He who conceals his disease cannot expect to be cured.
—Ethiopian proverb
Concealment and secrecy have been second nature to some of us. We may have felt that our masculinity kept us loners. Perhaps we said we were covering the truth for someone else’s good. Maybe we could not bear to expose the truth because we feared the consequences. For some of us a lie came more automatically than the truth. Now we are learning to be open with our friends, and we are finding the healing effect of fresh air for our secrets.
Although it’s frightening to stop tampering with the truth, it’s also exciting to feel the power of honesty and to deal with the consequences of uncovering it. Perhaps we still have some secrets that erode our wellbeing. If so, we need to bring them into the open so we can live completely honest lives. When we let others know us as we really are, we are casting our lot with good health and recovery.
Today, I will make progress in my recovery by letting myself be fully known.
I would be up for 3 days on Cocaine then would sleep for a day,…
Sex Addicts Anonymous offers a solutio Welcome You need not struggle alone SAA (Sex Addicts…
I was a square peg in a round hole. I felt like I came from…
A friend was going to tell his story at a retreat in Washington, so I…
An Invitation to Recovery “We found in each other what we could find nowhere else:…
For the great majority of NSW prison inmates with addiction issues, visits by NA members…