Step 12: Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these
steps, we tried to carry this message to alcoholics, and practice these
principles in all our affairs.
~ Yunmen, fragment from
Case 87, Blue Cliff Record
“This fragment comes from a famous koan, one of my favorite: ‘Medicine and
sickness heal each other; ‘The whole world is medicine; What are you?’ Indeed,
what and who are we? There probably is no more important question in our
lives.”
-- Jon
Joseph Roshi
I began
by sitting with Step 12 and this koan fragment, just as Jon Joseph did. Little did I know that the others in the room
were drawn to the entire koan of “The whole world is medicine; what are you?”
This is
where I found my self. As in solving a
mystery, I had to ask questions… Who? What? When? Where? How? And Why? With
each question, a little more of my self was revealed. How would you answer
these?
· Who is working Step 12?
· What am I doing here?
· When am I ready to do Step 12?
· Where does this take me?
· How thoroughly am I doing this
Step?
· Why (reason for) am I doing
this?
December 8 [Grapevine Quote of the Day]
"The reason we try to
carry the message is so that we stay sober. If the person we are helping stays
sober, that's an extra bonus."
Austin, TX,
May 2003
"What I Learned From My Sponsor"
I Am
Responsible: The Hand of AA
Dale’s usual approach
to 12 and Zen is to move from the Step to the koan. This week it was
turned around -- he started with the koan. This wasn’t planned. It was
simply how it happened.
So, medicine and
sickness heal each other. The whole world is medicine. What is your
self? As I sat with the koan it seemed it was channeling me toward
identifying my self as sickness. Identifying my self as
"sickness" was really uncomfortable for me. It was being in a
state of dis-ease. But I stayed with this and gradually I moved to
focusing on healing. And I realized that medicine and sickness represent
two aspects of the healing process. So my focus shifted to "healing."
Then I saw my "self" as being that which heals. Both the
object of healing and the subject that takes healing out into the world. At
that point I was able to move to Step 12: We become sober through the 12
steps. In other words we heal. We then try to share that healing
with others. As it says in A Vision for You, ask in your morning
meditation "what you can do each day for the man who is still sick."
What a
journey we’re on!. In our own way we
find ourselves climbing onto the caboose of a 12-Step train (Step 1); and
eventually, with the help of a sponsor, make our way to the engine (Step 12). How
we’ve changed by working the Steps, and awakened to what it means to be
who we are …who we have become.
Bill K.
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