Your cart is currently empty!
“Our best thinking brought us to our bottom.”
– Life with Hope, first edition, page 8
I love the saying, “Our best thinking brought us to our bottom.” When I try to manipulate others and situations to get my way, I am again resorting to my own worst thinking. I figure if I can steer the bus in just the right way, I will get what I want and be happy and relieved of suffering. However, when my actions are based on self-will and ego gratification, even when I initially achieve what I want, the outcomes are often hollow and may have negative unintended consequences that become clear over time. My desires alone, and the means I use to get those desires fulfilled, if not aligned with the will of my Higher Power, can lead to suffering for myself and others.
The beautiful thing about recovery is that it provides me with basic principles that, much like a map, when followed leads to elegant, robust and long-lasting positive outcomes. When I make the principles of recovery my focus and act upon those, I no longer have to suffer from obstacles generated by my own worst thinking.
The principles of Honesty, Hope, Faith, Courage, Integrity, Willingness, Humility, Love, Discipline, Perseverance, Spiritual Awareness, and Service as learned and practiced through the Twelve Steps are the keys. With these keys, I align myself with the help and support of a power greater than myself. When I am troubled and don’t know what to do, I pause, take a breath, and check-in to see if I am being willful or trying to manipulate people and situations; then I smile and turn the situation over to my Higher Power.
Final thought: Today, I ask God to reveal to me which recovery principle I need to focus on to get back to serenity.
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, Al E. The sixties, everybody was tuning in, turning on, and dropping out. I wanted to feel a part of it all. Love-ins, concerts, flowers in my hair, Beatles, Doors, Stones, and even the music went against the “norm.” I’d swear to this day that the Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper told us to “smoke…
“Yesterday ended last night. Every day is a new beginning learn the skill of forgetting and move on.” – Written by, Norman V.P. Published in A New Leaf – May 1991
Written by, an Anonymous Trusted Servant The Seventh Tradition is about more than “just” money. It’s about unity, responsibility, and protecting MA’s integrity. By declining outside contributions, we remain free from outside influence. That means it’s up to us to keep our fellowship strong. This Tradition is vital to MA’s growth. It deepens our spiritual…
“MA is a Higher-Power-help program — not a self-help one.” Published in A New Leaf – July 2025
Written by, Kathy C. Webster’s Dictionary defines commitment as:“An act of doing or performing something; a promise or pledge to do something.” I describe commitment as a simple extension of oneself in service to others, done in the name of gratitude. We can have no speakers without listeners, no takers without givers. Being of service…
Written by, Geoff F. Recently, it came to my attention that a new MA meeting has been started at the Gay & Lesbian Community Center in West Hollywood. I knew one day such a meeting would start, for if we believe even Master’s and Johnson’s conservative statistics, 10% of all marijuana addicts are gay. I…
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—