Talk:Twelve-step program

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The data listed above are just a small sample of a very large body of empirical evidence indicating that AA is no better than doing nothing at all. The few studies that have shown any benefit to AA attendance are notable for their methodological flaws and are virtually worthless (Le et al. p. 603).
The chief reason for AA’s dismal record is obvious to the Atheist. Any “treatment” predicated on belief in an imaginary despot-in-the-sky must fail. We might as well turn our lives over to the Energizer Bunny. Piety Gets You Sobriety?

"Engergizer Bunny" part is a bit funny but not encyclopedic. The rant about AA might be OK to have in the AA article if it were qualified and NPOVed. There is no reason to have either statement in this article. --maveric149

)

Ignoring the quip about the Energizer Bunny, it remains factual that 12-step programs don't have empirical evidence to back up their claims of high success rates. What research has been done has found them at best equal to quitting solo. These organizations have also proven hostile to research into their success rates.

Narconon

One organization which is often confused with an "Anonymous" 12-step program, due to the intentional similarity of its name -- but is not one -- is Narconon?. Narconon isn't [Narcotics Anonymous]?; it is rather a branch (or "mission") of the Church of Scientology.

Can someone explain how Narconon differs from 12-steps? It doesn't seem like being a branch of the CoS would make much of a difference. -- Ark

Simple, Ark -- Narconon doesn't use the 12 Steps; it uses Scientology methods. Some of these include: the Purification Rundown, a course of vitamin overdoses and various other "treatments" believed to purify the body of toxins; the Communications Course TRs, a series of drills such as sitting impassively, avoiding laughter while a coach reads nonsense sentences, answering simple questions, and so forth; and the Hubbard Study Tech. None of these techniques are used by non-Scientology "self-help groups", including 12-step groups. --Fubar Obfusco

You may be thinking of Narcotics Anonymous, or NA, which *does* use the 12 steps of alcoholics anonymous 63.26.97.90 12:23, 5 February 2006 (UTC)Ned F.[reply]

BTW, I've overhauled the Narconon page with some more description of what they're about. The previous version was the "party line" from the organization itself, rather than an encyclopedist's description. It still needs work, if you're interested in the research -- I left several links on both sides. --Fubar Obfusco

Naive little ol' me. I had actually expected that here in Wikipedia, when someone posted a page on something, they would actually know what they were talking about. <sigh> So much for expectations.
A wise person once noted that everyone has the right to be wrong, and this page proves it. The Author has gone out of the way to post almost as much common misconception as opinion and posting it as fact.
I'm not going to waste time and space posting my opinion, based on my own personal experience gleened over several long, struggling years in a variety of venues. Suffice it to say that This Editor has done his homework.
NOTE: Al-Anon is a program started by Lois Wilson, wife of AA Co-Founder Bill Wilson, for the purpose of giving help and support to family members of alcoholics. It is a program based on the 12-Steps of AA. Their focus is somewhat centered in chapters 8) To Wives, and 9)The Family Afterwards of the book Alcoholics Anonymous. NarAnon is to Narcotics Anonymous as Al-Anon is to Alcoholics Anonymous. -- Davjohn

Big Book

Added reference to "Big Book" and a paragraph on different ways of interpreting program literature. morimom

Capitalization of Bible

It's not common for Bible to be uncapitalized. Should this be changed?

Jdavidb 17:45, 23 Feb 2004 (UTC)

"He established the tradition within the "Anonymous" 12-step programs of using only his first name." Who exactly was this, Bill or Bob? --Fermatprime 14:16, 11 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Add to category mental health?

I am currently trying to populate category:mental health. I thought I would canvas opinion on whether the Twelve-step programme as a mental health promoting model would be seen as appropriate for addition to the category. --Vincej 13:27, 20 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]

I would certainly agree. DirkK 20:46, 20 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]
I have added category: twelve-step program to category:mental health.--Vincej 17:33, 26 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]

