Monday, August 15, 2016

Unconditional and Immediate Surrender

(The following is a personal post by one of our members.)

I was talking with my sponsor recently, and he shared that the program was distilled by a speaker he heard down to two words: "Let go."  If I only had two words, those two might be the way I would put it as well.

When I heard that, my mind immediately jumped to a section in the Sexaholics Anonymous book (p. 82) that includes those two words:
In summary, for us surrender is the change in attitude of the inner person that makes life possible. It is the great beginning, the insignia and watchword of our program. And no amount of knowledge about surrender can make it a fact until we simply give up, let go, and let God. When we surrender our "freedom," we become truly free."

So maybe even one word can sum up the program: "Surrender."

And yet it seems to be in my very nature to fight instead of surrender. I certainly fought lust. I really wanted to stop. I really tried to stop. But I couldn't. I was no longer free not to lust. I was lust's slave, and I needed to be emancipated by a Power greater than me because I was incapable of breaking the chains that bound me.

I fought God as well.

The difference between lust and God in this battle of mine is that lust is a master that will not let me go, but on the contrary, God is a master only so long as I continue to surrender to Him. And when I surrender my "freedom" to Him, I become truly free. He does not take my freedom away, but He accepts the good and the bad that I freely give Him, and He returns to me the gift of freedom from the bondage I can not escape in my own power.

U.S. Grant is quoted as saying, "No terms, except unconditional and immediate surrender, can be accepted." I started working the Steps of this program with my sponsor by first committing to God, "I will do whatever my sponsor says."  Early on in working the Steps with my sponsor, he asked me to write the date and the words "I will go to any length to stay sober" in the front of my AA book, when I was ready. Surrender. I was learning how to finally surrender.

Monday, August 1, 2016

Slipping

(The following is a personal post from one of our members.)

Some time ago I was talking with my wife about some things I was experiencing while working the program. Based on my prior experiences with slipping (aka relapsing), I knew I was in no position to try to fool myself or anyone else (her included) and make a claim to "never go back out there."

Instead I simply said, "I'm only ever one bad choice away from a relapse." And it doesn't even have to be a big choice or an obvious choice. One subtle, little choice, and I can be on the road to a relapse. And because I'm a sexaholic, that choice will be an "easy" one to make. That's been my past experience many, many times, and I don't doubt it can happen again.

I'm told by the old-timers that all I have is a "daily reprieve contingent on the maintenance of my spiritual condition." Here it is in context:

"It is easy to let up on the spiritual program of action and rest on our laurels. We are headed for trouble if we do, for [lust] is a subtle foe. We are not cured of [sexaholism]. What we really have is a daily reprieve contingent on the maintenance of our spiritual condition." (AABB, p. 85)

So what really matters in the end is my "spiritual condition." I've got to continue to ask myself, "Am I currently in right relationship with God and others?" (cf. Step 10)  "Am I growing spiritually in conscious connection with God?" (cf. Step 11)  "Am I trying to help others and sharing about who I really am and the story of what God is doing to change me in all areas of my life?" (cf. Step 12)

But without working the first nine Steps of the program with a sponsor, there wasn't any way I was going to know what the last three even meant, let alone do them.

I sincerely believe that if I am in continual right connection with a "loving God" that "could and would if He were sought,"  relapse simply won't happen. But if I walk away from that connection and start to once again "rest on my laurels" and believe I can do this on my own, then that "one bad choice" has already happened, and I'm on my way to that relapse, because I'm on my own.