Today's Reading from Just For Today © NA World Services
July 12 Patience
"We were trapped by our need for the instant gratification that drugs
gave us."
Basic Text, p. 25
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"I want what I want, and I want it now!" That's about as patient as
most of us ever got in our active addiction. The obsession and compulsion
of our disease gave us a "one-track" way of thinking; when we wanted
something, that's all we thought about. And the drugs we took taught us
that instant gratification was never more than a dose away. It's no
wonder that most of us came to Narcotics Anonymous with next to no
patience.
The problem is, we can't always get what we want whenever we want it.
Some of our wishes are pure fantasy; if we think about it, we'll realize
we have no reason to believe those wishes will be fulfilled in our
lifetimes. We probably can't even fulfill all our realistic desires; we
certainly can't fulfill them all at once. In order to acquire or
achieve some things, we will have to sacrifice others.
In our addiction we sought instant gratification, squandering our
resources. In recovery we must learn to prioritize, sometimes denying the
gratification of some desires in order to fulfill more important long-term
goals. To do so requires patience. To find that patience, we practice
our program of recovery, seeking the kind of full-bodied spiritual
awakening that will allow us to live and enjoy life on life's terms.
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Just for today: Higher Power, help me discover what's most important in
my life. Help me learn patience, that I can devote my resources to the
important things.