AA is not a religious program

I'm really sick of hearing all of these people critisizing Alcoholics Anonymous. I am a member of AA and I am a far cry from a christion organization. I have never even once felt pressured into believing anything in particular about God and have never once had anyone try to push their concept of God onto me. It is true that the word God can be found many times in the Big Book. The word God to me is inclusive and doesn't refer to any particular diety. I believe this was what Bill Wilson intended. It whould be remembered that there is not a single reference to Jesus in all of AA literature as far as I'm aware. I was a staunch atheist before comming to the program. Just because you believe in God does not make you a christion any more than drinking makes you an alcoholics. I don't have the luxury as some of you do of not believing in anything. Alcoholism is a LIFE OF DEATH SITUATION. You don't have to believe in ANYTHING in this program if you don't want to. Yes, many more people have tried this program than have succeeded in staying sober. But how many people have just stopped drinking and remained miserable. Drinking is not the main problem. It's the dysfunctional thinking that leads to drinking that is the main problem for alcoholics and is the main focus of Alcoholics Anonymous. This, I feel is something that many people outside the program misunderstand.

Thanks for your opinion. I think that most people would consider belief in a deity to be a "religious belief" -- regardless of whether that deity is the Christian God, or a Deist God, or any other sort of god. Since the Twelve Steps make explicit literal reference to belief and dependence upon God, I don't see how we could be consistent if we said that AA was entirely non-religious.
The main reason that this was mentioned in the article at all has to do with the First Amendment issues around the U.S. courts or prisons requiring inmates to attend AA. Under the Constitution, no U.S. government agency has the right to compel someone to express a religious belief. (This is why public-school studens can't be punished for refusing to recite the Pledge of Allegiance, for instance.) So insofar as AA involves a belief in a deity, U.S. courts can't require inmates or probationers to participate. This is a legal issue that has been raised and answered in the courts -- the Supreme Court let stand the 2nd Circuit's ruling in Warner v. Orange County Department of Probation to this effect.
Since then, the religion issue has also been raised as a contrast between AA and other models such as Rational Recovery. This seems to be a worthwhile contrast to make. --FOo 18:06, 27 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]
This seems to be mainly a semantic debate. The United States forces all children to pledge allegiance to "one nation under God", invokes God on all its currency, begins its legislative sessions with prayers, etc. Does that mean that the US government is religious? Probably, but perhaps no more so than AA is, with it's "Higher Power" and "God, as we understood Him". Is AA "religious"? I'd say so, but I think it's a matter of degree; it seems to be less religious than a church or sect, or maybe a public school in Kansas, but probably more so than RR.
I know that AA members like to say that it's "spiritual, not religious", but this is a distinction which makes no difference for a lot of people. Spirituality is widely considered a religious concept, no matter how few the number of spirits or how vaguely defined. Also, although AA is not affiliated with any particular religious doctrine or sect, in some groups, especially in the Bible Belt, some AA members exert a strong Christian influence, often intimidating those who do not believe likewise.
Since AA, itself, says that it has no monopoly on treatment for the alcoholic, its members have no need to be opposed to more secular alternatives. If courts and other government agencies allow individuals to choose their treatment, then I don't think that there would be any problem with AA being one of the possible choices. --Nike 02:49, 28 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]
I think you might want to review a few facts before coming to a conclusion on the relevance of religion to this article.
The U.S. certainly does not "force all children to pledge allegiance to 'one nation under God'". See our article on the Pledge of Allegiance -- requiring the Pledge was ruled unconstitutional in the 1940s thanks to lawsuits brought by Jehovah's Witnesses, whose religious beliefs preclude swearing allegiance to a government. Reciting the Pledge is a common practice in U.S. schools, but it is unlawful for a public school to make it mandatory.
Likewise, at issue in Warner v. Orange County was whether a drunk driver could be required by the state, as part of a probation sentence, to attend AA. As the court put it: "Warner claimed that a probation condition imposed on him as part of a criminal sentence, which required him to attend meetings of Alcoholics Anonymous ("A.A."), forced him to participate in religious activity in violation of the First Amendment's Establishment Clause [...]." [1]
The claim that AA is "non-sectarian" was explicitly dismissed by the court: "The County argues further that the non-sectarian nature of the A.A. experience immunizes its use of religious symbolism and practices from Establishment Clause scrutiny. The argument is at the very least factually misleading, for the evidence showed that every meeting included at least one explicitly Christian prayer. Furthermore, the claim that non-sectarian religious exercise falls outside the First Amendment's scrutiny has been repeatedly rejected by the Supreme Court."
Why does this matter? Why does it need to be described in an encyclopedia article? Well, the religious character of AA has been central in a court case which forbade government agencies in the U.S. from imposing AA attendance as a condition of probation. That's a pretty significant fact. --FOo 03:31, 28 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Did I say that AA was not religious? Or that it did not matter? No. Of course it is. My point was that there is no need for AA members to deny it. If they can admit to being "spiritual", then they should admit to being "religious", if the definition of "religious" includes sprituality, and does not require specific beliefs. Unitarianism is considered a religion, after all. I know that they don't want to turn away the non-religious, but in that case they should just drop the religious baggage, instead of insisting that they can act religious without being religious. And they can still accept people from the courts, if the courts provide other options, which should not be a problem, since their own Big Book says that they have no monopoly. To continue to insist that they are not religious, at the same time that they are using the Lord's Prayer and such, simply makes them look delusional or dishonest, and therefore harms the reputation of AA.
As for the Pledge, I was drawing a comparison, which is still valid. AA members are not forced to pray or even to express a belief in God. Just like in school, they can be the ostracized weirdo who refuses participate. I went to public shool, so I know what it was like. Not mandatory? No, they don't force you to say it, but you are forced to sit through it, even if you keep your mouth shut, and face peer pressure from the group. Just like in AA. --Nike 20:41, 28 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

