Make a Start

This may be the most important decision of our life. We’ve taken Step One when we said “Yes, I’m powerless over alcohol. My life is unmanageable. I can’t stop drinking, and I want help.”

In order to stop drinking, and stay stopped, there are a few simple principles that we need to apply to your life: AA’s program of recovery as outlined in our Twelve Steps. They can work as effectively for you as they have worked for countless others. Here are some additional suggestions which we feel can be helpful to you on your path to recovery.

Live One Day at a Time

AA is a “one day at a time” way of living. We try to break life into small pieces that we can handle. We stay sober one day at a time, or when necessary, one hour at a time. We do our jobs one task at a time. We solve our problems one problem at a time; we clean up our past one mess at a time.

Go to Meetings

All over the Greater Dallas area there are meetings: 365 days a year, morning, noon and night. The schedule for these meetings may be found in our meeting directory, available at every group or from our office, or on this web site. Take in as many meetings as you can: many long-sober AAs suggest jump-starting your program by attending ninety meetings in ninety days.

Get a Sponsor

A few members may tell you that they stay sober without the aid of a sponsor, and having one is indeed not a requirement. However, our AA experience tells us that we have a much better chance with a sponsor than without one. In fact, we find that communicating with our sponsor is a vital part of our participation in the AA program.

Sponsors listen and make suggestions based on his or her experience. He/She will not serve as a financial advisor, marriage counselor or psychologist, however. Sponsors are but experienced guides to the AA program of recovery: the Twelve Steps. Some AA groups will help find temporary sponsors.  If uncertain about a group’s practices regarding sponsorship, we simply ask the chairperson after a meeting.

Have a Home Group and Get Involved

For most of us, one particular AA group has become a unique haven for our sobriety, a place where we have many friends, where we can feel particularly safe in sharing exactly what’s going on with us today. This special place is known throughout the AA fellowship as the Home Group, often referred to as “The Heartbeat of AA.”

In the Greater Dallas area there are a number of large AA groups that meet several times each day, and there are smaller groups that meet from once to five times per week. All are encouraged to visit groups of different types before deciding what group feels the most “at home”. Ultimately, involvement at the group level will be more important than the size of the group or how often it meets. Our AA experience tells us that giving away what we have been so freely given is fundamental to our continued sobriety, and we can always find many varied ways to be of service in our home groups.

Family Matters

It is said that the average practicing alcoholic affects the lives of at least five other people. Many of these are family members, and there are ways that you can share your recovery with them.

Open Meetings

Most AA groups have a varied program of open and closed meetings. Closed meetings are for alcoholics, but family members may go along to open meetings with the AA member. Many weekend speaker meetings are open meetings. We have indicated the meeting type on our group meeting schedules.

AA Conferences

Weekend conferences are held throughout the year in various locations; these offer activities for both AA members and their families. Often, Al-Anon and Alateen meetings are held at these conferences as well. Information about these events may be found on group bulletin boards, our Intergroup newsletter, The D.I.A. Log or AA’s national magazine, The Grapevine. We also list some of them on this website. Click here to go to the “AA Conferences” page.

Al-Anon

The Al-Anon Family Groups, designed for members of the alcoholic family, hold meetings just as AA groups do. Al-Anon is a separate organization which uses AA’s Twelve Steps to effect the recovery of non-alcoholic family members. In the Dallas area, a typical AA group cooperates with Al-Anon by sub-leasing space to an Al-Anon group which holds its meetings “next door” to the AA meetings. For more information you may call the Dallas Al-Anon Central Office at (214) 363-0461, or click here for the Dallas Al-Anon website.

When Traveling

AA is in almost every city and town in the United States and Canada, as well as most urban areas throughout the world. Directories of meetings in the US, Canada and the rest of the world are available at your Dallas Intergroup office. Furthermore, frequently updated information about meetings in other localities may be obtained through links to independently operated websites. Note the links to AA World Headquarters here on our website.

Your New Beginning

You’ve made a new beginning. If you are like most of us, there may be times that you feel terribly frightened and lonely. If you are willing to use the tools that AA offers, you will never have to be alone again. You are among people who have been where you’ve been, felt what you’ve felt, thought what you’ve thought. Use those phone numbers and email addresses you’ve been given and join us on the path to recovery from our common problem – alcoholism. We can do together what we can’t do by ourselves.

Dallas AA Central Office
6162 E. Mockingbird Lane, Ste 213
Dallas, TX 75214
Tel: (214) 887-6699 – answered 24/7/365
E-mail: AA Help

This material has been approved by the Dallas Intergroup Association Board of Trustees, but not by AA World Services, Inc., except for specific excerpts from AA publications, which are reprinted with permission.