Pass It On Eastside Intergroup Newsletter April 2016
Transcription
Pass It On Eastside Intergroup Newsletter April 2016 Page 1 Why I Drank Why I drank by John M. Page 2 I drank because I was depressed Why I drank , continued I drank because I was afraid Pink Can Contributions I drank because I was upset Page 3 Upcoming Sober Events and Meeting Updates I drank because I was angry I drank because I was hurt Page 4 I drank because I was sad March Office News by Nancy O I drank because I was happy Page 5 I drank to celebrate Birthday Club I drank to forget Faithful Fivers I drank because others pissed me off Pink Can Contributions I drank because I was lonely Page 6 I drank because no one understood me Notes from the Archives I drank because I wasn’t appreciated by David C.. I drank because I resented my boss Page 7 I drank to spite my spouse Spiritual Experience I drank to build up my confidence Page 8 I drank to feel better about myself Office Information I drank because I didn’t like myself Newsletter Volunteers I drank to be social Hotline Volunteers I drank to relax Contributions I drank to quiet my nerves Page 9 I drank because I was in terrible physical pain Thank you ESIG Representatives 1 (cont. on p 2) Why I Drank (continued) NO! NO! NO! A gazillion times NO! I drank because I’m an alcoholic! Hello. I was powerless over alcohol. If I was happy I drank. If I was sad, I drank. If I was lonely I drank. If I was with friends I drank. There was never a time when I got up in the morning and decided “I’m feeling very happy and carefree today, so there’s no need for me to drink.” And then lived up to that decision? Are you kidding me? Think about normies and how they handle all of the above. A normie might lift a drink in celebration, but guess what, they don’t continue until they black out. Normies don’t relax with a bottle or two of chardonnay. They don’t ease their way into social situations with Captain Morgan or Jose Cuervo. And normies don’t deal with personal crises by drinking a pitcher of booze, thinking “I’ll just get through this difficult time getting sloshed and adding a nice hangover to my dilemma.” Normies don’t respond these ways. Alcoholics do. So, why would I ever expect that any condition I find myself in would be improved with alcohol? HONESTY! I am who I am. I believe that we alcoholics drink because we’re alcoholics. All the reasons we give are merely our way to “justify” or “explain” why we drink so much. In the end it remains much more important for us to understand and be committed to why we don’t drink, and to help others find that understanding and commitment. After all, that’s what we do. Thank You March Pink Can Contributors! Seven & Sober Fresh Start Nooner’s Wake Up Anchor Group Eastside Women Anonymous Sober Women District 46 Women of Worth 2 Upcoming Sober Events April 2nd: Eastside Intergroup Pancake Breakfast and Speaker Meeting from 10 am to 1 pm at the Eastside Foursquare Church in Bellevue. Cost is $7. Children $2. April 9th: Live at Pine Lake Speakers Meeting from 7 to 9 pm at Pine Lake Covenant Church in Sammamish. Speaker is Jeff T. from Techahai, Ca. April 16th: Area 72 Accessibility Quarterly from 9 to 3 pm at Shoreline Unitarian Universalist Church in Seattle.. Soup potluck will be served for lunch. Please bring a side dish to share. April 16: Conway Old-timers Speakers Meeting from 5 to 8 pm at Fir Island Lutheran Church in Conway. April 23rd: Jam Night hosted by Scott Kasper and Friends from 6 to 10 pm at Hope Hall in Snoqualmie. May 5th : Eastside Intergroup Meeting from 7:30 to 8:30 pm at the Bellevue Christian Reformed Church in Bellevue. May 7th: No Reservation Speaker Meeting from 7 pm to 9 pm at the Swinomish Gymnasium in La Conner. Speakers are: Butch M and Desiree C. May 14th: District 38 Workshop on Sponsorship from 1pm to 4pm at the Kirkland Congregational Church 106 5th Ave. Keynote speaker Steve C. May 21st: District 35 Workshop Living the Traditions from 1pm to 4pm at Our Savior Lutheran Church 745 Front Street in Issaquah. June 11th : AA Hotline Training from 10 to 