AA is NOT a religion, period. I am a religious person, a clergymember, in fact. I am also very familiar with AA, having worked as a substance abuse counselor and psychiatric technician, although I am not myself an alcoholic. In my role as a clergymember, I focus on both beliefs and behavior. When working with people who are alcoholics or addicts in a treatment context, I focus only on behavior, on action. IOW, while it is strongly suggested to AA or NA members that they pray, it is not REQUIRED for membership (In AA, for example, "the only requirement for membership is a desire to stop drinking") and one does not necesarily have to believe in any god in order to engage in this behavior, or any other such practice. As has been noted, one's "Higher Power" can be the group, the program ("Good Orderly Direction") or whatever inspires one to stay clean and sober one day at a time. As heard at meetings, many members of AA and/or NA have said, "I don't have any spiritual beliefs, but I have a spiritual practice."

Obviously, this begs some questions, such as, "What exactly is 'spirituality' anyway?" The answer to that question, whether from a religious or a 12-Step perspective, has to do with RELATIONSHIPS. IOW, spirituality is concerned with how one relates to oneself, others, the universe as a whole and any deity that one may believe in. Obviously, alcoholism or other addictions significantly screw up these relationships. The 12 Steps are designed such that the victims of such diseases may heal these relationships by working the program. Another question, perhaps more basic, has to do with the idea of engaging in prayer (or some forms of meditation) absent a belief in a deity. Well, from a non-religious perspective, perhaps such prayer is a form of "self talk"; perhaps I am simply addressing a part of myself not ordinarily accessible to conventional consciousness, perhaps a part of me which partakes in what Jung called "the collective unconscious," if such exists. In any event, I suspect the vast majority of AA and NA members who have achieved significant time clean and sober (a year or more, perhaps) would state that prayer has played a significant part in that process, regardless of belief, and that would include all such members who are atheists or agnostics. In sum, the issue is behavior, not belief, and the latter is what is a specifically religious issue.--Midnite Critic 05:17, 1 October 2005 (UTC)[reply]

