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Grapevine Daily Quote June 15, 2019

“One day it will be left to the young people now in our Fellowship to carry on the original spirit and traditions of AA, even though the buzz words and trends will come and go. It will be up to us to teach newcomers how to maintain the type of sobriety that achieves the promises of the Big Book and dispels some of the fables of recovery popular today. It will be up to us to help the newcomer from the street dry out, shakes and pukes and all. We will be left to teach the little things: how to sit at the front, not the back of the room, say hello to the new guy, wash coffee cups and ashtrays. One day it will be up to us to uphold the Traditions. It will be up to us to keep it simple.”

Bury St. Edmunds, England, September 1994, “We Who Are Next in Line,”, I Am Responsible: The Hand of AA
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Quote June 15, 2017

“One day it will be left to the young people now in our Fellowship to carry on the original spirit and traditions of AA, even though the buzz words and trends will come and go. It will be up to us to teach newcomers how to maintain the type of sobriety that achieves the promises of the Big Book and dispels some of the fables of recovery popular today. It will be up to us to help the newcomer from the street dry out, shakes and pukes and all. We will be left to teach the little things: how to sit at the front, not the back of the room, say hello to the new guy, wash coffee cups and ashtrays. One day it will be up to us to uphold the Traditions. It will be up to us to keep it simple.”

Bury St. Edmunds, England, September 1994 “We Who Are Next in Line,” I Am Responsible: The Hand of AA
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Quote June 15, 2014

“One day it will be left to the young people now in our Fellowship to carry on the original spirit and traditions of AA, even though the buzz words and trends will come and go. It will be up to us to teach newcomers how to maintain the type of sobriety that achieves the promises of the Big Book and dispels some of the fables of recovery popular today. It will be up to us to help the newcomer from the street dry out, shakes and pukes and all. We will be left to teach the little things: how to sit at the front, not the back of the room, say hello to the new guy, wash coffee cups and ashtrays. One day it will be up to us to uphold the Traditions. It will be up to us to keep it simple.”

Bury St. Edmunds, England, September 1994 “We Who Are Next in Line,” I Am Responsible: The Hand of AA

Quote May 18, 2015

“My self-analysis has frequently been faulty. Sometimes I've failed to share my defects with the right people; at other times, I've confessed their defects, rather than my own; and at still other times, my confession of defects has been more in the nature of loud complaints about my circumstances and my problems. “Nevertheless, I think I've usually been able to make a fairly thorough and searching job of finding and admitting my personal defects ... Yet this pretty well-ventilated condition is nothing for self-congratulation. Long ago I was lucky enough to see that I'd have to keep up my self-analysis or else blow my top completely. Though driven by stark necessity, this continuous self-revelation -- to myself and to others -- was rough medicine to take. But years of repetition has made this job far easier.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., June 1958 “Take Step Eleven,” The Language of the Heart
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Quote May 4, 2015

“In a garden we remove or control undesirable weeds; in my personal sobriety, I remove the things that have been blocking me; and in my home group, by means of group inventory, I do something about the things that cause problems. “At the group level, this might mean: 1) ensuring that the message being presented today is as good as the message that was here when we first needed it; 2) seeing to it that everyone coming through the door is given the chance to hear firsthand exactly what it is all about from persons with quality sobriety; and 3) making it known that a group is not interested in outside gobbledegook that has nothing to do with sobriety. “We can't be all things to all people, so let's do the thing we do best and that is carry the message of recovery from alcohol.”

London, Ontario, February 1992 “Freedom From Alcohol,” Voices of Long-Term Sobriety
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Quote May 25, 2015

“Newcomers are approaching AA at the rate of tens of thousands yearly. They represent almost every belief and attitude imaginable. We have atheists and agnostics. We have people of nearly every race, culture and religion. In AA we are supposed to be bound together in the kinship of a common suffering. Consequently, the full individual liberty to practice any creed or principle or therapy whatever should be a first consideration for us all. Let us not, therefore, pressure anyone with our individual or even our collective views. Let us instead accord each other the respect and love that is due to every human being as he tries to make his way toward the light. Let us always try to be inclusive rather than exclusive; let us remember that each alcoholic among us is a member of AA, so long as he or she so declares.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., July 1965 “Responsibility Is Our Theme,” The Language of the Heart
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Second Tradition Checklist

November 2020 | Our Twelve Traditions
By: B. L. | New York, N .Y.
He was going to save AA. Someone had to do it. A member recalls AA’s early days before the Traditions were written

My Lucky Day

February 2020 | Tough Times
By: William W. | Gulfport, Miss.
A nervous newcomer cautiously shows up for his daughter’s wedding. Luckily he has a good sponsor

The Last Candle

February 2016
His daughter got an award that night, but he got an even better one

The Good Girl

February 2014
By: Coleen F., | Jacksonville, Alabama
She spent a lifetime trying to be perfect, but booze changed all that

SURRENDER IN SAIGON

November 2009
By: ANONYMOUS | Exeter, N.H.
A government worker learns to survive sober on foreign assignments

Every Day? (June 1971)

November 2004
By: L. H. | North Hollywood, California
Our Quality Control Procedure

Why Are We Drinking?

October 2004
By: John C. | Bolingbrook, Illinois

Faith Among the Ruins

September 2002
By: Connie C. | New York, New York
Even in the smoldering wreckage of the World Trade Center, there was hope

I've Done the Twelve Steps--Now What?

November 1998
By: Paul M. | Riverside, Illinois
There are no endings in AA, only new beginnings - From the March 1973 Grapevine

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