Group Meetings
The local group meeting is
the center and heart of the A.A. Fellowship. It is, in many
ways, a unique type of gathering and one that is likely to
seem strange to the newcomer. The questions and answers that
follow suggest how the A.A. meeting functions and how the
newcomer fits into the group picture.
How does a person join A.A.?
No one "joins" A.A. in the usual sense of
the term. No application for membership has to be filled
out. In fact, many groups do not even keep membership
records. There are no initiation fees, no dues, no
assessments of any kind.
Most people become associated with A.A.
simply by attending the meetings of a particular local
group. Their introduction to A.A. may have come about in one
of several ways. Having come to the point in their drinking
where they sincerely wanted to stop, they may have gotten in
touch with A.A. voluntarily. They may have called the local
A.A. office listed in the phone book, or they may have
written to the General Service Office, Box 459, Grand
Central Station, New York, NY 10163.
Others may have been guided to a local A.A.
group by a friend, relative, doctor, or spiritual adviser.
Usually, a newcomer to A.A. has had an
opportunity to talk to one or more local members before
attending the first meeting. This provides an opportunity to
learn how A.A. has helped these people. The beginner gets
facts about alcoholism and A.A. that help to determine
whether he or she is honestly prepared to give up alcohol.
The only requirement for membership is a desire to stop
drinking.
There are no membership drives in A.A. If,
after attending several meetings, the newcomer decides A.A.
is not for him or for her, no one will urge continuation in
the association. There may be suggestions about keeping an
open mind on the subject, but no one in A.A. will try to
make up newcomers' minds for them. Only the alcoholic
concerned can answer the question "Do I need Alcoholics
Anonymous?"
What is an 'open' meeting?
An open meeting of A.A. is a group meeting
that any member of the community, alcoholic or nonalcoholic,
may attend. The only obligation is that of not disclosing
the names of A.A. members outside the meeting.
A typical open meeting will usually have a
"leader" and other speakers. The leader opens and closes the
meeting and introduces each speaker. With rare exceptions,
the speakers at an open meeting are A.A. members. Each, in
turn, may review some individual drinking experiences that
led to joining A.A. The speaker may also give his or her
interpretation of the recovery program and suggest what
sobriety has meant personally. All views expressed are
purely personal, since all members of A.A. speak only for
themselves.
Most open meetings conclude with a social
period during which coffee, soft drinks, and cakes or
cookies are served.
What is a 'closed' meeting?
A closed meeting is limited to members of
the local A.A. group, or visiting members from other groups.
The purpose of the closed meeting is to give members an
opportunity to discuss particular phases of their alcoholic
problem that can be understood best only by other
alcoholics.
These meetings are usually conducted with
maximum informality, and all members are encouraged to
participate in the discussions. The closed meetings are of
particular value to the newcomer, since they provide an
opportunity to ask questions that may trouble a beginner,
and to get the benefit of "older" members' experience with
the recovery program.
May I bring relatives or friends to an A.A. meeting?
In most places, anyone interested in A.A.,
whether a member or not, is welcome at open meetings of A.A.
groups. * Newcomers, in particular, are invited to
bring wives, husbands, or friends to these meetings, since
their understanding of the recovery program may be an
important factor in helping the alcoholic to achieve and
maintain sobriety. Many wives and husbands attend as
frequently as their spouses and take an active part in the
social activities of the local group.
(It will be recalled that "closed" meetings
are traditionally limited to alcoholics.)
* Consult the group for local custom.
How often do A.A. members have to
attend meetings?
Abraham Lincoln was once asked how long a
man's legs should be. The classic answer was: "Long enough
to reach the ground."
A.A. members don't have to attend any
set number of meetings in a given period. It is purely a
matter of individual preference and need. Most members
arrange to attend at least one meeting a week. They feel
that is enough to satisfy their personal need for contact
with the program through a local group. Others attend a
meeting nearly every night, in areas where such
opportunities are available. Still others may go for
relatively long periods without meetings.
The friendly injunction "Keep coming to
meetings," so frequently heard by the newcomer, is based on
the experience of the great majority of A.A.s, who find that
the quality of their sobriety suffers when they stay away
from meetings for too long. Many know from experience that
if they do not come to meetings, they may get drunk and that
if they are regular in attendance, they seem to have no
trouble staying sober.
Newcomers particularly seem to benefit from
exposure to a relatively large number of meetings (or other
A.A. contacts) during their first weeks and months in a
group. By multiplying their opportunities to meet and hear
other A.A.s whose drinking experience parallels their own,
they seem to be able to strengthen their own understanding
of the program and what it can give them.
Nearly all alcoholics, at one time or
another, have tried to stay sober on their own. For most,
the experience has not been particularly enjoyable — or
successful. So long as attendance at meetings helps the
alcoholic to maintain sobriety, and to have fun at the same
time, it seems to be good sense to be guided by the
experience of those who "keep coming to meetings."
