Overeaters Anonymous

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Pages: 9

work. Outside Meetings and Response Paper: Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous and Overeaters Anonymous Frequently, I have encountered many individuals who question my reasons for going to Alcoholics Anonymous (AA). For one to truly understand, one must be an addict or an alcoholic. I have been participating in AA meetings since 1978 because I lived in an alcoholic system. My alcoholic father and my dysfunctional family dynamics contributed to my own addiction issues. At the age of sixteen I entered my first gay bar, had my first drink, and I became an addict almost instantly; somehow alcohol and other drugs (AOD) made me feel better, confident, comforted, and they even made me feel like I was part of something. My struggle with AOD began in 1982 and nearly killed me by 1994, where I found myself out of control and out of patience with myself. Subsequently, I found the rooms of AA and remained in the rooms and stayed sober for ten years. In the middle of my sobriety, I moved to …show more content…
I went to an SLAA meeting between this one which had a very different feel because it was men. These women shared so openly the last time even though I was a stranger to them; I could not help but be moved. I was also excited to hear if one of the women I had spoken too would be willing to tell me her story. She said she would let me know at this meeting.
Arrival/Setting
This time I walked directly to the room and was surprised to see only five people in the room, considering the meeting was going to start in a few minutes. I sat down and asked the woman that I was familiar with why did they use AA literature instead of their own. She said she did not know, and she was only at one other meeting that did not use AA literature and she did not like that meeting. This was the woman who was thinking about telling her story to me, and I was delighted to hear that she