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What if recovery isn’t about stacking more meetings, but about a radical shift inside you? We pull on the thread running through the Big Book—from the “essential psychic change” to being “reborn” by Step Three—and make the case that the 12 steps are designed to build a living relationship with God, not another set of rituals. With Jennifer alongside, we explore how fear loosens only after surrender, why inventory works when ego breaks, and how a person moves from self-protection to service once the blocks are cleared.
We dig into AA’s origin story to understand what got lost. From the Oxford Group’s emphasis on confession and guidance to Carl Jung’s counsel to Roland Hazard, the early blueprint pointed to a spiritual conversion for alcoholics of the hopeless type. Along the way, we contrast fellowship with faith, question the modern tendency to “not scare the newcomer,” and ask whether softening the message has undermined outcomes for those who actually need power. If the malady is spiritual, we argue, only a spiritual solution will do.
This conversation also challenges common recovery habits: swapping meditation for meeting marathons, elevating sponsors and slogans over principles, and expecting change to arrive at Step Twelve after avoiding surrender at Step Three. We return to a simpler, harder path: admit powerlessness, seek God earnestly, clear what blocks contact, and practice daily—prayer, meditation, inventory, amends, and service. Expect practical takeaways, pointed quotes, and a preview of where we’re heading next as we connect personal transformation to the broader culture of AA today. If you care about real change—not just white-knuckle sobriety—press play, share it with someone who needs hope, and leave a review so more people can find the show.