11:30ish am at Eastside Intergroup. Six months of sobriety required. Conferences Meeting Updates NEW MEETINGS! SAMMAMISH SOBER SISTERS Mondays 7pm—8pm Closed Big Book Study Sammamish Presbyterian Church—22522 NE Inglewood Hill Rd. Room C205 HIGHLAND HAPPY HOUR Fridays 6pm-7pm Open, Young People Highland Covenant Church 15022 NE Bel Red Rd. Bellevue NEW LOCATION! EASTSIDE WOMEN Church of the Resurrection 15220 Main St. (cabana in back) Bellevue 98007 Tuesdays at 10am NEW MEETING TIME! KIRKLAND SOBRIETY HEADQUARTERS Fridays at 7 p.m. Kirkland Congregational Church 106 5th Ave. Kirkland April 17th: 6th Annual Woman’s Spiritual Retreat from 9 am to 4 pm at Cedar River Watershed Education above Rattlesnake Lake in North Bend. The cost is $25 (includes a lite lunch). April 22nd to 24th: Northwest Girlstock Women’s Big Book 12 Step Conference at Maple Hall in La Conner. Sold Out. June 24-26th: Pacific Northwest Conference 2016 at the Pendleton Convention Center. More info at: www.pnc1948.org 3 SUPPORT NEEDED! UNBRIDLED GROUP Thursdays 7:30 p.m. Open meeting United Methodist Church 7525 132nd Ave NE in Kirkland March Office Report 2016 February Office Report Nancy O. Office Manager It’s been a fantastic month at your Eastside Intergroup Office and I am grateful for the following volunteers that were of service during the month of March: Rick L., Carrie W., Susan H., Ted W., Steve C., Leah W., Ray R., Travis S., Wallene D., Nate W., John E----, and Erica E. - If you are interested in volunteering let me know. We still have some afternoon shifts open. One of the many gifts of being of service at the Intergroup office is the feeling of being useful. Our promises say “that feeling of uselessness and self-pity will disappear…” When we are able to help others it’s difficult not to feel useful. Eric C., Bill J. and I had a great hotline/phone training on March 12 th with several new people again signed up for hotline and also for help on the phones in the office. This training is quarterly with the next training scheduled for June 11th. If interested in the next training, it’s helpful for us to get a headcount ahead of time so give us a call or a quick email. Pancake Breakfast is April 2nd – we are looking forward to another fun event in which we get to thank you all for supporting Eastside Intergroup. We received donations for the Pancake Breakfast Raffle from the following groups, thank you! We had a lot of contributions from individuals too! Thank you so much. Moss Bay, Living Sober, Eastside Women, Juanita Triangle, District 35, Life Line, Issaquah Tuesday Night, Pine Lake Stag, 59 Minutes at Pine Lake, Joy of Living, Sharing the Legacy, Friday Night Firehouse, Bill’s Story, Any Lengths, and Millennium. The newest addition to our inventory is the Big Book Dictionary which sells for $3.75. And if you’re looking for a gift for a sponsor or sponsee, we have what you need! Stop in and see our great selection of medallions, literature and sobriety greeting cards. You can meet our wonderful volunteers at the same time. We are having a Big Book drive to collect books for the meeting “Sanity in Sobriety” in Kirkland that needs some extra help. If anyone has old books they would like to donate or even if they’d like to buy one and contribute it, we have a collection box at the office. Any help is appreciated! Our Corrections Committee received 95 used Grapevine magazines this month from Eastside Women to be donated to inmates in the jails and prisons – thank you so much! If you or your group have used Grapevines to donate, we collect them and they are distributed to the Issaquah Jail, Kirkland Jail and to the Monroe prison We still have the doctor packets available if anyone wants to take one to their doctor. My new doctor was thrilled and then asked for a literature rack for her waiting room! You just never know….. The packets are put together by volunteers, but the pamphlets that go in them are chosen by Erin A. our CPC Committee chairperson. The pamphlets in the packet are information about Alcoholics Anonymous and are pertinent to how the doctor