Practice These Principles.
Tradition One: Our common welfare should come first;
personal recovery depends upon AA unity.
1. Am I in my group a healing, mending, integrating person,
or am I divisive? What about gossip and
taking other members' inventories?
2. Am I a peacemaker? Or do I, with pious preludes such
as "just for the sake of discussion," plunge into argument?
3. Am I gentle with those who rub me the wrong way, or
am I abrasive?
4. Do I make competitive AA remarks, such as comparing
one group with another or contrasting AA in
one place with AA in another?
5. Do I put down some AA activities as if I were superior
for not participating in this or that aspect of AA?
6. Am I informed about AA as a whole? Do I support, in
every way I can, AA as a whole, or just the
parts I understand and approve of?
7. Am I as considerate of AA members as I want them to
be of me?
8. Do I spout platitudes about love while indulging in
and secretly justifying behavior that bristles with
hostility?
9. Do I go to enough AA meetings or read enough AA
literature to really keep in touch?
10. Do I share with AA all of me, the bad and the
god, accepting as well as giving the help of fellowship?
Tradition Two: For our group purpose there is but
one ultimate authority -- a loving God as He may express Himself in our
group conscience. Our leaders are but trusted servants; they do not govern.
1. Do I criticize or do I trust and support my group officers,
AA committees, and office workers? New
comers? Old-timers?
2. Am I absolutely trustworthy, even in secret, with
AA Twelfth Step jobs or other AA responsibility?
3. Do I look for credit in my AA jobs? Praise for
my AA ideas?
4. Do I have to save face in group discussion, or
can I yield in good spirit to the group conscience and
work cheerfully along with it?
5. Although I have been sober a few years, am I still
willing to serve my turn at AA chores?
6. In group discussions, do I sound off about matters
on which I have no experience and little
Tradition Three: The only requirement for AA membership
is a desire to stop drinking. 1. In my mind, do I prejudge some new AA
members as losers?
2. Is there some kind of alcoholic whom I privately
do not want in my AA group?3. Do I set myself up as a judge of whether
a newcomer is sincere or phony?
4. Do I let language, religion (or lack of it), race,
education, age, or other such things interfere with my carrying the message?
5. Am I overimpressed by a celebrity? By a doctor, a clergyman,
an ax-convict? Or can I just treat thisnew member simply and naturally
as one more sick human, like the rest of us?
6. When someone turns up at AA needing information or
help (even if he can't ask for it aloud), does itreally matter to me what
he does for a living? Where he lives? What his domestic arrangements are?
Whether he had been to AA before? What his other problems are?
Tradition Four: Each group should be autonomous
except in matters affecting other groups or AA as awhole.
1. Do I insist that there are only a few right ways of
doing things in AA?
2. Does my group always consider the welfare of the
rest of AA? Of nearby groups? Of Loners inAlaska? Of Internationalists
miles from port? Of a group in Rome or E1 Salvador?
3. Do I put down other members' behavior when it is different
from mine, or do I learn from it?
4. Do I always bear in mind that, to those outsiders
who know I am in AA, I may to some extent represent
our entire beloved Fellowship?
5. Am I willing to help a newcomer go to any lengths-his
lengths, not mine-to stay sober?
6. Do I share my knowledge of AA tools with other
members who may not have heard of them?
Tradition Five: Each group has but one primary
purpose to carry its message to the alcoholic who stillsuffers.
1. Do I ever cop out by saying, "I'm not a group, so this
or that Tradition doesn't apply to me"?
2. Am I willing to explain firmly to a newcomer the
limitations of AA help, even if he gets mad at me fornot giving him a loan?
3. Have I today imposed on any AA member for a special
favor or consideration simply because I am afellow alcoholic?
4. Am I willing to twelfth-step the next newcomer without
regard to who or what is in it for me?
5. Do I help my group in every way I can to fulfill our
primary purpose?
6. Do I remember that AA old-timers, too, can be alcoholics
who still suffer? Do I try both to help themand to learn from them?
Tradition Six: An AA group ought never endorse,
finance, or lend the AA name to any related facility or outside enterprise,
lest problems of money, property, and prestige divert us from our primary
purpose.
1. Should my fellow group members and I go out and raise
money to endow several AA beds in our local hospital?
2. Is it good for a group to lease a small building?
3. Are all the officers and members of our local club
for AAs familiar with "Guidelines on Clubs" (which is available free from
GSO)?
4. Should the secretary of our group serve on the mayor's
advisory committee on alcoholism?
5. Some alcoholics will stay around AA only if we have
a TV and card room. If this is what is required to carry the message to
them, should we have these facilities?
Tradition Seven: Every AA group ought to be fully
self-supporting, declining outside contributions.
1. Honestly now, do I do all I can to help AA (my group,
my central office, my GSO) remain self-supporting? Could I put a little
more into the basket on behalf of the new guy who can't afford it yet?
How generous was I when tanked in a barroom?
