Your cart is currently empty!
“We now have tools to help us grow.”
– Life with Hope, second edition, page 63
I’ve heard people talk in meetings about recovery giving them a spiritual toolkit. I access these tools as needed to help me continue on the path of being and staying clean. My spiritual toolkit includes meetings, working the Steps, calling my sponsor or a friend in recovery, and practicing prayer and meditation. It also includes the slogans, affirmations, and learning to focus on my physical well-being as well as my mental, spiritual, and emotional health.
I recently heard something new: that our disease of addiction has a toolkit too! Actually, it’s more like a cache of weapons! It contains things like fear, shame, guilt, pride, and making comparisons. Now, when those thoughts creep in, I remember they are part of my addiction, and I turn to my recovery toolkit to handle them. I remember that comparing my insides to another’s outside is never helpful. When I feel shame or guilt, I try to remember to call someone to talk it through so I can move through those feelings. I know that pain is inevitable, but that suffering is optional. With my spiritual toolkit, I can relieve my unnecessary suffering much quicker than before recovery.
Final thought: Today, I go through my day with my spiritual toolkit always ready by my side.
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 Cassie C. Remember me?We met at a party.When I was much younger.You were my best friend.Always there to lift my up.Always there to make me laugh.Always there to help me not care, Nor to cry:I was always the life of the party.You numbed me from reality.From the hurt, and pain inside.You made me…
By Ras M. of District 27 I used to smoke to stop time. I just needed a pause – from the oncoming crazy, and my subsequent flooding of anxiety. Of course, there would be the crazy again, 5 hours later. When I stopped smoking, I found it challenging to fill large chunks of time in…
By M. of District 27 For the past 6 years I have struggled to put clean time together, both in and out of the rooms of MA. Every time that April 20th rolls around, I have tried in vain to block out the existence of this once seemingly celebratory day and the memories that it…
Created by Brian B. Published April 2025 As a former U.S. Army military police officer, I learned early on the power of motivation, discipline, and perseverance. Although I couldn’t become a Ranger due to my specialized career, the Ranger Creed became a cornerstone of my mindset. I wore the Ranger tab inside my pocket over…
“For a long time, I thought I was consuming cannabis, but then I realized, cannabis was actually consuming me…” – Anonymous Published in A New Leaf – April 2025
By John J. of District 19 You wanna fight crime in a skintight suitYou wanna stop time and detect the truthYou wanna ray gun, wanna turn to stoneYou wanna be the one who saves the universe aloneYou wanna be fast like MercuryTravel to the past and fix historyYou wanna jump buildings, you wanna bend barsSee…
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—