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Listen to Barbara G. share on “Doctors Opinion” pages xxxi to end of chapter. If you would like to join us live, we meet every Sunday from 10:00 - 11:30 EST Zoom mtg login: 986 618 6769 Zoom password: bigbook164
Listen to Marie B. share on “Doctors Opinion” pages xxix to xxx If you would like to join us live, we meet every Sunday from 10:00 - 11:30 EST Zoom mtg login: 986 618 6769 Zoom password: bigbook164
Listen to Marie B. share on “Doctors Opinion” pages xxviii to xxix If you would like to join us live, we meet every Sunday from 10:00 - 11:30 EST Zoom mtg login: 986 618 6769 Zoom password: bigbook164
Listen to Terri W. share on “Doctors Opinion” pages xxvii to xxviii If you would like to join us live, we meet every Sunday from 10:00 - 11:30 EST Zoom mtg login: 986 618 6769 Zoom password: bigbook164
A presentation by Janet
Ask Dr. Neal your question about health, nutrition, diet, fitness, and more here: http://OLDPodcast.com/ask or call: 614-568-3643 Episode 1372: Q&A - The Carnivore Diet - What It Is & A Doctor's Opinion About the Newest Fad Diet The original post is located here: https://oldpodcast.com/carnivore-diet/ InsideTracker's patented algorithm analyzes your biometric data and offers you a clearer picture than you’ve ever had before of what’s going on inside your body. For a limited time, get 25 percent OFF the entire InsideTracker store! Go to InsideTracker.com/OHD dot to get your discount code and to start using InsideTracker today. Please Rate & Review the Show! Visit Me Online at OLDPodcast.com and in The O.L.D. Facebook Group Join the Ol' Family to get your Free Gifts and join our online community: OLDPodcast.com/group Interested in advertising on the show? Visit https://www.advertisecast.com/OptimalHealthDailyDietNutritionFitness --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/optimal-health-daily/support
In this timely podcast Dr. Lewis Blevins, PWN co-founder, and Medical Director, California Center for Pituitary Disorders at UCSF Professor of Clinical Medicine and Clinical Neurological Surgery, provides an in-depth discussion of viral infections specifically for people with pituitary disease.
A presentation from Janet B. - recorded 11jan2021
I get to have Laura M. on to dig into some of her favorite pages. Laura was there when I came in the rooms and she is still here. And that means so much. If you would ever like to join my virtual live Big Book meeting on Thursdays at 7:00 pm EST click below. Zoom Meeting-7 pm Big Book Cleveland, Ohio (follow on FB) https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86231325985?pwd=RWNOMnhvaW9jYk5IcXBxaWl0NGtHZz09 Meeting ID: 862 3132 5985 Passcode: 1279 Check out my memoir: Seconds & Inches
Please join us on Thursdays for my homegroup, Northstar Big Book Group. 7 pm EST ID: 862-3132-5985 Pass: 1279 and follow on FB at Northstar Big Book Group-Cleveland, Ohio #bigbook #aa #alcoholicsanonymous #northstarbigbook #thebigbook #bigbookstudy Also, check out my new podcast: In Your Corner Divorce (a podcast about coparenting and focusing on the Northstar-the kids). And my memoir: Seconds and Inches (available on Amazon, Audible, Barnes & Noble, Apple and anywhere else you can imagine).
Diz T from Tallahassee FL who describes himself as a self appointed AA historian gives a speak on the Doctor's Opinion at the Flint River Roundup in 2007. Email: sobercast@gmail.com Support Sober Cast: https://sobercast.com/donate We have added a page of meetings that have moved online https://sobercast.com/online-meetings Sober Cast has 1000+ episodes available, visit SoberCast.com to access all the episodes where you can easily find topics or specific speakers using tags or search.
I was surprised when I've listened to this doctor from NYC, his openion should be shared around the globe and should open our eyes about symptoms of Covid-19. You will be amazed after knowing this Fact. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/goalbillionaire/support
Garland Gerber has her Master’s degree in Clinical Psychology with MFT focus, is currently enrolled enrolled in a PhD program at UCSD for Research on Substance Abuse, has a couple other credentials I can’t fit, and she’s also one of us. We talk her story of growing up in Los Angeles, being in the entertainment industry at a young age, and forcing the party to go longer than it should. We then get into all the different types of research going on in the field of addiction now and the crew probably asks a lot of dumb questions, but she's really nice about it. Lots of Science on this one. Enjoy!
