REGION ONE OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS
  • Home
  • Newcomers
  • FIND YOUR INTERGROUP
  • FOR HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONALS
  • Meetings During Covid-19
  • 2023 WSBC
  • Board Blog
  • Board Calendar
  • Contact & Liaison List
  • Documents
  • Donations / 7th Tradition
  • Events
  • Journals
  • Links
  • RECOVERY RESOURCES
    • Newsletters
    • Podcasts / Speakers
    • Resources for Specific OA Populations
    • Sponsorship
    • Virtual Sponsorship
  • SERVICE RESOURCES
    • Intergroup Renewal
    • PIPO - Public Info / Professional Outreach
    • Speaker List
  • Privacy Policy
    • Board Blog

IF I COULD TELL YOU ONE THING...

9/10/2021

0 Comments

 
Picture

This workshop was part of our 2020 OA Region One Convention on Zoom and included two speakers, a writing prompt with writing for ten minutes, sharing in small group breakout rooms, and sharing as a large group at the end of the workshop. For each question, participants were asked to put their “one thing” in the chat.  Here (with only minimal editing) are their responses to our three "Just One Thing" questions.
 

One thing I have done to bolster my recovery in 2020:
  • Willingness to use Zoom
  • Attended lots of different meetings across the country as we are able to attend meeting virtually.
  • Went to an OA Rise meeting.
  • honestly saying "I don't know" and being teachable
  • I started a virtual meeting
  • agreed to be a temporary sponsor, which opened a lot of doors
  • "Balance" (more of it in life)
  • studied the principle of the traditions once a month
  • Doing Step 10 from Big Book - spot checking throughout the day, not just at night, I became aware of the sixth sense and intuition. This is the voice of HP.
  • I make a choice everyday which road I am choosing to take 1/ the path to recovery abstinence living joyous and free or 2/ control, overeating, despair and suffering
  • Setting Boundaries
  • Getting a sponsor
  • Attended Zoom meetings out of state.
  • Making 3 or more outreach calls every day.
  • Hosting virtual workshops
  • began sponsoring
  • Working the first 3 steps with sponsees.
  • Learn to surrender to my Higher Power.
  • More exercise. Discovering an online gym.
  • Working with a sponsor to keep accountable so that I keep moving forward with my Ninth Step work
  • Joined the Step 10/11 train which is a group of women who get paired up for two weeks and call each other with their inventories.
  • Also to join Step 10/11 train, you can email 1011steptrain@gmail.com. There is an orientation meeting you'll need to attend first.
  • listened to my instinct in asking for a particular person to be my sponsor.
  • realizing I am a food addict and that changed everything
  • Made a decision to live (a healthy life) rather than continue to compulsively overeat.
  • Coming to this Convention.
  • getting "back to basics" with my program...asking what wirjs? and doing that
  • Acting on any small willingness that came to me
  • Meditation walk daily
  • Lots of shares about steps 10, 11 and 12
  • Attend or facilitate a 12 Step workshop from the green workshop guide
  • More service
  • Started a Step Study using the 12 Step Study and Workshop
  • Facilitated a Virtual Step Study using the 12 Step Workshop and Study guide of OA (Green spiral)
  • Sponsoring a newcomer very different from me with food and HP issues
  • Even with COVID, I can still attend my Yuma meeting and see my Yuma OA’ers even if I am not going this year.
  • I took on new service position
  • Worked the steps with my first ever step sister from 20+ years ago and together we used the green workshop book. It was amazing. I also started using a meditation app twice daily.
  • 3 meals 1 day at a time with nothing but life in between. My choice is to be in recovery.
  • acceptance of necessity of shutting down, vs winter travel to warm places, of needing to scale back on risky activities (mountain climbing, skydiving) that also help with weight maintenance, willingness to give up diagnosed food allergens, break with family of origin. Willingness, acceptance, surrender, life on life's terms... etc...
  
