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AA is a group of people whose drinking has caused their lives to become unmanageable in various ways: problems with relationships, work, school, legal problems, losses etc.

They support and encourage members to abstain from alcohol by attendance at several different types of meetings: speaker (a person tells his/her story of recovery); discussion meeting (discussion of topics relating to recovery from alcohol abuse); step meeting (discussion of how the program works by working through each of the AA 12 Steps).

There are AA groups in many countries around the world. Most towns of any size in the US have at least one meeting. They can be found by searching online or just looking in the phone book under Alcoholics Anonymous. New persons are encouraged to attend meetings at several groups if they are available in order to find one that is comfortable for them.

Members have sponsors in the group who are in recovery and have been sober and working the 12 steps themselves for some time. The sponsor helps the new member learn how the program works and assists him/her to establish and maintain sobriety. This is a close, personal relationship similar to a mentoring situation.

Members get to know each other and learn how to relate to others without the social lubrication of alcohol. They celebrate each member's progress throughout her/his recovery by recognizing sobriety milestones as they occur, for example, one, two, three, etc. months/years sober. These celebrations occur at each group one night per month for all members who have had a sobriety anniversary in that month.

AA is the program among all those available that yields the best results in terms of long-term abstinence from alcohol and improvement in functioning in life situations and relationships.

Most AA groups share space with a program called Al-Anon which is for friends and family of people with drinking problems. They have their own program with many similarities to the AA program.

2006-09-29 18:47:23 · answer #1 · answered by KIT J 4 · 1 2

The purpose of AA is found on pg 77 of the Big Book:

"Our real purpose is to fit ourselves to be of maximum service to God".

Quitting drinking comes second, this is also apparent in the steps, where half are about God or a "Higher Power" and only one is about alcohol. Yet they claim not to be religious.

AA's purpose in society is to provide the ILLUSION that something is being done about alcoholics without costing the state or taxpayers too much money. And that's all it is, illusion. AA's success rate is no better than the natural remission rate of 5%. However, people in AA are four times as likely to be be dead or binge drinking within a year as those who attempt quitting with no treatment at all.

2006-10-01 04:33:13 · answer #2 · answered by raysny 7 · 0 0

AA is a quasi-religious group devoted to getting alcoholics to quit using 12 "steps."

2006-09-29 18:20:50 · answer #3 · answered by giovanni9686 4 · 1 0

AA is an organization devoted to helping alchoholics stop drinking. That is their entire function.

2006-09-29 18:16:07 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

The founders of AA have been initially contributors of the Oxford communities a controvertial Evangelical stream that believed human beings would have gain direct touch with and direction from God. They have been out to transform the international. AA founders left and started AA because of the fact they have been purely attracted to changing alcoholics. additionally they had some association with the psychologist Carl Jung, who became somewhat non secular himself. AA's 12 steps is a reformation of the ideals of the Oxford communities. it quite is skillfully achieved for the time. i don't think of the founders have been undesirable, purely self deluded. Afterall they progressed AA against a history of super stigma and shame approximately alcoholism and that they have been drinkers that had pursued their habit to the gates of insanity. it's time to pass on, yet not had to slate AA'in the historic sense. AA is non secular in nature. AA contributors desire to attraction to on the brink of the concept it quite is non secular because of the fact they can't face the unpalatable fact despite if it is not. AA is somewhat a shaggy dog tale on the instant. yet it is the fault of rehabs owned via profiteers keen to income from the 12 step philosophy and staffed via ill-equiped former addicts who in basic terms serve to perpetuate gross imaturity and fable.

2016-10-18 05:53:31 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It's a great place to meet some beautiful chicks

2006-09-30 12:37:24 · answer #6 · answered by Boogerman 6 · 0 0

To get people to stop consuming alcoholic beverages, of course!

2006-09-29 18:20:46 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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