Paul Summers Jr.
I’m Paul Summers, your neighborhood addict, alcoholic, overeater, and co-dependent. Good God Man!
Thank you for clicking on this translation of the Taking Steps 2020 Be Good To You Podcast: Step Three, making a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of our Higher Power, God, as we understand that Power. I’ll explain why I chose to change-up the wording in a minute.
If you feel like you are unable to live with or without drugs, booze, binge-eating, or an unhealthy relationship, reading…
“The ultimate weapon for recovery is the recovering person.” (Narcotics Anonymous Basic Text {Fifth Edition Pg. 15})
I cannot stress enough the importance of going through each Taking Steps episode starting from January. They are in order for a reason. I know from experience, that it can be very tempting to jump forward.
Please hold on; if following rules, taking orders, doing things in order, or following someone else’s process is difficult for you, I understand. But if you’re willing to try something different for a brief period of time just to see if it works in ways which benefit you physically, mentally, or spiritually, I’m merely suggesting that you try practicing trust and patience.
Trust that the order and the wording of the steps are the result of generations of trial and error and adapting through continuous improvement.
Patience in knowing there is internal work you’ll need to pause long enough to work out before you move on from one to two to three, etc.
This month’s Topic is FAITH – making a decision, then having faith in the outcome of the decision.
As I said in the Step One podcast, the first thing we need to work on each time we start our day is how to stay clean/sober by getting through today.
Right off the bat, you might be saying, this is a challenge. You might ask, “Am I supposed to make a decision, when I’ve already admitted my life is unmanageable? – When I’ve acknowledged how out of control I can get with or without drugs? – I mean, I used because things got out of control; then my using got out of control, which made everything else around me get even more out of control! … Now I’m supposed to make a decision?”
Ok, ok. I get it.
We’ve mostly never been able to control our using, so Where has all that effort and energy we’ve devoted to controlling everyone and everything around us gotten us? Are we able to turn these fear-based actions over? Could we let them go? But … but, if we do, who or what will replace them?
It’s too scary, right? We’ve never known any other way. Our survival skills have become so distorted that, as we sink toward our bottom, the only thing that looks or shows promise is the path or action which leads us to the most immediate gratification.
This path is deceiving. This path is a long, long loop back to square one. Maybe it beheld wonderful scenery and pleasurable perspectives; elation and rollercoaster dips that went so low that when we came up we actually believed it was our own doing – like an accomplishment. What we don’t always see is that every time we come back to the start, behind us are burned bridges and wreckage.
Our disease in our heads tells us to go around again, that this time will be different; that given the right combination of substances and situations, we’ll be able to fix it all in short order. Our disease within lies in mythical proportions.
When this loop becomes our routine, believe it or not, we’re in one of the most suitable places to seek something outside ourselves – something more caring and loving than we are to ourselves – to rely on. As addicts, we have a strange relation to destruction and detachment. We can keep breaking down more and more of our lives—much more than normal people. We’re so resourceful, we can hit a bottom and dig out a tunnel to a new bottom. And so on.
It goes on until it doesn’t. If we’re among the luckiest ones, we get an “Oh Crap!” moment.
In that moment, we can turn that stubborn will over to the care of a Higher Power. For you, the listener, I say H.P. instead of God because I don’t want you to stop reading before the miracle of recovery can find its way in. God and Higher Power are interchangeable words. The only difference is our perception of the concept. If you believe God is a female entity, or a collective conscience, or a non-entity, or anything, there is no limiting belief system you have to adhere to – ever – period.
The Third step is not a religious obligation. In fact, none of them are.
As I was saying, I don’t want you to click away from reading this before the miracle of recovery can find its way in to sit itself down right beside the disease within your head and offer an alternative to the thoughts you’ve, up until now, felt obliged to follow.
In the Step Two Podcast, I asked: What is going to replace our old thinking, if not ourselves? This time I’m asking, how many times have your turned your will and your life over to getting loaded—turned it over to the destructive power of our disease?
It’s probably been in your head for a while that a decision needs to be made. But our disease tricks us into believing the only decision we have is between going through withdrawals or taking more ‘medicine.’ Did you ever call it medicine? I did. I called it my relief, my cure; I’ve even called it my god. Eventually, we reach the point where even the first choice, to just deal with the withdrawals is not really feasible—especially if you’ve gone through the horrible suffering of withdrawals, then days or weeks later turned right back around and went back to using.
