Step Three: Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God, as we understood Him.
Practicing Step Three is like the opening of a door
which to all appearances is still closed and locked. All we
need is a key, and the decision to swing the door open.
There is only one key, and it is called willingness. Once unlocked
by willingness, the door opens almost of itself, and
looking through it, we shall see a pathway beside which is
an inscription. It reads: "This is the way to a faith that
works." In the first two Steps we were engaged in reflection.
We saw that we were powerless over alcohol, but we
also perceived that faith of some kind, if only in A.A. itself,
is possible to anyone. These conclusions did not require action;
they required only acceptance.
Like all the remaining Steps, Step Three calls for affirmative
action, for it is only by action that we can cut away
the self-will which has always blocked the entry of God -
or, if you like, a Higher Power - into our lives. Faith, to be
sure, is necessary, but faith alone can avail nothing. We can
have faith, yet keep God out of our lives. Therefore our
problem now becomes just how and by what specific
means shall we be able to let Him in? Step Three represents
our first attempt to do this. In fact, the effectiveness of the
whole A.A. program will rest upon how well and earnestly
we have tried to come to "a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood Him."
To every worldly and practical-minded beginner, this
Step looks hard, even impossible. No matter how much one
wishes to try, exactly how can he turn his own will and his
own life over to the care of whatever God he thinks there
is? Fortunately, we who have tried it, and with equal misgivings,
can testify that anyone, anyone at all, can begin to
do it. We can further add that a beginning, even the smallest,
is all that is needed. Once we have placed the key of
willingness in the lock and have the door ever so slightly
open, we find that we can always open it some more.
Though self-will may slam it shut again, as it frequently
does, it will always respond the moment we again pick up
the key of willingness.
Maybe this all sounds mysterious and remote, something
like Einstein's theory of relativity or a proposition in
nuclear physics. It isn't at all. Let's look at how practical it
actually is. Every man and woman who has joined A.A.
and intends to stick has, without realizing it, made a beginning
on Step Three. Isn't it true that in all matters touching
upon alcohol, each of them has decided to turn his or her
life over to the care, protection, and guidance of Alcoholics
Anonymous? Already a willingness has been achieved to
cast out one's own will and one's own ideas about the alcohol
problem in favor of those suggested by A.A. Any
willing newcomer feels sure A.A. is the only safe harbor for
the foundering vessel he has become. Now if this is not
turning one's will and life over to a newfound Providence,
then what is it?
But suppose that instinct still cries out, as it certainly will, "Yes, respecting alcohol, I guess I have to be dependent
upon A.A., but in all other matters I must still maintain
my independence. Nothing is going to turn me into a
nonentity. If I keep on turning my life and my will over to
the care of Something or Somebody else, what will become
of me? I'll look like the hole in the doughnut." This, of
course, is the process by which instinct and logic always
seek to bolster egotism, and so frustrate spiritual development.
The trouble is that this kind of thinking takes no real
account of the facts. And the facts seem to be these: The
more we become willing to depend upon a Higher Power,
the more independent we actually are. Therefore dependence,
as A.A. practices it, is really a means of gaining true
independence of the spirit.
Let's examine for a moment this idea of dependence at
the level of everyday living. In this area it is startling to discover
how dependent we really are, and how unconscious
of that dependence. Every modern house has electric wiring
carrying power and light to its interior. We are delighted
with this dependence; our main hope is that nothing will
ever cut off the supply of current. By so accepting our dependence
upon this marvel of science, we find ourselves
more independent personally. Not only are we more independent,
we are even more comfortable and secure. Power
flows just where it is needed. Silently and surely, electricity,
that strange energy so few people understand, meets our
simplest daily needs, and our most desperate ones, too. Ask
the polio sufferer confined to an iron lung who depends
with complete trust upon a motor to keep the breath of life
in him.
But the moment our mental or emotional independence
is in question, how differently we behave. How persistently
we claim the right to decide all by ourselves just what we
shall think and just how we shall act. Oh yes, we'll weigh
the pros and cons of every problem. We'll listen politely to
those who would advise us, but all the decisions are to be
ours alone. Nobody is going to meddle with our personal
independence in such matters. Besides, we think, there is
no one we can surely trust. We are certain that our intelligence,
backed by willpower, can rightly control our inner
lives and guarantee us success in the world we live in. This
brave philosophy, wherein each man plays God, sounds
good in the speaking, but it still has to meet the acid test:
how well does it actually work? One good look in the mirror
ought to be answer enough for any alcoholic.
Should his own image in the mirror be too awful to
contemplate (and it usually is), he might first take a look at
the results normal people are getting from self-sufficiency.
