Today's Reading from Just For Today © NA World Services
June 29 Keeping recovery fresh
"Complacency is the enemy of members with substantial clean time. If we
remain complacent for long, the recovery process ceases."
Basic Text, p. 84
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After the first couple of years in recovery, most of us start to feel like
there are no more big deals. If we've been diligent in working the
steps, the past is largely resolved and we have a solid foundation on
which to build our future. We've learned to take life pretty much as it
comes. Familiarity with the steps allows us to resolve problems almost as
quickly as they arise.
Once we discover this level of comfort, we may tend to treat it as a
"rest stop" on the recovery path. Doing so, however, discounts the
nature of our disease. Addiction is patient, subtle, progressive, and
incurable. It's also fatal-we can die from this disease, unless we
continue to treat it. And the treatment for addiction is a vital, ongoing
program of recovery.
The Twelve Steps are a process, a path we take to stay a step ahead of our
disease. Meetings, sponsorship, service, and the steps always remain
essential to ongoing recovery. Though we may practice our program
somewhat differently with five years clean than with five months, this
doesn't mean the program has changed or become less important, only that
our practical understanding has changed and grown. To keep our recovery
fresh and vital, we need to stay alert for opportunities to practice our
program.
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Just for today: As I keep growing in my recovery, I will search for new
ways to practice my program.