I, for one, never called AA "a religion". I merely said that it is "religious". That is, it has some obvious religious characteristics, but I would agree with you that it does not qualify as a full-fledged religion. The AA program is the 12 Steps, which refer repeatedly to God, so the AA program is to some extent religious.
I am an AA member, have been for many years, and I don't don't have a problem with AA being called "religious", even though I am personally not very religious. You might call me "agnostic" or "atheist", and I have read quite a bit of Jung. I can tolerate "God" on my money and in the Pledge of Allegiance, and in AA. I don't see the need to deny it. If AA wants to be completely non-religious, it should remove the word "God" and use secular terms. And stop using the Lord's Prayer, which at least NA has done. --Nike 06:06, 1 October 2005 (UTC)[reply]
As a longtime member of AA, you know that the emphasis in the 12-Step programs is on ACTION, not belief. Besides the obvious non-sectarian nature of the 12-Step programs, this quality, more than anything else, separates them from religions, which, almost by definition, are "belief systems." Further, I would argue that while these programs indeed are "spiritual," (see above), because of this lack of a religious belief system they are not religious. As far as the "Our Father" goes, while it is Christian in origin, it contains nothing that is specifically Christian in content. Further, as you know, no one is required to participate in reciting the prayer when it is used at AA meetings (or the "Serenity Prayer" for that matter). It is also important to note that a primary reason to stress the non-sectarian/non-religious nature of AA, for example, is so that it remains welcoming to ANY "alcoholic who still suffers" regardless of religious belief or lack thereof. Finally, I would suggest you Google "atheistic spirituality". You'll get some interesting hits. --Midnite Critic 06:24, 1 October 2005 (UTC)[reply]
First of all, AA is not "atheistic". The 12 Steps and AA literature make frequent references to God. Secondly, "belief" is the 2nd Step. Now, I would not argue with you that AA isn't "non-sectarian", because it is not affiliated with any specific sect or denomination, but I guess some judge figured that it is sectarian because most groups recite the LP, which is Christian, even though it's not specific to a particular branch of Christianity. Whatever. All I am saying is that AA has some religious aspects. I am not saying that "AA is a religion", or even that it is sectarian (aside from being generally monotheistic with heavy Christian influences). The point is, that no matter how stenuously and repeatedly AA members insist that AA is not religious at all, others are not going to buy it, so why bother? Distinguishing between "religious" and "spiritual" doesn't work when talking to people who don't distinguish between the two. Believe me, I gave up wasting my time with that decades ago. What it really boils down to is semantics, and you cannot win a semantic debate because it's about definitions, and theirs is different from yours. So fine, let's just concede that, by the definition of most, AA has religious aspects (just like the US government does) and move on to more important issues. Whether others wish to label AA as "religious" or not, AA doesn't need to defend itself against that. Hell, you don't have to tell me about "atheistic spirituality"; I was posting about that on BBSs back in the 80s.
As for "welcoming to ANY 'alcoholic who still suffers' regardless of religious belief or lack thereof", that depends less upon what others say about AA, and more upon what AA members, AA groups and the AA service structure does. AA gives every newcomer a heavy dose of God when s/he walks in the door, with the Lord's Prayer thrown on top, amen! Then when AA members say, "AA is not religious", they sound crazy, stupid or just disingenuous. Far better to simply cop to it, say that, yes, there are some religious aspects to AA, but one does not need to become religious to benefit from it. But that's hard to do when there are many AA members and groups saying that you can't stay sober unless you believe in and turn your life over to God. Sure, I can view that simply as a metaphor, but most mean it literally. --Nike 05:16, 2 October 2005 (UTC)[reply]

The main reason I feel AA is not a religious program is that when I hear most people speaking of religion and AA I believe what they really mean is Christianity and AA. Yes, there is a lot of talk about God in AA. It is in fact the keystone of the entire program. I can't speak for anybody who may have had an adverse experience at an AA meeting but I, myself have never had anyone at a meeting try to force their conception of God onto me. The "Big Book" does make several allusion to christianity but I think the main reason for this is that Bill Wilson wasn't familier with many other religions. He himself says he was always suspicious of religion. He just drew on what he knew. I should also say that I am not a Christian. I don't think this makes me an odball at AA meetings in any way. The majority of my friends in AA probably are Christians just as the majority of most Americans are, but I don't really know for sure since I don't hear people sitting around AA meetings talking about Jesus dying on a cross for our sins. That is not what AA is about at all. Alcoholics Anonymous is probably the most religiously tolerant organization I have ever been involved in. We speak of God, yes. As I said earlier "God" is a rather generic term. Nobody in AA is going to tell you what God is, because to most people in AA God means something different to each one. Is it Jesus, Allah, Bramman, Budha, the Tao? The answer is that it's all of these and none. It's something one has to figure out for oneself. Hell, make up your own conception of God. That's what Bill Wilson did. The point is, we must get out of our Egos, quit feeding our insatiable desires, quit being a slave to our selfish passions, and get out of ourselves. Whether you agree with it or not, it has definately worked for me. Rather than make me guilt-riden, miserable, and weak, it has actually removed much of my guilt, made me happy and strong.


