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Experience, Strength & Hope

October 2003
By: District 5, Area 52 Literature Work
The Big Book and Beyond

Carrying the Message

November 1973
By: D. B. | Decatur, Georgia
Why mention age?

About Alcoholism - Alcoholism Information, Research, and Treatment

May 1985
By: New York Times
Liquor Servers Grow Wary

Quote of the Month

February 1996
By: J.R.H. | New York, New York

PO Box 1980

September 1983
By: C. B. | Hershey, Pennsylvania
One article--three views

PO Box 1980

April 1989
By: B. H. | Bennington, Vermont
Sharing solutions

Group Membership

July 2005

About Alcoholism - Alcoholism Information, Research, and Treatment

July 1983
By: Edward B. Fiske
College Parties Go 'Creative'

Dear Grapevine

june 2026 | Young & Sober

P. O. Box 1980

July 1962
By: J. O'D. | Seattle, Washington
Re: Atheist

A Room Full of Moms and Dads

October 1989
By: Lynn H. | Alabama

Later in Life

July 2014
By: Betty L. | Fitchburg, Wisconsin
She thought she was different from others, but came to see that she was just a garden variety alcoholic

Ham on Wry

May 1988

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AA News

August 2012

Close That Gap!

April 1970
By: Bob F. | Pacific Grove, California
We measure our disease, not in years, but in pain, says this grateful young alcoholic

Your Move

October 1994
By: Dennis T. | Davidsonville, Maryland
The Path to Sobriety

The Barriers Are down

August 1960
By: E. F. | San Salvador

Mail Call for All A.A.s at Home Or Abroad

March 1948
By: J.A.L. | Quincy, Florida
Advice on the Younger Set

Growing Up in AA

April 1995
By: Karin A. | Sunnyvale, California

A Life Second to None

October 1989
By: Jason k. | West Havervill, Massachusetts

Once Over Lightly

August 1971
Sense and nonsense on the road to recovery

P.O. Box 1980

April 1964
By: W. L. W. | New Hartford, New York
What might have been

PO Box 1980

November 2005
By: Joshua L. | Mobridge, South Dakota
Just for me

P. O. Box 1980

December 1962
By: G. N. | Montreal, Quebec
Merry Christmas

Ageless Anonymity

October 1986
By: F. D. | New Orleans, Louisiana

From the Grass Roots

June 1958
By: D. D. | Arlington, Virginia
ON HEAD NOISES

In Memoriam

March 1980
Henrietta Seiberling dies, December 1979, at the age of 91

New Tricks

September 1986
By: C. C. | North Hollywood, California

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Grapevine Daily Quote June 29

“Today, there are hundreds of [AA] centers shedding their warm illumination upon the lives of thousands, lighting the dark shoals where the stranded and hopeless lie breaking up -- those fingers of light already stretching to our beachheads in other lands. “Now comes another lighted lamp -- this little newspaper called the Grapevine. May its rays of hope and experience ever fall upon the current of our AA life and one day illumine every dark corner of this alcoholic world.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., June 1944, “Editorial: The Shape of Things to Come”, AA Grapevine (Volume 1, Number 1), Reprinted in The Language of the Heart
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Grapevine Daily Quote June 28

“Today, there are hundreds of [AA] centers shedding their warm illumination upon the lives of thousands, lighting the dark shoals where the stranded and hopeless lie breaking up -- those fingers of light already stretching to our beachheads in other lands.

Now comes another lighted lamp -- this little newspaper called the Grapevine. May its rays of hope and experience ever fall upon the current of our AA life and one day illumine every dark corner of this alcoholic world.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., June 1944, “Editorial: The Shape of Things to Come”, AA Grapevine (Volume 1, Number 1), Reprinted in The Language of the Heart
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Quote December 14, 2015

"Life's formidable array of pains and problems will require many different degrees of acceptance ... Sometimes, we have to find the right kind of acceptance for each day. Sometimes, we need to develop acceptance for what may come to pass tomorrow and, yet again, we shall have to accept a condition that may never change. Then, too, there frequently has to be a right and realistic acceptance of grievous flaws within ourselves and serious faults within those about us – defects that may not be fully remedied for years, if ever."

