What if I Was Truly Full?

Ambler's Texaco - Rt. 66 “I wonder what it would be like if I really lived like I knew everything was going to be all right. Or if I really lived like I knew at all times I was loved and am love. Or if I really lived like I knew that I had access to a power that is unlimited and can do anything. I was considering it as I was making it through another cacophonous few minutes in my life where my thoughts were doing a victim conga line in my mind. I just know that life is not meant to be this way. But I also keep forgetting.” – My Agapic Life

We alcoholics and addicts seem to be especially endowed with that; with forgetfulness. In the absence of a complete restructuring of our psyches most of us have a difficult time telling the difference between what is objectively real and what is only real in our minds. At least that has been my experience. I forget that the underlying fabric of the universe is a part of me. I forget that my finite self as marshaled by my will is insufficient to solve my problems. And every time I forget those things I place myself a little farther away from Grace and a little closer to Destruction. Every time I forget to pick up the tools and balk at the work that leads me toward my Creator, I suffer. Every time I suffer, I forget that it is temporary.

On good days, on days I remember to pray, on days that I do an honest 10th step, the consciousness of the Love and Presence of my Creator is clearer to me. I seem, however, to go along in life thinking that I’m doing it; I’m carrying the message, my life is becoming manageable (ish) and I remain focused on the work I have already done. Inevitably something throws an unexpected log in my path and I have to exhaust myself trying to move it on my own.

The couple of things recently that have been particularly troublesome both involve entitlement. They involve my ego telling me that I should be treated differently, that I’m special, that I deserve better and they both involve the real (or I suppose imagined) wrongdoing of others. Good evidence suggests that doing the work provides me with a path to at least, at least, take a kindly and tolerant view. Yet, here I am, balking at the work.

I’ve been balking for some time on doing the work of my sex inventory. I had written so much on the other aspects of my fellationship with the IFX and in so doing had been relieved of so much of the pain that has plagued me these many months. It was a new harm, or rather just rudeness, that has prompted me to wallow in self-pity and animosity and to allow myself to forget that God can solve that problem, too. Stepping off the “I flippin’ deserve to be treated better than that” treadmill for only a moment allows me to see that there is a solution to the problem, yet I have been unwilling to take the necessary action. I’ve been enjoying the treadmill.

I have an astonishing need to be right, to be attended to and to receive the approval and acceptance of others. I have marched around being ‘right’ and soliciting endorsement of my ‘rightness’ since December. I have wallowed in my ‘rightness’ to such an extent that I went home from a meeting a couple of nights ago, climbed in bed at 7 o’clock and cried myself to sleep. I have considered ditching all my friends and changing all my meetings. I have half talked myself into believing that the only solution is to move away. By failing to pick up the tools I am hardly acceptable. It is hardly what God would have me do. I don’t approve of it and cannot expect others to approve, either. I forget that a little willingness goes a long, long way in this program. I forget where I put the willingness to act in faith until I’m out of ideas and have nowhere to turn but to God.

The other area I still think I can manage on my own stems from my indignation about the copyright to my work being infringed upon by an organization with a paid staff and whom I have offered a license to use my work for free but who have not complied with that simple request. Instead their paid staff are insisting that I spend my unpaid time to

“submit a notification pursuant to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (“DMCA”) by providing our Copyright Agent with the following information in writing (see 17 U.S.C. Section 512(c)(3) for further detail)”

This is an arduous and time consuming task. Not only that, but they also assert that

“The compilation of all content on this site is the exclusive property of (unnamed site) and protected by U.S. and international copyright laws.”

All they had to do was ask me. That one bit of “I deserve to be treated better” has disturbed my serenity enough for me to march around being ‘right’ about that, too.

To some extent, perhaps even to a great extent in each of these situations, I am right. I do deserve better. I am worth more. It is not my ‘fault’. My fault lies in being miserable about it. My fault lies in the idea that I can manage these things without the steps and without God. I just know that my life isn’t meant to be this way, that I have a spiritual answer to these problems, that I do not have to suffer over things like this or to allow them to cut me off from the ‘sunlight of the Spirit’. I have unlimited access that connects me to the fullness and grace of my limitless and loving Creator.

But, I also keep forgetting.

Ambler’s Texaco Gas Station, originally uploaded by jimfrazier. www.dwightillinois.com/history.htm

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

  1. What struck me is that a reality can be both – that your ego rears its (newly groomed) head and thus you need to employ willingness to turn it over and use your recovery tools…

    AND that you may be experiencing ALSO some early self-love, wherein you want now to fight for your self. After years of self-loathing and debasing of your value, could you now be at the dawning of loving yourself, as you begin to see your Creator at work in your life, indicating you have intrinsic value worth defending? (i.e., if God finds you of value, perhaps you dare begin to love yourself in the same manner He loves you.)

    It doesn’t have to be one or the other; it can be both happening concurrently.

    Just my gestalt.

    -DeeK

    Reply

  2. So true, so true. I can relate to it all. The entitlement, victimization forgetfulness, all of it!! You articulated it so precisely too. I also gave myself all the credit. Great part is that, you realized it and it is going to be OK. I promise.

    Reply

  3. Sound like your self-centered fear is finally starting to abate, i.e. a much more objective you is emerging from the hyper-subjective self that we all are inflamed by active addiction.
    I think you’re gonna be one of those who’s “slowbriety” you will come to see as a blessing. What I see is someone who strains to get to the next level, but when he breaks through, (like in this post) doesn’t regress.
    You’re certainly light years from where you were. Mary, you’re going to make it after all.

    Reply

  4. “Your the one most likely to succeed
    Just be sure to keep your head
    Cause girl you know that’s all you need
    Everyone around you adores you
    Don’t give up the world is waiting for you

    Love is all around, no need to waste it.
    You can have the town, why don’t you take it.
    You’re gonna make it after all.”

    Reply

  5. For a comedy-writing class back in college, I once had to write a fake theme song for a show, in which you get a sense of the “set-up” from the lyrics. I decided to use this theme, but the show was about Divine, so the words ended with “Cause you’re ugly, fat and baaaaldd….”
    Blessedly, I don’t remember the rest.
    However, the moral of the story is, you can’t be simultaneously depressed and laughing, so let’s remind ourselves regular to take our sobriety seriously, but not ourselves. (Too, at least).

    Reply

  6. What? Did you ALL miss the word FELLATIONSHIP?

    Nobody here thinks I’m funny.

    What is WRONG with these people? ;-)

    Reply

  7. I just feel like sometimes we “get it” and sometimes we don’t. You are realizing that you haven’t “gotten it” for a little while. That realization is not a fun one to have. It can cause feelings of embarrassment and the occasional “I’ve been acting like a douche bag” chill. BUT…that realization is a necessary one to have if we are ever to really “get it”.

    Do you get it?

    Reply

Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

get userping