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Patti O. Furniture's avatar

I tried AA when I first quit, but it was full of predators, men 8 hours sober looking for a damaged female to manipulate. I stopped going. As an atheist, it was also hard to constantly be told that I had to believe in fake shit to get sober. I bare-knuckled it & had no support, not even from family. It’s wonderful that there are now meetings for females only & for atheists. The old days of AA were dangerous for women & unwelcoming to non-believers. I still celebrate every “birthday” alone & buy my own chips. My sobriety is an internal thing. It had to be. Each person needs to figure out what sobriety means to them & not be cowed to self-judgement for not following a particular protocol or path. 30 years sober.

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heydave56's avatar

AA were the shock troops that got me sober but I found i needed something else to help me live sober.

I now go to, and facilitate, Smart recovery meetings. But I also go to a couple AA and even an NA meeting. I like the way those particular groups work and i really like the people there.

Recovery meetings are part of the community i need/want in life.

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