I'm glad that AA has worked for you, but in general there is plenty of criticism of AA that is perfectly valid and deserves to be included here, such as the "13th step" and the like. Also more of the history of AA showing how, like it or not, it comes from a religious/Christian background. There is quite a bit of data and analysis suggesting it is more cult like than you think. --Jakichan

The "spiritual" versus "religious" denial has been challenged in court on several occassions. In every case the court rules AA was in fact religious and the "spiritual and not religious" denial was deemed meaningless (and misleading). Several court cases saying AA is in fact religious is evidence. A court ruling (and in this case, several court rulings) is NOT POV or bias, it is evidence and things that can be evidenced belong in the article. Mr Christopher 00:23, 7 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

NPOV?

I don't think this article has a neutral point of view - it seems to be critical of 12 steps programs instead of presenting information in an unbiased way and allowing the readers to draw their own conclusions. This one section in particular, "A.A. is not a religious program", paints the false impression that A.A. is just a watered down form of Christianity and anyone who joins a 12 step program must rigidly adhere to these Christian tenets. As a Pagan with 23 yrs. sobriety in a 12 step program, I can assure you this is not the case. FilmGal 04:50, 5 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You assurances are noted but you'd do well to understand the goals and policies of Wikipedia (hint - promoting AA in a light AA members would like best is not one of them). Original research (such going to a meeting and reporting how AA works based on that meeting attendance) is not allowed in a Wiki article. What is expected is for editors to support what they write in the article with evidence.
Most ALL AA members deny AA is religious and cling to the meaningless thought stopping cliche' "spiritual and not religious". Well those denials are noted but they conflict with reality. Have you even read the rulings of the various court cases where the religiosity of AA was the basis of a lawsuit?
It is not appropriate for Wiki to decide whether AA is religious but instead the editors should provide evidence and the reader can make their own conclusion. Therefore, tt is MOST appropriate to include the religious versus spiritual controvery in this article as long as it is supported with evidence (and not original research i.e. "I am a member of AA and it aint so!"). Things like court case rulings are evidence. Mr Christopher 13:31, 7 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

These are the types of comments I'm referring to. For example, "cling to the meaningless and stopping cliche", "those denials", "I am a member of AA and it ain't so!", etc. are hardly neutral statements. Also, are other articles subjected to long discussions over the pertinence of court rulings? FilmGal 06:51, 15 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The fact that the religiosity of AA is debated is a fact and belongs in the article. The fact that numerous courts have ruled on the subject are relevant. Thousands (if not tens of thousands) of people have been sentenced to AA by the courts and a few of those sentences have been challenged. Most courts no longer sentence one to AA meeting or they give the convicted a choice of AA and other programs to avoid violating the Establishment Clause. Yes the debate over the religiosity and ensuing court cases are relevant.
And your denial that AA is religious is noted, probably most AA members deny AA is religious so it is nothing we have not heard before. But that does not make AA non-religious. The biggest objection newcomers have to AA is the religiosity. Good grief how many steps mention god and higher powers? Most AA meeting close with the serenity prayer or lords prayer? But I will agree with you that AA members are taught not to view AA as religious and instead substitute "spiritual" instead. The article should reflect the religiosity debate and those comments should be well supported.
More importanlty what sentence in the article do you find POV and how would you rewrite it? Mr Christopher 14:44, 15 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

over complicating

It's amazing to see so many people over complicating something as simple as the 12 step program. They coined the term "keep it simple" for this very reason. Too often people try to over analize the simplest things and before you know it their way out in left field. Larquitte 20:18, 6 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The 12 steps are a religion and I and many others do not belive in that religion. An encyclopedia should be truthful and calling 12-steps a religion in itself is truthful!


As I mentioned above Wiki should not take a stand on this issue and should instead focus on building an article that is well supported. That is Wiki policy Mr Christopher 13:33, 7 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

M Christopher ridiculously claims the high ground of Wikipidia as not being a place to represent the 12 Steps as A.A. would like to have them represented. All while using the article to represent the 12 Steps in the way HE would like to represent them. That is intellectually dishonest and manipulative.

71.208.211.146 17:59, 20 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

.

Merge "Acting Out"

A merge tag has been sat on Acting out for a few weeks now, proposing a merger with this article. No mergefrom tag was added here though, and the proposal hasn't received any comments. I don't know the subject so don't have an opinion, I am simply trying to stimulate debate so the proposal can be closed one way or the other. Kcordina 09:54, 10 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


I deleted the tag. The article Acting out is just one sentence "long". There's nothing to merge. :-) --Arne Neem 09:40, 19 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

== This Wikipedia article on 12 Step Programs is An Opinion Piece and is Not An Encyclopedic Description-- Very Innapropriate for an Online Encyclopedia.


