
...from the Basic Text of Narcotics Anonymous:
Who is an Addict?
What is the Narcotics Anonymous Program?
NA is a nonprofit fellowship or society of men and women for whom drugs had become a major problem. We are recovering addicts who meet regularly to help each other stay clean. This is a program of complete abstinence from all drugs. There is only one requirement for membership, the desire to stop using. We suggest that you keep an open mind and give yourself a break. Our program is a set of principles written so simply that we can follow them in our daily lives. The most important thing about them is that they work.
Why Are We here?
Before coming to the Fellowship of NA, we could not manage our own lives. We could not live and enjoy life as other people do. We had to have something different and we thought we had found it in drugs. We placed their use ahead of the welfare of our families, our wives, husbands, and our children. We had to have drugs at all costs. We did many people great harm, but most of all we harmed ourselves. Through our inability to accept personal responsibilities we were actually creating our own problems. We seemed to be incapable of facing life on its own terms. Most of us realized that in our addiction we were slowly committing suicide, but addiction is sucha cunning enemy of life that we had lost the power to do anything about it. Many of us ended up in jail, or sought help through medicine, religion, and psychiatry. None of these methods was sufficient for us. Our disease always resurfaced or continued to progress until in desperation, we sought help from each other in Narcotics Anonymous.
How It Works
If you want what we have to offer, and are willing to make the effort to get it, then you are ready to take certain steps. These are the principles that made our recovery possible.
1. We admitted that we were powerless over our addiction,
that our lives had become unmanageable.
2. We came to believe that a Power greater than
ourselves could restore us to sanity.
3. We made a decision to turn our will and our
lives over to the care of God as we understood Him.
4. We made a searching and fearless moral inventory
of ourselves.
5. We admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another
human being the exact nature of our wrongs.
6. We were entirely ready to have God remove all
these defects of character.
7. We humbly asked Him to remove our shortcomings.
8. We made a list of all persons we had harmed,
and became willing to make amends to them all.
9. We made direct amends to such people wherever
possible, except when to do so would injure them or others
10. We continued to take personal inventory and
when we were wrong promptly admitted it.
11. We sought through prayer and meditation to
improve our conscious contact with God as we understood Him, praying only
for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry that out.
12. Having had a spiritual awakening as result
of these steps, we tried to carry this message to addicts, and to practice
these principles in all our affairs.
The Twelve Traditions of NA
We keep what we have only with vigilance, and just as freedom for the individual comes from the Twelve Steps, so freedom for the group springs from our traditions. As long as the ties that bind us together are stronger than those that would tear us apart, all will be well.
1. Our common welfare should come first; personal recovery
depends on NA unity.
2. 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.
3. The only requirement for membership is a desire to
stop using.
4. Each group should be autonomous except in matters
affecting other groups or NA as a whole.
5. Each group has but one primary purpose – to carry
the message to the addict who still suffers.
6. An NA group ought never endorse, finance or lend the
NA name to any related facility or outside enterprise lest problems of
money, property or prestige divert us from our primary purpose.
7. Every NA group ought to be fully self-supporting declining
outside contributions.
8. Narcotics Anonymous should remain forever nonprofessional
but our service centers may employ special workers.
9. NA as such ought never be organized but ww may create
service boards or committees directly responsible to those they serve.
10. Narcotics Anonymous has no opinion on outside issues;
hence the NA name ought never be drawn into public controversy.
11. 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.
12. Anonymity is the spiritual foundation of all our
traditions ever reminding us to place principles before personalities.
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