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“The joy of my life today is awareness of the details of life and in having the honesty not to want to change them.”
– Sharing Our Experience, Strength, and Hope: Personal Stories of Marijuana Addicts, MA pamphlet
I felt a lot of shame and guilt when I was smoking marijuana. I was ashamed of hurting the people that I loved. I felt guilty that I was unable to pursue my goals because I was high. I tried to hide the negative feelings that I had about myself. I was full of loneliness and despair.
In MA meetings, I heard people say, “you can’t love someone else until you love yourself.” As I worked the Steps with my sponsor, I realized that loving myself was essential to stopping my past destructive behaviors. My negative self-esteem influenced my desire to escape my feelings with marijuana. My sponsor told me that these feelings can also trigger a relapse if they persist. By doing the Steps suggested in MA, I learned how to positively build my self-esteem and my belief in myself. I asked my Higher Power to help me with my recovery; I knew that I couldn’t recover by myself.
With recovery, I have learned that I am OK just the way I am. My Higher Power has unconditional love for me and this love brings me serenity and fulfillment. I want to improve my conscious contact with my Higher Power, so prayer and meditation have become part of my daily routine. I read a daily meditation every morning and I give thanks to my Higher Power every day.
Final thought: Today, my Higher Power leads me to a life of love; loneliness and isolation are no longer a part of my life.
Living Every Day with Hope – Copyright © 2025 Marijuana Anonymous World Services. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced by any means without the written permission of the publisher. Marijuana Anonymous groups have been granted limited permission to quote Living Every Day with Hope.

Where Marijuana Anonymous members spark creativity by sharing experience, strength, and hope.
Written by, Anonymous My journey into recovery starts as a pre-teen. I was a survivor of childhood cancer– a kidney cancer– and my parents were superstitious so they did not tell me about my cancer until my pediatrician shamed them about this when I turned 10, 6 years after my treatment. I did not know…

Written by, Jennifer W. Yesterday is goneToday has just begunTomorrow is not yet hereThe clouds are shiftingThe fog is liftingAnd everything is made clear We can’t go back or forwardWe only have todaySo let us bow our heads and prayThat we stay in the momentNow and foreverBecause We only have today One was never enoughI…

Written by, Michael M. For me, sunny summer days were made for using. At the pool. Before work. After work. For BBQ’s. For hikes in the woods. My friend used to say that weed was a “guaranteed good time.” And for addicted me, summer was prime “party” time. My mind wants to reminisce about how…

Written by, Cheryl B. You didn’t flinch.I noticed.Even when I unraveledlike thread pulled too far. You didn’t rush to fixor offer polished truths.You just stood—still,present. That mattered morethan you’ll ever know. I spilled stories,pixelated and flickering,sent across flat screensand silent hours. You received themwithout question,without recoil.Patient as a treein soft wind. I expected judgment—maybe even…

Created by, Callie B. Published in A New Leaf – September 2025

“We recover by the steps we take, not the meetings we make.” Published in A New Leaf – August 2025

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