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The Churches and Alcoholism

September 1957
By: J. P. L. | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
THE ACCOMPANYING ARTICLE reflects the Grapevine's developing plans to bring its readers more news of what is going on along a vast front of activity on the problem of alcoholism. It is written by an AA with personal experience in the growing interfaith wo

With The Big Book As His GPS

Web Exclusives | Grapevine Online Exclusives
By: Jared M.
After nearly a decade and a half, he headed in the right direction

Carrying the Message

October 1967
By: JIM T. | Albany
Bartender

The Internationalists Write

May 1960
By: J. D. | Rhode Island

A Chip Off the Old Block

August 2002
By: Ronald G. | Gorham, Maine
A grandfather's legacy

Dear Grapevine

November 2015

Aim for Ames Roundup

Date
March 27, 2015 - March 29, 2015

Ames, IA: Aim for Ames Roundup.            www.aimforames.org

The Montreal Story

May 1951
By: Joe McD. | Montreal, Quebec

The Kentucky Colonel

November 1984
By: E. S.
He was an outstanding adviser in the Bright Ideas Department - From the October 1972 Grapevine

The Kentucky Colonel

October 1972
By: E. S. | Brooklyn, New York
He was an outstanding adviser in the Bright Ideas Department

The Journey to Kazakhstan

September 2003
By: Anonymous | Ann Arbor, Michigan
The story of how the Fellowship got started in the Eurasian steppe

Ashtrays, Brooms, and Chairs: The ABCs of Sobriety

May 2000
By: M.L.C. | Santa Maria, California

Carrying the Message

September 1973
By: D. B. | Temple City, California
The active spiritual life

The Spirit Awake

June 1978
By: J. H. | Stavanger

The Big Catch

June 2007
By: Ed L. | Wrightwood, California
New memories lighten painful recollections from a drunken past

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From the Grass Roots

March 1954
By: R. G. | Seattle, Washington
LOVE MEANS SERVICE

Writing the 'Wretches'

June 1986
By: J. B. | Southampton, Pennsylvania

The No. 1 Disappearing Book

May 2015
By: Sam H. | Burlington, North Carolina
Distributing AA literature is part of his service. If only he could keep enough books on the shelf

Adrift in the Doldrums

February 1987
By: R. K. | Manhattan, New York

Our Primary Purpose and the Special-purpose Group

November 2000
By: John L. Norris, MD
From The October 1977 Grapevine

Our Primary Purpose and the Special-purpose Group

October 1977
By: John L. Norris, MD
A 13-page section in which five individuals express their opinions on an issue of moment in AA

“Ed the dead” sings songs of gratitude

April 2011
By: Ed L. | Wrightwood, California
This musical jam-master hasn’t bitten anyone’s butt in 25 years!

AA Around the World

December 1957
By: R.A., (Internationalist) | Barrie, Ontario
INTERNATIONALIST NEWS <lbNews, comments and letters from and about AA's worldwide outposts and centers--gleaned from letters to the Grapevine and General Service Headquarters, and from the "AA Exchange Bulletin," published monthly by GSH

Out of the woods

September 2017
By: Christopher D. | Harrison, New Jersey
It took him a while, but he finally found the fellowship he was craving under the trees

Join a Group and See the World

May 1962
By: A. G. | Manhattan, New York
For her it was

AA Around the World

August 1958
By: Dick P. | Chuquicamata
SOBRIETY IN CHILE - News, comments, and letters from and about AA's worldwide outposts and centers--gleaned from letters to the Grapevine and the General Service Office, and from the "AA Exchange Bulletin," published monthly by GSO

Facing the light

July 2015
A brilliant field of gold, but she couldn’t feel a thing. Had liquor stolen her joy?

The Result Was Nil

February 1998
By: Cynthia Y. | Nampa, Idaho

From the Grass Roots

October 1957

Across the Editor's Desk

April 1956

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Quote June 12, 2014

“Today, as I look back over 27-plus years of sobriety, I can simply thank Him for being wherever I am going before I even get there.”

Monaco, Pennsylvania, April 2011 “An Unmade Bed,” AA Grapevine

Grapevine Daily Quote December 15, 2019

“More than a million of us who suffer from the disease of alcoholism have found not just the ability to live with or survive this insidious disease, but a joyful way of life as new as this morning and as old as mankind. We can gain sobriety, aspire to serenity, at no greater price than caring for our fellow sufferers and sharing with them what has been freely given to us. We can experience the true joy of love that we once tried to destroy by not giving it away, and we can learn the truth that the more we give away, the more we will have.”

Brick Town, New Jersey, January 1977, “Because One Man Was Lonely,”, AA Grapevine
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Quote December 15, 2014

“More than a million of us who suffer from the disease of alcoholism have found not just the ability to live with or survive this insidious disease, but a joyful way of life as new as this morning and as old as mankind. We can gain sobriety, aspire to serenity, at no greater price than caring for our fellow sufferers and sharing with them what has been freely given to us. We can experience the true joy of love that we once tried to destroy by not giving it away, and we can learn the truth that the more we give away, the more we will have.”