Just one thing I would say to a newcomer that might be helpful to them, OR one thing that really helped ME as a newcomer:

  • wanna temporary sponsor?
  • don't do this alone
  • Welcome Home
  • Go to as many meetings as possible.
  • go to a Virtual newcomer meeting
  • find a 12 day sponsor
  • slow down and KISS! (Keep it Simple, Sweetie!)
  • You're not alone, here's my number, keep coming back.
  • This is an addiction and needs to be treated seriously.
  • grab a sponsor guide
  • Try at least 6 meetings
  • listen for your story in others shares
  • There is no one right way to do the program. Keep coming back until you find what works for you.
  • it works if you work it
  • ask for a glossary for all the acronyms
  • Don't give up because the program doesn't make sense at first...keep going to meetings, get a sponsor who can guide you through it.
  • Put yourself in the middle of the herd so that you create connections and break the isolation!
  • Take what you want and leave the rest.....p.s. we do pick up more as we keeping coming back.
  • Try the “New to OA” meeting every Saturday at 6PM through Oregon Intergroup.
  • oa.org - find a virtual meeting
  • Let go of defiance; and remember you have a choice; you don't HAVE to do anything; you are choosing to do this!
  • you are welcome you are deserving you are special and you are not alone
  • tradition 3, together we get better
  • It's a we program!
  • It's ODAT, I don't give up eating a certain food for the rest of my life, but for today, I choose not to eat it.
  • let us love you  until you love yourself
  • Here's my phone number, you're very welcome to call.
  • Get a sponsor
  • Keep a journal from day 1 to reflect on as you go through your program.
  • the only way you fail is to leave
  • OA is the "Good Clean Plate Program" at a buffet of ideas.  Take what you want, and leave the rest. However, you might consider taking what you need and leave the rest.
  • know that you can't do it wrong ❤
  • a desire to stop eating compulsively is the only requirement
  • this is a rough time to join a fellowship. congratulations on your bravery. keep coming back.
  • Ask someone if they would like a temp sponsor!  it helps!
  • Give yourself some grace while learning the lingo and ask questions if you don't understand!
  • A sponsor helps in working the 12 Steps and progressing in your recovery. It is okay to ask for a sponsor, even if you are new.
  • bring your journal to meetings to take notes for recovery tips!
  • Keep coming back and keep trying new things, even if abstinence eludes you.
  • Join a Step Study Group
  • life will change, the world will change, you will change over the long haul. but this can be the thread of your life....
  • go to oaregion1.org/sponsorship.html to get a sponsor
  • Ask someone to take you through the Newcomer's First 12 Days.  (Let newcomers know about this resource. 12 Days may seem do-able to a newcomer and make it easier to start.)
 
One thing I would like to commit to adding to my program for the rest of 2020:

  • 30 meetings in 30 days....30 phone calls in 30 days...30 meditations in 30 days.  Set up a calendar for whatever you decide to do 30 days on!  Keep it Simple.  :)
  • More meditation...walking meditation
  • A E I O U 10th Step:   a = abstinence    e = exercise   I = what I did for myself   o = what did I do for others   u = what was uncomfortable (more classic 10th step)  (some people add “Y” for Yahoo’s/Gratitudes) to the above format
  • Begin looking at the Principles of the Steps/Traditions/Concepts
  • Go to a meeting in every state / every province / why not in other countries?
  • Ask for willingness, then act on it as soon as it comes!
  • look at my food plan.  Not perfection, but ask my sponsor if I can start committing my food.  Or, find a food plan partner.
  • I felt JOY at the idea of attending meetings in other countries -- I'm going to start doing that!
  • oa region 9 can take you to Europe meetings
  • Make outreach calls on a weekly basis
  • really committing to an action plan, including being more open to service.
  • continue project -- catch myself in being negative toward myself. work on this and make more progress.
  • start a daily practice that supports my well-being for the day -- commit to making this a more regular, daily thing each morning
  • Have been working on my action plan.  Have made an action plan surrounding food plan, which helps me eat more regularly and on time. This helps me with daily routine.
  • reach out to newcomers. call out and be humble and real
  • Daily 3:00 tea time when depression sets in.
  • I want to commit to loving myself fiercely for the rest of the year. Being kind to myself.
  • Wake up and say I'm glad to be alive and today I'm going to be excited!
  • I would tell newcomers that OA has taught me tons of new tools to live my life free of food addiction, obsession, and shame.
  • So grateful for this experience. All the best to you for the next 24
  • I love this banquet of ideas and the fact you set it up to record commitments in chat!!!
  
Thank you to everyone for your amazing shares!

0 Comments

HELP!  I NEED ADVICE!

8/18/2021

1 Comment

 
Picture
“I wish someone would give me advice about my problems,” one person from our Fellowship shared after a meeting.  Although I stumbled for a minute, as I knew that cross-talk was not allowed, I started to think about her question more.
 