Series 1, Episode 2: Welcome to Away: A Podcast for Anyone Interested In a Secular Approach to 12-Step Recovery and The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous. In this episode I briefly review The Forward to the Second Edition of the Big Book and take a quick look at The Doctor's Opinion. I think I'll need to go back over some of this later in the book. And, in part, I keep it brief because a lot of the history is repeated later in the book when it becomes more relevant. Happy listening!
Let's dig deeper into the Doctor's Opinion so we can better understand the mental obsession and the physical allergy.
We are really going to be digging deep in the The Doctor's Opinion, because it is where we get Step 1.
Open up your Big Book and jump into the Doctor's Opinion with me so you can learn where Step 1 came from.
Overeaters Anonymous Saturday Study
From the late Don Pritts, GrapeVine article, 1988, Part One:If Our Message Is Clear. . .In working with professionals, let us keep in mind that for our friends to recommend us, they must understand us. And for that, we are responsible.As AA grows, cooperating with members of the professional community becomes one of the most important activities we can engage in. We are experiencing a growth beyond our wildest dreams, but with that growth come some problems. Most groups are finding that many of the new people coming to us are not alcoholics, but suffer from many other maladies. The people who refer them have seen the true miracles that happen in AA and, having no other resource, they lovingly send everyone to us.While I believe that our recovery program, the Twelve Steps, will work for any problem, our Fellowship of alcoholics does not seem to provide the same service for others as it does for us. Fellowship is a gathering of people of like mind, and while there are many similar behaviors among alcoholics and others suffering from obsessions of many kinds, the alcoholic mind and body are different. According to Dr. Silkworth, in "The Doctor's Opinion" in the Big Book, "This phenomenon [of craving], as we have suggested, may be the manifestation of an allergy which differentiates these people, and sets them apart as a distinct entity." So, as we are experiencing, nonalcoholics coming to our Fellowship cause us to be uncomfortable because we do not really understand them. We cause them to be uncomfortable because we demonstrate that we don't understand them. We know when our principles are applied to problems other than alcohol, in fellowships designed for each problem, such as Narcotics Anonymous, Cocaine Anonymous, or Overeaters Anonymous, the results are the same.
From the late Don Pritts, GrapeVine article, 1988, Part One:If Our Message Is Clear. . .In working with professionals, let us keep in mind that for our friends to recommend us, they must understand us. And for that, we are responsible.As AA grows, cooperating with members of the professional community becomes one of the most important activities we can engage in. We are experiencing a growth beyond our wildest dreams, but with that growth come some problems. Most groups are finding that many of the new people coming to us are not alcoholics, but suffer from many other maladies. The people who refer them have seen the true miracles that happen in AA and, having no other resource, they lovingly send everyone to us.While I believe that our recovery program, the Twelve Steps, will work for any problem, our Fellowship of alcoholics does not seem to provide the same service for others as it does for us. Fellowship is a gathering of people of like mind, and while there are many similar behaviors among alcoholics and others suffering from obsessions of many kinds, the alcoholic mind and body are different. According to Dr. Silkworth, in "The Doctor's Opinion" in the Big Book, "This phenomenon [of craving], as we have suggested, may be the manifestation of an allergy which differentiates these people, and sets them apart as a distinct entity." So, as we are experiencing, nonalcoholics coming to our Fellowship cause us to be uncomfortable because we do not really understand them. We cause them to be uncomfortable because we demonstrate that we don't understand them. We know when our principles are applied to problems other than alcohol, in fellowships designed for each problem, such as Narcotics Anonymous, Cocaine Anonymous, or Overeaters Anonymous, the results are the same.
