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“When you remove love and try to replace it with monetary things,
you've got nothing ... get him to understand that he has to love himself
before he can love anything else." John Peters (Slow
Turtle) Wampanoag Many alcoholics
are enthusiasts. They run to extremes. At the beginning of recovery a man
may take, as a rule one of two directions. He may either plunge into a
frantic attempt to get on his feet in business, or he may be so enthralled
by his new life that he talks or thinks of little else. In either case
certain family problems will arise. With these we have experience
galore. We think it
dangerous if he rushes headlong at his economic problem. The family will
be affected also, pleasantly at first, as they feel their money troubles
are about to be solved, then not so pleasantly as they find themselves
neglected. Dad may be tired at night and preoccupied by day. He may take
small interest in the children and may show irritation when reproved for
his delinquencies. If not irritable, he may seem dull and boring, not gay
and affectionate as the family would like him to be. Mother may complain
of inattention. They are all disappointed, and often let him feel it.
Beginning with such complaints, a barrier arises. He is straining every
nerve to make up for lost time. He is striving to recover fortune
and reputation and feels like he is doing
well. Sometimes mother
and children don't think so. Having been neglected and misused in the
past, they think father owes them more than they are getting. They want
him to make a fuss over them. They expect him to give them the nice times
they used to have before he drank so much, and to show his contrition for
what they suffered. But dad doesn't give freely of
himself. Resentment grows. He becomes still less communicative.
Sometimes he explodes over a trifle. The family is mystified. They
criticize, pointing out how he is falling down on his spiritual
program. Big Book
pg. 126 Reprinted with permission
A.A.W.S. Grandfather let me remember that my spiritual walk is right
here in everyday life. |