,
there
is
a
life
whom
you
are
designed
to
save.
And
this
weekend
or
next
week
may
be
the
time
that
that
person
comes
across
your
path.
If
we're
here
and
we're
available
for
it.
One
of
one
of
the
guys
that
taught
me
a
lot
about
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
Eric
Bloch,
just
passed
away
the
other
day.
And
Eric
taught
me
that
if
you
have
the,
if
you
have
the
privilege
of
taking
somebody
to
an
Alcoholics
Anonymous
meeting,
their
first
meeting,
take
them
to
the
very
best
meeting
that
you
can
find.
So
I
used
to
call
Norm
wife
up
and
say,
where
is
he
talking?
And
we'd
go
drive
wherever
it
was
that
Norm
was
talking
that
night
after
normality
passed
it.
I
used
to
really
like
the
way
that
Jack
Kissel
talked
about
the
disease
of
alcoholism.
So
we
drive
to
wherever,
we
call
Gene
up
and
go
wherever
Jack
was
talking.
And
then
he
said,
and
then
tell
your
wife
or
your
girlfriend,
I'm
going
to
be
really
busy
for
the
next
week.
And
he
said
for
the
next,
for
that
seven
days,
go
to
the
seven
best
meetings
that
you
know
of,
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
and
take
him
and
introduce
him
to
the
people
that
you
admire
at
those
groups.
And
if
you
haven't
tried
that,
it's
a
great
way
to
pump
up
your
holiday
season.
It's
a
really
fun
thing
working
with
others.
You
know,
they're
new,
they
don't
know.
Just
try
stuff
on
them,
see
what
happens.
Really.
Case
in
point,
number
year,
I,
I,
I've
got
this
really
weird
group
that
I
was
part
of
down
in
the
South
Bay,
Los
Angeles
for
years.
The
11
step
group.
It's
been
going
since
1948.
They've
just
got
a
little
experience.
And
you
know,
the
deal
there
was
meditate
with
him
from
the
gate
from
the
very
beginning.
And
so
we
started
doing
that.
You
know,
somebody
come
over
to
my
house,
I'd
force
him
to
meditate.
If
they
call
on
the
phone,
set
the
phone
down
for
three
minutes
and
meditate
with
them.
It's
remarkable
what
can
happen.
Really
changes
the
nature
of
the
conversations.
And
I
mean,
this
is
the
fun
thing
about
this
is
we
go
and
we
change
and
we
work
with
others
and
we
do
different
things.
Another
fun
experience
I
had
regarding
sponsorship.
I
was
about
three
years
sober
and
these
clowns
weren't
running
around
doing
a,
a,
the
way
that
I
thought
they
should
be
doing
it.
And
so
I
thought,
well,
maybe
there's
something
wrong
with
the
way
I'm
hearing
the
message.
I,
you
know,
tried
to
be
in
their
friends
and
I
tried
yelling
at
them
and
all
this
different
stuff.
So
what
I
did
was
I
went
out
and
I
took
four
of
the
men
that
I
admired
most,
one
of
whom
was
my
sponsor
in
those
days,
Fred
Ellis,
Fred
E
from
Culver
City,
who
used
to
sit
right
over
there
for
years
and
years
and
years.
And,
and
Jack
Pros
and
Ken
O'Brien.
And
I
took
these
guys
to
lunch
separately.
And
I
said,
what
did
your
sponsor
do
with
you?
And
I
took
notes,
found
out
what
they
did
and,
and
I
learned
some
things,
you
know,
and,
and,
and
so
that's
the
other
great
thing
about
Alcoholics
Anonymous
is
that
we
have
this
incredible
body
of
experience.
If
we
will
just
ask,
and
I
mean,
have
you
ever
met
anybody
in
a,
a,
that
if
you
offer
to
buy
him
food
and
ask
him
a
question
about
themselves,
they'll
sit
there
and
talk
for
hours.
It's
really
cheap
entertainment.
You
know,
if
you
buy
him
breakfast,
it
costs
a
little
less
than
dinner.
But
anyway,
you
know,
it's,
it's
a,
it's
a
great
thing.
You
know,
with
the
body
of
experience
that's,
that's
here
in
this,
this
meeting,
you
know,
the
only
thing
that
I
can,
I
can
really
share
honestly
from
my
from,
from
the
depth
of
me
is,
is
that
dream
deeply,
really
take
the
take
the
cover
off
and
allow
whatever
is
to
use
you
in
whatever
fashion
and
see
what
happens.
