A Slice of History: The Responsibility Declaration

Originally published in the in the General Service Office AA newsletter,
Box 459, Winter 2020

By most measures, Alcoholics Anonymous in 1965 had achieved success that seemed beyond the wildest dreams of its two co-founders thirty years earlier. Worldwide membership stood at an estimated 350,000, the Fellowship had become a well-known institution in North America, and many in the recovery field believed that AA was the clearest and best answer for alcoholism. With 10,000 members meeting in Toronto early in July for the fourth International Convention, it seemed a good time to bask in self-congratulation and gloat about AA’s achievements.

The achievements were noted, but the Toronto Convention was also devoted to serious inventory and, especially, the theme of Responsibility. The Responsibility Declaration was formally introduced there by Bill W. It states, “I am Responsible. When anyone, anywhere, reaches out for help, I want the hand of AA always to be there. And for that: I am responsible.”

The author of the pledge was the late Al S., a former trustee of the General Service Board, who told the story behind the saying at the sixth International Convention in Denver in 1975. “A statement (on Responsibility) was wanted that would be emotionally gripping to AAs without imposing any musts,” he recalled. He tried and discarded several approaches before finally arriving at the thought that it should be personal choice and responsibility – “I” instead of “we.” Ten thousand AAs joined hands at the Toronto Convention to repeat the declaration, and it has since been distributed throughout the Fellowship and is reprinted in AA pamphlets and Grapevine.

Why was the declaration written and accepted at that time? A probable reason is that Bill W. and other AA leaders had detected new problems that cast a shadow over AA’s future ability to help alcoholics. In 1963, a national magazine had published a highly critical cover story about AA, suggesting that it was no longer working well. Nonalcoholic professionals in the field were disturbed by the attitudes and actions of some AAs, and one of them would even speak at the Toronto Convention. Some hinted that it was time for AA to “take its inventory.”

Bill W. discussed this issue thoroughly in “Responsibility Is Our Theme,” in the July 1965 Grapevine (The Language of the Heart, p. 328). He noted how we might have alienated people through our arrogant conviction that we were always right and had the only answers to alcoholism. We needed to correct such attitudes and behavior in order to continue reaching the alcoholic who still suffers.

Bill, far from blaming the Fellowship at large, explained how mistakes of his own had often courted disaster. “If I inventory AA’s shortcomings, be also assured that I am also taking stock of my own. I know that my errors of yesterday still have their effect; that my shortcomings of today may likewise affect our future. So it is, with each and all of us.”


For more information about the declaration click here, Responsibility Is Our Theme, an article posted on AA Agnostica in October 2012.


 

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Addicted Australia

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

WATCH – America should do one… – 

Dec. 9, 2020 – Ten Australians fighting their addictions. What does it take to change a life? New series, Addicted Australia. We gain extraordinary access to the lives of a group of Australians and their families as they confront their addiction head on. Signed up to a unique six-month treatment program, we follow their heart wrenching journey from despair to hope and possible recovery.

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New Luxury Recovery Center Opens in North Alabama

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

WATCH – The sumptuousness of sobriety –  

Dec. 7, 2020 -The recovery center offers a non-clinical approach to the problem of drug and alcohol dependence by using the 12 steps.

“Hard things happen in life, but we develop those tools on how to be okay in here, regardless of what happens out here,” said White. “We learn how to adjust our sails to the wind. We can’t adjust the wind.”

In a release, the Sereno Ridge team described the center:

The expansive 16,500 sq. ft. facility features resort-style amenities, including an indoor heated pool, fitness center, chef-prepared meals, spacious rooms, and more. The 176-acre campus has extensive hiking trails, water fountains, and meditation gardens. While the lodge is spacious, there is a 16-person capacity, ensuring a discreet environment and small, intimate groups.

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Police commander asks if drug use is really crime?