Everywhere he sees people filled with anger and fear, society
breaking up into warring fragments. Each fragment says
to the others, "We are right and you are wrong." Every such
pressure group, if it is strong enough, self-righteously imposes
its will upon the rest. And everywhere the same thing
is being done on an individual basis. The sum of all this
mighty effort is less peace and less brotherhood than before.
The philosophy of self-sufficiency is not paying off.
Plainly enough, it is a bone-crushing juggernaut whose final
achievement is ruin.
Therefore, we who are alcoholics can consider ourselves
fortunate indeed. Each of us has had his own near fatal encounter with the juggernaut of self-will, and has suffered
enough under its weight to be willing to look for
something better. So it is by circumstance rather than by
any virtue that we have been driven to A.A., have admitted
defeat, have acquired the rudiments of faith, and now want
to make a decision to turn our will and our lives over to a
Higher Power.
We realize that the word "dependence" is as distasteful
to many psychiatrists and psychologists as it is to alcoholics.
Like our professional friends, we, too, are aware that
there are wrong forms of dependence. We have experienced
many of them. No adult man or woman, for
example, should be in too much emotional dependence
upon a parent. They should have been weaned long before,
and if they have not been, they should wake up to the fact.
This very form of faulty dependence has caused many a rebellious
alcoholic to conclude that dependence of any sort
must be intolerably damaging. But dependence upon an
A.A. group or upon a Higher Power hasn't produced any
baleful results.
When World War II broke out, this spiritual principle
had its first major test. A.A.'s entered the services and were
scattered all over the world. Would they be able to take discipline,
stand up under fire, and endure the monotony and
misery of war? Would the kind of dependence they had
learned in A.A. carry them through? Well, it did. They had
even fewer alcoholic lapses or emotional binges than A.A.'s
safe at home did. They were just as capable of endurance
and valor as any other soldiers. Whether in Alaska or on the
Salerno beachhead, their dependence upon a Higher Power worked. And far from being a weakness, this dependence
was their chief source of strength.
So how, exactly, can the willing person continue to turn
his will and his life over to the Higher Power? He made a
beginning, we have seen, when he commenced to rely upon
A.A. for the solution of his alcohol problem. By now,
though, the chances are that he has become convinced that
he has more problems than alcohol, and that some of these
refuse to be solved by all the sheer personal determination
and courage he can muster. They simply will not budge;
they make him desperately unhappy and threaten his newfound
sobriety. Our friend is still victimized by remorse and
guilt when he thinks of yesterday. Bitterness still overpowers
him when he broods upon those he still envies or hates.
His financial insecurity worries him sick, and panic takes
over when he thinks of all the bridges to safety that alcohol
burned behind him. And how shall he ever straighten out
that awful jam that cost him the affection of his family and
separated him from them? His lone courage and unaided
will cannot do it. Surely he must now depend upon Somebody
or Something else.
At first that "somebody" is likely to be his closest A.A.
friend. He relies upon the assurance that his many troubles,
now made more acute because he cannot use alcohol to kill
the pain, can be solved, too. Of course the sponsor points
out that our friend's life is still unmanageable even though
he is sober, that after all, only a bare start on A.A.'s program
has been made. More sobriety brought about by the admission
of alcoholism and by attendance at a few meetings is
very good indeed, but it is bound to be a far cry from permanent sobriety and a contented, useful life. That is just
where the remaining Steps of the A.A. program come in.
Nothing short of continuous action upon these as a way of
life can bring the much-desired result.
Then it is explained that other Steps of the A.A. program
can be practiced with success only when Step Three
is given a determined and persistent trial. This statement
may surprise newcomers who have experienced nothing
but constant deflation and a growing conviction that human
will is of no value whatever. They have become persuaded,
and rightly so, that many problems besides alcohol will not
yield to a headlong assault powered by the individual alone.
But now it appears that there are certain things which only
the individual can do. A11 by himself, and in the light of his
own circumstances, he needs to develop the quality of willingness.
When he acquires willingness, he is the only one
who can make the decision to exert himself. Trying to do
this is an act of his own will. All of the Twelve Steps require
sustained and personal exertion to conform to their
principles and so, we trust, to God's will.
It is when we try to make our will conform with God's
that we begin to use it rightly. To all of us, this was a most
wonderful revelation. Our whole trouble had been the misuse
of willpower. We had tried to bombard our problems
with it instead of attempting to bring it into agreement with
God's intention for us. To make this increasingly possible is
the purpose of A.A.'s Twelve Steps, and Step Three opens
the door.
Once we have come into agreement with these ideas, it
is really easy to begin the practice of Step Three. In all times of emotional disturbance or indecision, we can pause,
ask for quiet, and in the stillness simply say: "God grant me
the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to
change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference.
Thy will, not mine, be done."
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