Sentences with phrase «find aa»

I suspect it's a battery issue but I couldn't find my AA supplies in the dark TV room — the electricity isn't working out there for some reason.
My god, the lengths they go to find a few more bushes... Shame they couldn't find any AA to rid those jaggies.
On Award booking, BA seems way expensive after factoring in surcharges and I don't know how to find AA space at 20K one - way coach — please shed lights & thank you very much!
Alaska uses the old, pre-devaluation AA award chart, so provided you can find AA availability, you can save tens of thousands of miles vs. using AAdvantage miles.
You can find AA's negotiated hotel rates at bookaahotels.com, where you can earn up to 10,000 bonus miles per night on select properties.
Actually I find AA to be a huge recruiter for the Christian religion not the other way around.
This could help many more problem drinkers and alcoholics who do not find either AA.
There is a sense of release in this, as there is a sense of satisfaction in the thought that his talk may have helped some new comer, perhaps several, to find the AA solution.
I find AA and other 12Step Groups to be pseudo-religous even when they say, as an organization, they are not.
Whether my new - found AA.
I found the AA citypack guide brilliant for outlining the level of accessibility of different venues.
It easily warrants dusting off the Wii, finding some AA batteries, and getting your waggle on for one last hurrah.
She could not get financial assistance from the BC SPCA or from anyone else to help her to spay and neuter the cats until she found AAS.
Still, you might have a reason to value American AAdvantage miles higher than United Mileage Plus, or you might have a problem finding AA availability for the dates you want, in which case, the United deal is great.
Prior to founding AAS, Beth was the President of Terranova Florida's largest 3rd party asset manager.

Not exact matches

That one can find purpose and sobriety while not embracing the exact structure of AA gives hope to those that are also atheist.
I personally believe that Jesus Christ is the true power behind AA, go back a little in the history of AA and see how it was founded, not the watered down version that is AA today.
Found this all over the place in Alcoholics Anonymous, leaving AA as well while staying sober.
Thus AA has found an answer to the alcoholic's deep feeling of isolation, loneliness, and rejection.
@Bill W Messenger: As an agnostic in AA, I found the chapter to which you refer, to be rather a disappointment as it seems to be written only from the perspective of those who were at one point either agnostic or atheist and had consequently found a faith.
A significant milestone in AA history was the First International Conference held in Cleveland in July, 1950, the fifteenth anniversary year of its founding.
Our book is meant t be suggestive only LOL God luck I have feeling AA will weather the hate as it has the last 75 + years and continue to reach out to those so desperately in need of sobriety for free LOL If you read this and want to get sober please try AA if it doesn't work for you find something that does.
Here she will find understanding and help in a group of wives who are attempting to deal with their own personality problems by applying AA principles.
AA is so well distributed that wherever a member goes he is likely to find a group.
Though the word «Christ» is not used in the AA approach, it would be difficult to find more Christlike concern and service than is found in AA at its finest.
A practical discussion of how a pastor can work with AA and get help from it is found in an article by Marty Mann, executive director of the National Council on Alcoholism, entitled «The Pastors» Resources in Dealing with Alcoholics.»
Representative of the many alcoholics who have found their way to AA and happy sobriety through the help of their clergymen is Bob P., who has been sober in AA for several years.
As a recovered alcoholic, who is a devoted churchman, put the matter: «Many people find so much more acceptance in AA than in the church, they make AA their church.»
It should be remembered that those who make AA their religion have found a measure of vital faith and service within its fellowship.
I think a lot of people assume here that her writing this was to foster «atheism» when in reality it was about her surviving and thriving... finding her «own» path within the the highly dogmatic and structured religious organization known as AA.
After many years of street ministry I found that if people are in need help it's best to direct them to a secular organization, like women's safe houses, food banks, AA, community colleges, community counselors, etc..
There are hard core AA members that would have you believe that you will drink if you don't find a higher power.
You'll find a wealth of information and newer, more enlightened ideas about treating substance abuse problems than you can imagine — just because they're not as widely known and universally accepted as AA doesn't mean they don't contain better, more effective ideas.
There's no such thing as joining AA, but one can join an AA group, and by doing so I have found over the last thirty years enough support to not be chased out of AA for my atheistic views.
I believe that Marya actually has found a way to «take» AA successfully, as opposed to thsoe MILLIONS who «Ja - HEE - zus» could not, did not and never will, HELP.
This issue is an extremely common topic at meetings and it is always stressed that believe in a Higher Power can be anything of your choosing and many AAs simply believe in the power of the group as a whole as their Higher Power (I have also know many people who started with this belief and later found faith in God).
I was hoping to hear some practical examples of how you found your way through AA without getting bogged down in the god question.
For a person to become an individual «Free of the alcoholic trails» progressive structures like in AA are a worthy endeavor and I find no fault through its» inception.
Willy - that dogmatic «sober but not recovering» statement is exactly what I found disturbing about AA.
She also would have found the «detractors» and critics of AA (consisting of a LOT of EX-AA members, in the form of: Orange-papers.org.
AA was founded by god and was lead by god... if you would look in the book of James in any Bible there you will find the Big Book.
Actually, I don't find this recent AA billboard as bad as the one from last year or their anti-Christian and anti-Mormon signs they had for the Democratic and Republican conventions, respectively.
He's an addict who «found» religion like every other «recovering» addict who goes to AA and then they're better than everyone else and tout they're religion.
I once knew an alcoholic in AA who had suffered through relapse after relapse, found sobriety, maintained it for 30 years and then relapsed again in his 70s.
Much has happened since the founding and developmental days of early AA.
I've since found out that thousands have done the same thing in the more than sixty - five years since AA.
The author's final chapters lay great stress on the work of the Holy Spirit in Christian healing; and many of the verses from the Bible that early AAs studied can be found cited by Hickson in these chapters — verses from the Gospels, from Acts, from James, from Corinthians, from Ephesians — and others dealing with the «gifts of healing.»
You can find the remarks of many in Appendix Three of my latest title Why Early AA.
To this day, I've never found or heard anything that indicates Bill Wilson disputed Dr. Bob's statement about the Bible's being the source of AA.
I've always found it a bit insulting that fully half of the 12 steps in AA involve submission to God.
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