
I copied this from Greatgreebo's journals. Thank you Greebs.
Spirituality
Spirituality can be defined as "an active relationship with a power
greater than yourself that gives your life meaning and purpose." When
you work a spiritual program, you consciously, actively attempt to
become a part of something bigger, greater, and more powerful than
yourself.
Belief in a Higher Power takes you out of the center of your
universe and offers peace of mind and serenity by an awareness that
there is a power that is not restricted by your weaknesses and
limitations. Through spiritual development you can develop new
confidence in your own abilities and develop a new sense of hope. It is
through a spiritual program that you can reach with hope and a positive
attitude toward the future.
In working on your spirituality it is important for you to use the
principles of the AA/NA program. AA/NA provides guidelines for
“increasing your conscious contact with your higher power.” You do not
have to have any one image of your higher power to increase your
conscious contact. You do have to be open to the possibility of a
Higher Power and be willing to experiment with communicating with that
Power. It is important to structure your life in such a way as to spend
time alone each day to interact with your Higher Power. It is important
to examine your values and look within yourself to determine whether
your life is in harmony with those values.
Spiritual discipline is a consciously chosen course of action.
Discipline is uncomfortable for many recovering addicts. They have
lived lives of immediate gratification, and discipline is the reverse
of that. The purpose of spiritual discipline is freedom from the
slavery of self-indulgence. Spiritual discipline includes prayer and
meditation, spiritual fellowship, and regular inventory of your
spiritual growth.
Balanced Living
Balanced living means that there is bio-psycho-social-spiritual
harmony in your life. It means that you are healthy physically and
psychologically and that you have healthy relationships. It means that
you are spiritually whole. It means that you are no longer focused on
one aspect of your life. It means you are living responsibly, giving
yourself time for your job, your family, your friends as well as time
for your own growth and recovery. It means allowing a Higher Power to
work in your life. It means wholesome living.
It means having a balance between work and play, between fulfilling
your responsibilities to other people and your need for
self-fulfillment. It means functioning as nearly as possible at your
optimum stress level, maintaining enough stress to keep you functioning
in a healthy way and not overloading yourself with stress so that it
becomes counterproductive. With balanced living, immediate
gratification as a lifestyle is given up in order to attain fulfilling
and meaningful living.
Balanced living requires proper health care so that the body is
functioning well. Nutrition, rest, and exercise all receive the proper
focus in your life to provide energy, manage stress, allow freedom from
illness and pain, combat fatigue, and rebuild a damaged body.
Freedom from physical distress allows psychological growth. When
you feel good it is easier to think about your attitudes and values and
to work on eliminating denial, guilt, and anger. Balanced living
requires doing things to develop self-confidence and self-esteem and
learning to feel good about yourself.
Balanced living needs a strong social network that nurtures you and
encourages a healthy, recovery-oriented lifestyle. A healthy network
provides a sense of belonging. It includes relationships in which you
feel you are a valuable part. It includes immediate family members,
friends, relatives, co-workers, counselors, employers, self-help group
members, and sponsors.
Even after a couple of years of sobriety, Walter had times when he
found it more difficult than usual to remember things, when he was more
irritable and anxious, when he overreacted around his family and
friends, when he felt confused and overwhelmed. His wife began to
notice that he experienced these symptoms more on Saturday. What was
different about Saturday? He usually slept later and had a couple of
cups of coffee as soon as he got up, he began going over to visit his
AA sponsor as early as possible. Together they drank coffee, ate
donuts, smoked their pipes, and talked. Walter stayed until early
afternoon, and by the time he got home and had lunch it was usually
1:30 or 2:00 in the afternoon. If one of his kids left a bike in the
driveway or his wife was on the phone too long, he found himself
overreacting and leaving the house. The rest of the day was totally
unproductive because of what became know in his family as his “Saturday
Syndrome.”
Walter decided to try some alternate activities to see if there was
a change in his reactions. He started drinking orange juice as soon as
he woke up instead of coffee. That helped, so he decided to try eating
breakfast. That helped even more. He and his sponsor started drinking
decaffeinated coffee and he skipped the donuts. He came home early
enough to have lunch and to exercise for awhile. He then felt like
doing something with his family in the afternoon. They were all amazed
at the disappearance of the “Saturday Syndrome.”