Skip to main content
  • Español

User account menu

  • Carry the Message
  • Podcasts
  • APPS
  • Contact
  • Log in
Shopping cart 0 items
header logo

Main navigation

  • Magazine
  • Archive
  • Get Involved
  • Store
  • Subscribe

Mobile menu

  • Magazine
  • Archive
  • Get Involved
  • Store
  • Subscribe

Search

Breadcrumb

Home Search
  • All
  • Articles
  • Audio
  • Events
  • Pages
  • Quotes

Watchwords for sobriety [serenity, too]

September 1956
By: J. F. | Elmhurst, Long Island, New York
Great oaks from little acorns grow.

Just for Fun

August 1956
By: S. T. | New York City, New York

Farewell for Jonas

May 1956

Today I Live for Tomorrow

April 1956
By: Warren G.

The Doctor Prescribes for the Doctors

January 1956
By: Dr. F. J. | Sandusky, Ohio

I've Got What I Want for Christmas

December 1955
By: Virginia E. | Chicago, Illinois

Stones for the Sea

July 1955
By: Jack | Cork

For Man's Pursuit of Maturity

July 1955
By: M. W. | New York City, New York
THE NEW BIG BOOK

Rx for Boredom

May 1955
By: Winnie | Hackensack, New Jersey

Just for Today

May 1955

Questions For Discussion

April 1955
A SELFISH PROGRAM?

A Tulip for Mr. Big

March 1955
By: H. L. | New York City, New York

Catnip for Mother-in-law

March 1955
By: Rollo | Smackover, Arkansas

Questions For Closed Meeting Discussion

February 1955
Am I An Alcoholic?

Some Questions for Closed Meeting Discussion

January 1955

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹‹
  • …
  • Page 39
  • Page 40
  • Page 41
  • Page 42
  • Current page 43
  • Page 44
  • Page 45
  • Page 46
  • Page 47
  • …
  • Next page ››
  • Last page Last »

Questions For Closed Meeting Discussion

February 1955
Am I An Alcoholic?

Some Questions for Closed Meeting Discussion

January 1955

Home for Christmas

December 1954
By: J. C. | Scarsdale, New York

A Time for Giving

December 1954
By: G. B. | Columbus, Ohio

Suggested Questions for Holiday Closed Meetings

December 1954

Other Points For Discussion

November 1954
HOW AA TRADITIONS BEGAN

Magna Charta for Alcoholics

October 1954
By: Chit-Chat | Robesonia, Pennsylvania

Other Subjects for Closed Meetings

October 1954
ADDING SOMETHING NEW

Discussion Subject For Closed Meetings

August 1954

Plan Sought for Group Growth

July 1954
By: M. A. | Colorado Springs, Colorado
from the Groupvine

Other Subjects for Closed Meetings

May 1954

Education for Privacy"--Wisdom for Twelfth Steppers

April 1954

Other Subject for Discussion

April 1954
Each month this department will present a typical closed meeting discussion subject, with suggestions for other topics. Reports of interesting discussions are welcome.

In Return for Help

March 1954
By: P. G. | Vancouver

Sober Kick for Jazzmen

February 1954
By: Fred W. | New York City, New York

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹‹
  • …
  • Page 39
  • Page 40
  • Page 41
  • Page 42
  • Current page 43
  • Page 44
  • Page 45
  • Page 46
  • Page 47
  • …
  • Next page ››
  • Last page Last »

Grapevine Daily Quote October 18, 2017

“Because of what I learned in my home group -- to be on time, sit in the front row, thank the speaker, take commitments, pray and meditate -- I’m able to carry the message to the alcoholic who still suffers. It’s important for me to be connected to the love of giving back and the joy of helping others -- chips, cakes, Step work and lots of reaching out.”

May 2014“Calling Alcoholics,”AA Grapevine
Sign up to receive the Grapevine's Daily Quote via email

Grapevine Daily Quote November 27, 2017

“Perhaps those who know just a little about AA think our meetings must become dull and monotonous and our talks collapse into tiresome and repetitious laments or tortured remembrances .... Not so! As AAs, we need these lifesaving contacts to support and maintain our happily found sobriety .... For us, our meetings are eternally new, each offering something -- whether happy or tragic -- to encourage, sustain, and reaffirm our precious sobriety.”

Barcelona, Spain, April 1976“Suddenly Something Happened,”AA Around the World
Sign up to receive the Grapevine's Daily Quote via email

Quote June 14, 2017

“I’m working diligently to improve my character. I work daily on trying to reign in my impetuous temper, my obsession with reaction rather than reflection, and that silly ego that keeps rearing its ugly head.

“I’m grateful for AA’s reference to progress rather than perfection. Despite my shortcomings, with the help of the AA program and my brothers in AA, improvements will continue to be made.”

April 2011 “Mistakes Have Been Made,” AA Grapevine
Sign up to receive the Daily Quote via email

Quote July 7, 2017

“Many of us think today the main problem of Alcoholics Anonymous is this: How, as a movement, shall we maintain our humility -- and so our unity -- in the face of what the world calls a great triumph? Perhaps we need not look far afield for an answer. We need only adapt and apply to our group life those principles upon which each of us has founded his own recovery.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., October 1947 “Traditions Stressed in Memphis Talk,” The Language of the Heart
Sign up to receive the Daily Quote via email

Quote March 19, 2013

“My belief in a Higher Power is as strong as it was when I went to my first AA meeting and accepted the first and second Steps as simply and as trustfully as a child accepts its mother’s milk ... So what on earth was I looking for? I just don’t know. I guess I wanted a little Tinker Bell all my own to show me the right and only way out of every situation.”