I
mean,
it's
really,
really
odd
the,
the
amount
of
wonderful
things
that
I
mean,
it's,
I
mean,
it
can
be
something
as
simple
as,
you
know,
every
New
Year's
I
ask
myself,
if
you
could
do
anything
in
the
world,
what
would
you
do?
Because
the
only
limitation
that
exists
is
in
my
mind,
there's
infinite
potential
available
for
all
of
us
in
a
moment,
in
this
moment.
And
that
more
and
more
it's,
it's,
it's
a
thing
of
learning
to
walk
away
from
three
dimensions
and
stay
more
and
more
in
the
fourth.
And
it's
it's
not
hard
to
do.
Maybe
a
little
harder
in
Brentwood,
but
24
years
ago
I
turned
my
television
off
and
I
haven't
had
one
since.
I
stopped
listening
to
good
radio
about
18
years
ago,
and
the
newspaper
went
about
15
years
ago.
And
so
I'm
never
plagued
with
the
things
of,
well,
if
I
weighed
15
lbs
less,
if
I
drove
this
kind
of
car,
if
my
wife
looked
like
this,
you
know,
I'm
not
plagued
by
that.
I'm
plagued
by,
oh,
I
wonder
what's
available
today.
I'm
fortunate
enough
to
have
a
job
nowadays
where
I
I
work
as
a
program
director
at
a
retreat
house
and,
and
three
times
a
day.
What
I
do
is,
is
I
literally
get
up,
go
out,
sit
down
and
ask
that
any
idea
I
have
of
what
is
going
on
for
it
to
be
removed
so
that
the
infinite
potential
can
be
available
to
me.
And
it's
bizarre
what
happened.
I'm
inflicting
weirdness
on
all
kinds
of
people.
And
it's
just,
I
mean,
I,
I,
well,
you
know,
what
do
you
mean
by
living
in
the,
the
4th
dimension
and
all
that
stuff.
Best
example
I
can
give
you
recently
of
my
experience,
I
get
invited
to
talk
at
a
gratitude
dinner
in
Sedona.
I
like
Sedona.
I,
I,
I
actually
grew
up
in,
in,
in
Laguna.
I
went
to
high
school
in
Laguna
in
the
60s
and
that
the
vibe
there's
very
much
the
same.
There's
one
road
to
get
through
town
and
all
this
stuff.
And
anyway,
it
said
it's
an
interesting
place.
And,
and
so
I'm
talking
at
this
meeting
and
as
I
get
down,
the
voice
says
very
clearly
to
me,
move
here
now.
Now,
the
reason
I
meditate
is
to
distinguish
the
voice
from
the
voices,
right?
And
so
I
sit
down
next
to
my
wife
and
I
lean
over
to
her
and
say
I
just
got
told
to
move
here.
And
she
looks
at
me
and
giggles
and
says,
I
knew
that
now
I've
lived
in
the
South
Bay
Los
Angeles
and
been
active
for
33
years
at
the
time.
I
mean,
I
sponsored
Bill
CI
mean
it's
it's
bizarre.
And
the
level
of
activity
that
that
that
I've
that
have
enjoyed
being
part
of
the
sober
community
in
Southern
California
never
even
occurred
to
me
that
I
would
leave.
But
we
came
home,
we
thought
about
it,
I
went
well,
I've
had
every
wonderful
experience
a
sober
man
can
have
in
LA.
I
wonder
what's
next.
And
literally,
we
toss
the
keys
to
to
a
realtor
and
we
headed
to
Sedona
without
scripter
purse.
And
I'd
been
underemployed
here
for
a
long,
long
time.
And
it
wasn't.
We
were
there
three
weeks
and
this
opportunity
came
by
about
working
in
a
retreat
house.
Three
weeks
after
that
we
we
found
a
home
right
at
the
base
of
the
largest
feminine
vortex
in
Sedona.
And
I
wonder
where
I'm
supposed
to
be.
And,
and
it's
been
an
amazing,
amazing
experience.
You
know,
small
town
A,
a
I
was
a
little
wary,
but
then
I
remember
that
it's
it
was
perfect
the
day
before
I
moved
there.
Very
much
like
at
my
place
of
employment,
if
there
is
a
conflict
there,
I
know
that
everything
is
perfect
there
before
I
bring
that
conflict
to
work
with
me.
So,
you
know,
I,
I
cannot
tell
you
how
much
fun
I
have
had
in
the
program
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous.
And
also
I've
had
all
that,
you
know,
I've,
I've,
I
had
the,
the,
the
crash
in
the
with
the
first
marriage
and,
you
know,
business
problems
here
and
there.
