Yesterday I had this observation: One of the women that I
sponsor is struggling and I thought, “She needs more prayer.” Things are not
going her way, and she’s mad. I thought, “OK, how do I explain to her that it’s
going to be a lot easier to surrender sooner rather than later.” Then I
thought, “OK Diane, can you take your own advice?”
Note to me: More prayer.
It seems so obvious, but now I also know why the “Twelve and
Twelve” says, “We should not be lax on this matter of prayer”. It is like that
old juice commercial that reminds, “I could have had a V-8”. So often after
struggling, musing, wondering and making myself miserable trying to control
something, I think, “I could have prayed-or maybe-- prayed sooner.
Put prayer first.
Yesterday I had a cranky day. Not quite relaxed, not quite
working, slightly bored even though there was plenty to do; it was just an off
day. When I did my 10th step at night I realized that I’d skipped my
morning prayer time, and from there my day was just unsettled. Note to me: Put
prayer first.
Gratitude and Compassion.
I read this ages ago, and I keep a sticky note in my planner
that says, “Pray for a grateful heart and a compassionate heart”. It’s a great
piece of guidance and an all-purpose solution to things that bother me.
Gratitude shifts my attitude. Gratitude reminds me of the good. Gratitude shows
me that there is growth, change and recovery in my life when my feelings try to
convince me otherwise.
A compassionate heart softens me. Compassion helps me to see
that other people- (even people who I think are bad or wrong)—are mostly broken
or troubled. And often they are broken or troubled I ways that I am too, or that
I have been. Having a compassionate heart slows me down. I am more inclined to
practice “restraint of tongue and pen” when I have a compassionate heart.
But to get there: More prayer.
Years ago I thought that people who had years of recovery
must be doing all the right things, all the time. But I don’t, we don’t. But we
do have a couple of things that come with time. One is good recovery habits. So
I pray each morning and I do a 10th step at night that closes with a prayer. If
I skip either one I feel crummy; it’s kind of like not brushing my teeth. So
even if I’m rushed or even not feeling very sincere I’ll get on my knees and
read the Third Step Prayer. I say the words out loud. Even if done without
complete sincerity, it helps.
The other thing people with long recovery have are stories.
We have our own stories yes, but even better; we have other people’s stories
too. If you go to meetings for years you accumulate stories. So when times are
hard I can lean into someone else’s story. I can recall what they said about
the time they prayed; the time they yelled at God, the time a prayer was
answered in a miraculous way; the time they let go of what they wanted and got
something better instead.
And each time the reminder to me is this: Prayer and more
prayer.
No comments:
Post a Comment