Then I realized that there are ways in OA that we give a great deal of advice:

  • We advise depending on God’s guidance
  • We recommend reading OA literature
  • We suggest you attend several meetings to see the many ways OA can help you
  • We suggest using our nine tools of recovery to help guide you
  • We advise you that a sponsor is a very helpful person to have in your life
  • We suggest spiritual ways to find a new perspective and a new strength
 
There is so much guidance offered and wisdom in taking these actions.  I think the thing is that I have to be the one taking the action instead of waiting for the right words or right person to “fix” me.  As it says in For Today on page 277 about looking elsewhere for peace:
 
“‘I would if I could, my friend, but – as it is for me – the problem is within.’  It is not the weather, the dog, the neighbor, my house, my spouse, or lack of spouse, my job or lack of one; it is within me.
 
For today: I am completely honest in taking stock of myself so I can learn why I feel as I do about myself.”
 
Now that’s some good advice!
 
Gratefully,
Nadine D. – Region One

1 Comment

TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF FREEDOM FROM BULIMIA

6/21/2021

5 Comments

 
Picture
When I was a child, the adults in my life let me down so many times that I stopped trusting them. All of them. I always believed in God, in a power that guides us and wants what's best for us, but each time another imperfect human betrayed me or hurt me, I was sure it was because I must have done something to cause God to turn his back on me. It seemed that no matter what I did, I could not win God's favor.
 
By the time I found program, I was suicidal. I had spent so many years using my eating disorder to keep my feelings at bay, while working endlessly to prove my worth and earn my place in the world. I was exhausted. I could not keep doing what I was doing, but I did not know any other way to live; I was out of ideas. The darkness began to envelop me. I could see only one way to stop the pain. Then something miraculous happened—a small voice inside told me not to give up, and I somehow found the courage to reach out for help.
 
I was in the hospital for only ten days, but those ten days saved my life. It was there that I learned about the Twelve Steps and about Overeaters Anonymous. I attended my first meeting. Something began to shift. A door that had been slammed shut began to open. I began to see that my Higher Power had been with me through everything, putting people in my life when I needed them. I had been too hurt and too afraid to accept the help that was offered.
 
I wish I could tell you that I got a sponsor right away and worked the steps. That is not my story. After I left the hospital, a year and a half passed before I found myself in my second OA meeting, and then it took me two years to ask someone to be my sponsor. She had what I wanted and I was ready to go to any lengths to get what she had. She was calm and serene. Even when life was throwing lemons at her, she trusted her Higher Power completely. When things didn't go "her way," she didn't run from her feelings. She felt them, felt compassion for herself. She got quiet, asked for guidance, and did the footwork. She looked for her part, and trusted her Higher Power to walk with her as she took the next correct action. I wanted what she had and I was willing to risk trusting someone other than myself. As we worked through the steps, my trust in her grew, as did my trust in my Higher Power.
 
OA gave me so many opportunities to trust my fellows and to let go of expectations. I practiced in these rooms, and then in all of my affairs.  Before OA, I saw people with a fearful heart; now I see people with a kind and loving heart.
 
I found a solution in the Twelve Steps and I surrendered to my Higher Power with complete abandon. I did the work and learned to trust the world again. My heart is open and I know with my entire being that my life does not need to be justified. Or earned. It is a true miracle and I am grateful every day.
 
I celebrated 25 years of freedom from bulimia this year. The road has been long and winding, yet I do not regret what I had to face, or the process, with the loving guidance of my Higher Power, because today I feel more joy and more happy days than I ever dreamed possible. All because I chose to take a chance and dare to trust again.

​If you are afraid, OA is here for you. We can help you learn to trust again. All you have to do is find the courage to ask.
 
Alice W. – Region One


SPECIAL FOCUS OA MEETINGS:  OA welcomes all who want to stop eating compulsively, and offers many special focus meetings:  100 Pounders, Anorexic/Bulimic, Bariatric Surgery, Black, Health Issues, LGBT, Men, Women, Young Persons.  Any OA member may attend any OA meeting, regardless of special focus.  To find a special focus meeting:
  • go to Find a Meeting 
  • select a type of meeting (face-to-face, online, telephone, or non-real-time)
  • click on "additional search options" and select the desired special focus

5 Comments

MY PLACE OF PEACE

6/7/2021

3 Comments

 
Picture
This morning, I woke up feeling sad, close to tears.  Why?  I don’t know; I can’t identify anything that’s happening in my life that would bring me to sadness.   As I tried to figure out my feelings, a lot of old and recent hurts and resentments started to flood my brain, and I knew that I had to change my thinking immediately. 
 
