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The 12 Steps Of Alcoholics Anonymous
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Step Eight: "Made a list of all persons we had harmed, and
became willing to make amends to them all."
Steps Eight and Nine are concerned with personal relations.
First, we take a look backward and try to discover where we
have been at fault; next we make a vigorous attempt to
repair the damage we have done; and third, having thus
cleaned away the debris of the past, we consider how, with
our newfound knowledge of ourselves, we may develop the best
possible relations with every human being we know.
This is a very large order. It is a task which we may
perform with increasing skill, but never really finish.
Learning how to live in the greatest peace, partnership, and
brotherhood with all men and women, of whatever description,
is a moving and fascinating adventure. Every A.A. has found
that he can make little headway in this new adventure of
living until he first backtracks and really makes an
accurate and unsparing survey of the human wreckage he has
left in his wake. To a degree, he has already done this when
taking moral inventory, but now the time has come when he
ought to redouble his efforts to see how many people he has
hurt, and in what ways. This reopening of emotional wounds,
some old, some perhaps forgotten, and some still painfully
festering, will at first look like a purposeless and
pointless piece of surgery. But if a willing start is made,
then the great advantages of doing this will so quickly
reveal themselves that the pain will be lessened as one
obstacle after another melts away.
These obstacles, however, are very real. The first, and one
of the most difficult, has to do with forgiveness. The
moment we ponder a twisted or broken relationship with
another person, our emotions go on the defensive. To escape
looking at the wrongs we have done another, we resentfully
focus on the wrong he has done us. This is especially true
if he has, in fact, behaved badly at all. Triumphantly we
seize upon his misbehavior as the perfect excuse for
minimizing or forgetting our own.
Right here we need to fetch ourselves up sharply. It doesn't
make much sense when a real toss pot calls a kettle black.
Let's remember that alcoholics are not the only ones
bedeviled by sick emotions. Moreover, it is usually a fact
that our behavior when drinking has aggravated the defects
of others. We've repeatedly strained the patience of our
best friends to a snapping point, and have brought out the
very worst in those who didn't think much of us to begin
with. In many instances we are really dealing with fellow
sufferers, people whose woes we have increased. If we are
now about to ask forgiveness for ourselves, why shouldn't we
start out by forgiving them, one and all?
When listing the people we have harmed, most of us hit
another solid obstacle. We got a pretty severe shock when we
realized that we were preparing to make a face-to-face
admission of our wretched conduct to those we had hurt. It
had been embarrassing enough when in confidence we had
admitted these things to God, to ourselves, and to another
human being. But the prospect of actually visiting or even
writing the people concerned now overwhelmed us, especially
when we remembered in what poor favor we stood with most of
them. There were cases, too, where we had damaged others who
were still happily unaware of being hurt. Why, we cried,
shouldn't bygones be bygones? Why do we have to think of
these people at all? These were some of the ways in which
fear conspired with pride to hinder our making a list of all
the people we had harmed.
Some of us, though, tripped over a very different snag.
We clung to the claim that when drinking we never hurt
anybody but ourselves. Our families didn't suffer, because
we always paid the bills and seldom drank at home. Our
business associates didn't suffer, because we were usually
on the job. Our reputations hadn't suffered, because we were
certain few knew of our drinking. Those who did would
sometimes assure us that, after all, a lively bender was
only a good man's fault. What real harm, therefore, had we
done? No more, surely, than we could easily mend with a few
casual apologies.
This attitude, of course, is the end result of purposeful
forgetting. It is an attitude which can only be changed by a
deep and honest search of our motives and actions. Though in
some cases we cannot make restitution at all, and in some
cases action ought to be deferred, we should nevertheless
make an accurate and really exhaustive survey of our past
life as it has affected other people. In many instances we
shall find that though the harm done others has not been
great, the emotional harm we have done ourselves has. Very
deep, sometimes quite forgotten, damaging emotional
conflicts persist below the level of consciousness. At the
time of these occurrences, they may actually have given our
emotions violent twists which have since discolored our
personalities and altered our lives for the worse.
While the purpose of making restitution to others is
paramount, it is equally necessary that we extricate from an
examination of our personal relations every bit of
information about ourselves and our fundamental difficulties
that we can. Since defective relations with other human
beings have nearly always been the immediate cause of our
woes, including our alcoholism, no field of investigation
could yield more satisfying and valuable rewards than this
one.
Calm, thoughtful reflection upon personal relations can
deepen our insight. We can go far beyond those things which
were superficially wrong with us, to see those flaws which
were basic, flaws which sometimes were responsible for the
whole pattern of our lives. Thoroughness, we have found,
will pay--and pay handsomely. We might next ask ourselves
what we mean when we say that we have "harmed" other people.
What kinds of "harm" do people do one another, anyway? To
define the word "harm" in a practical way, we might call it
the result of instincts in collision, which cause physical,
mental, emotional, or spiritual damage to people.
If our tempers are consistently bad, we arouse anger in
others. If we lie or cheat, we deprive others not only of
their worldly goods, but of their emotional security and
peace of mind. We really issue them an invitation to become
contemptuous and vengeful. If our sex conduct is selfish, we
may excite jealousy, misery, and a strong desire to
retaliate in kind. Such gross misbehavior is not by any
means a full catalogue of the harms we do. Let us think of
some of the subtler ones which can sometimes be quite as
damaging. Suppose that in our family lives we happen to be
miserly, irresponsible, callous, or cold. Suppose that we
are irritable, critical, impatient, and humorless. Suppose
we lavish attention upon one member of the family and
neglect the others. What happens when we try to dominate the
whole family, either by a rule of iron or by a constant
outpouring of minute directions for just how their lives
should be lived from hour to hour? What happens when we
wallow in depression, self-pity oozing from every pore, and
inflict that upon those about us? Such a roster of harms
done others--the kind that make daily living with us as
practicing alcoholics difficult and often unbearable could
be extended almost indefinitely. When we take such
personality traits as these into shop, office, and the
society of our fellows, they can do damage almost as
extensive as that we have caused at home.
Having carefully surveyed this whole area of human
relations, and having decided exactly what personality
traits in us injured and disturbed others, we can now
commence to ransack memory for the people to whom we have
given offense. To put a finger on the nearby and most deeply
damaged ones shouldn't be hard to do. Then, as year by year
we walk back through our lives as far as memory will reach,
we shall be bound to construct a long list of people who
have, to some extent or other, been affected. We should, of
course, ponder and weigh each instance carefully. We shall
want to hold ourselves to the course of admitting the things
we have done, meanwhile forgiving the wrongs done us, real
or fancied. We should avoid extreme judgments, both of
ourselves and of others involved. We must not exaggerate our
defects or theirs. A quiet, objective view will be our
steadfast aim. Whenever our pencil falters, we can fortify
and cheer ourselves by remembering what A.A. experience in
this Step has meant to others. It is the beginning of the
end of isolation from our fellows and from God.
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