But
The
thing
is,
is
that
that
that
we
have
a
gift
here
that
is
beyond
imagination.
I'd
like
to
ask
you
just
for
a
second
to
close
your
eyes.
Just
take
a
breath
and
to
realize
that
80
years
ago,
alcoholism
and
drug
addiction
was
a
death
sentence.
There
was
nothing
that
could
be
done
before
and
then
something
happened
and
we
are
all
walking
the
earth
as
love.
Thank
you.
Repeat
the
question.
Absolutely
yes.
Yeah.
The
question
is,
you
talked
about
a
voice.
Was
that
God?
It
was
inspirational.
Now
I
would.
I
use
the
G
word
a
lot.
I'm
I'm
gifted
to
be.
I'm
best
described
in
the
book
Alcoholics
Anonymous
as
a
strange
chap
with
a
queer
idea
of
fun.
And
so
I've
I'm
a
historian
of
the
movement
and
I'm
very
familiar
with
William
James
and
the
varieties
of
religious
experience,
although
I
think
James
would
call
it
the
varieties
of
spiritual
experience.
I've
had
a
number
of
experiences
over
the
years,
and
the
most
important
thing
about
experience,
as
our
friend
Ward
Ewing
said
couple
weeks
ago,
is
that
experience,
explanation,
experience.
Trump's
explanation.
Now.
I
had
an
experience
at
the
2
+
2
meeting
in
October
of
1979
where
the
entire
room
left
and
and
what
came
was
feelings,
not
words.
And
maybe
what
I
did
was
if
you
know,
so
that
the
sudden
experiences
happen
too.
But
we
all
are
heir
to
having
a
educational
variety
of
experience
each
day
that
we
don't
drink.
The
heart
is
more
and
more
useful
than
the
mind.
And
as
you
open
your
heart
more
and
more
using
the
tools
that
were
given
here
in
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
you
can
listen
to
your
heart.
And
so,
yeah,
I
said
a
voice.
A
voice
did
it.
And
and
it,
that's
exactly
how
I
interpret
it.
But
to
your
question
whether
it
was
God
or
not,
I
don't
care.
The
thing
is,
is
that
my
I,
I
went
down
a
wormhole.
That's
just
incredible.
I
mean,
Sedona
is
a
place
that
was
created
for
people
like
me
to
end
up
in.
So
thank
you
very
much.
Yes.
The
question
is,
what
do
you
like
most
about
the
AA
in
Sedona?
You
know,
it's
so
much
fun
because
my
Home
group,
the
Sedona
Reflections
group,
we
meet
at
8:00
AM
every
Saturday
morning
at
the
little
clubhouse
on
Stutz
BearCat
is
as
exciting
as
any
of
the
home
groups
that
I've
had.
And
the
reason
is,
is
that
the
mines
are
open.
I
think
it's
the
that
the
mines
are
open.
I
was
there
maybe
a
few
weeks
and,
you
know,
they're,
they're
the
meetings
are
all
literature
based
because
it
was
a
small
community.
And
so
they,
they're
each
meeting,
you
know,
focuses
on
literature
and
there
was
a
woman
sharing
and
she
said
something
about
her
inner
child.
Now,
most
of
the
people
in
the
meeting,
I,
I
have
kind
of
the
team
hair
color
and,
and
anyway
that
it
goes
around
the
room
and
there
was
not
one
person
in
that
meeting
of
50
people.
Many
of
them
have
many,
many
years
of
sobriety
that
didn't
speak
to
that
woman's
share
and
not
one
person
derided
in
Sedona.
Everybody's
on
a
spiritual
quest
and
we're
all
delighted
that
everybody's
on
it,
and
nobody's
insisting
that
it
be
one
way
or
the
other.
Especially
in
fellowship,
yes.
How
do
you
find
the
best
way
to
get
president
Like
with
your
mind
really
starts
getting
out
of
control.
How
do
you
like
get
back
to
the
President?
Thank
you
very
much.
The
question
is
how
do
I
find
the
best
way
to
get
present
there
are
to
meditate.
There
are
two
that
have
been
very
helpful
to
me
over
the
over
the
years.
Once
a
thing
of
having
a
word
that
I
come
back
to
every
time
the
mind
runs.
One
of
the
things
that
I
think
is
most
important
is
is
that
meditation.
3
minutes
is
a
perfect
meditation
because
you
can
always
go
back
to
it
for
many
years.
