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Essay On Alcoholics Anonymous

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Alcoholics Anonymous an Open Meeting Dominique Steinburg describes mutual aid as a process through which people develop collaborative, supportive, and trustworthy relationships; identify and use existing strengths and/or to develop new ones; and work together toward individual and/or collective psychosocial goals. (Steinburg, 2010) Alcoholics Anonymous is mutual aid group that supports individuals in their recovery from alcohol dependence. Established in the mid 1930’s, Alcoholics Anonymous was borne from the principals of self-improvement and mutual aid practiced by the Oxford Group. The Oxford Group was a popular religious movement in the United States and Europe at that time. (AA) When Rowland H., a prominent Rhode Island businessman and Yale graduate, relapsed into his alcoholism, the renowned psychoanalyst Carl Jung, refused to provide any further treatment citing that Rowland had reached the end of what psychology and medical science had to offer him. Carl Jung recommended that Rowland H. seek spiritual guidance and referred him to the Oxford Group. (Blum, 2006) After experiencing nothing short of a miraculous recovery, Rowland H., decided to act upon one of the principals took the Oxford Group’s message to a friend named Ebby Thatcher, who was struggling with alcoholism and facing a prison sentence. Ebby desperate to avoid prison readily agreed to give it a try. The pair convinced the judge to release him into the care and custody of Rowland H. After finding

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