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

War on Addicts! – 

Dec. 10, 2020 – But there’s also fallout from alcohol and even second-hand smoking. Both these legal drugs often have unwanted side effects on the individual who chooses to use them. We deal with alcohol and tobacco in a completely different way than the way we treat illegal drugs. We consider them a health issue – unless someone is assaulted or run over because the offender was drunk – yet still, the offender is not arrested for using alcohol per se but for the consequences of its use.

Somehow we still continue treating illicit drug use as a crime and, I might add, with little success.

Recently it was revealed the NSW government was reconsidering how to deal with this issue. It has looked at recommendations from last year’s ice inquiry. These are unsurprisingly seen by a few former top cops as a sensible way forward.

The word “decriminalisation” has been bandied about a lot over the past week but while the term means slightly different things to different people it is clear the NSW government is reluctant to go there.

They are, however, considering a much humbler but nevertheless worthwhile step towards “diverting” drug users away from the criminal justice system – a “three strikes” policy that would see a person initially given a warning or a fine instead of being charged.

more@TheGuardian

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Staten Island doctor admits to prescribing opioids in return for sexual favors

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

Creep of the Week – 

Dec. 9, 2020 – He took particular interest in his younger patients who were struggling with substance abuse and prescribed them powerful narcotics in exchange for sexual favors, officials said.

“These patients were all under the age of 40 and wouldn’t normally be treated by a geriatric care physician,” according to prosecutors.

“Many of these patients were dealing with pain and addiction, and instead of getting help from their doctor, they were drawn deeper into the cycle of drug abuse,” said New Jersey US Attorney Craig Carpenito in a statement.

The Drug Enforcement Administration began investigating Santiamo in 2017 after learning that patients were traveling great distances to score powerful narcotics prescriptions and using multiple pharmacies to fill them, according to court papers.

“Santiamo wrote prescriptions for controlled substances in doses that far exceed what might be medically necessary for an ordinary patient,” the complaint states.

Santiamo, who is free on $250,000 bond, is scheduled to be sentenced April 12, 2021, and faces up to 20 years in prison and a $1 million fine, court records show.

“This defendant not only violated his oath to help people, he took advantage of them when they were most vulnerable for his own selfish needs,” said DEA Special Agent.

more@NYPost

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Relapse as a Path to Sobriety

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

Voice of recovery –  

December 8, 2020 – If you had told me 15 years ago that I would grow up to be an IV-using, heroin-addicted shell of a person, I would have never believed you. I grew up in a devoutly religious family. We were homeschooled, raised with morals, values and manners. We were shielded from the darkness of the world outside. As the middle child of eight children, it was quite often that I was able to slide under the radar, the attention never being on me (which always served me quite well).

I obviously never intended to grow up and become a drug addict, but life had other plans. The very first drug I tried at 15 years old was an opiate, and to this day I can still vividly remember how it made me feel. I felt like I had never felt before. An escape from an uncertain, cruel, cold world. After that experience, I dabbled with other substances, as most teenagers do. But eventually, it all came back to opiates. To the feeling of escaping, completely.  At 23, I went into rehab for the first time at the urging of my family. I went through detox, inpatient and outpatient. I moved into my very first apartment by myself and I was thriving for a short while, until I made the decision that I wanted to not feel anymore — I wanted to escape again. Life had become overwhelming and sad. I wanted to feel something and nothing at the same time, and I found that once again in heroin.

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Danny Trejo, 52 Years Sober, Urges Those Fighting Addiction to Seek Treatment During Pandemic

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

What a wonderful way to live! – 

Dec. 13, 2020 – The spot — part of CRI-Help’s “Fight” campaign — debuts on the eve of the center’s 50th anniversary and is aimed at raising awareness around substance abuse recovery. It arrives during the holiday season, a time known to be challenging for some struggling with drug and alcohol addictions, not to mention during a global pandemic that has increased isolation and fueled financial insecurity for many Americans.

Says CRI-Help COO Brandon Fernandez, “The physical and emotional triggers often imbued in this time of year can lead to increases in drug and alcohol consumption. Over the last decade, CRI-Help has consistently seen an uptick in admissions right before and after the holidays. We want people to know that we are here to help.”