I
do
stuff
long
and,
and
then
when
I
fall
off
the
bike,
I,
I,
I
wouldn't
get
back
on
because
I
couldn't
3
minutes.
One
of
the
things
I
did
a
number
of
years
ago
was
I,
when
I
said,
well,
what
if
I
could
do
anything?
What
would
it
be?
Would
be
to
help
people
learn
to
meditate.
And
so
with
my,
one
of
my
mentors,
we
sat
down
and
we
did
a,
a
website.
It's
the
#3
minutesofsilence.org
and
there's
a
dozen
different
ways
to
meditate.
I
always
suggest
you
pray
and
meditate
the
way
you
drink
and
used.
Just
try
stuff,
see
where
you
end
up.
You
know,
and
you
know,
and,
and
that
the
only
wrong
way
to
do
it
is
not
to
do
it.
So,
so
there's
that.
Another
fun
thing
for
just
like
if
we
were
sitting
here
is
to
use
the
old
thing
that
the
Cowboys
and
Indians
did
about
tracking
sound
and
starting
with
the
sound
closest
to
you
and
then
going
to
the
sound
as
far
away
as
you
can
carry
it.
That'll
get
your
that'll
get
you
stretched
out.
But
the
one
that
I
enjoy
most
is
called
the
awareness
exercise.
And
that's
the
thing
where
you
start
with
your
feet,
you
know,
like
your
right
foot
and
put
all
your
attention
on
it
and
then
move
it
to
say
your
left
elbow,
What
happened
to
your
right
foot?
And
whatever
it
is
that's
asking
that
question,
that
is
the
thing
that
we
learn
to
find.
And,
and,
and
if
you
do
that
enough
and
it's
it's
actually
on
that
website
is
the
awareness
exercise.
There's
a
little
Dulcie,
Dulcie
Smith
does
a
great
little
directed
meditation
on
there,
and
it's
a
way
to
be
able
to
meditate
while
people
are
yelling
at
you.
You
learn
to
use
this
faculty
that
we
all
have,
but
that
we've
never,
never
learned
to
use.
Yes,
Sir.
Can
you
talk
a
little
bit
about
some
of
the
things
that
the
early
members
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous
and
the
founders
did
as
their
program
before
the
book
was
published,
like
praying
for
guidance,
some
of
the
literature
that
they
used
to
pass
around
and
read,
some
of
the
habits
that
they
created
early
on?
That's
a
long
question,
but
when?
So
what
were
some
of
the
things
that
the
early
folks
did?
A
great
meditative
practice
is
called
How
to
seek
guidance.
It's
it's,
it's
actually
on
that
same
threeminutesof.org
and,
and
what
they
would
do
is,
is
that
they
would
specifically
sit
down
with
a
pencil
and
a
piece
of
paper.
That's
a
great
thing
for
folks
that
say,
Oh,
my
mind's
too
busy.
Really.
Well,
I'm
not
good
at
it.
Do
you
think
Bill
and
Bob
were?
I
mean,
those
guys
were
toasted.
I
mean,
the
stuff
they
drank
and
the
pills
Bob
had
at
his
disposal.
Give
me
a
break.
These
guys's
mind
was
as
torched
as
any
tweaker
you're
ever
going
to
sponsor.
And
one
of
the
things
that
the
Oxford
Group
did
was
is
they
would
ask
specifically
for
direction.
So
you
put
a
piece
of
paper
down,
whatever
the
problem
is,
and
you
ask
specifically
for
help
with
it.
And
then
you
sit
there
and
you,
you
just
open
your
mind
and
the
instruction
is,
is
that
you
write
down
everything
that
comes
across
your
mind.
Good
thoughts,
bad
thoughts,
holy
thoughts,
unholy
thoughts,
all
of
it.
You
write
it
all
down
because
in
that
record,
there's
going
to
be
stuff
that
specifically,
if
you
do
it
today,
will
show
you
that
there
is
a
thread
that's
running
through
your
life.
Now,
again,
all
this
stuff
that
I'm
talking
about,
I'm
not
saying
that
this
is
the
truth,
but
I'm
saying
it's
a
really
fun
thing
to
try
different
stuff.
I
mean,
what
the
heck,
we're
sober,
What
are
we
going
to
do,
right?
But
you
try
doing
that
for
about
30
days
now
they
called
it
how
to
listen
to
God,
you
know,
and,
and
that
makes
people
nervous.
So
if
you
change
it
to
guidance
and
then
you
follow
it,
now,
you
know,
and,
and
the
Oxford
Group
used
to
say,
now
you
need
to
check
it.
