PACE Newsletter

April 2019 

Positive Action Changes Everything

April Fools

and

Happy Easter!

MHIG info

Weekly Meetings

Updates

 

Port Ewen Sunday - Started back up on 4/7/19

 

Wappingers Falls Tuesday - contact Yvette @ 845-401-7946 

Closings

 

Woodstock  - Monday

Rhinebeck  - Wednesday

 Mid-Hudson Intergroup

Spring Retreat 

A Weekend Delve

Into the New 12&12
 

A weekend retreat for members of
Overeaters Anonymous

May 17-19, 2019
St. Lawrence Friary
Beacon, NY 12508

Non-Resident Participant openings are still available until April 30th. 

 
Registration Flyer

OA Region 6 Info

2019 Convention

is oh so close to us in

White Plains, NY

October 18- 20

 
Link to Convention Info

OA WSO Info

2019 Holiday 

Phone Marathons

for 712+

Phone Intergroup

Friday, April 19 Good Friday

Searching for Forgiveness with Step 4

Saturday, April 20 Passover

This Too Shall Pass - You Are Not Alone

Sunday, April 21 Easter

The Power of a Spiritual Awakening

 
Click here for Phone Details
Click here to read the OA World Service Organization News Bulletin | April 2019

Step 4 - Courage

Tradition 4 - Autonomy

Step Four - Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.

Step 4: Searching Out Shame

 

In OA, we rely strongly on AA literature, and we are truly blessed to have it. I am infinitely grateful to AA and its founders and members. I do find, however, one critical difference between alcoholism and food addiction that, once addressed, finally gave me the freedom of back-to-back abstinence that eluded me for decades.

 

Members of AA can walk away from alcohol. As hard as it must be, they can find new activities and new friends. With the support of their program, fellowship, and higher power, they do not have to engage with their substance again.

 

The Step Four inventory in AA literature focuses on fears and resentments and has been enormously helpful, but there is a critical difference for me as an overeater that requires additional probing in my personal Step Four inventory. My food addiction is not to individual foods but to eating itself. I have to go head-to-head with my addiction three times a day. In order to do that abstinently, I have to delve deep. I believe strongly that my food struggle is an emotional struggle. I cannot be in emotional discord for long without it leading to a food struggle. Since I have to engage with my addiction every day, it puts me on very shaky ground to be in a state of emotional “dis-ease.”

 

I recently heard a helpful metaphor: If I wanted to replace the blades in a blender, I’d obviously have to turn the machine off. But would I then put my hand inside it? Of course not, because it might turn on if still plugged in. I’d first be sure to disconnect the power source, or the blades could start spinning and I could get badly hurt. Disconnecting the power source is key. So I had to ask myself, “What is the power source of my compulsion?”

 

For many OA members, the power source of our compulsions is not just fear and resentment, but shame, which is rooted in the codependency that developed in our dysfunctional childhoods. Shame is my power source. If I don’t address it, the power can kick on again with the slightest trigger. Before I healed my shame, for example, a critical comment by a co-worker or supervisor was enough to send me into relapse. Trying to abstain without understanding the power of shame was like trying to stop the blender by only pressing the off button. It invariably kicked on again and cut me with a relapse.

 

My experience is that I only became able to abstain peacefully and consistently when I began a searching and fearless Fourth Step journey into my shame and codependence. I then began to enjoy the greatest gift of all: comfort in my own skin. This comfort is glorious and precious in itself, and it has protected my abstinence, one day at a time, for over five years.

 

— Leslie O., Broad Brook, Connecticut USA

Lifeline - Posted on April 20, 2016

Tradition Four - Each group should be autonomous except in matters affecting other groups or OA as a whole.

Tradition Four: Beneficial Differences

 

Autonomy in OA is a really cool thing! I love how each meeting I go to is a bit different. My home group is a literature meeting where we study Conference-approved OA literature each week. I go to a Big Book meeting too. I also attend intergroup meetings whenever I can. Sometimes I listen to a recorded meeting. Each type of meeting is different, but all start with the Serenity Prayer and a reading of one or more of our OA Steps and Traditions.

 

I find it comforting that the underlying principles of each meeting are the same: We use the same Steps and Traditions; each group wants nothing more than the recovery of its members; and we base our program on spiritual matters rather than diets.

 

I trust that each meeting I attend submits to the Principles of OA as a whole. We all do our best to represent the OA program consistently, in a way that will not damage OA as a whole, and still meet the needs of the individuals who attend each meeting.

 

I hope someday to be able to travel and visit OA meetings in other states—maybe even in other countries. I trust that those meetings will protect our precious OA program the same way.

 

— Edited and reprinted from Common Bond newsletter, Western Michigan Intergroup, March/April 2015

​​​​​​LifeLine - Posted on April 20, 2016

Click here to subscribe to the OA Lifeline Magazine

Thank You! ...to All Our 

Contributors!

 

March donations:

 

  • Poughkeepsie
  • Middletown 

 

 

Your 7th tradition donations make all this possible.

 
Click here to contribute !

 

Please forward this newsletter to all your OA friends.

 

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Mid-Hudson Intergroup OA