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., March 1962 "What Is Acceptance?" The Language of the Heart
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Quote December 14, 2012

“Life’s formidable array of pains and problems will require many different degrees of acceptance ... Sometimes, we have to find the right kind of acceptance for each day. Sometimes, we need to develop acceptance for what may come to pass tomorrow and, yet again, we shall have to accept a condition that may never change. Then, too, there frequently has to be a right and realistic acceptance of grievous flaws within ourselves and serious faults within those about us – defects that may not be fully remedied for years, if ever.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., March 1962 From: “What Is Acceptance?” The Language of the Heart
Talk about this on What's On Your Mind
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Grapevine Daily Quote December 13

“Life’s formidable array of pains and problems will require many different degrees of acceptance ... Sometimes, we have to find the right kind of acceptance for each day. Sometimes, we need to develop acceptance for what may come to pass tomorrow and, yet again, we shall have to accept a condition that may never change. Then, too, there frequently has to be a right and realistic acceptance of grievous flaws within ourselves and serious faults within those about us – defects that may not be fully remedied for years, if ever.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., March 1962, “What Is Acceptance?”, The Language of the Heart
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Grapevine Daily Quote December 13

“Life’s formidable array of pains and problems will require many different degrees of acceptance ... Sometimes, we have to find the right kind of acceptance for each day. Sometimes, we need to develop acceptance for what may come to pass tomorrow and, yet again, we shall have to accept a condition that may never change. Then, too, there frequently has to be a right and realistic acceptance of grievous flaws within ourselves and serious faults within those about us – defects that may not be fully remedied for years, if ever.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., March 1962, “What Is Acceptance?”, The Language of the Heart
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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

Grapevine Daily Quote June 14

“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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Grapevine Daily Quote June 13

“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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Grapevine Daily Quote January 13

“I have an AA friend, a good and gentle soul. He recently joined one of the great religious orders, one in which the friars spend many hours a day in contemplation. So my friend has plenty of time to take his inventory. The more he looks, the more unconscious self-deception he finds. And the more astonished he becomes at the elaborate and devious excuse-making machinery by which he had been justifying himself. He has already come to the conclusion that the prideful righteousness of ‘good people’ may often be just as destructive as the glaring sins of those who are supposedly not so good. So he daily looks inward upon himself and then upward toward God, the better to discover just where he stands in this matter of honesty. Out of each of his meditations there always emerges one dead certainty, and this is the fact that he still has a long way to go.”

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Quote January 13, 2015

“I have an AA friend, a good and gentle soul. He recently joined one of the great religious orders, one in which the friars spend many hours a day in contemplation. So my friend has plenty of time to take his inventory. The more he looks, the more unconscious self-deception he finds. And the more astonished he becomes at the elaborate and devious excuse-making machinery by which he had been justifying himself. He has already come to the conclusion that the prideful righteousness of ‘good people’ may often be just as destructive as the glaring sins of those who are supposedly not so good. So he daily looks inward upon himself and then upward toward God, the better to discover just where he stands in this matter of honesty. Out of each of his meditations there always emerges one dead certainty, and this is the fact that he still has a long way to go.”

 
AA Co-Founder, Bill W., August 1961
            “This Matter of Honesty,”
            The Language of the Heart
 
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Grapevine Daily Quote January 13, 2018

“I have an AA friend, a good and gentle soul. He recently joined one of the great religious orders, one in which the friars spend many hours a day in contemplation. So my friend has plenty of time to take his inventory. The more he looks, the more unconscious self-deception he finds. And the more astonished he becomes at the elaborate and devious excuse-making machinery by which he had been justifying himself. He has already come to the conclusion that the prideful righteousness of ‘good people’ may often be just as destructive as the glaring sins of those who are supposedly not so good. So he daily looks inward upon himself and then upward toward God, the better to discover just where he stands in this matter of honesty. Out of each of his meditations there always emerges one dead certainty, and this is the fact that he still has a long way to go.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., August 1961 “This Matter of Honesty,” The Language of the Heart
Sign up to receive the Grapevine's Daily Quote via email

Grapevine Daily Quote January 13, 2020

“I have an AA friend, a good and gentle soul. He recently joined one of the great religious orders, one in which the friars spend many hours a day in contemplation. So my friend has plenty of time to take his inventory. The more he looks, the more unconscious self-deception he finds. And the more astonished he becomes at the elaborate and devious excuse-making machinery by which he had been justifying himself. He has already come to the conclusion that the prideful righteousness of ‘good people’ may often be just as destructive as the glaring sins of those who are supposedly not so good. So he daily looks inward upon himself and then upward toward God, the better to discover just where he stands in this matter of honesty. Out of each of his meditations there always emerges one dead certainty, and this is the fact that he still has a long way to go.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., August 1961, “This Matter of Honesty,”, The Language of the Heart
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