In the moody spot, Trejo fights his demons — literally and figuratively — in and out of a boxing ring. He appears alongside four CRI-Help counselors (and onetime clients), none of whom had any prior acting experience. “Casting former clients who are now role models at CRI-Help helps add to the authenticity of the piece and reinforces the value of one addict working with another,” says A.J. Lewis, CRI-Help board member and Emmy-winning producer of the campaign.

The ads are helmed by Clio Award-winning director Sean Ross, and all creative talent involved donated their time and services to the nonprofit.

Seeing Trejo in a ring will be a familiar image for those who know his backstory as a top prison boxer at California’s San Quentin State Prison, where he spent time for armed robbery in the 1960s. It was there that Trejo found recovery and got clean. He’s been sober for 52 years.

“Everything good that has happened to me has happened as a direct result of helping someone else,” says Trejo, who detailed his journey in the Brett Harvey-directed feature documentary Inmate #1: The Rise of Danny Trejo.

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Peter Young, priest who lifted up the downtrodden, dies at 90

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

One soul helping another… – 

Dec. 9, 2020 – At first, he said, the politicians saw his priest’s collar and dismissed him as just another do-gooder but, after presenting them with the cost of incarceration, he got some attention and support.

“I proved it was cost-effective,” Young said in 2008. “That’s how I got credibility,” and, eventually, “after years of work, Young won support for decriminalizing alcoholism,” The Enterprise editorialized in 2012. That’s what enabled people to get help: When they no longer had to admit to being a criminal to attend Alcoholics Anonymous, Young said.

Father Young “spawned a movement,” The Enterprise wrote in a 2014 editorial. “He changed the way lawmakers and the public look at alcoholics and drug addicts. With this perception came help, real help, to set people on the course to productive lives.”

In the 1980s, Father Young was ahead of the state in setting up an Honor Court program to offer non-violent offenders who had committed alcohol- or drug-related crimes an opportunity to go to drug treatment instead of jail. 

Father Young would go on to run 121 not-for-profit addiction treatment and rehabilitation programs that treated more than 18,000 people each day.

But he was ahead in another important way, too. 

When people with addictions would emerge from a program like Young’s, or after convicts served their time, they can often end up where they started — on drugs or in jail. 

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The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Recap: Sinners!

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

Mormons gone wild –  

Dec. 9, 2020 – Jen goes outside with Heather to remind us that it cannot be later than 1 p.m. and to give Lisa a chance to stir the pot a bit further. They come back in so Mary can call Heather a hypocrite with “very many faces” and Jen a “ghetto hoodlum.” Jen then brings up a previous incident in which Mary told her that if there were Black people outside of a 7-Eleven, she would go to a different 7-Eleven. Absolute yikes. This feud keeps getting deeper and more insidious and seems destined to rage until the end of time. Jen finally leaves, and Mary asks for her $1,200 AirPods back. No word on the betta fish or the Women Helping Women in Business™ journal set, but it would have been nice to at least offer them up to Valter and Arturo as a drop in the restitution bucket.

The next day, the dust settles as Meredith gives Brooks the postgame report, Lisa tells her kid he’s getting two birthday parties, and Mary puts on the boots from her grandma’s high-school majorette uniform so she can pour protein powder into a blender and demand her housekeeper put on a beatboxing performance. Nothing to see here! At Heather’s house, we find out her ex is great at making his child-support payments and that Heather lets her daughter Ashley break ye olde Mormon rule about not going to multiple dances in a row with the same boy. Her boyfriend, Jaydon, plans actual dates and knows his way around the back end of the Supreme website, so here’s hoping they last long enough for us to see his hair reach tiny-ponytail length (we’re close! Maybe six more weeks). Heather also tells her daughters they can skip church the following day if they want, because what’s one more week without going? Say what you will about her “I’m not a regular mom — I’m a cool mom” energy, but this is merely giving kids age-appropriate agency in the face of community pressure not to, and, honestly, it’s really refreshing to see.

more@Vulture

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