Step One: I admit that I am powerless over food and this feeling and my life has become unmanageable. 
 
Step Two: I believe that only a power greater than myself can restore me to sanity. 
 
Step Three: I’m deciding right now to turn my will and my life over to the care of God, as I understand God.  
 
I prayed:  "Dear God, tell me what to do next."  And I got my answer.  I knew that I had to go to my physical place of peace and let God be within me. 
 
My place of peace, the place that always bring me closer to God, calms me, and allows me to immerse myself in the present, is a bird sanctuary quite close to my home.  As I walked the paths, I heard God in the birds, in the ruffles and ripples of the creeks that run through the sanctuary, and in the wind in the trees.  I felt the presence of God, and as I lifted my eyes to the mountains, I knew that I am indeed loved by God.  I knew that everything is just as it should be at this precise moment. 
 
I was refreshed and ready to face the sadness head on by reaching out to another compulsive overeater and tackling the service commitments I’ve made to my service groups, family and friends. 
 
And I am at peace.  I am smiling.  I know that I’m okay and God not only has my back, but also my present and my future. 
 
 
Paula Z. - Region One 

3 Comments

CONTINUED GROWTH IN RECOVERY WITH STEP FIVE

5/26/2021

2 Comments

 
Picture
When I first attended a Twelve Step program, I quickly “did” all twelve steps in about a month.  That was expected. The Fifth Step, which I chose to do with my priest, was somewhat scary, but I continued on.  When I had completed Step Nine, I felt a great sense of burdens being removed. I joined other fellowships and worked through the steps similarly.
 
Approximately ten years after I first entered “the rooms,” I joined Overeaters Anonymous. I started the same way, not taking long to go through the first nine steps, then continuing to work 10, 11 and 12.  In OA I found that it is common to take the Fourth and Fifth Steps again regarding another person or a particular situation. I have gone through the steps several times in my OA life. 

I have thought of the Sixth and Seventh Steps as the “working steps” for my character defects, but I am beginning to realize I have neglected a wonderful gift in the Fifth Step. To write out a Fifth Step around a character defect, share with Higher Power and then with a sponsor or partner in recovery is truly working the program.  After all, the spiritual Principle of Step Five is integrity.  
 
As it says in For Today on November 3rd:  “I need not be afraid to admit anything to God and to another person, under God’s guidance.”
 
To continue to grow in recovery I need to use the Fifth Step, and I am grateful to do so!
 
Lesley – Region One

2 Comments

SPECIAL FOCUS GROUPS IN OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS

5/10/2021

3 Comments

 
Picture
Tradition Three says that the only requirement for membership in Overeaters Anonymous (OA) is the desire to stop eating compulsively. Tradition Four states that each group should be autonomous except in matters affecting other groups or OA as a whole. 

Have you noticed a recent trend toward special focus groups (groups which are specifically for members who share one trait)?  I believe that this is a wonderful thing, a finding of identity. Identity is the spiritual principle of Tradition Three.  Some of us, especially those who have been around OA for a long time, want everything to stay the same as it has always been.  But slowly, over time, we have allowed many things which we didn’t want to let into OA when the subject was first raised. I would much rather be an “elder statesman” than a “bleeding deacon” (or a “stick in the mud”).  I have been around OA for over forty years now, therefore I have a wealth of experience from which to draw perspective.  On the other hand, when I first came into OA, we did not worry about lots of things, and I like the “let them whirl” attitude of not correcting what others are doing.  I try to stay with correcting my own behaviors and attitudes rather than watching for what others are doing wrong.  It is not my job to be the OA Traditions police. 

Each OA group has the right to do things wrong.  One of my pet peeves is the practice of only reading one Tradition per week at meetings. However, that is NOT against Traditions and so I may grumble, but it is not my job as a Trustee to push my will on others. 

Tradition Four allows each meeting to have its own ways of doing things, unless it affects other groups or OA as a whole.   Both the OA and the AA “12x12” books (The Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions of Overeaters Anonymous and The Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions of Alcoholics Anonymous) have interesting anecdotes about experiences with these Traditions. 

One of the stories I enjoy in Tradition Three is about how early in AA, they were very afraid of losing their meetings and their sobriety.  They wanted to keep certain people out and only allow “pure and respectable alcoholics” in.  So, the General Service Office asked that each group to send in its list of “protective” regulations.  The total list of those to be excluded was huge: beggars, tramps, asylum inmates, prisoners, queers, plain crackpots, fallen women, atheists, and more. Those early AA members suddenly realized that if all those rules had been in effect everywhere, no one could possibly have joined AA!  They came to their senses and made the only requirement for membership the desire to stop drinking.