Brick Town, N.J., January 1977 “Because One Man Was Lonely,” AA Grapevine
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Quote January 19, 2016

“When we AAs look to the future, we must always ask ourselves if the spirit which now binds us together in our common cause will always be stronger than those personal ambitions and desires which tend to drive us apart ... Though the individual AA is under no human coercion, is at almost perfect personal liberty, we have, nevertheless, achieved a wonderful unity on vital essentials. For example, the Twelve Steps of our AA program are not crammed down anybody's throat. They are not sustained by any human authority. Yet we powerfully unite around them because the truth they contain has saved our lives, has opened the door to a new world.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., September 1945 “’Rules’ Dangerous but Unity Vital” The Language of the Heart
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Grapevine Daily Quote December 15, 2017

“More than a million of us who suffer from the disease of alcoholism have found not just the ability to live with or survive this insidious disease, but a joyful way of life as new as this morning and as old as mankind. We can gain sobriety, aspire to serenity, at no greater price than caring for our fellow sufferers and sharing with them what has been freely given to us. We can experience the true joy of love that we once tried to destroy by not giving it away, and we can learn the truth that the more we give away, the more we will have.”

Brick Town, N.J., January 1977“Because One Man Was Lonely,”AA Grapevine
Sign up to receive the Grapevine's Daily Quote via email

Quote January 19, 2013

“When we AAs look to the future, we must always ask ourselves if the spirit which now binds us together in our common cause will always be stronger than those personal ambitions and desires which tend to drive us apart ... Though the individual AA is under no human coercion, is at almost perfect personal liberty, we have, nevertheless, achieved a wonderful unity on vital essentials. For example, the Twelve Steps of our AA program are not crammed down anybody's throat. They are not sustained by any human authority. Yet we powerfully unite around them because the truth they contain has saved our lives, has opened the door to a new world.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., September 1945 From: “’Rules’ Dangerous but Unity Vital” The Language of the Heart
Talk about this on What's On Your Mind
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Grapevine Daily Quote May 9, 2018

“It’s not the wonderful people I’ve met from throughout these great lands who have helped keep me sober most of the time, but those wonderful people sitting around the table in my hometown who loved me when I could not love, who waited for me to quit lying, who tolerated me when I would be part of nothing, and who never asked me to leave when I was obnoxious. Because of their love and patience, I was able to get outside of myself and make some sort of commitment to the group.”

“Why Have a Home Group?” Neosho, Missouri, September 1986The Home Group: Heartbeat of AA
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Quote May 9, 2016

“It’s not the wonderful people I’ve met from throughout these great lands who have helped keep me sober most of the time, but those wonderful people sitting around the table in my hometown who loved me when I could not love, who waited for me to quit lying, who tolerated me when I would be part of nothing, and who never asked me to leave when I was obnoxious. Because of their love and patience, I was able to get outside of myself and make some sort of commitment to the group.”

Neosho, Mo., September 1986 “Why Have a Home Group?” The Home Group: Heartbeat of AA
Sign up to receive the Daily Quote via email

Quote May 9

"It's not the wonderful people I've met from throughout these great lands who have helped keep me sober most of the time, but those wonderful people sitting around the table in my hometown who loved me when I could not love, who waited for me to quit lying, who tolerated me when I would be part of nothing, and who never asked me to leave when I was obnoxious. Because of their love and patience, I was able to get outside of myself and make some sort of commitment to the group."

Neosho, Mo., September 1986 "Why Have a Home Group?" The Home Group: Heartbeat of AA
Sign up for the free daily email
Talk about this on What's On Your Mind

Grapevine Daily Quote November 20, 2018

"“I’d like to develop Step Eleven further -- for the benefit of the complete doubter, the unlucky one who can’t believe it has any real merit at all .... As he goes along with his process of prayer, he begins to add up the results. If he persists, he will almost surely find more serenity, more tolerance, less fear, and less anger. He will acquire a quiet courage, the kind that doesn’t strain him. He can look at so-called failure and success for what they really are. Problems and calamity will begin to mean instruction, instead of destruction. He will feel freer and saner ... His sense of purpose and of direction will increase. His tensions and anxieties will commence to fade. His physical health is likely to improve. Wonderful and unaccountable things will start to happen. Twisted relations in his family and on the outside will unaccountably improve.

 

“Even if few of these things happen, he will still find himself in possession of great gifts. When he has to deal with hard circumstances he can face them and accept them. He can now accept himself and the world around him.”"