Feedback-- this is an overly harsh and overly poltically-correct interpretation of the 12 Steps.

This Wikipedia article is not a description of the 12 Steps, it is a critique of the 12 steps.

Thus it far oversteps the stated mission of wikipedia as being an online encyclopedia and instead reads like a thesis paper attacking the 12 steps. Thesis papers by definition do not describe, they take positions, they take sides.

That would be fine for a thesis paper but has nothing to do with describing something in an encyclopedic sense.

This article is all opinion from start to finish. It argues about the effectiveness of the 12 steps and it argues other issues related to the 12 steps from start to finish. All it does is promote the authors opinions rather than simply describing what 12 step programs are. Very politically motivated and very manipulative!


If opinion is all that Wikipedia wants-- here are some of my opinions on the subject of the 12 steps--


Although I too am critical of 12 Step programs and aware of their flaws, I nevertheless balance that criticism with appreciation that 12 Step Programs saved my life.

Wikipedia should get politics out of the process here and find a more neutral writer or editor-- this writer clearly has political biases that saturate the writing here with the political agenda of wanting to oppose or overly-criticise A.A. and other 12 Step Programs because of the higher power concept.


An appropriate wikipedia writer (and article) for this subject would be descriptive rather than evaluative. Describing rather than evaluating the 12 steps and 12 step programs.

But since the main article is heavily laced with opinion, here are some more opinions from me--


I do agree with one main thrust of the writers argument however-- that A.A. (and the 12 Steps in general) are not the only way to get better.

Additionally I agree that Court-mandated attendence at 12 Step meetings forces spirituality on those who may not want it or may not be predisposed to benefiting from it. Courts and also State and Federal governments have no place getting involved in 12 Step programs in this way and participation should never be forced on anyone.

It should however be noted that 12 Step programs have a stated (and written) policy of "attraction not promotion". So don't blame 12 Step programs for what the courts are doing.


Implying that Bill Wilson and Bob Smith were allegedly struck sober by their own personal spiritual experiences crosses an editorial line here and shows the writer to have an awful lot of bias.

It would be fine to say that Bill Wilson and Doctor Bob 'reported' or 'related' that they had spiritual experiences which lifted their desire to drink--

But instead this Wikipedia article snidely describes their experiences as "unusual cures".

Most telling is the fact that the writer attacks the A.A./12 Step seperation of the concept of religion from the concept of spirituality-- and essentially claims that all spirituality is religious--

"The 'spirituality' idea was originally defined by Wilson as reliance on the Creator — truly a religious idea."

In fact belief in some kind of God is a different matter than defining that God or codifying the dictates of that God. One need go no further than a dictionary to find the definitions of 'spirituality' and 'religion' as being quite different. Spirituality is defined as a general sense of God or transcendent reality, whereas religion dictates who God is, what

God says etc. So contrary to the authors argued opinion (which has no place in an online encylopedic reference anyway) there is a significant difference between spirituality and religion.

Furthermore--

I have attended 12 step meetings for 18 years and I can tell you that 1) people in 12 step programs don't have to believe in God at all, and 2) people in 12 steps programs are also free to define their concept of God in any they want personally want.


I have heard, thousands of times in A.A. meetings, "You can make a chair your higher power if you like, just as long as you develop trust that something can help you".

The author also expresses a huge bias by repeatedly attacking the disease concept of alcoholism and even putting the labeling of alcoholism as a "problem" in quotes, as if the very idea that drinking compulsively being a 'problem' is somehow suspect.


This smacks of a writer who is so intellectually driven that reality simply becomes a canvas that one paints over with ones own ideas.


Sorry, but the reality is that compulsive drinking (and other compulsive addictions)are serious illness that have destroyed and damaged countless lives and no amount of intellectual 're-thinking' can paint over that objective fact.

The reality also remains that A.A, and other 12 Step programs have helped millions of people to stop drinking, drugging and other compulsive patterns of behavior (and I am one of those people).

It is also true that the 12 Steps do not work for a lot of people-- that courts and governments should never force participation in them-- and that other treatment approaches work as well (and more progress in the area of treatment is needed).