Westport, Conn., July 1956 From: “In All Our Affairs” Emotional Sobriety: The Next Frontier
Talk about this on What's On Your Mind
Sign up for the daily email

Quote June 14, 2014

“I’m working diligently to improve my character. I work daily on trying to reign in my impetuous temper, my obsession with reaction rather than reflection, and that silly ego that keeps rearing its ugly head.

“I’m grateful for AA’s reference to progress rather than perfection. Despite my shortcomings, with the help of the AA program and my brothers in AA, improvements will continue to be made.”

April 2011 “Mistakes Have Been Made,” AA Grapevine

Quote July 7, 2014

“Many of us think today the main problem of Alcoholics Anonymous is this: How, as a movement, shall we maintain our humility -- and so our unity -- in the face of what the world calls a great triumph? Perhaps we need not look far afield for an answer. We need only adapt and apply to our group life those principles upon which each of us has founded his own recovery.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., October 1947 “Traditions Stressed in Memphis Talk” The Language of the Heart

Grapevine Daily Quote November 7, 2018

“Our Twelve Traditions ... represent the sum of our experience as individuals, as groups within AA, and similarly with our fellows and other organizations in the great fellowship of humanity under God throughout the world. They are all suggestions, yet the spirit in which they have been conceived merits their serious, prayerful consideration as the guideposts of AA policy for the individual, the group, and our various committees, local and national.”

AA Co-Founder, Dr. Bob, September 1948, “The Fundamentals in Retrospect”, The Best of the Grapevine, Volume 2
Sign up to receive GV's Daily Quote via email

Grapevine Daily Quote June 2, 2018

“As we listen to one another’s anxieties and problems, we understand that it’s not what’s happening to you ... it is how you cope with it, survive it, and don’t give up and drink over it ... dashed career hopes, unrequited love, crippling disease, poverty, approaching death. Together we face it, equipped only with the vast, previously undiscovered resources of power within us, which faced and conquered alcoholism for us.”

“Beyond the Generation Gap,” Saratoga, California, August 1985, The Home Group: Heartbeat of AA
Sign up to receive GV's Daily Quote via email

Quote February 22, 2015

For me, there is a direct coupling of the Tenth Step and Step Two. The more sanity, the quicker the admission that I am wrong. It is much easier today to get rid of an overreaction at the thought level before it becomes a spoken word and then a physical act. “Now I can see that sanity is steadily being restored to me so that I can use the other Steps to greater advantage.”

March 1981“Sanity,”Step By Step
Sign up to receive the Daily Quote via email

Quote March 1, 2015

“If in order to get into AA we had had to meet any standards more rigid than the one given in the Third Tradition, who of us would be alive? Think of all the wonderful people, including the nonconformists, eccentrics, and kooks who make such valuable additions to our number, who would have been kept out of AA if we had any requirement for membership other than a desire to get well.”

Manhattan, N.Y., January 1970 “Tradition Three,” The Best of the Grapevine, Volume 1
Sign up to receive the Daily Quote via email

Quote November 7, 2016

“Our Twelve Traditions ... represent the sum of our experience as individuals, as groups within AA, and similarly with our fellows and other organizations in the great fellowship of humanity under God throughout the world. They are all suggestions, yet the spirit in which they have been conceived merits their serious, prayerful consideration as the guideposts of AA policy for the individual, the group, and our various committees, local and national.”

AA Co-Founder, Dr. Bob, September 1948 “The Fundamentals in Retrospect” The Best of the Grapevine, Volume 2
Sign up to receive the Daily Quote via email

Quote December 6, 2015

"By 1937, some of us realized that AA needed a standard literature. There would have to be a book ... Well, we did quarrel violently over the preparation and distribution of that book. In fact, it took five years for the clamor to die down. Should any AAs dream that the old-timers who put the book together went about in serene meditation and white robes, then they had best forget it."

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., November 1951 "Services Make AA Tick" The Language of the Heart
Sign up to receive the Daily Quote via email

Quote December 23, 2015

“Our spiritual way of life is safe for future generations if, as a Society, we resist the temptation to receive money from the outside world. But this leaves us with a responsibility – one that every member ought to understand. We cannot skimp when the treasurer of our group passes the hat. Our groups, our areas, and AA as a whole will not function unless our services are sufficient and their bills are paid.”

AA Co-Founder, Bill W., November 1957 “Respecting Money” The Language of the Heart
Sign up to receive the Daily Quote via email

Quote June 2, 2016

“As we listen to one another’s anxieties and problems, we understand that it’s not what’s happening to you ... it is how you cope with it, survive it, and don’t give up and drink over it ... dashed career hopes, unrequited love, crippling disease, poverty, approaching death. Together we face it, equipped only with the vast, previously undiscovered resources of power within us, which faced and conquered alcoholism for us.”

” Saratoga, Calif., August 1985 “Beyond the Generation Gap The Home Group: Heartbeat of AA Anonymous
Sign up to receive the Daily Quote via email

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹‹
  • …
  • Page 39
  • Page 40
  • Page 41
  • Page 42
  • Current page 43
  • Page 44
  • Page 45
  • Page 46
  • Page 47
  • …
  • Next page ››
  • Last page Last »

aagrapevine footer

Footer

  • Rep Resources
  • About Us
  • Web Policy
  • Contact Us
  • AA.ORG
  • Youtube
  • Instagram