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I have recovered from the disease of Alcoholism. I believe there is only one person really,.. everybody. And that peace of mind is everything. -So treat your neighbor as you would treat yourself, because your neighbor IS yourself. I think most of recovery is what I would call common sense, but that learning to be ordinary is a true gift very few people acquire. My ambition is to accept everything unflinchingly, with compassion, and therefore be intrinsically comfortable in my own skin, no matter what. I am comfortable being uncomfortable and am willing to go to any lengths to improve my life. I believe the Big Book was divinely inspired, and is extraordinarily powerful. Unfortunately AA's best kept secret a lot of the time. (In my opinion). I just try to do what works, no matter what it is.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Earnest? No. It's much ! healthier to be harmlessly mischevious


Heard in meetings: 'Sober not Somber'
'If you are happy would you please inform your face'
Big Book:
We are not a glum lot p132
Those in bad health, and those who seldom play, do not laugh much. p132
We absolutely insist on enjoying life. p132
We cannot subscribe to the belief that his life is a vale of tears, though it once was just that for many of us. p133

I like it when people in AA are having FUN, wherever ? they are, but not at other peoples expense as that would constitute 'harmful speech'. Or in a socially embarrassing or inappropriate way. Social skills are a !! huge asset, without them its so easy to rub people up the wrong way without realizing..

I saw someone who was clearly quite 'into' the AA programme recently in a very uneventful phase of their recovery, but to me they ? just looked like they were having no ! fun. Very dreary. So ! serious! Bleh. All I know is that I would find it unbearable to endure an overly serious sobriety indefinitely. It looks too much like sufferance. If I go to a meeting which is attended by fairly serious looking people, I'm almost certain that they must think I am some sort of ? lightweight because I look like I'm just having a bit of a laugh. The more serious they are the more I want to have a laugh. But if I attend a meeting full of high-pitched shrieky nervous laughter I am equally uncomfortable and would prefer a more relaxed calm response.

But I was at a meeting full of slightly more serious faces recently and it crossed my mind how important it is to have fun, because it's very hard to stay sober if recovery is terribly serious. if I meet someone who looks a little too earnest or serious, or is simply trying too hard, I try to tell them how important it is to lighten up and wear life like a loose garment. it's the only way that long-term sobriety is bearable. It gets too heavy otherwise. Besides having fun is not an opportunity to be missed. It costs nothing :)
But occasionally I attend meetings full of young people trying desperately to look “interesting” by sounding witty or clever, and those meetings also grate after a while. “You impress me when you stop trying to impress me” is something an old timer at my home group used to say.

My home group 20 years ago was full of people having a laugh, so that's what I became used to. Now when I see a room full of serious faces I cannot really relate to them very much. I understand that this is a common feature of the first 5 years of recovery, and I am sure that when I was less than 5 years I was equally unduly earnest, but I try to encourage sponsees to lighten up as soon as possible rather than wait 5 years to do so like I did. I think 5 years is a common benchmark for the time it takes a reasonably disturbed person to loosen their feverish grip on the program and start to relax a little, by doing less AA activities without fear of drinking again.

So generally speaking I would say that being a bit too serious is not at all good for long-term sobriety, and that if you are a little bit humourless, or serious and preoccupied a lot of the time, that this could quite reasonably have devastating effects on your sobriety long-term.
Trying too hard to be a “good” AA member is equally disastrous because it is not sustainable. Nobody can maintain a earnest disposition, because at some point we all ! look foolish for some reason or other, so the 'earnest' mask will crack. It gets unbearably dull and repressive. There is no fun in it.