can help his/her patient. Board Member elections are approaching quickly. On April 7th at our meeting we will elect three Board members. Those nominated (in order of nomination) are: John K., Mary B., Jon S., Mike O. and Rodney L. Thank you for allowing me to be of service. Nancy 4 How Can You Help Support Eastside Intergroup in Addition to the 7th Tradition at your Meetings? Become a Faithful Fiver Join Our Birthday Club! What are Faithful Fivers? Faithful Fivers are AA members who graciously pledge to contribute $5.00 each month to support Eastside Intergroup in its efforts to carry the AA message of hope and recovery to those alcoholics who still suffer in the Eastside area. As a Faithful Fiver, your contribution can and will make our vital services possible. The Faithful Fiver idea came about when we remembered that we wasted much more than $5 each month during our drinking days. Contributions to Eastside Intergroup from AA members are limited to $3,000 per member per year and are tax Eastside Intergroup Birthday Club! Many of our members contribute to ESIG $1, $2 or $5 per year during their AA Anniversary month. We’ll print your name, sobriety date and home group in our Newsletter. Your Birthday Club contributions directly support your Eastside Intergroup Office which provides a 24 hour phone line, literature, coins Birthday Club! Name___________________________________ Yes! Please enroll me as a Home Group_____________________________ Faithful Fiver! Sobriety Date____________________________ Here is my contribution of Contribution $___________________________ $_______for_________months Get your name & Home Group in the newsletter! Name___________________________________________ Address________________________________________ City___________________ State/Zip_________________ Return this form to: Eastside Intergroup March 2016 Birthday Contributions Barbara—2 Years! Better Odds Sober Group 13401 NE Bel-Red Rd. Suite B6 Bellevue, WA 98007 Please mark here if you would like a renewal reminder A contribution was made by Bobbie D. in honor of her friend Fern M. who passed away in March with 44 years of sobriety. Fern was a wonderful example of recovery to many women in the area. Her home group was Sammamish Plateau Women’s Step Study. She will be missed. Thank You March Faithful Fivers! Barbara M. Pat A. Eastside David W. Ulf W. Open Nancy O. Don S. Breakfast Eastside Susan M.Open Breakfast 5 Notes from the Archives By David C., District 38 Archivist Hello from the vaults of the District 38. This month I thought you might like to understand about what the Archives really are. In the broadest sense, they are the records of the District and a traveling display of items of A.A. history. My job is to collect and save all the monthly District items for the future use by the District, such as the meeting minutes, the Treasurers reports, and any items GSO sends to me. Along with that I have been tasked to put together and maintain a display of A.A. items, and other pieces on alcoholism in general. It is to this second item that I will be talking to you about today. Lots of you ask me why I have pieces that have no bearing on Alcoholics Anonymous in the display? Well there is so much more to our history than meets the eye. We have almost all the books that A.A. World Services puts out, along with other books and items directly related to A.A. We also have many books and items that tell the story of our beginnings and the road we have traveled in the past eighty one years. For example many people want to know why we have a copy of the Bible in the display? Well that was the first book that was used by Anne Smith ( Dr. Bob’s wife ), to teach us about Christian principals. She read from the book of James before every meeting. We also have many books from the Washingtonians and the Oxford Group. They tell us of the struggles of the many mutual aid groups that would eventually come to influence A.A. Bill and Bob knew that we needed guidance and they looked to the past for that enlightenment. Along this historical path, we meet many