Twelve Step Sponsorship: How It Works
By Hamilton B.
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About this ebook
Sponsorship is a rich and enduring part of tradition of Alcoholics Anonymous. Twelve Step Sponsorship delivers both the theory and practice--how to do it and why--in a clear, step-by-step presentation. Written by the author of Getting Started in AA, a widely acclaimed guide for the newcomer to the program of AA, Twelve Step Sponsorship is the first truly comprehensive look at sponsorship, a role recovering people benefit from both as sponsees and ultimately as sponsors. Twelve Step Sponsorship includes informative sections that deal with: finding a sponsor and being a sponsor.
Twelve Step Sponsorship offers a welcome reinforcement to the tradition of "passing it on" from one generation of sponsors to the next.
Hamilton B.
Hamilton B. is a recovering alcoholic who has been sober in AA for more than twenty years. As an AA member, he maintains his anonymity "at the level of press, radio, and film." He holds a BA in psychology from an Ivy League college and a PhD in organizational behavior from an eastern university. A recognized expert in the areas of alcoholism recovery and spirituality in organizational settings, he has testified for both both branches of the United States Congress.
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Twelve Step Sponsorship - Hamilton B.
Hazelden Publishing
Center City, Minnesota 55012
www.hazelden.org/bookstore
©1996 by Hamilton B.
All rights reserved. Published 1996. Updated 2020.
Printed in the United States of America No part of this publication, neither print nor electronic, may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the express written permission of the publisher. Failure to comply with these terms may expose you to legal action and damages for copyright infringement.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
B., Hamilton.
Twelve step sponsorship : how it works / Hamilton B.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-56838-122-0
Ebook ISBN 978-1-59285-766-1
1. Alcoholics—Rehabilitation—United States. 2. Twelve-step programs—United States. I. Title.
HV5279.B18 1996
616.86'106—dc20
96-28947
CIP
Cover design by David Spohn
Editor’s note
The Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions are reprinted and adapted with permission of Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc. Permission to reprint and adapt this material does not mean that AA has reviewed or approved the contents of this publication, nor that AA agrees with the views expressed herein. AA is a program of recovery from alcoholism only—use of the Twelve Steps in connection with programs and activities which are patterned after AA, but which address other problems, or in any other non-AA context, does not imply otherwise.
To Father Tom Butler, who is not an alcoholic or addict, but who has led many people to Twelve Step recovery. My close friend and spiritual advisor, he inspired me to write this book. I am deeply grateful.
Contents
Dedication
Editor’s Note
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
The Easy Way to Use This Book
Part I: Finding a Sponsor
1. What Does a Sponsor Do?
A brief history of sponsorship
What a sponsor does
What a sponsor does not do
2. Choosing a Sponsor
Finding a temporary sponsor
Guidelines for choosing a primary sponsor
Has what we want
Lives in the solution
Walks the talk
Has a sponsor
Emphasizes the Steps
Has more time in recovery than we do
Has worked more Steps than we have
Is available for telephone calls and meetings
Emphasizes spiritual aspect of the program
Gender is the same as ours
Interviewing a potential sponsor
If a potential sponsor says no
3. Some Questions Sponsees Ask about Sponsorship
Who were Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob’s sponsors?
Is it okay to change sponsors
How is a spiritual advisor different from a sponsor?
Is it possible to have more than one sponsor?
Can someone who lives in a different town sponsor me?
How do I fire
a sponsor?
Why do I need a sponsor if I’ve been in recovery a long time?
Aren’t you asking somebody for a big favor to sponsor you?
Is it okay to ask a high-profile person to sponsor me?
Why can’t I sponsor myself?
What if my sponsor slips?
Is it okay to attend another Twelve Step group as well?
How do I pay my sponsor back for what he or she has done for me?
4. Some Questions Sponsees Ask about Their Sponsors
Do I have to take the Fifth Step with my sponsor?
What if I can’t reach my sponsor when I need him or her?
Do I have to do what my sponsor says?
What if my sponsor is overprotective and wants to run my life?
What if I don’t agree with my sponsor?
What if my sponsor won’t return my phone calls?
My sponsor told somebody else a secret about me. Now what?
My sponsor keeps taking my inventory. What do I do about that?
What if I have outgrown my sponsor?
What if I dread calling my sponsor?
What if my sponsor dumps on me?
What if my sponsor tries to force his or her religious beliefs on me?