So forget the “too good” ideology. Stop trying to convince everybody that you are serious about your program by trying desperately to look serious and earnest, or speak in a terribly serious way in meetings. You stand a much better chance staying sober indefinitely if you really learn how to wear your life like a loose garment and stop taking yourself so seriously. Get over yourself! Try to cultivate harmless mischievousness instead. And if your face looks miserable then you are not there yet :) There should be a glint in the eye. A wry smile. No sufferance. Not a sad “Oh well never mind” smile. A jolly smile. A Santa Claus smile. The best example I can give you as to what I mean when I say this is the example provided by TNH. He discusses very serious and far-reaching topics but he is not miserable looking. Here is a link to recent video so you can see what I mean. http://vimeo.com/14221955

I was saying to another AA member recently how much I appreciated learning how to have huge amounts of fun doing incredibly mundane things. We had stopped to buy something trivial after a meeting in a very ordinary supermarket and ended up having a really pleasant and funny exchange with the cashier. It was a lot of fun, and this isn't the sort of place where people normally ! expect to have much fun. So after we left I was saying to the other AA how lucky we are to be able to have fun in such mundane circumstances. Perhaps this example gives you a better idea of what I mean about developing one's capacity to have fun every day. It's very important. I can't emphasize this enough. I can honestly say that you put your sobriety at grave risk (long term) if you do not learn how to have fun and enjoy your day ? whatever you happen to be doing. Being generally humourless, earnest or taking yourself far too seriously is a recipe for disaster. Even if it doesn't drive you to drink, it will make your sobriety utterly grim, and who wants that?

Anyway, I'd better go so hope you have a lovely weekend :)

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

It's great to hear that you have such a good sense of humor and fun. I like that story about having a good time talking with the cashier at the store. That's a life I hope to live-- one where I am not frowning or crying all of the time.

This is a very powerful post.

Wishing you well,
NOS

Anonymous said...

I love humour too and I love to laugh. Agreed that humour that causes harm such as hurtful mockery is wrong. An oxymoron when you think of it.... hurtful humour?

Like music and its virtually endless combinations of notes, arrangements and styles, I believe humour, with the right amount of creativity, can take on many forms that would include a tremendous number of life-giving styles.

It is really a matter of creativity. And a re-training away from the hurtful styles so common in "entertainment" today. We have be so conditioned by these hurtful styles. And I have to admit, I have found them very funny. Even if not healthy.

God as I understand him teaches, "Laughter does good like a medicine".

Ciao.

Chaz

Syd said...

I have an offbeat sense of humor. I can also be too serious but for the most part I enjoy abroad laugh and to enjoy life. We Al-anions tend to be dismal sometimes and need to lighten up.

Storm Before the Calm said...

We are not a glum lot ... how important that is. As a newcomer I was confused by the happy faces, but I would have been frightened byan unhappy group. I was already miserable, I did not want to be sober and miserable.

johno said...

I agree, laughter childlike, not childish... Finding the truth much more funny than fiction ... My sense of humour has developed and is more natural nowadays..

I do fall into verging on sarcasm and cynism at certain times (of the month) and need to reign in somewhat. Mind you i seem to verge on lots of stuff i'd rather not at certain times (of the month) thanksfully i muzzle up when i notice !!

I always enjoyed laughing... Nowadays i find fun, and good feeling in the simplest of ways, and oftennwhen amnnotnlooking for it.

Glad to hear you are enjoying life too and bringing smiles into the lives of others :-)

Clueless said...

Fun is always important in any process of any type of healing or recovery. But, for some it is a defense. I find the most important part is to just be myself...what I am feeling, thinking and doing at the moment without judgement of yourself. Just a few thoughts from a complete stranger.

take care,
CC

Willa said...

I am so guilty of this, Irish. And I'm trudging towards the five-year mark. Yep, I need to love life more and wear it like a loose garment. Just the last year has been tough times (unemployment). However, I have been laughing at lot during work lately, for good reasons!

Thank you, I really needed to read this.

Let Go, Let God said...

Being within my first five years, I find that I too get bogged down in the gray serious place of trying to figure things out, but I'm learning to just let it go. There is growing more room for a full hearty laugh, and that's the best freedom. thanks for the reminder.

twodogsblogging said...

And with seriousness for me, often comes anger. Sometimes I want to get a message across in the worst way, but end up getting strident, angry and it defeats my message. Thanks!

An Irish Friend of Bill said...

hey nice to see you Ms 2 Dogs :)

Anonymous said...

Post!!!!!!

Johno :-)