Steps 1-3 brought me into the SA program (vs. just participating in meetings). Steps 4-9 under the guidance of a sponsor took me though the process of reconciling with my past and connecting rightly with God and others. Steps 10-12 keep me in right relationship with God and others and show me a path ahead to keep growing spiritually.
The Sexaholics Anonymous book introduces Steps 4-10 by titling them “The Toughest Act in Town” (97). Nobody is saying these Steps are not hard work! I agree wholeheartedly that they are necessary for real growth to happen (vs. just working Steps 1-3 and just staying sober). “Sadly, many men and women with years of physical sobriety in Twelve Step programs never make the breakthrough into the heart of the program and true recovery. The biggest obstacle seems to be Steps Four through Ten—the core substance of the program” (SA 97).
Steps 4-9 provided me with some painful experiences, completely necessary pain if I was ever going to grow up and face reality. The thorough inventory work on my past (Step 4), confession of my wrongs to myself, God and my sponsor (Step 5), and facing my many character defects honestly enough to really want to be rid of them (Step 6), could not be called “happy days.” But finishing that process by taking it through to the direct amends to others in Step 9 meant that I really could “clear away the wreckage” of my past.
I no longer have to hide from myself and others. I know I can admit my wrongs to myself, God and others. I know that God loves me and will continue to do for me what I can’t do for myself. I know that I have done (am doing) what I can to make things right with others. That “dreadful load of guilt” has dropped from my shoulders. I can “lift my head, look the world in the eye, and stand free.” None of that could have happened without working Steps 4-9.
Anonymous, Taichung, Taiwan