So
you
check
it
with
another
member,
You
know
the
the
guidance
that
you
got.
I'm
supposed
to
take
the
girl
from
the
Recovery
House
that's
coming
to
the
morning
meeting
to
Las
Vegas,
that
kind
of
stuff.
And,
and
so
you
either
run
it
by
another
member
or,
or
you,
you
say
what
it
is,
you
know,
does
it,
how
does
it
square
with
spiritual
literature
that
you
know?
And
how
does
it,
how
does
it
square
with
your
duties
to
your
family,
your
friends
and,
and,
and
your
community?
Yes,
the
experience
with
the
amounts.
Thank
you
and
thank
you
the
first
woman
that
I
asked
a
question.
Thank
God.
Something
direct.
My
favorite
men's
story
is
my
grandmother
Alice.
Now
Alice
taught
me
out
of
10
bar.
I
just
stole
a
little
money
from
her.
And
so
when
I
was
about
3
months
sober,
I
went
and
visited
her
and
I
brought
her
some
money
and
I
said,
grandmother,
here's
some
money
and
I
owe
you
this
much.
And
God
and
Alcoholics
Anonymous
for
helping
me
to
stay
sober.
And
she
took
the
money
and
she
said,
what
did
you
say?
And
I
said,
well,
God
has
helped
me
to
stay
sober.
And
she
got
up
and
she
got
her
purse.
She
started
leaving.
I
was
prepared
for
a
long
talk.
I
said,
where
are
you
going?
She
said.
I
don't
know,
she
said.
About
four
or
five
years
ago
you
said
that
you
didn't
believe
in
God
anymore.
And
she
said,
I
went
down
and
I
put
you
on
a
list
at
the
church
and
me
and
the
girls
have
been
praying
for
you.
And
she
said
I
need
to
go
down
and
report
to
them
that
my
grandson
has
been
restored
spiritual
terrorism.
It's
highly
effective.
Now
we're
in
the
postmodern
era,
right?
You
know
a
lot
of
folks
aren't
churched.
No
big
deal.
Spiritual
terrorism.
1O2
Because
everybody
in
here
knows
somebody
that's
got
a
problem,
and
when
you
walk
into
the
room
and
you
see
an
empty
chair,
just
walk
up
and
tap
the
chair
and
say
that
person's
name.
Get
three
or
four
of
your
friends
to
do
it.
In
1985,
my
then
wife
Jacqueline
got
sober.
Is
one
of
the
most
wonderful
things
that
ever
happened
in
my
life.
And
when
she
got
sober
at
the
moment
of
meditation
at
the
end
of
the
meeting,
we
thought
of
three
people.
Her
best
childhood
friend,
our
buddy
Jeannie,
who
worked
for
Hefner's
Enterprises
and
was
a
cocktail
waitress,
and
a
lot
of
you
guys
know,
and
my
sister
Regina,
who
was
missing
in
action
with
her
self-employed
Colombian
boyfriend.
Within
a
year,
all
three
of
them
got
sober.
And
the
two
that
got
sober
and
Alcoholics
Anonymous
are
consecutively
sober
today.
Get
some
friends
and
do
it.
Just
make
an
experiment,
but
don't
give
up
and
see
what
happens.
Yes,
I'm
sorry
from
my
oh
what
did
I
learn
from
Norm
Alpi?
I'm
a
door
slider
normality
was
one
of
the
great,
great
speakers
and
Alcoholics
Anonymous.
And,
and
what,
what
he
taught
me
was,
is
that
that
laughter
he
what
he,
he
had
a
line
that
said
he
talked
about,
he,
he,
he,
he
talked
about
the
hay
shakers,
the
guys
from
Bell
Gardens,
the
guys
that
were
working
out
in
the
fields
and
that
they
were
sitting
down
in
the
front
of
the
room
and
they
were
identifying
and
they
were
crying.
And
he
said,
he
said
the
and
he
said
we
laugh
out
our
pain
and
we
cry
through
our
joy.
And
this
is
the
miracle
that
we
call
Alcoholics
Anonymous
and
be
my
favorite.
Yes,
Sir.
I'm
relatively
new
so
like
the
welcome.
Yes.
How
many
days
without
a
drink?
A
few
days?
22
months.
OK,
22
months.
The
wormhole.
Oh,
I'm
sorry.
You
talked
about
wormholes.
You
talked
about
the
voice
of
guide,
you
talked
about
all
this
spiritual
crap.
