Today's Reading from Just For Today © NA World Services
June 3 Direct and indirect amends
"We make our amends to the best of our ability."
Basic Text, p. 40
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The Ninth Step tells us to make direct amends wherever possible. Our
experience tells us to follow up those direct amends with long-lasting
changes in our attitudes and our behavior-that is, with indirect amends.
For example, say we've broken someone's window because we were angry.
Looking soulfully into the eyes of the person whose window we've broken
and apologizing would not be sufficient. We directly amend the wrong
we've done by admitting it and replacing the window-we mend what we
have damaged.
Then, we follow up our direct amends with indirect amends. If we've
acted out on our anger, breaking someone's window, we examine the
patterns of our behavior and our attitudes. After we repair the broken
window, we seek to repair our broken attitudes as well-we try to "mend
our ways." We modify our behavior, and make a daily effort not to act
out on our anger.
We make direct amends by repairing the damage we do. We make indirect
amends by repairing the attitudes that cause us to do damage in the first
place, helping insure we won't cause further damage in the future.
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Just for today: I will make direct amends, wherever possible. I will
also make indirect amends, "mending my ways," changing my attitudes,
and altering my behavior.