It would be nice if wikipeda would find an author that was less academic, less looking down upon reality from an ivory tower, and more someone from the front lines of real life experience to comment on the 12 Steps and what they can and can't do for people.

One could easily have written an article that was reflective of the flaws and limitations of the 12 Step programs (as well as their great contribution to the recovery of milions of people) without producing something that is so soaked in gross political bias.

Sincerely,

Phil M. Recovered from crippling OCD for 18 years thanks to the 12 Step programs.

Also 80% recovered from crippling social anxiety disorder thanks to 12 step programs.

(I have attended A.A.meetings for many years in order to learn and use the 12 steps, and as parallel 12 step programs for OCD and social anxiety disorder emerged, I attended them as well for years. I know the steps don't help everyone, but they have sure helped me).

Please find a new author and start over from scratch. This article is so extremely biased that it is not even worth editing--

P.S. It is telling and almost humorous that the author writes the phrase at one point "crictics of 12 step programs" while it is so obvious that the author is a critic of 12 Step Programs and this whole article is not an encyclopoedic description, but is nothing more than a critique.

Very sloppy and irresponsible! You can't tweak an op-ed column and make it into an encyclopedic reference. You need to trash it and start from scratch.

I was told in (and saved) a Wikipedia personal message from Mr. Christopher that I could post this here.

== This Wikipedia article on 12 Step Programs is An Opinion Piece and is Not An Encyclopedic Description-- Very Innapropriate for an Online Encyclopedia.


Feedback-- this is an overly harsh and overly poltically-correct interpretation of the 12 Steps.

This Wikipedia article is not a description of the 12 Steps, it is a critique of the 12 steps.

Thus it far oversteps the stated mission of wikipedia as being an online encyclopedia and instead reads like a thesis paper attacking the 12 steps. Thesis papers by definition do not describe, they take positions, they take sides.

That would be fine for a thesis paper but has nothing to do with describing something in an encyclopedic sense.

This article is all opinion from start to finish. Rather than providing an encyclopedic description, it instead becomes a polemical opinion piece on the 12 steps. All it does is promote the authors opinions rather than simply describing what 12 step programs are. Very politically motivated and very manipulative!


If opinion is all that Wikipedia wants-- here are some of my opinions on the subject of the 12 steps--


Although I too am critical of 12 Step programs and aware of their flaws, I nevertheless balance that criticism with appreciation that 12 Step Programs saved my life.

Wikipedia should get politics out of the process here and find a more neutral writer or editor-- this writer clearly has political biases that saturate the writing here with the political agenda of wanting to oppose or overly-criticise A.A. and other 12 Step Programs because of the higher power concept.


An appropriate wikipedia writer (and article) for this subject would be descriptive rather than evaluative. Describing rather than evaluating the 12 steps and 12 step programs.

But since the main article is heavily laced with opinion, here are some more opinions from me--


I do agree with one main thrust of the writers argument however-- that A.A. (and the 12 Steps in general) are not the only way to get better.

Additionally I agree that Court-mandated attendence at 12 Step meetings forces spirituality on those who may not want it or may not be predisposed to benefiting from it. Courts and also State and Federal governments have no place getting involved in 12 Step programs in this way and participation should never be forced on anyone.

It should however be noted that 12 Step programs have a stated (and written) policy of "attraction not promotion". So don't blame 12 Step programs for what the courts are doing.


Implying that Bill Wilson and Bob Smith were allegedly struck sober by their own personal spiritual experiences crosses an editorial line here and shows the writer to have an awful lot of bias.

It would be fine to say that Bill Wilson and Doctor Bob 'reported' or 'related' that they had spiritual experiences which lifted their desire to drink--

But instead this Wikipedia article snidely describes their experiences as "unusual cures".

Most telling is the fact that the writer attacks the A.A./12 Step seperation of the concept of religion from the concept of spirituality-- and essentially claims that all spirituality is religious--

"The 'spirituality' idea was originally defined by Wilson as reliance on the Creator — truly a religious idea."

In fact belief in some kind of God is a different matter than defining that God or codifying the dictates of that God. One need go no further than a dictionary to find the definitions of 'spirituality' and 'religion' as being quite different. Spirituality is defined as a general sense of God or transcendent reality, whereas religion dictates who God is, what

God says etc. So contrary to the authors argued opinion (which has no place in an online encylopedic reference anyway) there is a significant difference between spirituality and religion.

