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My Visit to an Alcoholics' Anonymous Meeting

2023-06-06 00:25:28

On 27th February 2014, I visited an anonymous alcohol treatment group meeting called Another Chance. Another opportunity is the meeting at Concord Baptist of Christ of Gardner C. Taylor Boulevard, 833, Brooklyn, NY. Another opportunity lasted more than 30 years ago and open debate on alcohol use and prevention every Thursday from 6 pm to 7 pm is taking place. The focus of this group's interaction with alcohol use and abuse is to ensure that not every member drinks a day, regardless of race, ethnicity, culture, and maintains healthy thoughts and emotions through use It is to prompt.

Narcotics Anonymous is a worldwide support program for alcohol addicts and drug addicts. Established in 1953, it is using the same 12 station mode as alcohol. They held more than 61,000 conferences in 129 countries around the world. It helps thousands of people get it and keep it clean. Therefore, the meeting will be held in the same basic way, whether the meeting is in Spokane, Washington or in Helsinki, Finland. This is how I am sure that movies and television are almost always wrong. This is a ridiculous and dangerous explanation six myths which drew a fact.

There are many similarities in the structure of the association between alcoholic anonymity and anti-drug anonymity. One of the main differences I saw at the Anonymous Anonymous Conference of Narcotics Anonymous Conference was that at the Anti-Virus Anonymous Conference, people who did not recognize or mention drug use were shared. In an anonymous conference on narcotics, "anti-drug unknown people do not differentiate substances, they are all inclusive", and alcohol was clearly stated to be a drug. "In anonymous meetings of anti-drug groups, it was said that other communities (alcoholics) anonymous people were accepted at this and all anti-drug anonymous meetings.

The anonymous conference of the anti-virus I attended was named 7-Day NA, it is located on 1212 North Wolfe Street and is called Dee's Place. Like the previously held alcohol anonymity conference, this place seems to be holding a support organization in a hidden quiet place. We enter through the backdoor. The backdoor seems to be performing in a way that ensures the identity of the participants. Just like the support group I participated last time, I looked up the room again, put a 12-step guide on the wall and wrote a relatively thick NA "basic text" textbook on the counselor's desk It was. More participants participated this time. About 20 women and men, mainly African-Americans and two white women participated, but most participants were women. All of these are either court orders or periodic daily attendance.