Can
you
give
me
something
to
do
practically
to
enlarge
my
spiritual
life?
OK.
That
was
the
question.
The
miracle
has
already
happened.
Now,
whether
the
word
miracle
means
anything
or
not
is
pointless.
The
truth
is,
is
that
any
woman
or
man
that's
in
here
that
hasn't
had
a
drink
for
13
days,
18
days,
20
days,
something
beyond
belief
has
happened.
The
impossible
became
possible.
You're
not
loaded.
I'm
not
loaded.
Every
person
in
there
hopefully
is
not
loaded
or
somewhere
along
the
continuum
of
not
being
loaded.
That
is
the
simple
thing.
Now,
given
the
point
of
emotional
pain
that
I
am
in
at
any
given
day,
especially
at
22
months,
because
what's
happened
is,
is
that
I
used
to
be
able
to
come
to
these
meetings
and
I
feel
better
when
I
left
and
now
I
don't.
Why
is
that?
Well,
Alcoholics
Anonymous
gives
to
us,
but
then
we
have
to
become
the
giver.
The
most
practical
thing
that
I
can
tell
you,
especially
at
this
time
of
year,
is
to
make
sure
that
you
come
to
the
Marine
a
little
early
and
you
look
outside
the
meeting
for
a
guy
that
looks
like
you
feel,
or
more
importantly,
looks
like
you
used
to
feel
before
you
got
22
months.
And
you
walk
up
to
him
and
you
say,
hey,
how
you
doing?
Do
you
come
here
regularly?
This
is
one
of
my
regular
meetings.
I
haven't
had
the
privilege
of
meeting
you.
Not
are
you
new?
But
hey,
I
haven't
had
the
privilege
of
meeting
you.
It
fills
up
in
here.
Do
you
got
a
seat?
You
don't
have
to
know
anything.
The
most
important
thing
that
first
couple
weeks
was
wasn't
the
spiritual
things.
It
wasn't
that
I
got
to
listen
to
Chuck
Chamberlain
or
find
out
about
wormholes
or
any
of
that
stuff.
The
most
important
thing
that
happened
is
is
I
was
the
recipient
of
kindness
and
compassion,
and
that
is
the
miracle
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous.
The
most,
the
most
spiritual
thing
that
any
person
can
do
is
to
stick
their
hand
out
and
say,
welcome,
yes,
thank
you,
yes.
Why
would
anybody?
The
question
is,
why
would
anybody
turn
off
their
television?
And
then
why
did
you
stick
with
it?
Well,
what
happened
is,
is
my
first
marriage
dissolved
and
when
I
left
my
family
my
wife
and
I
had
a
5
year
old
daughter
and
I
knew
that
I
would
not
be
the
custodial
parent.
I
would
be
with
her
frequently
and
I
was
fortunate
enough
to
have
her
every
weekend
for
eight
years
after
that.
And
I
knew
that
if
there
was
a
television
in
the
house
that
it
would
be
something
that
we
could
go
to,
that
we
wouldn't
be
engaged.
And
I
wanted
to
make
sure
that
I
was
available
to
be
engaged
with
her.
But
in
that
what
happened
is,
is
that
after
a
time,
because
I
do
this
weird
meditation
practice,
which
again,
just
try
the
stuff,
you
know,
you
don't
have
to
believe
anything.
Just
try
stuff
and
whatever
intellectually
works
for
you.
Cool.
Doesn't,
doesn't
matter.
Sins
of
Commission,
not
omission.
But
but
what
I
found
is,
is
that
I
got
happier
and
happier.
And
I
realized
it
was
because
I
wasn't
listening
to
people
tell
me
what
it
was
I
was
supposed
to
be
thinking
and
feeling.
And
I
started
to
pay
more
and
more
attention
to
what
is
in
front
of
me,
who
is
in
front
of
me.
This
is
what
my
day
is
to
be.
The
person
at
the
grocery
store
is
what's
supposed
to
be
there.
Now
they've
even
got
screens
telling
me
what
to
buy
or
what,
you
know,
things
I
need
to
be
inoculated
against,
you
know,
instead
of
being
engaged
with
my
fellow
people.
So
my,
my,
my
purpose
is,
is
to
open
myself
further
and
further
to
being
engaged
with
folks.
And
it's
great.
It's
great.
I
go
home
to
the
woman
that
I
want
to
go
home
with
more
than
any
in
the
world.
My
life
is
is
an
absolute
dream
because
I'm
being
focused
on
what
is
and
not
what
I'm
being
told.
Thank
you.