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“We were not problem users whose problems went away when we threw away our stash. When we stopped using, we found we had a problem with living; we were addicts.”
– Life with Hope, third edition, page 8
I have a living problem. This is both horrible and fantastic news; what is fantastic is that I’m not alone. I am not uniquely failing at the program because I sometimes still massively struggle with living life even though I have put the drugs down; not using doesn’t cure all of my unhappiness.
I might wish it were true that once I put down the marijuana, my life instantly became spectacular and I began floating around on white robes, gravid with wisdom, and smiling at everyone. Instead, I found that I could be a real juvenile jerk at times, outright vicious, and self-pitying at others; only now I didn’t have any drugs to blame!
I heard people in meetings say that their marijuana use had been a symptom of their disease and that their real problem was what was between their ears; that they suffered from uncontrolled bouts of thinking that stood to threaten their life at times.
Getting clean is a delicious miracle. I cannot do anything until I put the drug down. Once I do, though, I can’t afford to stop and pat my own back for the next several decades or so. Getting clean gives me a fighting chance to change my life. I am an addict and that fact doesn’t change when I turn away from marijuana.
Final thought: Today, I will remember that recovery is a delicious miracle that gives me a fighting chance to change 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.
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