* Consult the group for local custom.
Do A.A.s have to attend meetings for the rest of their
lives?
Not necessarily, but — as one member has
suggested — "Most of us want to, and some of us may need
to."
Most alcoholics don't like to be told that
they have to do anything for any extended period of time. At
first glance, the prospect of having to attend A.A. meetings
for all the years of the foreseeable future may seem a heavy
load.
The answer, again, is that no one has
to do anything in A.A. There is always a choice between
doing and not doing a thing — including the crucial choice
of whether or not to seek sobriety through A.A.
The primary reason an alcoholic has for
attending meetings of an A.A. group is to get help in
staying sober today — not tomorrow or next week or
ten years from now. Today, the immediate present, is the
only period in fife that the A.A. can do something about.
A.A.s do not worry about tomorrow, or about "the rest of
their lives." The important thing for them is to maintain
their sobriety now. They will take care of the future when
it arrives.
So the A.A. who wants to do everything
possible to insure sobriety today will probably keep going
to meetings. But attendance will always be on the basis of
taking care of present sobriety. As long as the approach to
A.A. is on this basis, no activity, including attendance at
meetings, can ever resemble a long-term obligation.
How will I be able to find the time for A.A. meetings,
work with other alcoholics,
and other A.A. activities?
During our drinking days, most of us somehow
managed to minimize the importance of time when there was
alcohol to be consumed. Yet the newcomer to A.A. is
occasionally dismayed to learn that sobriety will make some
demands on time, too. If the beginner is a typical
alcoholic, there will be an urge to make up "lost time" in a
hurry — to work diligently at a job, to indulge in the
pleasures of a home life too long neglected, to devote time
to church or civic affairs. What else is sobriety for, the
new member may ask, but to lead a full, normal life, great
chunks of it at a time?
A.A., however, is not something that can be
taken like a pill. The experience of those who have been
successful in the recovery program is worth considering.
Almost without exception, the men and women who find their
sobriety most satisfying are those who attend meetings
regularly, never hesitate to work with other alcoholics
seeking help, and take more than a casual interest in the
other activities of their groups. They are men and women who
recall realistically and honestly the aimless hours spent in
bars, the days lost from work, the decreased efficiency, and
the remorse that accompanied hangovers on the morning after.
Balanced against such memories as these, the
few hours spent in underwriting and strengthening their
sobriety add up to a small price indeed.
Can newcomers join A.A. outside their own community?
This question is sometimes raised by persons
who seem to have perfectly valid reasons for not wanting to
risk identification as alcoholics by any of their neighbors.
They may, for example, have employers who are totally
unfamiliar with the A.A. program and potentially hostile to
anyone who admits the existence of a drinking problem. They
may wish desperately to be associated with A.A. as a means
of gaining and maintaining sobriety. But they may hesitate
to turn to a group in their own community.
The answer to the question is that a person
is free to join an A.A. group anywhere he or she may choose.
Obviously, it is more convenient to join the nearest group.
It may also be the most straightforward approach to the
individual's problem. The person who turns to A.A. for help
is usually, but not always, pretty well identified as a
drunk. Inevitably, the good news of this person's sobriety
is bound to spread, too. Few employers or neighbors are
likely to resent the source of their worker's or friend's
continued sobriety, whether it centers in a local A.A. group
or one located fifty miles away.
Few people these days are fired from their
jobs or ostracized socially because they are sober. If the
experience of many thousands of A.A.s is a reliable guide,
the best approach for the newcomer is to seek help in the
nearest group before beginning to worry about the reactions
of others.
If I come into A.A., won't I miss a lot of friends and
a lot of fun?
The best answer to this is the experience of
the hundreds of thousands of men and women who have already
come into A.A. In general, their attitude is that they did
not enjoy real friendships or real fun until they joined
A.A. Their point of view on both has changed.
Many alcoholics discover that their best
friends are delighted to see them face up to the fact that
they cannot handle alcohol. No one wants to see a friend
continue to hurt.
Naturally, it is important to distinguish between
friendships and casual barroom acquaintanceships. The
alcoholic is likely to have many acquaintances whose
conviviality may be missed for a while. But their place will
be taken by the hundreds of A.A.s the newcomer will meet -
men and women who offer understanding acceptance, and help
in sustaining sobriety at all times.
Few members of A.A. would trade the fun that
comes with sobriety for what seemed to be fun while
they were drinking.
Reprinted from the A.A.
Pamphlet "44 Questions" with permission of A.A. World Services,
Inc.
Copyright © 1952 by Works
Publishing, Inc. (Now known as A.A. World Services, Inc.)
All Right Reserved
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