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Weight | 29 g |
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Dimensions | 100 × 2 × 230 mm |
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Year of publication | |
Pages | 32 |
Language |
Twelve alcoholic women from a range of backgrounds — a U.S. Marine, a stay-at-home mom, a teenage runaway — share how they stopped drinking and found recovery in A.A. Touching on many of the themes common among still-suffering female alcoholics, their stories show how Alcoholics Anonymous helped these women find a new way of life.
P-5 – Taxes included.
With sharing that reflects the boundless range of belief (and non-belief) among A.A. members — including Buddhism, Islam, Native American faith traditions, and atheism and agnosticism — this pamphlet shows how Alcoholics Anonymous is a spiritual organization, rather than a religious one.
P-84 – Taxes included.
Twelve alcoholics with serious mental health issues — bipolar disorder, severe depression, schizophrenia — share how they found recovery in Alcoholics Anonymous. Includes the perspectives of five A.A. members with long-term sobriety who have sponsored alcoholics with mental health issues.
P-87 – Taxes included.
A message of hope from formerly incarcerated members of Alcoholics Anonymous, this pamphlet contains personal stories explaining how A.A. can help alcoholics stop drinking even in prison. Includes a self-diagnostic questionnaire for this who think they may have a drinking problem.
P-9 – Taxes included.
Nineteen young A.A.s — aged 16 to 27 — tell how they were able to stop drinking through Alcoholics Anonymous, dispelling many common “myths” about alcoholism and A.A. Includes a self-diagnostic questionnaire for those who think they may have a drinking problem.
P-4 – Taxes included.