people that helped us to grow and flourish. Father Ed Dowling, a Catholic priest that helped Bill with his struggles with the spiritual side of our program. Emmet Fox who wrote, “Sermon on the Mount”, read by so many in A.A. Ernie Kurtz who wrote, “Not God” the best history ever written about the formation of A.A. to name but a few. The more I delve into our history the more I realize I know so little. I just hope that I live long enough to have my questions answered. The traveling display is huge, and yes I am responsible for that. Is it confusing to most people? I guess so, but the fact that there is so much material only allows us to find out those answers we seek. Some of my other fellow Archivists question my way of presenting our history, but this is the way I know how. I know that when the questions are asked, I will be ready to answer them. More will be revealed….. P. S. Come and see the entire traveling display on June 18 at the Kirkland Congregational church. Till next time…… 6 Spiritual Experience The terms “spiritual experience” and “spiritual awakening” are used many times in this book which, upon careful reading, shows that the personality change sufficient to bring about recovery from alcoholism has manifested itself among us in many different forms. Yet it is true that our first printing gave many readers the impression that these personality changes, or religious experiences, must be in the nature of sudden and spectacular upheavals. Happily for everyone, this conclusion is erroneous. In the first few chapters a number of sudden revolutionary changes are described. Though it was not our intention to create such an impression, many alcoholics have nevertheless concluded that in order to recover they must acquire an immediate and overwhelming “God-consciousness” followed at once by a vast change in feeling and outlook. Among our rapidly growing membership of thousands of alcoholics such transformations, though frequent, are by no means the rule. Most of our experiences are what the psychologist William James calls the “educational variety” because they develop slowly over a period of time. Quite often friends of the newcomer are aware of the difference long before he is himself. He finally realizes that he has undergone a profound alteration in his reaction to life; that such a change could hardly have been brought about by himself alone. What often takes place in a few months could seldom have been accomplished by years of self discipline. With few exceptions our members find that they have tapped an unsuspected inner resource which they presently identify with their own conception of a Power greater than themselves. Most of us think this awareness of a Power greater than ourselves is the essence of spiritual experience. Our more religious members call it “God-consciousness.” Most emphatically we wish to say that any alcoholic capable of honestly facing his problems in the light of our experience can recover, provided he does not close his mind to all spiritual concepts. He can only be defeated by an attitude of intolerance or belligerent denial. We find that no one need have difficulty with the spirituality of the program. Willingness, honesty and open mindedness are the essentials of recovery. But these are indispensable. “There is a principle which is a bar against all information, which is proof against all arguments and which cannot fail to keep a man in everlasting ignorance—that principle is contempt prior to investigation.” By HERBERT SPENCER 7 Office Information 13401 NE Bel-Red Suite B6 Bellevue, WA 98005 Phone: 425-454-9192 Email: esig@eastsideintergroup.com Website: www.eastsideintergroup.com Office Hrs: Mon.-Fri. 10:00am-6:00 pm Thank you March Hotline Volunteers! Carmen A. Carrie W. Chuck M. Elton B. Eric C. Fred M. Ginny K. Guy P. Jim R. Joe M. John K. John M. John R. Keith S. Leslie G. Mark J. Matthew M. Merrill G. Mike S. Richard J. Sara K. Sheree P. Susan M. Ted W. Tim B. Tina B. Travis S. Backup : Sheree P. Newsletter Contributors Publisher…….....................Alma O. month 7:30-8:30pm All members welcome! Bellevue Christian Reformed Church 1221 148th Ave NE, Bellevue 98007 Office Manager - Nancy 0. Editor……………..