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., June 1958, “Take Step Eleven”, The Language of the Heart
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Quote November 20, 2016

“I’d like to develop Step Eleven further -- for the benefit of the complete doubter, the unlucky one who can’t believe it has any real merit at all .... As he goes along with his process of prayer, he begins to add up the results. If he persists, he will almost surely find more serenity, more tolerance, less fear, and less anger. He will acquire a quiet courage, the kind that doesn’t strain him. He can look at so-called failure and success for what they really are. Problems and calamity will begin to mean instruction, instead of destruction. He will feel freer and saner ... His sense of purpose and of direction will increase. His tensions and anxieties will commence to fade. His physical health is likely to improve. Wonderful and unaccountable things will start to happen. Twisted relations in his family and on the outside will unaccountably improve. “Even if few of these things happen, he will still find himself in possession of great gifts. When he has to deal with hard circumstances he can face them and accept them. He can now accept himself and the world around him.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., June 1958 “Take Step Eleven” The Language of the Heart
Sign up to receive the Daily Quote via email

November 20, 2013

“I’d like to develop Step Eleven further -- for the benefit of the complete doubter, the unlucky one who can’t believe it has any real merit at all .... As he goes along with his process of prayer, he begins to add up the results. If he persists, he will almost surely find more serenity, more tolerance, less fear, and less anger. He will acquire a quiet courage, the kind that doesn’t strain him. He can look at so-called failure and success for what they really are. Problems and calamity will begin to mean instruction, instead of destruction. He will feel freer and saner ... His sense of purpose and of direction will increase. His tensions and anxieties will commence to fade. His physical health is likely to improve. Wonderful and unaccountable things will start to happen. Twisted relations in his family and on the outside will unaccountably improve. “Even if few of these things happen, he will still find himself in possession of great gifts. When he has to deal with hard circumstances he can face them and accept them. He can now accept himself and the world around him.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., June 1958 “Take Step Eleven” The Language of the Heart
Sign up for the free daily email
Talk about this on What's On Your Mind

Grapevine Daily Quote June 1, 2019

"“This issue of the Grapevine marks the anniversary of its founding exactly fifteen [now seventy] years ago. 

 

“The memory of some of those first editorial meetings will linger with me always. Seated around a table in a tiny cheerless room some place downtown, the founders pored over their freshly written copy for the first issues. In those days the enthusiastic founders did everything. Not only did they do the art work, write the bulk of the stories, they kept the books, they paid the printing bill, they typed the address on each copy and finally licked all the stamps. So went the happy monthly paroxysm of creating what was to become the principal monthly journal of our whole society.

“Today 35,000 readers [now over 100,000 across multiple media platforms] see mirrored in each issue of the AA Grapevine a monthly vision of the worldwide thought, feeling and activity of our whole fellowship. It is our great means of inter-communication; a magic carpet on which each of you can ride to the more distant reaches and watch new brothers and sisters emerge from darkness into light.

“On this happy occasion I send my warmest affection to Grapevine readers and staff alike. May God prosper the Grapevine always.”"

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., June 1959, “An Anniversary Letter”, The Language of the Heart
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Quote June 1, 2017

“This issue of the Grapevine marks the anniversary of its founding exactly fifteen [now seventy three] years ago. 

 

“The memory of some of those first editorial meetings will linger with me always. Seated around a table in a tiny cheerless room some place downtown, the founders pored over their freshly written copy for the first issues. In those days the enthusiastic founders did everything. Not only did they do the art work, write the bulk of the stories, they kept the books, they paid the printing bill, they typed the address on each copy and finally licked all the stamps. So went the happy monthly paroxysm of creating what was to become the principal monthly journal of our whole society.

“Today 35,000 readers [now over 100,000 across multiple media platforms] see mirrored in each issue of the AA Grapevine a monthly vision of the worldwide thought, feeling and activity of our whole fellowship. It is our great means of inter-communication; a magic carpet on which each of you can ride to the more distant reaches and watch new brothers and sisters emerge from darkness into light.

“On this happy occasion I send my warmest affection to Grapevine readers and staff alike. May God prosper the Grapevine always.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., June 1959 “An Anniversary Letter” The Language of the Heart
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Quote June 1, 2014

"This issue of the Grapevine marks the anniversary of its founding exactly fifteen [now seventy] years ago. “The memory of some of those first editorial meetings will linger with me always. Seated around a table in a tiny cheerless room some place downtown, the founders pored over their freshly written copy for the first issues. In those days the enthusiastic founders did everything. Not only did they do the art work, write the bulk of the stories, they kept the books, they paid the printing bill, they typed the address on each copy and finally licked all the stamps. So went the happy monthly paroxysm of creating what was to become the principal monthly journal of our whole society. “Today 35,000 readers [now over 100,000 across multiple media platforms] see mirrored in each issue of the AA Grapevine a monthly vision of the worldwide thought, feeling and activity of our whole fellowship. It is our great means of inter-communication; a magic carpet on which each of you can ride to the more distant reaches and watch new brothers and sisters emerge from darkness into light. “On this happy occasion I send my warmest affection to Grapevine readers and staff alike. May God prosper the Grapevine always.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., June 1959 “An Anniversary Letter” The Language of the Heart

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