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What We Could Not Do for Ourselves

April 1989
By: Eleanor M. | White Plains, New York

New Weapons for a Warrior

March 1989
By: Michael T. | Concho, Oklahoma

Too Close for Comfort

January 1989
By: Anonymous | South Carolina

From "Modesty One Plank for Good Public Relations

July 1988
By: Bill W.

Let's Hear It for Sponsorship!

November 1987
By: K. A.
Discuss it at meetings; talk about it with each other. Are we forgetting this vital element of our AA lives? - From the September 1975 Grapevine

A Tool for Carrying the Message

November 1987
On the Grapevine

90 Days--or Just for Today?

October 1987
By: W. H. | New York, New York

Sitting in the Hot Sun Waiting for a Dumb Bus

July 1987
By: R. M. | Gainesville, Florida
(or, Busted in the Bushes)

Almost Too Old for AA

April 1987
By: F. M. | New Canaan, Connecticut

A Program for Selfish People

March 1987
By: E. C. | Bowling Green, Kentucky

Don'ts for negative thinkers

November 1986
By: K. N. | Columbus, Ohio
From the May 1976 Grapevine

Thirsty for Life

July 1986
By: F. G. | Montreal, Quebec

Searching for a New Group Conscience

March 1986
By: B. B. | Long Beach, California

Another Vision for You

March 1986
By: R. H. | Northridge, California

We All Count for Something

March 1986
By: J. C. | Wauwatosa, Wisconsin

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Another Vision for You

March 1986
By: R. H. | Northridge, California

We All Count for Something

March 1986
By: J. C. | Wauwatosa, Wisconsin

Taking Gratitude for Granted

February 1986
By: Anonymous

Go for the Gold

December 1985
By: C. K. | Chicago, Illinois

Secret Formula for Success

December 1985
By: W. D. | New Hampton, Iowa

Happiness Is Not for Me

November 1985
By: G. L.
From the January 1971 Grapevine

Ready for Better Things

August 1985
By: W. H. | Manhattan, New York
Step 6 - Were entirely ready to have God remove these defects of character

Too Close for Comfort

April 1985
By: T. M. | Iselin, New Jersey
A too-early romance got in the way of serene sobriety

For the Greater Glory of Me

February 1985
By: W. H. | Manhattan, New York
Self-seeking will slip away

Cause for Celebration

February 1985
By: G. B. | Lafayette, Indiana
We don't need holidays to rejoice in sobriety

Waiting for the Last Hiccup

January 1985
By: J. M. | Springvile, New York
We're always changing, but who can predict the final result?

Thank You for Not Sharing!

January 1985
By: H. H. | Scarborough, Maine

Let's Hear It for Sobriety

December 1984
By: R.K. | Manhattan, New York
In AA, one person's sobriety is important to us all

See You in Montreal for the Birthday Party?

October 1984

D" Is for Disease

July 1984
By: W. K. | Lakehurst, New Jersey

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Grapevine Daily Quote February 23, 2019

“The welcome I received in AA was real. Neither my youth, my race, my newness, nor my foreignness concerned them. All they appeared to see was that I finally admitted my powerlessness over alcohol. That was enough for them.”

“What Do I Like Best?” Port of Spain, March 2003, Beginner’s Book: Getting and Staying Sober in AA
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Grapevine Daily Quote March 11, 2019

“I have come to believe that my drinking insanity is only one form of the craziness to which we AAs are prone. I call it Insanity A. Insanity B is finding out what works for you -- and then not doing it.”

“Insanity B,” Prague, Czechoslovakia, February 2005, Beginner’s Book: Getting and Staying Sober in AA
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Grapevine Daily Quote April 20, 2019

“The language of AA is the language of self-discovery, of speculation, of wonder. It has a dual reality: While it describes experience, it also creates experience, and allows each member to grow in the search for personal meaning.”

“The Language of AA,” Thornbury, Ontario, Aught 1984, AA Grapevine
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Quote January 20 2014

"The language of AA is the language of self-discovery, of speculation, of wonder. It has a dual reality: While it describes experience, it also creates experience, and allows each member to grow in the search for personal meaning."

Thornbury, Ontario, August 1984 "The Language of AA" AA Grapevine
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Quote February 23 2014

"The welcome I received in AA was real. Neither my youth, my race, my newness, nor my foreignness concerned them. All they appeared to see was that I finally admitted my powerlessness over alcohol. That was enough for them."

Port of Spain, March 2003 From: "What Do I Like Best?" Beginner's Book: Getting and Staying Sober in AA
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Quote March 11 2014

"I have come to believe that my drinking insanity is only one form of the craziness to which we AAs are prone. I call it Insanity A. Insanity B is finding out what works for you -- and then not doing it."

Prague, Czechoslovakia, February 2005 "Insanity B" Beginner's Book: Getting and Staying Sober in AA
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Quote January 20, 2017

“The language of AA is the language of self-discovery, of speculation, of wonder. It has a dual reality: While it describes experience, it also creates experience, and allows each member to grow in the search for personal meaning.”

Thornbury, Ontario, Aught 1984 “The Language of AA,” AA Grapevine
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Quote February 23, 2017

“The welcome I received in AA was real. Neither my youth, my race, my newness, nor my foreignness concerned them. All they appeared to see was that I finally admitted my powerlessness over alcohol. That was enough for them.”

Port of Spain, March 2003 “What Do I Like Best?” Beginner’s Book: Getting and Staying Sober in AA
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Quote December 24, 2015

“Do I really want ... to be bitter, hostile, and judgmental? Do I want to live inside that sort of person? Wouldn’t I rather forgive, make allowances, understand? Is self-pity, feeling abused, so precious that I will not trade it for self-liking?”

Key West, Fla., February 1973 “Self-Pity Can Kill” Best of Grapevine, Volume 1
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Quote March 11, 2017

“I have come to believe that my drinking insanity is only one form of the craziness to which we AAs are prone. I call it Insanity A. Insanity B is finding out what works for you -- and then not doing it.”

Prague, Czechoslovakia, February 2005 “Insanity B” Beginner’s Book: Getting and Staying Sober in AA
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Quote July 19, 2017

“The part of my job that always catches me off-guard is the palpable jolt of pleasure I get from the little ways to be helpful -- to be of service -- to others, for which they are so genuinely grateful.”

York Harbor, ME, October 2001“We Get What We Get,” Emotional Sobriety
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Quote May 21, 2017

“I can recognize that I’m caught up in my will when I desperately struggle to slam a square peg into a round hole. That’s the time for me to back off and trust that God’s will is far better than mine.”

Elloree, S.C., November 2013 “Square Peg, Round Hole,” AA Grapevine
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Quote May 30, 2017

“I have learned to keep quiet when I disagree and to give others freedom to express opinions widely different from my own -- without giving in to the urge to enlighten them. I am grateful for all the voices of AA.”

Alexandria, Va., March 2007 “Humble Proportion,” AA Grapevine
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Quote December 24, 2012

“Do I really want ... to be bitter, hostile, and judgmental? Do I want to live inside that sort of person? Wouldn’t I rather forgive, make allowances, understand? Is self-pity, feeling abused, so precious that I will not trade it for self-liking?”

Key West, Fla., February 1973 From: “Self-Pity Can Kill” Best of Grapevine, Volume 1
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Quote May 30 2014

“I have learned to keep quiet when I disagree and to give others freedom to express opinions widely different from my own -- without giving in to the urge to enlighten them. I am grateful for all the voices of AA.”

Alexandria, Va., March 2007 “Humble Proportion,” AA Grapevine
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