Your cart is currently empty!
“The turning point for us was the decision to relinquish control. However, no matter how sincere our efforts, we do make mistakes. Then we admit our humanity and try again.”
– Life with Hope, first edition, page 14
In my early twenties, I was an active member in meeting rooms. I was able to maintain a few years of abstinence, but there was still much about the Twelve Steps I never fully understood. I resisted applying certain concepts to my recovery. I thought I had “completed” all the work and could just stop engaging with my recovery process. I forgot that I am powerless to manage my addiction, and once again I tried to control my use. All my previous gains of recovery went dormant as my life became increasingly unmanageable and my disease progressed to new levels of destruction. I became desperate for help, emotionally distraught, and I had no idea what to do.
Now in my mid-thirties, I found the humility to return to meetings. This time, I’m embracing recovery as if I were drowning and grabbing onto a life preserver. The gift of desperation made me open to finally surrendering to forces much greater than my ego. Not knowing what to do has opened me to receiving guidance from others, and given me a willingness to try a different way of being.
I am now actively applying the Steps to my life and letting go of the underlying trauma and fears that kept me using. I believe there is a possibility for healing the moment we begin to trust the unfolding process. I know I am powerless over marijuana. I reach out for help rather than always running away from myself. It is not always easy, but it is far more sustainable than my life of using. Now, I have a second chance to experience myself, other people, and my concept of Higher Powers in a new way.
Final thought: Today, I turn my desperation into a willingness to reach out for help. I have trust in this process.
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.
“I’m having positive transitions. This is the promise of recovery.” – Anonymous Published in A New Leaf – June 2025
By, Jesse P. It started out as one teenaged wishthe click of a lighterand turned into a lifeIt was excitingand floating from the groundcame the laughter and the closeness I needed to have somehowyou turned into a danger from someone I held so close, I don’t knowbut it was time for you to go Oh…
By, Melissa H. Dear Cannabis Sativa,We were introduced by a cool, blond-haired rebel girl from Colorado. I was a 15-year old flatlander from Pennsylvania who had never even heard of you. I took to you because you elevated fun to a new level. I hadn’t known that fun was smokable. You made rolling over on…
By, Carol M. I am an addict and a depressive. I wish I were manic depressive, but I have never experienced the up, just the down. Getting to the “almost OK” has been a struggle all my life. My first attempt at suicide was at eleven. Depression is a disease. In many ways it’s like…
“Life, Itself, Is The Proper Binge.” – Julia C. Published in A New Leaf – February 1991
By Vinnie C. Dear Mary Jane, We are now broken up, retroactive to Dec. 29th, 2024. It’s not you. It’s me. Let me explain. When we first met back in February of 2004, you absolutely rocked my world. I’ll never forget that first time, smoking with a shady Russian guy in a New Jersey college…
Copyright © 1989–2025 Marijuana Anonymous World Services—All Rights Reserved
—Marijuana Anonymous World Services, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation, does not endorse or accept contributions from any outside enterprise—