What do I do if my sponsor stops working his or her program?
What if I find out that my sponsor hasn’t been honest with me?
What if my sponsor or I want to bring up issues from other Twelve Step Fellowships?
Part II: Being a Sponsor
5. Sponsorship Expectations
Ethics
Confidentiality
Mutual honesty
Working the Steps
Meeting attendance
Sponsor availability
Frequency of contact
When and where to call
Sponsor replacement
Spirituality
6. Some Questions Sponsors Ask about Sponsorship
What is my primary purpose as a sponsor?
What are the best suggestions I can offer my sponsees?
How do the responsibilities of a temporary sponsor differ from those of a primary sponsor?
What do I tell my sponsees when they ask if they have to go to meetings the rest of their lives?
How many sponsees is too many?
What are the warning signs of a slip?
When is it appropriate for a sponsor to terminate a sponsorship relationship?
How do I de-sponsor somebody?
What if I make a mistake?
How soon can I sponsor somebody?
How do I treat a high-profile sponsee such as a politician or an actor?
Should I offer to sponsor someone?
With whom can I discuss my sponsee’s problem?
Is it okay to assign readings to a sponsee for discussion?
Is it okay to give sponsees assignments other than readings?
How far do I have to go to keep a sponsee in recovery?
When am I enabling a sponsee?
How do I handle relationships among my sponsees?
What can I recommend to a sponsee as a substitute for a Twelve Step meeting?
What should I tell a newcomer sponsee about thirteenth stepping?
What is the greatest danger in sponsorship?
7. Some Questions Sponsors Ask about Their Sponsees
What if my sponsee doesn’t do what I tell him or her to do?
How do I handle it when my sponsee has another sponsor who disagrees with me?
What do I do when my sponsee lies to me?
My sponsee calls too often. How do I handle that?
What do I do when my sponsee is seeing a therapist who says the sponsee doesn’t have to work the Steps because they are covering his or her basic problems in therapy?
What if my sponsee is suicidal?
How do I know when I am carrying
my sponsee?
What do I do with a sponsee who is obviously depressed?
What do I do if I think my sponsee is relapsing?
What do I do if my sponsee slips?
What if my sponsee slips and wants to get back in recovery?
What if my sponsee asks for money, a place to live, or to borrow my car?
How much advice on matters outside the program should I give my sponsee?
What if my sponsee has a dual addiction?
My sponsee just wants to be my buddy. Is that okay?
When should I suggest that my sponsee seek professional help?
What if my sponsee hasn’t called me in weeks?
Part III: Working the Steps
8. Introducing the Steps
Purpose of the Steps
History of the Steps
Why the Steps are suggested
What it means to work
a Step
Timing of the Steps
Step study
Formal meetings with sponsees
Format of the chapters on the Steps
9. Working Step One
10. Working Step Two
11. Working Step Three
12. Working Step Four
13. Working Step Five
14. Working Step Six
15. Working Step Seven
16. Working Step Eight
17. Working Step Nine
18. Working Step Ten
19. Working Step Eleven
20. Working Step Twelve
21. Progress, Not Perfection
Appendices
Appendix A: AA Preamble
Appendix B: AA’s Twelve Promises
Appendix C: The Twelve Steps
The Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous
The Twelve Steps of Al-Anon
The Twelve Steps of Narcotics Anonymous
The Twelve Steps of Overeaters Anonymous
The Twelve Steps of Sex Addicts Anonymous
The Twelve Steps of Gamblers Anonymous
Appendix D: Twelve Traditions of AA (Short Form)
Notes
Index
Preface
This book is about sponsorship in Twelve Step programs and the significant difference it can make it recovery. The principles and guidelines it describes are based on the model of sponsorship developed by Alcoholics Anonymous. Most of the examples in this book are taken from AA literature, the original source on Twelve Step recovery. My own experience has been in AA. It is in AA that I first found a sponsor and learned how to be a sponsor.
But you don’t have to be an AA member to use this book and to make it work for you. Whatever Twelve Step program you call home, you’ll find that the principles and guidelines—and the experience, strength, and hope—will fit.
AA created the concept of sponsorship, but its principles apply to all Twelve Step programs.