This point at which our ability to decide has a different outer appearance for each of us. It might be reached when someone you love dearly is at wits end—distraught, broken by your confusing, conflicting words and actions. It might be on an especially cold night—when you’ve pissed through your sleeping bag tucked under the freeway. It might be when you can no longer pretend to function at work—maybe at the dream job you finally landed after years of struggling, which you’re about to lose but you say you don’t care because it no longer brings you joy.
In my case, the day in which the outer appearance was no longer deniable came the day my then wife emptied our apartment while I was working, taking our daughter away indefinitely.
For many of us, we had to reach this point in order to be willing to accept that the path we kept choosing to follow; the same one which has looped around on us time and again might just be unalterable. (by this point we discover that we’re not powerful enough to change it) We either find a way off of the path, or accept our fate: jail, death, or some drugged up institution in which any semblance of our personality disappears.
Throughout our addiction, our willingness could be traced to our actions. I didn’t realize this until after a few years clean. If you’ve promised your kids you’d pick them up after school, but then didn’t show up until an hour later if at all, your actually weren’t willing to pick them up. If you needed to work a shift to pay for the fifth you planned on buying to get through the weekend, you worked. You made it through, maybe miserably, because you were willing to do whatever it takes to buy that bottle. Until, of course, you weren’t.
I mention this because this Willingness to make the decision to turn your will and your life over needs to come from you. Only you. Only you. If anyone makes this decision for you, you will never know the sense of accomplishment it promises. This sense is HUGE for the future of anyone’s recovery. It could be a deal breaker, that’s how epic making this decision on your own is.
If faith is not a reinforced strong suit for you. I suggest you look around for reinforcement. Search for people who have made this decision and pay attention to the outcome it provided for them.
Let me clarify how making this decision is an ‘as needed’ action to take. I don’t think any part of the steps can be approached as a contract where you “have to do it this way until you die, or else.” It’s not that rigid. I wouldn’t have stuck around if it was.
So let’s say we’ve become willing. We’ve decided, for now at least, we’re going to have faith in our decision to turn our will and our life over to the care of God as we understand God. Now what?
Two cliché phrases I hear often come to mind.
1) let go and let God
2) The Third Step Prayer: Take my will and my life. Guide me in my recovery. Show me how to live.
You might say, these are just words. But words are powerful. We pray with words, we confirm our hearts, emotions, and desires with words. Spoken words are a kind of outward expression of inner conviction.
Organically, taking this decisive action implies that we are willing to surrender our will to our Higher Power—also known as turning it over. One simple way is to ask for guidance, then be prepared to hear, or see, feel or get an answer. It will come. Some know it in their gut. Some of us, depending on what we’re asking guidance for, it takes a little more than just a nudging feeling.
And I hate saying don’t, but don’t ever feel you’re better off just to give up, that you aren’t’ cut out for this just because you ignored your Higher Power even when it seemed pretty clear what the guidance you were supposed to follow was. Looking at our situation that way is what I’ve come to find is just another opportunity for our disease to coerce us to go back to our ways.
Even after we know it to our core that our Higher Power’s help is our best, most powerful source of strength and courage, every single one of us in recovery have, at some point, taken our will back. That’s why I said a few minutes ago that we need to revisit this decision and remake it as often as we realize it.
This gets easier each time we remember to ask for our Higher Power’s will. We gradually find that our request to understand God’s will comes more and more from a place of honesty and sincerity. Don’t worry, we don’t get perfect!
I’d like to say we get better, but the definition of ‘better’ is up to each person individually. If hopelessness is waning; if the way we live no longer resembles the insanity and manic survival of our active addiction, then we’ve become blessed to be given proof that our Higher Power is working.
For some of us, just the fact that things are going well is so frightening, our disease goes right back to work on our brains. This is a point where we really need to kick into gear to stave off the relentless barrage of lies, deceptions, denials, and rationalizations our disease will undoubtedly manufacture.
Take a deep breath.
There is a Power working in your life which is greater than you or me. It is kinder to you and more loving of you than you have been to and of yourself.
This Power wants to have a relationship with you, where you are open to a way of thinking besides your own – where you are open to allowing self-care, connection and interaction with people who are striving toward beneficial living, healthy decision making, and actions.
It really comes down to choosing whether or not you wish to stay in those patterns, or be open to a different perception - to ponder an alternate belief. As mentioned in Step Two, I suggest that you look for proof either way, practice your finding, then honestly assess which path leads to a more rational thinking you can come to believe in.
I hope this helps you.
I live for interacting with you.
Remember, Be Good To You.
Paul