From the late Don Pritts, GrapeVine article, 1988, Part One:If Our Message Is Clear. . .In working with professionals, let us keep in mind that for our friends to recommend us, they must understand us. And for that, we are responsible.As AA grows, cooperating with members of the professional community becomes one of the most important activities we can engage in. We are experiencing a growth beyond our wildest dreams, but with that growth come some problems. Most groups are finding that many of the new people coming to us are not alcoholics, but suffer from many other maladies. The people who refer them have seen the true miracles that happen in AA and, having no other resource, they lovingly send everyone to us.While I believe that our recovery program, the Twelve Steps, will work for any problem, our Fellowship of alcoholics does not seem to provide the same service for others as it does for us. Fellowship is a gathering of people of like mind, and while there are many similar behaviors among alcoholics and others suffering from obsessions of many kinds, the alcoholic mind and body are different. According to Dr. Silkworth, in "The Doctor's Opinion" in the Big Book, "This phenomenon [of craving], as we have suggested, may be the manifestation of an allergy which differentiates these people, and sets them apart as a distinct entity." So, as we are experiencing, nonalcoholics coming to our Fellowship cause us to be uncomfortable because we do not really understand them. We cause them to be uncomfortable because we demonstrate that we don't understand them. We know when our principles are applied to problems other than alcohol, in fellowships designed for each problem, such as Narcotics Anonymous, Cocaine Anonymous, or Overeaters Anonymous, the results are the same.
From the late Don Pritts, GrapeVine article, 1988, Part One:If Our Message Is Clear. . .In working with professionals, let us keep in mind that for our friends to recommend us, they must understand us. And for that, we are responsible.As AA grows, cooperating with members of the professional community becomes one of the most important activities we can engage in. We are experiencing a growth beyond our wildest dreams, but with that growth come some problems. Most groups are finding that many of the new people coming to us are not alcoholics, but suffer from many other maladies. The people who refer them have seen the true miracles that happen in AA and, having no other resource, they lovingly send everyone to us.While I believe that our recovery program, the Twelve Steps, will work for any problem, our Fellowship of alcoholics does not seem to provide the same service for others as it does for us. Fellowship is a gathering of people of like mind, and while there are many similar behaviors among alcoholics and others suffering from obsessions of many kinds, the alcoholic mind and body are different. According to Dr. Silkworth, in "The Doctor's Opinion" in the Big Book, "This phenomenon [of craving], as we have suggested, may be the manifestation of an allergy which differentiates these people, and sets them apart as a distinct entity." So, as we are experiencing, nonalcoholics coming to our Fellowship cause us to be uncomfortable because we do not really understand them. We cause them to be uncomfortable because we demonstrate that we don't understand them. We know when our principles are applied to problems other than alcohol, in fellowships designed for each problem, such as Narcotics Anonymous, Cocaine Anonymous, or Overeaters Anonymous, the results are the same.
From the late Don Pritts, GrapeVine article, 1988, Part One:If Our Message Is Clear. . .In working with professionals, let us keep in mind that for our friends to recommend us, they must understand us. And for that, we are responsible.As AA grows, cooperating with members of the professional community becomes one of the most important activities we can engage in. We are experiencing a growth beyond our wildest dreams, but with that growth come some problems. Most groups are finding that many of the new people coming to us are not alcoholics, but suffer from many other maladies. The people who refer them have seen the true miracles that happen in AA and, having no other resource, they lovingly send everyone to us.While I believe that our recovery program, the Twelve Steps, will work for any problem, our Fellowship of alcoholics does not seem to provide the same service for others as it does for us. Fellowship is a gathering of people of like mind, and while there are many similar behaviors among alcoholics and others suffering from obsessions of many kinds, the alcoholic mind and body are different. According to Dr. Silkworth, in "The Doctor's Opinion" in the Big Book, "This phenomenon [of craving], as we have suggested, may be the manifestation of an allergy which differentiates these people, and sets them apart as a distinct entity." So, as we are experiencing, nonalcoholics coming to our Fellowship cause us to be uncomfortable because we do not really understand them. We cause them to be uncomfortable because we demonstrate that we don't understand them. We know when our principles are applied to problems other than alcohol, in fellowships designed for each problem, such as Narcotics Anonymous, Cocaine Anonymous, or Overeaters Anonymous, the results are the same.