When I came into OA, I think there were some members who would have been very happy if I had gone away--I didn’t believe in the God that those sweet little ladies believed in, plus I had taken drugs and had sex.  But I did have the desire to stop eating compulsively.

These days, people seem to be asking for more special focus groups. Based on some of the experience above, I say let them do it.  It may be that some of those members can start their recovery journey in a special focus group and stay in OA to support all other compulsive eaters toward recovery.  I stayed, even though some people rolled their eyes when I shared, but they didn’t kick me out and I kept coming back until I too found recovery.

So, love and accept them all, even if they challenge your beliefs.  Accept their right to work OA their own way. 
​
Margie G. – Region One

3 Comments

DANCING WITH THE GORILLA

4/28/2021

5 Comments

 
Picture
​“I think I’m doing pretty darn good in this OA program.  I don’t think about food very much anymore.  I go to meetings and try to be of service.  My clothes are fitting quite nicely, thank you very much.  I think I’m going to take a break from all this OA busyness.  Thank you OA, but I’ve got it from here.”
 
Oh, aren’t those words I’ve thought about saying more than once?  When can I stop doing this?  It takes so much time and effort and don’t you know that I really am starting to like myself now?  I’ve got all the information I need to set me on the right path.  Off I go….
 
Wow! For me, that type of thinking is indicative of the lies I tell myself.
 
What I know to be true is that the night I believed the lies that “I’m ok now, I’m at a normal body weight so it won’t matter and I just want it!” was the night my food addiction came waltzing right back in.  Waltzing like a gorilla, that is.  It picked me up and threw me down, and you know what they say, “When you’re dancing with a gorilla, you’re not done until the gorilla says you’re done.”
 
Yes this program takes time, but the results give me a life of peace. Peace with myself, peace with my Higher Power and peace with those around me.  It is true what they say that we never graduate from this Twelve Step program.  It is a design for living that works and as long as I’m living, I want to follow this design!
 
The Big Book of AA says:  “We are not cured of alcoholism.  What we really have is a daily reprieve contingent on the maintenance of our spiritual condition.” (Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th edition, page 85)
 
Today, I know, that I know, that I know, I am an addict.  I will always need this Twelve Step program to guide me.  There is no leaving it behind because I’m tired of doing it. Well, there is, but the gorilla is waiting and I truly don’t want to dance anymore!
 
Gratefully done dancing,
 
Nadine D. – Region One

5 Comments
<<Previous
Forward>>
    Follow us on Facebook!

    BLOG POSTS ARE THE EXPERIENCE, STRENGTH AND HOPE OF INDIVIDUAL MEMBERS AND DO NOT REPRESENT OA AS A WHOLE.

    Search Blogs

    All
    7th Tradition
    Abstinence
    Acceptance
    Action
    Advice
    Amends
    Anonymity
    Anorexia / Bulimia
    Big Book
    Body Image
    Carrying The Message
    Change
    Character Defects
    Choices
    Commitment
    Diversity
    Feelings
    Fellowship
    Food
    Food Cravings
    Gratitude
    Higher Power / Spirituality
    History Of AA
    HISTORY OF OA
    Holidays
    Honesty
    Hope
    Integrity
    Isolation
    Joy
    Life On Life's Terms
    Literature
    Love
    Meditation
    Meetings
    Perfection
    Perseverance
    Priniciples
    Professional Outreach
    Progress Not Perfection
    Promises
    Public Information
    Recovery
    Relapse
    Relationships
    Resentments
    Self Esteem
    Self-esteem
    Self Will
    Self-will
    Serenity Prayer
    Service
    Shame / Guilt
    Slogans
    Social Situations
    Sponsorship
    Steps / Steps In Daily Life
    Tools
    Traditions
    Trust
    Unity
    Weight
    Willing
    Willingness
    Willpower

    Blog Archives

    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    November 2018
    April 2018
    September 2017
    July 2017
    December 2016
    June 2016
    January 2016
    July 2015
    May 2015
    January 2015
    October 2014
    July 2014
    February 2014
    December 2013
    September 2013
    June 2013

Region One Overeaters Anonymous, P.O. Box 23235, Tigard, OR  97281    USA 
webmaster@oaregion1.org                     Copyright 2022