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Recovery Blog

Alcoholics Anonymous Big Book with blue cover on a wooden desk beside an AA handbook, smartphone displaying a big book app, notebook, glasses, and coffee mug in a sober living environment.

AA Handbook and Big Book Apps: Covers and Access

Alcoholics Anonymous (A.A.) literature usually falls into two categories. The Big Book is the core text that describes A.A.’s program for recovery from alcoholism, and an AA handbook (often a service or group handbook) supports how groups run and how members carry the message through service. This post looks at AA big book covers, how the AA handbook is used, and what to expect from an aa big book app or other big book app. It also addresses common searches such as free AA books and they stopped in time aa. The focus is practical and neutral, not promotional.

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Four adults preparing a healthy meal together in a sober living home while focusing on alcohol recovery and rebuilding healthy routines.

How Long Does Alcohol Stay on Your Breath?

People often ask how long does alcohol stay on your breath because the answer affects decisions like driving and workplace testing. A related concern is how long does alcohol stay in your system when a test is possible the next day. Alcohol does not simply sit in the mouth. Ethanol moves from the stomach and intestines into the bloodstream, then reaches the lungs. As blood passes through the lungs, some ethanol transfers into the air that is exhaled, which is why breath alcohol testing works. The key point is that “alcohol on your breath” can mean two different things, and those two timelines do not always match.

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Small Alcoholics Anonymous group reviewing the AA sponsorship pamphlet and discussing sponsorship guidelines in a supportive meeting environment.

AA Sponsorship Pamphlet: Sponsor Basics

AA sponsorship is one-to-one support inside Alcoholics Anonymous (AA). If you are new, you may be asking what a sponsor is, what a sponsor does, and how do I get an AA sponsor. The AA sponsorship pamphlet, Questions and Answers on Sponsorship (P-15), explains how sponsorship works. It answers common questions from people who are new, people who want to be an AA sponsor, and groups that are building sponsorship connections. This article follows the pamphlet’s approach: clear, practical, and based on shared experience. It is not medical, mental health, or legal advice.

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Peer support meeting in a bright room, with recovery literature and a sobriety coin in the foreground.

36 Spiritual Principles of AA Explained

Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) is a fellowship where people help each other with a drinking problem. AA is not a medical service, and it does not require any one religion. When AA members talk about “spiritual principles,” they mean values that guide daily choices. When people look up the 36 principles of AA or the 36 spiritual principles of AA, they are often pointing to three AA sets: the Twelve Steps (personal recovery), the Twelve Traditions (how groups stay united), and the Twelve Concepts for World Service (how service work stays responsible). These three sets are sometimes called AA’s “three legacies”: recovery, unity, and service.

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Small AA-style support group meeting outdoors at sunset in a sober living environment focused on humility in recovery.

Humility in AA: Definition and Practice

Humility is one of the most used—and most confused—words in Alcoholics Anonymous (AA). Some people hear “be humble” and assume it means feeling small, staying silent, or letting others push them around. In AA, it is usually described in a more grounded way: an honest view of who you are, where you are, and what help you may need. This guide explains the humility definition AA members often discuss, how it shows up in the Steps, and what it can look like in daily sobriety. It is general information, not medical or mental health advice.

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Framed AA anniversary coins displayed on a bedside table with sobriety chips and a sobriety coin holder arranged nearby.

AA Sobriety Chips, Coins, and Chip Holders

In Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) meetings, many groups mark sobriety milestones with small tokens. You may hear them called AA chips, an AA coin, AA medallions, or simply a sobriety coin. People carry them in a pocket, keep them at home, or store them in AA chip holders such as keychains and protective sleeves. This post covers what these tokens mean, common AA chip colors, AA chips in order, how AA chip holders fit different coins, and where to buy sobriety chips.

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Open AA Big Book on page 63 with sobriety medallion and notebook representing Step 3 Big Book reflection and recovery study

AA Big Book Page 63: Step 3 Explained

People often search for aa big book page 63 because it includes Step 3 themes, the Third Step Prayer, and “promises” that describe what can change when a person stops trying to manage life alone. You may also see searches like aa big book pg 63, aa page 63, and page 63 big book. This guide explains what’s on page 63 and how it connects to nearby passages people commonly look up, including aa big book page 58, aa big book page 60, aa big book page 64, aa page 67, aa big book page 68, and page 75 big book. AA literature is copyrighted, so the focus here is summary and context rather than reprinting.