2. Should the Grapevine sell advertising space to book
publishers and drug companies, so it could make abig profit and become
a bigger magazine, in full color, at a cheaper price per copy?
3. If GSO runs short of funds some year, wouldn't it be
okay to let the government subsidize AA groups in hospitals and prisons?
4. Is it more important to get a big AA collection from
a few people, or a smaller collection in which moremembers participate?
5. Is a group treasurer's report unimportant AA business?
How does the treasurer feel about it?
6. How important in my recovery is the feeling of self-respect,
rather than the feeling of being always under obligation for charity received?
Tradition Eight: Alcoholics Anonymous should remain
forever nonprofessional, but our service centers may employ special workers.
1. Is my own behavior accurately described by the Traditions?
If not, what needs changing?
2. When I chafe about any particular Tradition, do I realize
how it affects others?
3. Do I sometimes try to get some reward_even if not money_for
my personal AA efforts?
4. Do I try to sound in AA like an expert on alcoholism?
On recovery? On medicine? On sociology? On AA itself? On psychology? On
spiritual matters? Or, heaven help me, even on humility?
5. Do I make an effort to understand what AA employees
do? What workers in other alcoholism agencies do? Can I distinguish clearly
among them?
6. In my own AA life, have I any experiences which illustrate
the wisdom of this Tradition?
7. Have I paid enough attention to the book Twelve Steps
and Twelve Traditions? To the pamphlet AATradition-How It Developed?
Tradition Nine: AA, as such, ought never be organized;
but we may create service boards or committees directly responsible to
those they serve.
1. Do I still try to boss things in AA?
2. Do I resist formal aspects of AA because I fear them
as authoritative?
3. Am I mature enough to understand and use all elements
of the AA program-even if no one makesme do so-with a sense of personal
responsibility?
4. Do I exercise patience and humility in any AA job I
take?
5. Am I aware of all those to whom I am responsible in
any AA job?
6. Why doesn't every AA group need a constitution and
bylaws?
7. Have I learned to step out of an AA job gracefully-and
profit thereby-when the time comes?
8. What has rotation to do with anonymity? With humility?
Tradition Ten: Alcoholics Anonymous has no opinion
on outside issues; hence the AA name ought never be drawn into public controversy.
1. Do I ever give the impression that there really is
an "AA opinion" on Antabuse? Tranquilizers? Doctors? Psychiatrists? Churches?
Hospitals? Jails? Alcohol? The federal or state government? Legalizing
marijuana? Vitamins? Al-Anon? Alateen?
2. Can I honestly share my own personal experience
concerning any of those without giving the impression I am stating the
"AA opinion"?
3. What in AA history gave rise to our Tenth Tradition?
4. Have I had a similar experience in my own AA life?
5. What would AA be without this Tradition? Where
would I be?
6. Do I breach this or any of its supporting Traditions
in subtle, perhaps unconscious, ways?
7. How can I manifest the spirit of this Tradition
in my personal life outside AA? Inside AA?
Tradition Eleven: Our public relations policy is
based on attraction rather than promotion; we need always maintain personal
anonymity at the level of press, radio, and films.
1. Do I sometimes promote AA so fanatically that I make
it seem unattractive?
2. Am I always careful to keep the confidences reposed
in me as an AA member?
3. Am I careful about throwing AA names around-even within
the Fellowship?
4. Am I ashamed of being a recovered, or recovering, alcoholic?
5. What would AA be like if we were not guided by the
ideas in Tradition Eleven? Where would I be?
6. Is my AA sobriety attractive enough that a sick drunk
would want such a quality for himself?
Tradition twelve: Anonymity is the spiritual foundation
of all our Traditions, ever reminding us to place principles before personalities.
1. Why is it a good idea for me to place the common welfare
of all AA members before individual welfare? What would happen to me if
AA as a whole disappeared?
2. When I do not trust AA's current servants, who do I
wish had the authority to straighten them out?3. In my opinions of and
remarks about other AAs, am I implying membership requirements other thana
desire to stay sober?
4. Do I ever try to get a certain AA group to conform
to my standards, not its own?
5. Have I a personal responsibility in helping an AA group
fulfill its primary purpose? What is my part?6. Does my personal behavior
reflect the Sixth Tradition_or belie it?
7. Do I do all I can do to support AA financially? When
is the last time I anonymously gave away aGrapevine subscription?
8. Do I complain about certain AAs' behavior_especially
if they are paid to work for AA? Who mademe so smart?
9. Do I fulfill all AA responsibilities in such a way
as to please privately even my own conscience? Really?
10. Do my utterances always reflect the Tenth Tradition,
or do I give AA critics real ammunition?
11. Should I keep my AA membership a secret, or reveal
it in private conversation when that may help another alcoholic (and therefore
me)? Is my brand of AA so attractive that other drunks want it?
12. What is the real importance of me among more than
a million AAs?
THE AA GRAPEVINE INC., PO BOX 1980, GRAND CENTRAL STATION,
NEW YORIC, NY 10163-1980