Furthermore--

I have attended 12 step meetings for 18 years and I can tell you that 1) people in 12 step programs don't have to believe in God at all, and 2) people in 12 steps programs are also free to define their concept of God in any they want personally want.


I have heard, thousands of times in A.A. meetings, "You can make a chair your higher power if you like, just as long as you develop trust that something can help you".

The author also expresses a huge bias by repeatedly attacking the disease concept of alcoholism and even putting the labeling of alcoholism as a "problem" in quotes, as if the very idea that drinking compulsively being a 'problem' is somehow suspect.


This smacks of a writer who is so intellectually driven that reality simply becomes a canvas that one paints over with ones own ideas.


Sorry, but the reality is that compulsive drinking (and other compulsive addictions)are serious illness that have destroyed and damaged countless lives and no amount of intellectual 're-thinking' can paint over that objective fact.

The reality also remains that A.A, and other 12 Step programs have helped millions of people to stop drinking, drugging and other compulsive patterns of behavior (and I am one of those people).

It is also true that the 12 Steps do not work for a lot of people-- that courts and governments should never force participation in them-- and that other treatment approaches work as well (and more progress in the area of treatment is needed).

It would be nice if wikipeda would find an author that was less academic, less looking down upon reality from an ivory tower, and more someone from the front lines of real life experience to comment on the 12 Steps and what they can and can't do for people.

One could easily have written an article that was reflective of the flaws and limitations of the 12 Step programs (as well as their great contribution to the recovery of milions of people) without producing something that is so soaked in gross political bias.

Sincerely,

Phil M. Recovered from crippling OCD for 18 years thanks to the 12 Step programs.

Also 80% recovered from crippling social anxiety disorder thanks to 12 step programs.

(I have attended A.A.meetings for many years in order to learn and use the 12 steps, and as parallel 12 step programs for OCD and social anxiety disorder emerged, I attended them as well for years. I know the steps don't help everyone, but they have sure helped me).

Please find a new author and start over from scratch. This article is so extremely biased that it is not even worth editing--

P.S. It is telling and almost humorous that the author writes the phrase at one point "crictics of 12 step programs" while it is so obvious that the author is a critic of 12 Step Programs and this whole article is not an encyclopoedic description, but is nothing more than a critique.

Very sloppy and irresponsible! You can't tweak an op-ed column and make it into an encyclopedic reference. You need to trash it and start from scratch.

Sean7phil 16:30, 20 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Wikipedia is Not a Soapbox

Clearly this Wikipedia article on the 12 Step Programs violates Wikipedias policy of not being a soapbox.

See below--'' Sean7phil 16:29, 20 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Wikipedia is not a publisher of original thought Wikipedia is not a place to publish your own thoughts and analyses. Please do not use Wikipedia for any of the following:

[edit] Wikipedia is not a soapbox Wikipedia is not a soapbox, or a vehicle for propaganda and advertising. Therefore, Wikipedia articles are not:

Propaganda or advocacy of any kind. Of course, an article can report objectively about such things, as long as an attempt is made to approach a neutral point of view. You might wish to go to Usenet or start a blog if you want to convince people of the merits of your favorite views. You can also use Wikinfo which promotes a "sympathetic point of view" for every article.


BOy is this Wkipepedia Artcle on the 12 Steps Adovacy! It totally violates Wikipedias rules!

Sean7phil 16:29, 20 May 2006 (UTC) .[reply]

This Article Lists Sources From 9 Critics of 12 Step Programs and Only References 1 (one) Supporter: Very Biased

If you look in the footnotes of this article in Critics and Supporters Sections, this Article Lists Sources From 9 Critics of 12 Step Program and Only References 1 Supporter.

9 critics books are cited but only the book of one supporter?!!

That shows a huge bias of the author of this article (or the net article) against 12 Step programs.

This article is not fixable and should be removed and a truley neutral author should be found to write a description of 12 Step Programs rather than a critique of them.

Wikipedia is not a soapbox-- it is not a place to critique things-- it is an online encyclopedia designed to describe things.


Dear Wikipedia admins--

The 12 Step Programs aren't perfect but they have saved millions of lives. Please make it a priority to clear the way for a more fair article to describe them here.

Phil M.

.