“Humility is a result of getting honest with ourselves.”
Basic Text, p. 36
Humility was an idea so foreign to most of us that we ignored it
as long as we could. When we first saw the word “humbly” ahead in Step
Seven, we may have figured it meant we had quite a bit of humiliation in
store. Perhaps we chose to look it up in the dictionary, only to
become even more confused by the definition. We didn’t understand how
“lowliness and subservience” applied to recovery.
To be humble does not mean we are the lowest form of life. On
the contrary, becoming humble means we attain a realistic view of
ourselves and where we fit in the world. We grow into a state of
awareness founded on our acceptance of all aspects of ourselves. We
neither deny our good qualities nor overemphasize our defects. We
honestly accept who we are.
No one of us will ever attain a state of perfect humility. But
we can certainly strive to honestly admit our faults, accept our assets,
and rely on our Higher Power as a source of strength. Humility doesn’t
mean we have to crawl life’s path on our hands and knees; it just means
we must admit we cannot recover on our own. We need each other and,
above all, we need the power of a loving God.
Just for today
To be humble, I will honestly
accept all facets of myself, seeing my true place in the world. For the
strength I need to fill that place, I will rely on the God of my
understanding.
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