Search This Blog


Showing posts with label The School of Recovery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The School of Recovery. Show all posts

Sunday, January 22, 2017

Meme of the Day: 22JAN17


 "Stars can't shine without a little darkness;

So shine on." 

So Shine On
©ProcrastiKNITor
I actually made this meme the other day so I could upload it to Zedge as a wallpaper because I was uber bored. I found the saying to be inspirational because it's simply true and serves as a beautiful reminder that the darkness can represent the trials and tribulations of life; while you and your higher power are the light...shine on (live and let live). I can't remember where I heard or read this quote originally. However, as an addict in recovery, I can attest that our brains tend to focus on the negative side of life and takes the self-hating/self-shaming to a whole other level that can take years of therapy to undo. However, without that darkness...the light wouldn't shine so bright. We wouldn't need to illuminate our paths to guide us out because we wouldn't be able to see any path out at all, there would not be anything to differentiate the contrasting elements of light and darkness. It would be all light or all darkness. If you ever experienced the hell of active addiction, that is the kind of darkness you don't want to be permanently engulfed in. Plus, it is kind of like the old adage my Nana used to say, "You can't really know joy, unless you have known sorrow."

Check out some of my other Narcotics Anonymous related posts on the ProcrastiKNITor Blog:







A Prayer Post: The Just For Today Prayer

The Just For Today Prayer 






JUST FOR TODAY: 



My thoughts will be on my recovery, living and enjoying life without the use of drugs. 







JUST FOR TODAY: 



I will have faith in someone in N.A. who believes in me and wants to help me in my recovery. 







JUST FOR TODAY:



I will have a program. I will try to follow it to the best of my ability. 




JUST FOR TODAY: 

Through N.A. I will try to get a better perspective on my life. 


JUST FOR TODAY:

I will be unafraid, my thoughts will be on my new associations, people who are not using and who have found a new way of life. So long as I follow that way, I have nothing to fear.



Check out some of my other Narcotics Anonymous related posts on the ProcrastiKNITor Blog:





A Prayer Post: The Trust Prayer

The Trust Prayer




"Higher Power, I've learned to trust your guidance;

 Yet I still have my own ideas about how I want to live my life. 

Let me share those ideas with you;

 and then let me clearly understand your will for me. 

In the end, let your will, not mine, be done."



Check out some of my other Narcotics Anonymous related posts on the ProcrastiKNITor Blog:



A Prayer Post: The Literature Prayer

The Literature Prayer 




"God, grant us knowledge that we may write according to your divine precepts. 

Instill in us a sense of your purpose. 

Make us servants of your will and grant us a bond of selflessness;

 that this may truly be your work, not ours-in order 

that no addict, anywhere, need die from the horrors of addiction."





Check out some of my other Narcotics Anonymous related posts on the ProcrastiKNITor Blog:










A Prayer Post: The Serenity Prayer



The Serenity Prayer








God, as we may know him, grant us the serenity



to accept the things we cannot change;



The courage to change the things we can;

And the wisdom to know the difference.



Take my will and my life;

Guide me in my recovery;

Show me how to live.

We cannot change the nature of the addict 

or the disease of addiction.



But we can help to change the old lie, 

"Once an addict, always an addict", 

by striving to make recovery more availiable. 

Help us to remember this difference, help us be that difference.




Check out some of my other Narcotics Anonymous related posts on the ProcrastiKNITor Blog:

















January 22nd: The School of Recovery

January 22nd: The School of Recovery

"This is a program of learning."
Basic Text pg. 16

Learning in recovery is hard work. The things we need to know are often the hardest to learn. We study recovery to prepare ourselves for the experiences life will give us. As we listen to others share in meetings, we take mental notes we can refer to later. To be prepared, we study our notes and literature between "lessons". Just as students have the opportunity to apply their knowledge during tests, so do we have the opportunity to apply our recovery during times of crisis. As always, we have a choice in how we will approach life's challenges.

We can dread and avoid them as threats to our serenity or we can gratefully accept them as opportunities for growth. By confirming the principles we've learned in recovery, life's challenges give us increased strength. Without such challenges, however, we could forget what we've learned  and begin to stagnate. These are the opportunities that prod us to new spiritual awakenings. 

We will find that there is often a period of rest after each crisis, giving us time to get accustomed to our new skills. Once we've reflected on our experience, we are called on to share our knowledge with someone who is studying what we have just learned. In the school of recovery, all of us are teachers as well as students.

Just for today: I will be a student of recovery. I will welcome challenges, confident in what I've learned and eager to share it with others.

Just for today: daily meditations for recovering addicts. (1992).
Van Nuys, CA: World Service Office.






Featured Post

Meme if the Day: 15AUG