………..Sandy B. Archivist……………..……..David C. Personal Story…..……….. John M. Office News …….………..Nancy O. Eric C. Bill J. John E. Ted W. Leah W. Travis S. Nate W. Wallene D. Rick L. Coordinators: Steve C. Ray R. Nancy O. Carrie W. Erica E. Directions on website Core Relations 59 Minutes at Pine Lake Nameless Bunch of Drunks Tuesday Night Solutions 12 & 12 Fellowship Hall Ladies Step Study Serenity Break Nooners Up the Creek Sharing the Legacy Kenmore Big Book Sober Valley Wallene D. March Office Volunteers Email: Nancy@eastsideintergroup.com Thanks to the following Groups for sending contributions to the Eastside Intergroup office in the month of March 2016. Group contributions enable us to pay the rent and bills for your Intergroup Office, maintain our phone lines 24 hours a day 7 days a week, publish a monthly newsletter, provide a meeting directory, and carry AA information and literature. Eric C. Bill J. Intergroup Meeting First Thursday of each Bob F. Susan H. Group Contributions District, GSO & Area Info District 35 Eastside Intergroup: Eastside Intergroup Sammamish Plateau Women’s Step Study Afternooners Serenity on Sunday Wake Up Gay Men in Recovery Eastside Beginners Anchor Group Right Side of the Tracks Happy Destinies Eastside Men’s Group Fresh Start Unbridled Group Issaquah District 35 13401 NE Bel-Red Rd. Suite B6 P.O. Box 442 Bellevue, WA 98007 Issaquah, WA 98027 Western WA Area 72 District 36 702 Kentucky St., #535 Snoqualmie Valley, Duvall, Bellingham, WA 98225 North Bend District 36 General Service Office (GSO) P.O. Box 459 P.O. Box 1963 North Bend, WA 98045 Grand Central Station New York, NY 10163 District 38 District 34 District 38 Kirkland Bellevue, Redmond, East Lake P.O. Box 322 Sammamish, Mercer Island Kirkland, WA 98083 District 34 P.O. Box 50081 District 39 Bellevue, WA 98015 Bothell, Kenmore, Woodinville Call Intergroup 8 Thank you Intergroup Reps! The following Intergroup Reps were in attendance at our meeting. See you on Thursday, Feb. 4th! Andy G. – Core Relations, District 35 & ESIG PI Chair Ari B. – Sunday Breakfast at Alano Aysen R. – Seven & Sober Betsy N. – Women of Worth/Sober Women Brian G. – Living Sober Carol G. – Reflections Carrie W. – Tons of Grace Charlie C. – ESIG Web Committee Dan H. – Pine Lake Stag/ESIG Corrections Chair Erin A. – ESIG CPC Chair Erin E. – District 34 Liaison Garrett V. – Eastside Men’s Group Holly F. – Women’s Way James T. – Issaquah Big Book Study Jane L. – ESIG Accessibility Chair Jean M. – ESAC Nooners Jeannie H. – Essentials Alternate Jeffrey G. – Pocket of Enthusiasm Jen T. – Sobriety Lifeline/Joy of Living John K. – Sammamish BB Study/Live at Pine Lake Judi D. – LSS Kiera E – District 35 Intergroup Rep Kyle M. – Maximum Service Leigh Anne D. – ESIG CPC Alternate Lisa S. – 59 Minutes at Pine Lake Margaret H. – Eastside Women Margie C. – ESIG Web Committee Mary B. – District 38 Intergroup Rep/BB GSR Michelle M. – Reflections Phil K. – Area 72 Corrections Chair Robin O. - Millennium Rodney L. – Redmond Friday Night Samantha F. – Woman’s Way Sandy B. – ESIG Newsletter Editor/FSHQ Sheree H. – Fresh Start Susan M. – Sober Cartooners/Sanity in Sobriety/Wednesday Willingness Todd G. – Juanita Triangle Tracy A. – Wake Up k n a Th ! ! ! u yo What does an Intergroup Rep do? An Intergroup Rep is elected at his/her Home Group and attends the Eastside Intergroup Meeting on the 1st Thursday of each month from 7:30pm to 8:30pm. You represent your home group at the monthly meeting and hold a vote for your group. Because Eastside Intergroup covers five Districts and is a central clearinghouse for local AA activities and information, you become a vital link between the Intergroup office, the Districts, and your home group. The Intergroup Rep keeps his or her home group informed about work being done, activities going on, etc. You become a part of the networking between Eastside Intergroup and the groups. 9
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