In some Twelve Step Fellowships, the Twelve Steps are almost exactly the same as those in AA. In others, the Steps have been altered slightly more to reflect the particular addiction, compulsion, or focus of the group. In Narcotics Anonymous, for example, the phrase our addiction
has been substituted for alcohol
in the First Step and addicts
for alcoholics
in the Twelfth Step. In Overeaters Anonymous, the word food
has been substituted for alcohol
in the First Step and compulsive eaters
for alcoholics
in the Twelfth Step. Despite the slightly different wording, however, the fundamental principles of recovery remain the same in all the Twelve Step programs.
It was not practical to write a book for each of the different Twelve Step Fellowships (which now number over sixty), nor was it necessary. In those instances where the fit among Fellowships is not exact, I have used AA as the model with the expectation that the reader will make whatever wording adjustment is necessary to make the principle apply to his or her Twelve Step program. For example, direct quotations from AA literature use the terms sober,
alcohol,
alcoholism,
and sobriety.
In some instances, I could not alter the original AA text to make it more inclusive without distorting its meaning.
In general, I have used the word recovery
rather than more specific words such as sobriety,
abstinence,
or clean
since it is an awkward use of language to use clean, sober, abstinent
every time the reference is to not drinking, not using, or not engaging in compulsive behavior. Likewise, I sometimes use the word addict
to refer to someone who suffers from any kind of addiction or compulsive behavior. Occasionally I use the term sobriety
to stand for all forms of abstinence since that term is used in many programs besides AA.
The individual literature of each Fellowship also presented a referential problem. The basic textbook of Alcoholics Anonymous is entitled Alcoholics Anonymous and is affectionately referred to as the Big Book.
Other Fellowships also have basic texts (for example, Narcotics Anonymous and Overeaters Anonymous), which also have their own nicknames (the Basic Text
in NA, for example). I have chosen to use the phrase basic text
or Big Book or equivalent
to refer to the basic textbook of a Twelve Step Fellowship. Likewise, I have used AA’s term Conference-approved
to mean literature approved by any Twelve Step Fellowship as representing its official position. While non-Conference-approved literature can often be very helpful, it represents the opinion of its author and not the Fellowship.
Most Twelve Step programs have a basic textbook, which is the equivalent of AA’s Big Book.
For those readers who are not AA members, the numerous references to AA’s Twelve Promises may be unclear. The Promises are a group of benefits that AA members receive after having painstakingly worked the first nine Steps of the AA program. The Promises include a new freedom,
a new happiness,
serenity,
and peace.
It is my belief that these same Promises are fulfilled in the lives of other Twelve Step Fellowship members who painstakingly work the Steps. The Promises are listed in appendix B (page 228
).
A word about personal pronoun usage in this book: When I am referring specifically to my own AA sponsees, I use the masculine pronoun because my AA sponsees are all male in accordance with AA tradition. When I am making a reference to sponsees in general, on the other hand, I use both the masculine and feminine pronouns or a pronoun that is gender neutral. Some historical quotations use only the masculine form when referring to both men and women, in accordance with the traditions of the time.
None of these changes to make the book more inclusive is important, however, and none dilutes its basic purpose. What is important is that each of the Twelve Step programs offers a way out of our addiction, compulsion, or problem if we are willing to work the Steps. In all the programs, the Steps are the key to a rich and fulfilling recovery. An important part of working the Steps in every Twelve Step program is having a sponsor. Being that sponsor or finding that sponsor is what this book is about.
Sponsorship is one of the greatest adventures and greatest rewards of Twelve Step recovery. Through it, you can create one of the most meaningful and enduring relationships of your life. That, at least, has been my experience with sponsorship, and it has been the experience of countless others. It can be your experience as well.
Sponsorship is part of the promise that we never have to be alone again.
Acknowledgments
I want to thank my sponsor, David S., for his wisdom and support over the years and for his detailed and perceptive review of the manuscript that made a significant difference in the book. David introduced me to the term grandsponsor,
meaning, your sponsor’s sponsor,
a term I have used because it captures the love that is part of sponsorship. Grandsponsor
reminds us of the collected wisdom in Twelve Step groups that is handed down from one generation to the next within this family of our choosing.
I also want to thank Ed S., Fionnula F., Rod C., and Jeanne R. for their insights on sponsorship, which I have incorporated into the book. My special thanks to Dennis W. for all his help and suggestions. I want to express my gratitude to Harold H., a remarkable man who has helped me and many others in so many ways, and to Ken B., who got me to my first AA meeting.