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Diverse group of adults sitting in a circle during an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting in a supportive sober living environment

Alcoholics Anonymous Success Rate and Popularity

Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) is one of the most common peer support options for alcohol use disorder. It is also one of the most debated. Many people ask for one number—the alcoholics anonymous success rate. AA does not track members the way a clinic does, and “success” can mean different things. At the same time, AA’s reach is hard to miss. Alcoholics anonymous popularity is one reason it is included in many recovery plans. This guide explains what research can and cannot say about AA outcomes, why reported success rates vary, and how AA can fit with treatment, therapy, and recovery housing.

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Morning recovery routine with 24 hour a day book, coffee, journal, and smartphone displaying aa thought for the day in a peaceful home setting.

AA Thought for the Day: 24 Hours a Day Guide

Many people in Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) begin the morning with a short reading, especially when they want the day to feel structured instead of chaotic. You might hear it called an AA thought for the day, an AA reading for today, or a daily meditation. The name often depends on the meeting or the book being used. The intent is not to solve every problem before breakfast, but to keep recovery in a manageable time frame—often the simple idea of 24 hours a day—so the next right action feels reachable. This page explains what “thought for today” usually means in AA settings and how the Twenty-Four Hours a Day book (sometimes searched as the 24 hour a day book, 24 hour a day book AA, aa 24 hr book, or twenty four hours a day book) is set up. It also explains how daily recovery readings can be used in a practical, not perfectionistic way.

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Young adults holding an AA book during an outdoor young people AA meeting near a campus setting.

Young People AA Meetings: How to Find One Near You

Searching for young people AA meetings can feel confusing, especially if you are new to recovery or younger than most people you know in the rooms. Many people also type “young aa meetings near me,” “aa meetings for young adults near me,” or “youth aa meetings near me” because they want a group that feels relatable and safe. This guide explains how to find meetings that welcome teens and young adults, what the labels mean, and how to choose a meeting you will actually return to.

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Close-up of Prozac bottle and whiskey glass illustrating the risks of mixing alcohol and Prozac.

Alcohol and Prozac: Risks, Relapse, and Next Steps

Alcohol and Prozac can be a risky mix. Taking Prozac (fluoxetine) and drinking alcohol may seem harmless, but the combo can raise side effects and relapse risk. If you are on Prozac for depression or anxiety, alcohol can worsen mood and make it harder to judge limits. This guide explains how drinking on Prozac affects the body, what to do if it happens, and whether Prozac for alcohol addiction is ever a fit.

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Group of adults in a sober living home discussing boundaries related to the alcoholics anonymous 13th step.

The 13th Step in AA: What It Means

In Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), the phrase “13th step” is not part of the official Twelve Steps. Instead, some people use it as slang for boundary problems—most often when a person with more time in the program pursues a romantic or sexual relationship with someone who is new to meetings. This topic comes up because many people enter a 12-step program during a big life change. New sobriety can bring loneliness, grief, and a strong need for connection. Those factors can make relationship dynamics in the rooms feel more intense than they might feel elsewhere.

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Man speaking with counselor during alcohol use disorders identification test review in a supportive clinical setting

AUDIT Alcohol Test: Screening and Score Guide

Alcohol screening tools are short forms that ask about drinking habits and alcohol-related effects. A common option is the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT), sometimes called the alcohol AUDIT tool or AUDIT alcohol screening tool. In many settings, it is treated as an alcohol use disorders test because it screens for risky use and possible disorder. Online, people may look for an alcoholic test, a drinking problem quiz, or an “am i an alcoholic questionnaire.” The AUDIT can support that kind of self-check, but it is still a screening test. It does not diagnose alcohol use disorder by itself.

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Emergency responders assisting an unconscious adult showing signs of alcohol poisoning and severe alcohol intoxication.

Alcohol Poisoning Symptoms and BAC Levels

Alcohol can affect judgment and coordination at low doses. At higher doses, it can interfere with breathing and consciousness. Alcohol poisoning (sometimes called an alcohol overdose) is a medical emergency. It happens when alcohol in the bloodstream begins to shut down life-support functions such as breathing, heart rate, and temperature control. If you think someone may have alcohol poisoning, it is safer to get emergency help right away than to wait for “proof.” Major warning signs include an inability to wake up, slow or irregular breathing, repeated vomiting, seizures, or very cold/clammy skin.

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Group discussion focused on treatment planning for alcohol craving medication and recovery support

Alcohol Craving Medication: What to Know

Alcohol cravings can feel strong and hard to ignore. They may show up in early sobriety. They can also appear later, triggered by stress, places, or people. If you are looking for a drug for alcohol cravings, it helps to know that several prescription medicines can reduce cravings. Some can also support a goal of drinking less or not drinking at all. These are often called meds for alcohol cravings. These medications are not a “cure.” They work best as part of a plan that includes medical follow-up and behavioral support.

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