NarAnon
Step Eight
Step
8: Made a list of all those we had harmed and became willing to make
amends to them all.
If
we want to stop reading now, we should realize that the only physical
action is the first part - "to make a list". The second
part, "...became willing..." indicates that we're ready
for more recovery. If we don't think we need to make amends for anything,
we should look through our Fourth Step work again. Reviewing character
defects improves the memory.
Getting
this far implies that we now understand we may occasionally have been
at fault. All we really need to do is give ourselves some quiet, private
time to think about our relationships with other people. Of course,
everyone's list will be very unique, but there are some general guidelines
that can be used.
The
first name on the list should be ours. The shiniest haloes are above
the ones who have hurt themselves the most. All in the name of helping
our addicts, we have delayed or ignored our own health care, sometimes
to the point of serious illness. We have cancelled our vacations and
dropped out of school. We have berated ourselves for not being perfect.
We have scorned our own instincts and distrusted our own judgment.
We have made ludicrous financial decisions. We have denied ourselves
everything from flowers to new cars. Would we treat our best friends
that way? No! We need to make amends to ourselves for simply not knowing
how to cope with our situations. This is not to say that we should
write off our mistakes, but we should acknowledge that we're not perfect,
we're not mind-readers, and we're not gods.
Who's
next on the list? Undoubtedly, the people who qualify us for membership
in NarAnon. Who among us has not been judgmental, antagonistic and
insulting, or indifferent, manipulative and callous? Our behaviour
towards our "qualifiers" had not always been considerate
and understanding. Speaking from experience, the people who are the
nicest on the outside can be the most spiteful on the inside. Yet
if we are honest, we will have to admit that many of our character
defects were evident and even highlighted in our relationships with
the addict.
There
are many people who have been harmed as a direct result of our dealing
with addiction. Did we ignore the needs of our children in our obsession
with an addicted spouse? