Step 2 at the Unity at the light convention in Martha’s Vineyard, MA
Good
morning,
everyone.
I'm
actually
Maria,
but
that's
OK.
I
like
Mariah
David.
Our
first
speaker
this
morning
comes
from
Auburn.
ME
and
Stephanie
and
I
have
been
talking
on
the
phone
for
a
couple
of
weeks
now
and
when
we
met
each
other
there
was
this
instant
connection.
And
I
know
that
I
have
a
new
friend,
which
is
awesome
and
I'm
can't
wait
to
hear
her
story
because
I
want
to
know
her
more
and
more.
Here
she
is,
Stephanie.
Hey,
I'm
an
alcoholic
and
my
name
is
Stephanie.
Thank
you
so
much
for
having
me.
I
get
all
crazy,
right?
This
is
amazing.
The
story
about
Bob.
Amazing.
Bob
is
here,
man.
I've
never
done
this
before,
Step
2.
So
let's
see
what
happens,
right?
Oh
my
God,
I
love
Alcoholics
Anonymous
and
I'm
going
to
keep
it
to
two,
right?
So
I
had
came
to
believe
that
a
power
greater
than
myself
could
restore
me
to
sanity,
or
came
to
believe
that
a
power
greater
than
ourselves
could
restore
us
to
sanity.
And
when
I
came,
my
dress
has
pockets.
When
When
I
came
to
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
I
didn't
understand
what
sanity
was,
right?
Alcoholism
prevents
me
from
seeing
the
truth,
and
alcoholism
prevents
me
from
participating
in
the
real
world.
And
that
happened
for
me
long
before
I
ever
picked
up
alcohol.
You
know,
I
grew
up
in
an
alcoholic
home.
My
dad
was
an
active
alcoholic.
My
mother
was
an
untreated
al
Anon.
And
so
I
had
no
idea
what
sanity
was.
My
dad
would
say
on
a
Friday
afternoon,
Amy,
I
got
to
go
to
the
war,
right?
And
we
know
that's
drunk
speak
where
I'm
going
to
get
wasted.
And
so
my
mother,
not
understanding
this
disease
would
say
to
him,
take
Stephanie
with
you,
right,
thinking
that
if
a
10
year
old
child
went
with
him,
he
wouldn't
go
to
the
club.
He'd
go
to
the
store
and
come
home.
But
my
father
was
an
alcoholic.
He
was
incapable
of
not
drinking.
He
had
the
mental
obsession.
He
had
the
phenomenon
of
craving
once
he
took
alcohol
into
his
body.
And
so
we
would
end
up
down
the
vets
or
down
the,
or
down
the
KSC.
I
still
remember
all
the
phone
numbers
for
those
places,
right?
And
we
would
end
up
down
there.
And
I
wasn't
drinking.
I
was
10-11
years
old.
But
already
when
I
would
walk
into
those
places,
they're
like
all
maroon
and
they're
dark
and
the
floor
is
like
sticky
smells
a
little
like
vomit,
right?
But
that's
like
my
place,
man.
Oh
my
God,
right.
And
so
I'm
like
up
at
the
bar.
I'm
behind
the
bar.
I'm
making
my
own
little
Shirley
Temple.
I'm
pulling
the
lucky
sevens
out
of
the
fishbowl.
I
have
arrived,
you
know,
and
I
haven't
even
picked
up
a
drink
yet,
you
know,
And
we
would
get
home
and
it
would
be
midnight,
1:00
in
the
morning.
And
we
had
these
stairs
up
our
back
step.
And
my
mother
would
come
around
the
corner
and
she'd
look
at
us
and
her
face,
you
know,
she'd,
she'd
have
that
first
that
look
of
shock
and
then
that
look
of
hate,
disgust,
and
just,
you
know,
and
she'd
start
throwing
his
dirty
laundry
down
the
stairs.
Richard,
I'm
not
doing
this
anymore.
Who
do
you
think
you
are?
She
needs
to
be
at
school,
right?
My
father's
at
the
bottom
of
the
stairs
and
he's
just
like
Amy,
Amy,
Amy,
you
know?
And
I'm
folding
his
clothes.
I'm
folding
his
clothes,
right?
Because
already,
even
though
I
hadn't
had
a
sip
of
alcohol,
I
was
incapable
of
seeing
the
truth.
Alcohol
prevented
me
from
seeing
the
truth.
And
what
I
saw
was
I
saw
this
shrew
at
the
top
of
the
stairs,
right?
I'm
just
like,
hey,
we're
just
having
a
good
time
here,
right?
I'm
like,
I
do
not
want
to
be
like
her.
And
I
grew
up
just
like
him,
you
know?
And
all
I
saw
was
a
guy
just
trying
to
have
a
good
time.
Alcohol
prevented
me
from
seeing
the
truth.
I
couldn't
see
the
fact
that
he
had
just
driven
drunk
with
me
in
the
car.
He
could
have
killed
us
both.
I
couldn't
see
that
he
had
just
drank
and
gambled
away
the
mortgage
again.
And
I
definitely
could
not
see
that
my
father
was
incapable
of
being
present
physically
or
emotionally
for
my
mother.
I
had
no
idea
what
that
meant.
I
had
no
idea
what
sanity
was.
I
grew
up
in
that
house
with
a
Christmas
tree
was
getting
thrown
out
the
window,
you
know,
like
that
was
my
house.
And
I
had
no
idea
what
sanity
was.
You
know,
Fast
forward
a
few
years,
my
mother
has
found
Al
Anon.
This
did
not
provide
me
with
sanity,
but
it
provided
her
with
a
whole
heck
of
a
lot
of
slogans,
right?
I
can
make
choices.
I
can
make
healthy
choices
today
and
like,
yeah,
why
don't
you
make
me
a
sandwich?
Go
choose
to
do
that.
And
she
went,
she
went
to
an
Al
Anon
and
it
was
like
her
and
all
my
friends,
'cause
my
friends,
my
dad,
my
alcoholic
life
was
the
only
normal
one,
even
before
it
was
me
drinking,
right?
So
we
would
be
at
all
these
little
school
functions.
And
it
was
like,
whose
dad's
going
to
show
up
wasted,
You
know,
whose
father's
going
to
run
on
the
soccer
field
drunk?
Like
who's
going
to,
you
know,
whatever
that
was
the
craziness
of
my
life.
And
all
the
little
moms
found
Alan
on
together.
So
they
would
like
this
little
gang
in
recovery.
And
so
one
weekend
they're
like,
yeah,
we're
going
to
an
Al
Anon
convention.
We
can
make
healthy
choices,
right?
And
what
that
meant
was
that
they
left
us
home
with
the
drunk
dads,
right?
So
my
dad
is
all
like,
here's
20
bucks,
you
know,
don't
tell
your
mother,
see
you
on
Sunday.
I'm
like,
make
it
25
and
we're
good,
you
know,
because
I'm
always
on
the
hustle.
I
am
always
on
the
hustle,
right?
I
can
walk
into
a
room,
I
can
assess
it.
I
know
exactly
who
I
need
to
see
what
I
need
to
say
to
get
what
I
want,
you
know?
So
on
the
hustle,
I
am
so
good
at
survival.
I
have
no
clue
how
to
live,
you
know,
And
so
my
mother
goes
off
to
the
Al
Anon
convention
and
I
figure
I'm
going
to
go
figure
out
what
this
alcohol
thing
is
all
about.
And
I
certainly
drank
before,
you
know,
we
drank,
we
stole
Michelobes
from
my
dad
and
drank
them
through
straws
and
made
out
with
boys
at
the
at
the
little
junior
high
dances.
And
I
was
kind
of
a
radical
like
that.
But
that
night
I
was
really
going
to
get
one
on.
And
so
we
went
to
this
girl
Sharon's
house
and
we
took
out
a
blender
and
we
went
into
the
liquor
cabinet.
I'm
from
just
north
of
Boston.
I'm
Irish,
I'm
Catholic.
Our
big
things
are
we
don't
get
pregnant,
we
don't
talk
about
it,
and
we
don't
get
caught.
So
we
took
out
the
blender
and
we're
putting
just
a
couple
little
shots
of
everything
in
because
you
can't
get
caught.
And
we're
idiots,
right?
Because
we're
maybe
thirteen
years
old.
And
so
we're
putting
all
the
mixes
in
and
all
that
kind
of
stuff.
Because
I
got
no
idea
what
alcohol
is
and
what's
not.
It's
got
gin
and
schnapps
and
vodka
and
that
lime
liqueur.
I
can
remember
the
green
lime
her
right,
all
that
stuff
goes
in.
We
added
two
scoops
and
nestles
quick
and
we
mixed
it
up
right,
legit,
legit.
And
The
thing
is
y'all
are
going
to
understand
this
because
you're
my
people.
But
so
we
mix
it
all
up.
Nestle
quick
actually
doesn't
dissolve
in
alcohol
because
of
the
consistency
or
whatever
right?
I
can
feel
it
like
in
my
teeth
when
I
tell
this
story.
And
so
basically
what
it
was
was
it
was
this
brown
liquid
with
this
brown
powder
on
top,
right?
And
I
drank
it,
and
I
drank
it.
And
for
Alcoholics
like
me,
I
believe
we
have
like,
an
alcohol
chakra
that's
right
at
the
core
of
our
being,
right?
And
when
just
enough
booze
hits
that
chakra,
man,
it's
like,
bam,
this
is
how
I
feel
on
alcohol,
right?
I
feel
like
you
either
want
to
be
me
or
you
want
to
be
me.
I
look
like
Cindy
Crawford.
I
can
dance
like
Janet
Jackson.
I
am
so
funny.
I
am
so
amazing.
You
know,
alcohol
restored
me
to
sanity.
Alcohol
made
it
so
that
I
felt
OK
in
the
world.
Alcohol
prevented
me
from
seeing
the
truth,
you
know?
And
I
drank
that
boot,
that
blender
full
of
Yum,
like
woo
drank
it
up.
And
already
the
consequences
started
happening.
You
know,
we
got
in
trouble.
It
was
the
first
summer
I
was
grounded.
I
was
grounded
every
summer
until
my
mother
kicked
me
out
when
I
was
16,
you
know,
because
my
alcoholism
made
her
life
unmanageable.
So
Fast
forward
a
few
more
years
because
I
need
to
come
to
believe,
obviously,
because
the
only
thing
I'm
coming
to
are
a
lot
of
porcelain
toilets
and
puking
and
it's
just
not
good,
right?
And
at
the
end
of
my
drinking,
for
me,
what
happened
was,
you
know,
I
took
a
lot
of
hostages.
I
took
a
lot
of
men
because
for
me,
alcohol
is
but
a
symptom.
Alcohol
is
a,
is
a
symptom
of
an
underlying
condition
and
an
underlying
disease.
And
I've
got
that
disease
and
it's
a
soul
sickness.
It's
a
spiritual
malady,
you
know,
And
I
had
that,
and
I
couldn't
look
at
me,
and
I
couldn't
ever
look
to
see
how
I
felt.
I
had
no
idea
how
I
felt.
And
so
I
took
this
poor
guy
hostage,
and
I
told
him
because
I
had
been
here
in
my
mother's
al
Anon,
you
know,
by
now
she's
chasing
me
around
with
44
questions,
putting
big
books
on
the
toilet.
Have
you
had
enough
yet?
Like,
no.
Make
me
a
sandwich.
Yeah,
give
me
some
money.
I'm
unemployable,
but
so
I
took
this
poor
guy
hostage
and
I
told
him
that
he
was
an
alcoholic.
You
know,
I'm
like,
you're
an
alcoholic
and
you
need
to
get
help.
I'm
going
to
break
up
with
you.
And
he's
just
like,
see
ya,
that
was
psycho.
But
eventually
he
called
because
I
get
into
really
healthy
relationships
and
eventually
he
called
and
he
said,
you're
right.
I
can't
live
without
you.
Please,
I'll
do
anything.
And
to
me,
that's
like
1/5
of
vodka.
That
is
like
1/5
of
vodka.
It
feels
so
good.
And
so
I
came
to
Alcoholics
Anonymous
with
him.
I
came
to
Alcoholics
Anonymous
for
him.
And
the
grace
of
God
entered
my
life.
Because
The
thing
is,
God
is
amazing.
God
is
huge.
And
God
knew
that
I
could
never
come
here
for
me.
God
knew
that
I
couldn't
see
that
my
drinking
was
a
problem,
which
was
ridiculous,
but
I
couldn't.
But
God
knew
that
I
would
come
for
someone
else.
And
God
knew
that
I
was
crazy,
right?
And
I
had
no
idea
what
sanity
was
when
I
got
here.
And
I
sat
in
these
rooms
with
him
and
I
and
I,
and
I
would
say
to
him,
sweetheart,
he
should
be
your
sponsor.
You
have
those
same
character
defects,
you
know.
Oh,
honey,
this
is
what
you
owe
me
immense
for.
And
he'd
just
be
like,
it's
ridiculous.
I
was
so
insane.
This
disease
had
infiltrated
the
core
of
my
essence
so
much
that
he
stopped
coming
to
meetings.
And
I
kept
coming
to
meetings.
And
I
sat
there
and
I
had
my
big
book,
and
I
was
reading
and
I
was
highlighting
because
I
was
going
to
get
him
well,
because
I
believed
that
if
only
he
got
better,
I
could
be
OK.
I
had
no
idea
alcohol
prevented
me
from
seeing
the
truth
that
I
was
in
charge
of
my
own
life.
Prevented
me,
you
know?
And
so
I
sat
there
and
I
highlighted
and
I
read
and
I
did
everything
for
him
because
I
just
wanted
him
to
get
better
so
I
could
be
OK.
And
I
couldn't
see
the
insanity
of
that.
And
God
is
so
good.
God
is
so
gentle,
God
is
so
kind
that
she
allowed
me
to
do
that.
Yeah,
we'll
get
there.
Oh,
yeah.
And
so
when
I
came
to
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
I
was
23
years
old
and,
and
you
know,
I
was
there
were
I,
I
went
to
AA
in
my
hometown.
So
I
go
into
the
rooms
and
there
were
all
the
guys
that
my
dad
drank
with.
They're
all
the
guys
from
the
vets
and
the
IA
and
everything
else.
I
know
all
these
guys.
I'm
like,
hey.
And
they're
all
looking
at
me
like,
oh,
Stephanie,
are
you
here
with
your
dad?
And
they're
looking
over
my
head.
And
I'm
like,
Nope,
you
know,
And
those
men,
God,
those
men
took
me
and
tried
to
keep
me
safe,
right?
But
where
it
says
in
the
promises
we
lose
interest
in
selfish
things
and
gain
interest
in
our
fellows.
I
didn't
really
lose
interest
in
selfish
things.
And
I
gained
interest
in
a,
a
fellows
one
at
a
time,
right?
Like
that's
what
I
did.
And
they
tried
like
they
tried
to
put
me
up
front.
Don't
talk
to
the
boys.
I'm
like,
like
you're
old.
You're
like
40.
Like,
please,
I've
got
this.
Don't
you
know?
I'm
in
Community
College,
OK?
But
those
men
kept
me
safe
because
I
couldn't
see
the
insanity
that
was
my
life,
you
know?
And
so
when
I
came
here,
I
could.
I
didn't
even
believe
that
I
was
an
alcoholic
or
that
my
life
was
unmanageable.
So
why
would
I
ever
need
to
come
to
believe
that
a
power
greater
than
myself?
And
what
really
could
that
be?
A
power
greater
than
myself
could
restore
me
to
sanity.
I'm
not
crazy.
It's
y'all,
you
know,
if
you
all
would
do
what
I
said,
if
you
all
would
behave
the
way
I
knew
you
should,
then
everything
would
be
OK,
you
know?
But
I
didn't
know
because
God
prevented
me
from
seeing
the
truth
at
that
point.
God
put
me
lovingly
in
your
hands
and
that
made
me
stupid
as
shit.
Thank
God,
you
know?
And
I
could
sit
here
and
I
was
looking
at
Step
2
and
all
this
because
I'm
all
nervous
about
what
am
I
going
to
say,
am
I
going
to
look
stupid,
blah
blah
blah.
And
I'm
rereading
Step
2
about
the
intellectually
self-sufficient
and
all
these
different
types
of
Alcoholics
and
all
these
reasons
why
we
don't
have
faith.
And
I
could
tell
you
all
of
these
crazy
stories
about
the
way
that
I
am
these
things.
I
mean,
my
God
is
so
good.
Get
this.
So
it
says
that
we
we
resign
from
the
debating
society,
right?
When
we
get
so,
but
we
resign
from
the
debating
society.
I
didn't,
I
got
a
PhD
in
argument,
right?
Like
that's
my
God.
It's
like,
you're
not
going
to
not
do
that.
You're
going
to
do
the
exact
opposite,
right?
But
I
could
sit
here
and
I
could
tell
you
all
these
funny
stories
about
the
crazy
things
and
the
crazy
ways
that
I
judged
other
people.
But
the
bottom
line
is
that
when
I
came
to
Alcoholics
Anonymous
and
I
did
all
of
that
self-righteous
judging
and
I
did
all
of
those
things
to
push
you
away,
I
did
it
because
I
was
afraid.
I
was
so
afraid
when
I
came
here
and
I
saw
you
all
and
I
saw
all
the
women,
and
I
didn't
like
women.
Sometimes
with
enough
drinks,
I
did,
but
most
of
the
time
I
did
not
like
women.
You
know,
I
knew
how
you
were.
You
wanted
my
man.
Now,
granted,
he
didn't
have
a
car,
he
didn't
have
a
job,
and
he
didn't
have
very
many
teeth,
but
he
was
mine.
So
back
off.
You
know,
I
did
not
like
women
and
I
certainly
wasn't
gonna
trust
them.
You
know,
hold
on.
Crazy.
So
when
I
came
to
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
they
told
me
I
had
to
trust
and,
and
God
lovingly
put
me
in
your
hands
and
made
me
stupid.
Thank
God.
God
made
me
stupid.
And
I
just
wanted
you
to
like
me.
I
just
wanted
you
to
like
me.
And
I
saw
all
these
women
and
they're
all
matchy
matchy.
And
they
look
like
they're
showering,
which
is
way
above
my
pay
grade
at
this
point.
And
I'm
just
like,
what
is
going
on?
And
I,
but
I
saw
them
and
they
would
look
me
in
the
face
and
they
would
say,
how
are
you,
Stephanie?
I'm
fine,
you
know.
And
I
was
just
so
bristly
and
I
just
wanted
it.
I
wanted
it.
Oh
my
God,
I
wanted
it.
But
I
didn't
dare
want
it
because
every
single
time
I
wanted
everything,
anything,
every
single
time
I
said
I
was
going
to
do
something.
Every
single
time
I
came
into
that
house
and
stood
at
the
bottom
of
those
stairs,
my
mother
would
come
around
the
corner
and
look
at
me
with
that
face,
that
face
of
disgust,
that
face
of
hate,
because
alcohol
was
lying
to
me.
Alcoholism
preventing
me
from
seeing
the
truth.
Alcoholism
preventing
me
from
seeing
the
fact
that
my
mother
didn't
hate
me.
My
mother
was
afraid
that
her
baby
was
gonna
die,
and
I
couldn't
see
that.
I
couldn't
handle
the
truth.
And
so
when
I
came
here
and
all
of
these
women
are
trying
to
be
nice
to
me,
I
couldn't
handle
it,
you
know?
And
there
used
to
be
this
guy
George.
Oh,
my
God,
George.
I
haven't
thought
about
George
in
a
long
time.
There
was
this
guy
George.
And
I
would
come
into
these
meetings
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous
and
I
would
have
my
head
down
because
I
just
couldn't.
I
wanted
it.
I
was
listening.
I
was
doing
the
things
you
said.
I
would
go
home
and
I
would
get
on
my
knees
and
I
was
copying
the
big
book
449
word
for
word
because
I
didn't
know
what
else
to
do.
My
head
was
just
racing
and
I
couldn't
make
it
stop.
And
I
was
terrified
to
drink.
And
I
would
come
into
this
meeting
and
George
be
sitting
there,
and
he'd
be
like,
here
comes
the
prettiest
little
girl
in
a
A
and
I
wanted
to
be
the
prettiest
little
girl
in
AA
so
bad.
And
the
fact
that
he
remembered
who
I
was
and
the
fact
that
he
always
had
a
seat
for
me,
I
was
like,
Oh
my
God,
can
I
have
this?
But
I
didn't
believe
I
did.
Actually,
I
did
believe
that
God
could
restore
me
to
sanity.
I
didn't
believe
that
God
would.
I
didn't
believe
that
I
was
worthy,
and
I
didn't
believe
that
God
really
took
much
of
an
interest
in
me.
When
I
got
to
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
I
had
been
Catholic.
My
God
had
a
clipboard.
My
God
had
a
list
of
sins,
deadly
sins.
I
was
checking
those
things
off
like
nobody's
business,
you
know?
And
so
when
I
got
here,
I
didn't
believe
that
God
would
restore
me
to
sanity.
God
was
restoring
you
all
to
sanity
because
you
were
sick.
I
was
bad,
you
know,
and
I
couldn't
see
it.
And
so
I
got
a
sponsor,
right?
Because
they
told
me
to
do
that.
They
said
find
someone
who
has
what
you
want
and
be
willing
to
do
what
they
do.
God
with
skin,
you
know?
And
so
I
got
this.
I
got
this
woman
because
she
had
a
wicked
hot
husband
and
a
really
nice
car
and
she
had
nice
clothes.
And
I'm
like,
that's
what
I
want.
Pretty
sure
I
said
some
inappropriate
thanks
to
her
husband
because
that's
how
I
behaved
back
in
the
day,
you
know.
But
God
was
there
and
God
was
there
and
God
took
the
woman
with
the
Mercedes
and
put
her
in
my
life,
knowing
what
a
shallow
materialistic
psycho
I
was
and
made
sure
she
had
a
program,
you
know.
And
so
I
got
with
that
woman
and
we
started
going
through
the
1st
164
pages
of
the
book
and
she
helped
me
to
come
to
believe.
And
I
believe
today
that
it
is
a
sponsor's
job
to
simply
take
the
hand
of
those
that
they
sponsor
and
put
it
in
the
hand
of
God.
And
I
have
done
this
piece
meal
like
not
even
close
to
perfect.
And
even
still
now
I
will
have
my
hand
out.
My
God,
I
love
God.
But
then
you
put
something
in
my
way
or
you
make
me
afraid.
I
have
so
much
fear
still.
And
I
pull
my
hand
back,
you
know,
and
I
get
defensive
and
my
sponsor
is
always
there
with
absolutely
brutal,
unconditional
love
and
lack
of
judgment
and
puts
my
hand
back,
you
know.
So
I
came
to
Alcoholics
Anonymous
and
we
started
to
do
this.
And
when
we
got
to
the
second
step,
she
said,
why
don't
you
tell
me
about
your
God,
right?
I'm
like,
I
don't
want
to
talk
about
my
mother
had
been
a
nun,
for
God's
sakes,
right?
Yeah,
it's
crazy.
So
she
said,
why
don't
you
tell
me
about
your
God?
And
I
was
still
so
afraid.
I
was
so
afraid
to
commit
publicly
to
this
program.
I
was
so
afraid
to
have
you
look
at
me
like
you
liked
me
and
then
disappoint
you
because
that's
what
I
do.
And
so
I
was
pushing
people
away
and
y'all
will
be
like,
oh,
let
us
love
you
until
you
can
love
yourself.
You
know,
I'd
make
masturbation
jokes
like
at
open
meetings
on
purpose,
'cause
I
needed
you
away.
I
needed
you
away.
And
so
when
this
woman
said
to
me,
tell
me
about
your
God,
I
said
my
God's
a
lesbian
cheerleader,
right?
Because
what
I
wanted
was
I
wanted
her
to
say
no,
no,
no,
you
can't
do
that.
You
need
to
find
Jesus.
No,
no,
no,
you
can't
do
that.
This
is
what
God
is.
No,
no,
you
can't
believe
that
you
need
to
go,
you
know,
and
God
was
there
and
she
just
said
to
me,
OK,
pray
to
her.
Like
what?
What?
And
so
then
the
real
work
began,
right?
And
I
had
to
come
to
believe
that
a
power
greater
than
myself
could
restore
me
to
sanity.
And
this
program
is
not
for
people
who
need
it,
and
it's
not
for
people
who
want
it.
It's
for
people
who
do
it,
you
know?
And
I
get
right
thinking
through
right
action.
And
I
need
action
and
more
action.
The
book
tells
me
that,
you
know?
And
so
when
I
got
sober,
I
had
no
idea.
I
had
no
idea
what
sanity
was,
and
I
certainly
had
no
idea
to
be
a
woman
of
dignity
and
grace.
And
I
wasn't
quite
sure
that
I
wanted
to
be
one
of
those.
They
sounded
a
little
boring.
Not
a
woman
of
dignity
and
grace.
I'm
a
potty
girl,
thank
you
very
much.
And
this
is
the
way
that
I
like
it,
you
know,
because
I
didn't
know
me.
I
couldn't
see
into
me.
Into
me.
I
see
into
me.
I
see
intimacy,
you
know,
I
couldn't
see
into
me.
I
couldn't
stand
to
look.
But
fundamental,
down
deep
inside
of
every
man,
woman
and
child
is
the
idea
of
God,
you
know?
And
so
that's
what
I
needed
to
do.
I
needed
to
look
in
because
what
I
did,
I
worshipped
so
much
stuff.
I
worship
stuff,
I
worship
people,
I
worship
things,
I
worship
everything
out
there.
You
know,
I
was
incapable
of
loving
what
was
in
here.
I
was
incapable
of
even
looking
because
I
was
so
afraid
that
if
I
looked,
I
would
see,
I
would
see
that
little
piece
that
made
it
so
that
I
really
was
that
sociopath.
I
really
was
that
fundamentally
unfixable,
unlovable,
constitutionally
incapable
person
who
couldn't
stay
here,
you
know?
But
I
began
to
do
what
people
told
me
to
do
because
I
didn't
know
what
else
to
do
and
because
God
is
good,
you
know.
And
so
the
first
thing
that
I
started
to
do
was
I
started
to
make
my
bed.
My
sponsor
said
to
me,
you
know,
as
a
woman
of
dignity
and
grace,
you
make
your
bed.
And
I
know
this
might
be
surprising,
but
I
was
a
little
promiscuous
when
I
drank.
I
know
I
kissed
a
boy
and
a
girl.
No.
Yeah,
seriously.
Like,
you
know,
it
was
a
mess
because
I
just
wanted
to
feel
that
love,
you
know?
And
I
thought
that's
what
love
was
incorrect.
You
know,
the
disease
of
alcoholism
prevented
me
from
seeing
the
truth
about
what
true
intimacy
was.
You
know,
true
intimacy
for
me
then
was
if
I
went
on
a
date,
I
brought
my
toothbrush
'cause
if
I
liked,
am
I
going
to
get
in
on
that?
You
know,
if
you're
laughing,
we
can
talk
after.
So
I
started
making
my
bed.
Because
today
I'm
a
woman
of
dignity
and
grace
and
deliberateness.
You
know,
because
today
I
don't
always
make
the
best
choices,
particularly
when
it
comes
to
relationships.
Shocker.
But
today
they're
my
choices
because
today,
after
working
those
steps,
I
do
have
all
those
principles.
You
know,
I
do
have
a
set
of
standards
that
I
have
for
myself.
And
coming
to
believe,
I
was
thinking
about,
you
know,
how
did
I
come
to
believe?
And
the
way
that
I
came
to
believe
was
God.
GODA
group
of
drunks,
people
like
George
telling
me
that
I
was
the
prettiest
little
girl
in
AA.
You
know,
people
like
my
sponsor
who
would
tell
me
that
no
matter
what,
whenever
you
find
a
person,
place
or
thing
unacceptable,
it's
a
spiritual
axiom.
There's
something
wrong
with
you
if
not
me,
Neil.
I
lived
in
Alcoholics
Anonymous
for
a
whole
bunch
of
years
just
trying
to
prove
her
wrong
on
that
one,
you
know?
And
I
couldn't,
you
know,
and
I
started
doing
the
little
things
that
we're
supposed
to
be
doing
and
seeing
God,
I
started
looking
to
see
how
the
universe
was
conspiring
for
me
instead
of
against
me,
you
know,
And
I
started
like
I
was
going
to,
I
was
going
to
school,
I
was
driving
my
sponsor
crazy.
Basically,
I
was
showing
up
at
our
house
every
day
and
I'm
like,
hey,
what
are
we
doing?
She's
like,
I'm
going
grocery
shopping.
I'm
like,
OK,
you
know,
'cause
I
was
so
afraid
to
be
alone.
I
was
so
afraid
to
drink.
I
hadn't
worked
the
steps.
I
hadn't
had
a
spiritual
experience.
So
I
had
nothing
like
Chris
talked
about.
I
had
nothing
between
me
and
that
first
drink,
you
know,
There
was
no
power
on
earth
that
was
going
to
keep
me
away
from
it.
So
I
was
just
going
to
be
right
with
her,
you
know?
And
finally,
she
said
to
me,
Stephanie,
why
don't
you
take
a
class
or
something,
You
know,
like,
OK,
whatever
you
want.
People
please
her.
You
know,
sometimes
our
defects
of
character
can
get
us
over
some
rough
spots.
So
I
was
going
to
school
and
I'm
and
I'm
doing
all
that
kind
of
stuff.
You
know,
I'm
coming
to
woman's
meetings,
which
I
didn't
like.
I
didn't
even
understand
why
you
would
go
to
a
woman's
meeting.
There
are
no
men
there,
right?
Like
why?
Like
seriously,
it's
kind
of
like
non
alcoholic
beer.
I
just
can't
get
my
head
around
it.
Just
don't.
Just
don't.
But
I
started
doing
the
things.
I
started
doing
the
deal.
I
picked
up.
I
picked
up
ashtrays,
I
picked
up
chairs,
I
sat
down
chairs.
And
I
started
seeing
how
the
universe
was
conspiring
for
me.
And
I
was
in
Graduate
School.
And
this,
you
know,
my
coming
to
believe
continues
today,
right?
Like,
I
just
can't
even,
I
just
can't
even.
So
I'm
in
Graduate
School
and
I'm
probably
four
or
five,
four
or
five
years
sober
and
I'm
still
coming
to
believe.
And,
and
I
got
a
letter
from
the
IRS
saying
that
I
had
made
a
mistake
on
my
taxes
back
in
the
day
and
they
actually
owed
me
$278.
Like
what?
Like
sobriety
right
now.
Meanwhile,
I
have
no,
absolutely
no
ability
to
not
spend
money
as
soon
as
it
touches
my
hands,
right,
Because
I'm
in
still
early
recovery.
I
I
mean,
I'm
25
years
old
and
I
think
I'm
still
in
early
recovery.
I
am
not
in
any
danger
of
getting
well
anytime
soon.
But
so
I
get
this
check
for
$278.
But
now
I'm
principled,
you
know,
now
I'm
going
to
trust
God
with
my
finances.
And
so
I
put
it
in
the
bank.
Yeah,
for
about
3
days.
But
within
those
three
days,
what
happens
is
my
dad
calls
me
and
he
tells
me
that
my
mother's
had
a
heart
attack
and
I
need
to
come
home.
And
we
don't
have
any
money.
You
know,
I'm
first
generation
to
college.
We
got
nothing
but
that
plane
ticket,
$275.
You
know,
that's
God.
And
then
when
I
got
there
to
take
care
of
my
mother,
what
this
program
allowed
me
to
do
was
not
make
it
about
me.
I
came
to
believe
in
sanity.
I
could
see
that
the
sanity
of
the
situation
was
that
my
mother
was
scared
that
my
father's
an
idiot.
I
mean,
I
love
him,
idiot.
And
that
what
my
mother
would
like
are
clean
sheets
and
some
flowers
in
her
room
when
she
got
out
of
the
hospital.
And
I
didn't
have
to
make
a
big
production
out
of
it.
I
didn't
have
to
tell
everyone
about
it.
I
could
just
do
it.
Because
to
fit
myself
of
Max
to
be
of
maximum
service
is
my
only
purpose
to
day.
That's
it.
If
I
think
my
purpose
is
anything
else,
it's
my
will,
you
know?
It's
not
me
relying
on
God.
It's
not
me
believing
that
God
can
restore
me
to
sanity.
It's
me
living
in
the
insanity
of
thinking
I
have
any
idea
what
to
do
because
I
don't,
you
know,
and
so
I
did
that.
I
took
care
of
my
mom,
you
know,
and
this
program
has
afforded
me
so
many
opportunities
to
see
the
God
instances
in
my
life,
to
see
the
way
that
the
universe
conspires
for
me
all
the
time.
Like
the
amount
of
gratitude,
the
amount
of
stuff,
the
amount
of
love,
the
amount
of
God
that
I
have
today
is
indescribable.
Indescribable.
I
would
gladly
give
you
all
all
I
have.
I
mean,
that's
what
the
book
tells
me
I
need
to
do.
What
I
have
is
an
unlimited
loan.
As
long
as
I
insist
on
giving
away
all
of
the
profits,
not
just
some
half.
Measures
don't
avail
me
half
'cause
some
days
I'd
be
OK
with
half.
Half
measures
avail
me
nothing.
I
need
to
give
away
all
of
the
profits,
you
know.
But
God
is
good
because
I
can't
do
that
because,
oh,
wait.
And
it's
not
because
I'm
an
alcoholic.
It's
not
because
I
don't
work
a
good
enough
program.
It's
because
I'm
human.
I
am
perfectly
imperfect
and
human.
And
as
soon
as
I
was
OK
with
that,
which
is
still
not
every
day
all
day,
but
when
I'm
OK
with
that,
my
life
is
huge
because
my
God
is
huge,
you
know,
And
so
coming
to
believe
has
been
this
super
gradual,
super
slow
process.
And
I
know,
like
with
sponsorship,
right?
Like
I
consider
my
sponsor
my
God
with
skin,
like,
Oh
my
God,
if
I
can
be
half
the
woman
I,
my
sponsor
is
to
me,
to
my
girls,
I'm
doing
awesome.
Like
she
is
amazing
and
I
get
that
she's
human.
I
don't
think
that
we
need
to
like,
you
know,
be
sponsor
dependent.
And
if
anything
happened
to
her
I
would
be
OK
because
my
program
and
my
God
is
huge,
you
know?
But
she's
one
woman
who
knows
all
my
stuff.
Which
means
I
don't
have
to
bring
it
into
meetings
because
no
offense,
y'all
ain't
in
danger
getting
well
anytime
soon
either,
right?
But
my
sponsor
has
been
that
person
for
me,
that
person
who
has
helped
me
retrieve
and
figure
out
what
sanity
is
because
I
had
no
idea
like
seriously,
when
I
was
starting
to
date
in
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
like
dating
sober,
having
sex
sober,
all
of
those
things
way
beyond
me,
right?
And
I
would
be
like,
I'm
going
to
go
on
a
date
and
Oh
my
God.
And
I'm
already
talking.
I'm
buying
bride's
magazines.
I'm
and
my
sponsor
would
be
like,
dude,
why
don't
you
just
go
to
coffee,
have
him
drop
you
off
in
an
hour
and
call
me.
And
I'm
like,
oh,
OK,
you
know,
is
that
what
you
do?
But
wait,
he
hasn't
proposed.
Like,
how
am
I
supposed
to
end
the
interaction?
How
do
I
know
he's
gonna
come
back?
And
she
said
to
me,
maybe
you
don't
want
him
to
come
back.
What?
You
drunk
right?
What
do
you
mean?
I
don't
want
him
to
come
back
to
me.
I
see
intimacy.
You
know,
when
I
came
around
here
and
I
got
over
and,
and
worked
through
a
lot
of
that
stuff
about
my
sexual
promiscuity
and
my
sexual
conduct,
and
I
realized
the
way
that
I
was
violating
my
own
principles.
I
began
to
see
that
I
was
worthy.
I
began
to
believe
that
I
was
worthy.
And
when
I
believe
that
I
am
worthy,
I
know
that
God
is
there
like
I
know
God.
And
So
what
I
used
to
do
with
this
woman,
and
for
a
long
time
into
sobriety,
right?
Because
I
was
still,
I
still
am
human.
I
would
get
into
these
things,
right?
Oftentimes
they
involved
pen
and
I
would
get
into
these
situations
and
you
know,
life
would
go
crazy.
Principles
out
the
window,
no
steps,
dry
drunk.
But
then
I
would
realize
I
would
get
into
enough
pain
as
the
spiritual
touchstone
of
all
growth,
right?
I
would
get
into
enough
pain
that
I
would
be
like,
OK,
I
got
this,
you
know?
And
I
would
start
praying
and
I
would
start
writing
and
I
would
start
looking
and
helping
others
and
reaching
out,
right?
Trust
God,
clean
house,
help
others.
Bam,
I
got
the
deal.
And
I
would
start
doing
those
things
and
I
would
start
to
feel
OK.
And
I
would
start
to
believe
that,
OK,
I
could
be
OK
in
here.
Then
I'd
call
my
sponsor,
right?
I'd
be
like,
hey,
I
know
we
haven't
talked
in
a
few
days.
Yeah,
some
things
were
kind
of
crazy,
but
this
is
what
happened.
And
this
is
what
I'm
doing,
and
I'm
OK,
Thank
you
very
much,
You
know,
because
I
still
had
that
fear.
I
still
had
that
fear
that
if
I
allowed
that
woman
into
my
process
as
it
was
unfolding,
that
peace
would
come
out.
You
know,
that
thing
would
be
discussed.
That
makes
me
incurable.
You
know
today
I
don't
do
that.
You
know,
today
God
has
restored
me
to
sanity.
Today
I
understand
that
anything
that
I
see
is
simply
fear,
False
evidence
appearing
real,
like
it's
not
real.
Also,
when
I
was
in
recovery
and
and
in
sobriety,
after
a
few
years,
of
course
I
went
to
a
meeting.
I
spoke
in
a
meeting
that's
probably
three
or
four
years
sober.
I
spoke
at
a
meeting
and
there
was
a
super
cute
guy
in
the
room
and
we
had
eye
contact.
You
know
that
eye
contact
that
you
have
with
people
when
you
just
know?
No,
no,
we
have
that
eye
contact.
And
so
after
the
meeting,
of
course,
he
asked
me
for
my
number
and
I
gave
it
to
him
and
we
got
married.
And
we
did.
We
really
did.
George.
His
name
was
George
too,
and
my
son's
name
is
George.
It's
crazy.
It's
not
crazy.
It's
God.
It's
crazy
how
quickly
I
can
forget.
So,
you
know,
George
followed
me
to
Kansas
while
I
was
getting
my
PhD
and,
and
then
we
came
back
and
we
were
going
to
get
married.
We
did
get
married,
but
so
the
night
before
the
wedding,
of
course,
he's
in
recovery.
I'm
in
recovery.
All
my
bridesmaids
are
in
recovery.
My
father's
quit
drinking
by
now.
My
sister's
in
recovery.
My
niece
is
in
recovery.
Everybody's
in
recovery.
So
we
go
to
a
meeting
the
night
before
the
wedding.
Sweet
party
hard.
So
we
go
to
this
meeting
and
George,
my
George
is
chairing
the
meeting.
Old
George,
right?
Old
George
is
chair
of
the
meeting.
So
I
go
up
to
George
and
I'm
probably
seven
or
eight
years
so
by
now.
And
I
go
up
to
George
and
I
hug
him.
I'm
like,
hey,
George,
how
you
doing?
What
are
you
doing?
I'm
like,
I'm
getting
a
PhD.
Do
you
believe
this?
Oh,
my
God,
it's
crazy.
God,
it's
got
wife.
Yeah.
Love,
love,
sit
down,
you
know,
just
the
kind
of
regular
thing.
And
when
I'm
sitting
there,
there's
this
little
girl
comes
in.
She's
brand
new.
You
can
tell
she's,
you
know,
she
looks
a
mess.
She
thinks
she's
got
her
shit
together.
She
totally
doesn't.
She's
looking
down,
you
know,
and
George
goes
up
to
her
and
says,
hey,
here
comes
the
prettiest
little
girl
in
a
A
and
God
restored
me
to
sanity
because
that
day
I
didn't
feel
jealous.
I
didn't
feel
at
all
envious.
I
didn't
need,
want,
or
was
the
prettiest
little
girl
in
a
A
anymore.
Today
I'm
a
woman
of
dignity
and
grace
and
deliberateness.
And
today
other
people's
opinions
of
me
don't
matter
because
today
I
have
God.
You
know,
you
all
have
my
solution.
Without
a
doubt.
You
have
a
solution
in
those
first
164
pages
that
are
absolutely
divinely
inspired.
You
don't
have
any
of
my
answers.
God
has
my
answers.
And
if
I
want
my
answers,
I
need
to
look
down.
I
need
to
look
into
me
because
that's
where
God
is,
you
know,
And
in
the
last
five
years,
in
the
last
five
years,
I'm
just
like,
whatever.
In
the
last
five
years,
I
didn't,
I
didn't
think
this
would
ever
happen.
I
can't
believe
I'm
gonna
talk
about
this.
Here
we
go.
OK,
when
I
was
probably
18
or
19
years
sober,
I
got
involved
with
someone
who
was
new,
a
newcomer
guy.
We're
not
supposed
to
do
that.
There
are
reasons
why
we're
not
supposed
to
do
that,
but
I
did,
you
know,
I
was
the
exception.
It
was
OK,
blah,
blah,
blah,
blah,
blah.
And
I
came
home
one
day
and
he
was
shooting
up
in
my
bathroom.
You
know,
obviously
I
got
divorced
from
George.
George
and
I
got
very
amicable,
amicably
divorced.
We
have
these
two
kids
who
are
now
13
and
15,
who
absolutely,
positively
are
our
world.
George
is
one
of
my
best
friends
and
biggest
advocates,
and
it's
incredible.
I
still
don't
want
to
be
married
to
him,
but
I
came
home
and
he's
shooting
up
in
my
bathroom.
This
is
not,
this
is
not
sane,
You
know,
this
is
not
sane
behavior.
He's
in
my
house
with
my
kids.
I'm
a
tenured
professor.
I'm
almost
20
years
sober.
I
sponsor
half
of
my
town,
you
know,
God
was
there.
God
was
there
and
God,
there
was
a
lot
of
pain.
But
The
thing
is
that
today
I'm
a
woman
of
dignity
and
grace
and
deliberateness.
And
I
walked
through
that
and
I
got
my
answers
and
I
did
what
I
needed
to
do
when
I
needed
to
do
it,
with
God's
help.
And
I
came
to
believe,
you
know,
because
I
couldn't
see
the
insanity.
I
was
incapable
of
seeing
because
this
is
a
spiritual
malady.
And
just
because
I
put
down
the
drink
does
not
mean
I
got
cured,
you
know?
And
I
had
a
lot
of
stuff
going
on
at
that
point.
A
lot
of
stuff
God,
but
God
was
there
and
I
could
share
with
my
sponsor
and
I
could
be
honest
and
I
didn't
have
to
be
ashamed,
right?
Because
shame
and
guilt,
that's
the
stuff
that's
going
to
get
me
drunk.
That's
the
stuff
that's
going
to
make
me
isolate
and
keep
me
away
from
you.
And
I
can't.
So
I
will
come
here
every
day
and
tell
you,
yeah,
left
my
own
devices.
I
am
a
dirty
little
Co
core
and
I
have
done
some
bad
things
in
sobriety,
you
know,
because
that's
my
truth.
And
today
I
trust,
I
trust
God
because
I
know
that
God
is
unlimited,
you
know,
so
eventually
that
guy
got
out
of
my
life
and
the
way
that
he
got
out
of
my
life.
My
God
is
so
sneaky.
She's
funny.
This
little
God
of
mine.
I
was
coming
up
on
a
sabbatical
because
I'm
this
tenured
professor,
which
means
I
get
every
7th
year
off
paid,
which
is
just
ridiculous.
So
I'm
getting,
I'm
getting
ready
to
go
on
sabbatical
and
I
have
all
these
really
big
plans
about
what
I'm
going
to
do
and,
and
how
I'm
going
to
travel
and
I'm
going
to
do
this.
I'm
going
to
do
that.
And
my
dad
had
cancer
and
it
came
back.
Yeah.
And
my
mother's
410
and
my
father's
62.
And
my
mother
couldn't
pick
up.
He
was
falling
down
all
the
time
and
he
was
sick
and
she
couldn't
take
care
of
him.
And
we
met
at
Thanksgiving
and,
and
we
said,
dad,
what
do
you
want
to
do?
And
he
said,
all
I
want
to
do
is
come
home,
right.
So
I
called
my
ex-husband
and
I
said,
dude,
my
dad's
cancer's
back.
He
said,
I
got
the
kids,
don't
even
worry
about
it.
And
I
moved
home.
You
know,
I
moved
back
to
Massachusetts
and
I
helped
take
care
of
my
dad
and
I
drove
back
and
forth
a
lot
while
I
was
taking
care
of
my
dad.
I
was
in
charge
of
the
morphine
and
all
the
funny
little
drugs
that
you
get
when
you're
on
Hospice.
Me,
me
left
my
own
devices.
If
I
was
drinking
and
using,
I
absolutely,
positively
would
have
done
my
dad's
drugs.
I
have
no
illusions
about
who
I
am
when
I
am
incapable
of
seeing
God
and
seeing
the
truth.
But
because
of
God's
grace
and
because
I
have
kind
of
been
restored
to
sanity
because
of
that,
when
I
came
home
with
a
pizza
from
my
mother
and,
and
she
started
screaming
at
me
because
it
was
pepperoni
and
not
sausage.
And
doesn't
she
know
pepperoni
gives
her
heartburn?
And
what
do
I
thinking?
And
Oh
my
gosh,
how
much
money
was
that?
She's
not
going
to
be
able
to
afford
it.
And
who's
going
to
pay
for
all
this?
I
didn't
get
it
all
defensive.
I
knew
it
wasn't
about
the
pizza.
God
allowed
me
to
see
the
truth.
God
allowed
me
to
see
the
truth
that
this
woman
was
losing
the
man
that
she
had
been
married
to
for
48
years.
And
granted,
she
couldn't
stand
him
a
lot
of
the
time.
I
mean,
we
put
the
fun
in
dysfunctional
at
my
house,
right?
But
he
was
hers
and
she
was
going
to
be
alone
and
she
had
never
been
alone.
And
so
when
she
started
screaming
at
me,
I
said,
my,
you
want
me
to
go
get
another
pizza?
And
she
just
started
bawling.
And
I
hugged
her,
you
know,
and
we
took
care
of
my
dad
while
my
dad
was
dying.
And
it
was
absolutely,
positively
the
most
spiritual,
awesome
experience
of
my
life.
And
that
was
another
way
that
God
showed
me
that
I
don't
know
the
truth
because
I
had
always
projected
in
my
head,
Oh
my
God,
if
anything
like
that
happened,
I
could
never
do
that.
I
could
never,
I
would
freak
out.
I
would
do
this.
I
would
do
that.
I
have
no
idea
what
I'm
capable
of
with
God
because
I'm
capable
of
anything
with
God.
So
one
of
the
last
things
that
my
dad
said
to
me,
one
of
the
last
things
my
dad
had
to
say
to
me
was
don't
you
ever
get
back
with
him.
That
guy
shooting
up
in
my
bathroom,
that
guy
who
was
in
and
out,
that
guy
who
had
a
credit
card
attached
to
my
account,
That
guy.
Yeah,
because
we
go
deep
and
I
was
doing
al
Anon
and
a,
a,
you
know,
I
was
doing
what
I
was
supposed
to
be
doing.
Well,
obviously
not,
you
know,
but
I
was
incapable.
I
was
incapable
of
seeing
the
truth.
And
I
still
had
that
whole
piece
of
I
just
want
to
be
loved.
And
I
believed
that
somehow
if
I
saved
that
man,
if
I
gave
that
man,
like
people
in
recovery
in
my
home,
in
my
home
state
are
all
like,
Stephanie,
you're
awesome
in
recovery.
Your
goddess.
And
I
thought
that
somehow,
if
I
could
give
that
to
him,
if
I
ego,
oh,
if
I
could
make
him
love
me,
if
I
could
get
him
sober,
he'd
be
obligated
and
he
would
never
leave
me.
Finally,
I
would
make
someone
love
me
enough.
20
years
sober,
right?
That's
the
truth.
That's
the
truth
of
who
I
am.
Because
today
I
can
look
into
me
and
I
can
see
because
I
know
right
beside
all
that
fear,
right
beside
that
little
girl
who
is
coming
into
a
A
and
who
just
wants
to
be
loved,
is
God.
So
that
week
on
Valentine's
Day,
of
course,
which
was
me,
and
I
won't
use
the
word
that
I
call
him,
we're
wrapping
him
in
love
and
light
and
giving
him
to
God.
Really.
Like
legit.
Like
legit.
It
was
crazy
selfish
of
me
to
continue
to
demand
that
that
man
try
to
be
what
I
needed.
He's
not
in
my
league,
you
know,
I
do.
I
deserve
someone
who
is
smart
and
who
is
sober
and
who
is
spiritual
and
who
has
principles.
He
was
incapable
of
that
crazy
selfish
of
me
to
keep
demanding
it
of
him
because
he
wanted
to
do
it
for
me.
He
couldn't.
So
that
year
on
Valentine's
Day,
of
course,
that
was
our
anniversary,
because
that's
the
kind
of
guy
he
was.
Big
gestures.
My
dad
died
on
Valentine's
Day.
My
dad
took
that
day
away
from
him
and
gave
it
back
to
me.
How
can
I
not
believe
that
there
is
God?
How
can
I
not
believe
that
God
has
put
me
in
the
palm
of
her
hand?
How
can
I
not
believe
you
know?
And
today,
because
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
because
of
the
steps,
because
of
amazing,
loving
sponsorship
where
all
that
woman
ever
tells
me
to
do
is
pray
and
write
all
the
time,
I'll
be
like,
Oh
my
God,
I'm
just
like,
did
you
pray?
Yes,
I
pray.
Did
you
write?
Yes,
I
wrote.
Well,
maybe
you
should
pray,
right?
Because
today,
because
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
I
have
come
to
believe,
I
have
come
to
know
that
God
has
restored
me
to
exactly
the
amount
of
sanity
that
I
need
to
have.
You
know,
I
am
never
going
to
be
perfect.
I
am
so
good
with
that.
That
is
so
freeing.
The
pressure
is
off.
Bam,
this
is
what
you
get.
You
know,
you
come
to
my
school,
this
is
what
you
get.
We
go
out
for
nachos,
this
is
what
you
get.
You
come
hand
me
an
A,
A.
This
is
what
you
get.
And
this
is
perfect.
Perfect,
because
God
is
so
freaking
huge.
Ah,
I
just
love
God,
I
love
AA,
you
know,
Alcoholics
Anonymous
has
taken
this
girl,
this
girl,
this
little
scared
girl
and
made
her
into
a
spiritual
warrior.
There
is
nothing
I
can't
do.
There
is
nowhere
I
won't
go
to
help
another
alcoholic.
It's
the
truth.
It
is
absolutely
the
truth,
you
know.
And
so
today
when
I
get
up,
what
I
do
is
I
get
down
on
my
well,
first
thing
I
do
is
I
make
my
bed,
even
in
the
hotel,
'cause
I
am
a
woman
of
dignity
and
grace
and
deliberateness
and
I
have
been
deliberately
single
for
three
years
now.
OK,
there
was
a
little
slip.
Whatever.
Progress,
not
perfection.
And
I
have
done
that
intimacy
thing,
you
know,
I
have
looked
into
me
and
I
have
seen
what
it
is
that
God
aspires
for
me.
Because
The
thing
is,
the
good
is
the
enemy
of
the
great,
right?
The
good
is
the
enemy
of
the
great.
And
The
thing
is
that
God
has
amazing
things
planned
for
all
of
us
and
for
me.
And
I
falter
and
I
think
I
can't
possibly.
And
God's
like,
you're
gonna,
you
know.
And
so
I
can
either
go
willingly
or
I
can
just
claw
in
and
drag,
but
I
can't
not
be
amazing.
What?
It's
crazy.
So
today
when
I
get
up,
I
make
my
bed
and
then
I
get
down
on
my
knees
and
I
get
down
on
my
knees
and
I
ask
God
to
keep
me
sober
for
one
day
because
God
has
restored
me
to
sanity.
And
I
try
to
be
of
service.
And
all
I
do
is
I
come
here,
self-centered
alcoholic
that
I
am,
and
I
tell
you
about
my
experience
and
somehow
we
get
better.
Like,
tell
me
that
can't
be
God,
you
know?
Ah,
so
if
you're
struggling,
or
if
you
don't
have
a
God
that's
not
working
for
you,
if
your
God
is
at
all
judgy
or
yucky
or
doesn't
wear
a
super
hot
Plaid
skirt,
just
use
mine,
right?
Because
God
is
amazing.
And
that's
why
I
came
to
believe.
Thanks
for
letting
me
share.