Some A.A. members are rascals and coyotes who trick and surprise new people; some are harsh taskmasters trying to whittle down ego and pride, others teach more through honoring and encouragement, nurturing the best in a fellow member; some lecture like a professor; and others can melt someone open with love and compassion. But the greatest gift and the strongest power emanates from the sense of freedom and joy that comes from the more experienced member.
It's a basic principle of my spiritual life that I learn the deepest things when I'm in unknown territory. Often it's when I feel most confused inwardly and am in the midst of my greatest difficulties that something new will open. I awaken most easily to the mystery of life by exploring and challenging my weakest side. I've been to sixty-five countries - a number of them more than once - and forty-eight states - and not just stopping in an airport on a brief layover - and I'm not done yet. I don't want to go back and do something I've already done. I've done it. I want to do something new because new is challenging. New is exciting. I want to be challenged. If I'm not challenged I get bored quickly. And I say this while understanding that new can be frustrating. I had to get in and out of a rubber zodiac bouncing on an ice-covered ocean and I was incredibly nervous the first time I did it. I'm not coordinated at all and I kept playing an internal video of the guides trying to fish me out of water that was at approximately 32.07 degrees Fahrenheit. But I did it! It was a thrill of a lifetime!