From the late Don Pritts, GrapeVine article, 1988, Part One:If Our Message Is Clear. . .In working with professionals, let us keep in mind that for our friends to recommend us, they must understand us. And for that, we are responsible.As AA grows, cooperating with members of the professional community becomes one of the most important activities we can engage in. We are experiencing a growth beyond our wildest dreams, but with that growth come some problems. Most groups are finding that many of the new people coming to us are not alcoholics, but suffer from many other maladies. The people who refer them have seen the true miracles that happen in AA and, having no other resource, they lovingly send everyone to us.While I believe that our recovery program, the Twelve Steps, will work for any problem, our Fellowship of alcoholics does not seem to provide the same service for others as it does for us. Fellowship is a gathering of people of like mind, and while there are many similar behaviors among alcoholics and others suffering from obsessions of many kinds, the alcoholic mind and body are different. According to Dr. Silkworth, in "The Doctor's Opinion" in the Big Book, "This phenomenon [of craving], as we have suggested, may be the manifestation of an allergy which differentiates these people, and sets them apart as a distinct entity." So, as we are experiencing, nonalcoholics coming to our Fellowship cause us to be uncomfortable because we do not really understand them. We cause them to be uncomfortable because we demonstrate that we don't understand them. We know when our principles are applied to problems other than alcohol, in fellowships designed for each problem, such as Narcotics Anonymous, Cocaine Anonymous, or Overeaters Anonymous, the results are the same.
From the late Don Pritts, GrapeVine article, 1988, Part One:If Our Message Is Clear. . .In working with professionals, let us keep in mind that for our friends to recommend us, they must understand us. And for that, we are responsible.As AA grows, cooperating with members of the professional community becomes one of the most important activities we can engage in. We are experiencing a growth beyond our wildest dreams, but with that growth come some problems. Most groups are finding that many of the new people coming to us are not alcoholics, but suffer from many other maladies. The people who refer them have seen the true miracles that happen in AA and, having no other resource, they lovingly send everyone to us.While I believe that our recovery program, the Twelve Steps, will work for any problem, our Fellowship of alcoholics does not seem to provide the same service for others as it does for us. Fellowship is a gathering of people of like mind, and while there are many similar behaviors among alcoholics and others suffering from obsessions of many kinds, the alcoholic mind and body are different. According to Dr. Silkworth, in "The Doctor's Opinion" in the Big Book, "This phenomenon [of craving], as we have suggested, may be the manifestation of an allergy which differentiates these people, and sets them apart as a distinct entity." So, as we are experiencing, nonalcoholics coming to our Fellowship cause us to be uncomfortable because we do not really understand them. We cause them to be uncomfortable because we demonstrate that we don't understand them. We know when our principles are applied to problems other than alcohol, in fellowships designed for each problem, such as Narcotics Anonymous, Cocaine Anonymous, or Overeaters Anonymous, the results are the same.
From the late Don Pritts, GrapeVine article, 1988, Part One:If Our Message Is Clear. . .In working with professionals, let us keep in mind that for our friends to recommend us, they must understand us. And for that, we are responsible.As AA grows, cooperating with members of the professional community becomes one of the most important activities we can engage in. We are experiencing a growth beyond our wildest dreams, but with that growth come some problems. Most groups are finding that many of the new people coming to us are not alcoholics, but suffer from many other maladies. The people who refer them have seen the true miracles that happen in AA and, having no other resource, they lovingly send everyone to us.While I believe that our recovery program, the Twelve Steps, will work for any problem, our Fellowship of alcoholics does not seem to provide the same service for others as it does for us. Fellowship is a gathering of people of like mind, and while there are many similar behaviors among alcoholics and others suffering from obsessions of many kinds, the alcoholic mind and body are different. According to Dr. Silkworth, in "The Doctor's Opinion" in the Big Book, "This phenomenon [of craving], as we have suggested, may be the manifestation of an allergy which differentiates these people, and sets them apart as a distinct entity." So, as we are experiencing, nonalcoholics coming to our Fellowship cause us to be uncomfortable because we do not really understand them. We cause them to be uncomfortable because we demonstrate that we don't understand them. We know when our principles are applied to problems other than alcohol, in fellowships designed for each problem, such as Narcotics Anonymous, Cocaine Anonymous, or Overeaters Anonymous, the results are the same.