Most important, I want to thank my brother Herbert for his faith in me and for his love and support during the best of times and the worst of times
as I struggled to learn and apply the principles of the Twelve Steps in my own life. His patience and steadfastness have been remarkable.
I am grateful to AA World Services for their continued efforts on behalf of all of us in the Fellowship and for their generous permission to quote so extensively from AA sources. They are a dedicated group of individuals carrying on the loving tradition established by Bill Wilson, Dr. Bob, and the other AA pioneers. And, of course, my profound thanks to my sponsees past and present for all they have taught me, but especially: Andy B., Brian B., Byron B., Chris D., John K., David L., Dick M., Henry S., Dave T., and Warren T.
I want to thank some special members of the Fellowship whose words and lives have meant so much to me in my sobriety: Anne B., Allan C., Ed C., Mike D., Abigail G., Lauder G., Mark G., Tim G., the late Tom G. (who gave me my first Big Book), Ann H., Harry L., Candy M., Hal Attitude of Gratitude
M., Gay Q., Dede S., Sandy S., the late Sandy S., Marijane V., and Steve W. Without these wonderful AA members and hundreds of others who share their experience, strength, and hope with me, I could not have stayed sober.
My God bless you and keep you on the Road of Happy Destiny.
Introduction
When I was new to Alcoholics Anonymous, people in the Fellowship suggested that I find a sponsor. But how was I to find one? And where? And, most important, who would it be? The AA Big Book didn’t mention sponsorship, and there were no books written about it. I was scared to ask someone to sponsor me, so I put off getting one. I kept thinking I could do it myself. I couldn’t. Now I see how much not having a sponsor delayed my progress in AA.
When I was new to AA and looking for a sponsor, I didn’t even know the right questions to ask.
After a while, I did get a sponsor. Then one day, someone asked me to sponsor him. Suddenly, I had a big responsibility. I had dozens of questions that I wanted answered. And quickly. What was I supposed to do as a sponsor? How would I know when he was ready to take a Step? What if he drank? I had nothing to rely on but my own sponsor and what I had heard about sponsorship in AA meetings and from other sponsees.
Twelve Step Sponsorship: How It Works came out of those early sponsorship experiences and out of the fear and earnestness I saw in my own sponsees when they were asked to sponsor somebody for the first time. They had many questions, but AA’s only publication on this topic was a thirty-page pamphlet called Questions and Answers on Sponsorship.
So when a friend of mine made the suggestion, I decided to write something that would guide Twelve Step members through the sponsorship process.
The result is a guide for both sponsors and sponsees, for both newcomers and old-timers. Its purpose is to help sponsors be the most effective sponsors they can be, and to help sponsees get the most they can out of having a sponsor. Because my experience and knowledge are mostly in AA, the ideas here will reflect mainly an AA perspective. Yet, this book will be useful to people in any Twelve Step Fellowship—e.g., Al-Anon, Narcotics Anonymous (NA), Cocaine Anonymous (CA), Overeaters Anonymous (OA), or Adult Children of Alcoholics (ACA)—who want to take advantage of the special resource of sponsorship.
This book discusses what a sponsor does, how to find a sponsor, and how to be a sponsor. It also explains how to help a sponsee work each of the Twelve Steps.
This book is a guide to the sponsorship process.
The suggestions in Twelve Step Sponsorship did not originate with me. Everything in the book comes from AA through its members, meetings, and publications, but it is filtered through my perception. The only real authorities in AA are the Big Book (entitled Alcoholics Anonymous), Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, other Conference-approved literature, and decisions of the AA General Service Conference (as AA’s elected voice). These sources are largely silent on sponsorship, so most of what is in this book comes from my own experience and from the experience of other AA members. As with AA, the only authorities in other Twelve Step Fellowships are their Conference-approved literature and their equivalent to the General Service Conference.
In the process of writing Twelve Step Sponsorship, I have discovered just how different opinions are within the Fellowships regarding sponsorship. Part of the reason is that there is no authoritative book on the subject that we can all use as a common reference point. Instead, we have relied on what our own sponsors have told us and on what we have heard in meetings. Sponsorship has been a word-of-mouth phenomenon. The result is that the contents of this book do not necessarily represent a consensus of opinion within AA on sponsorship. The book represents my considered opinion and the opinions of those with whom I have spoken while writing it. Twelve Step Sponsorship is not an AA, Al-Anon, NA, OA, or CA Conference-approved book. In the best Twelve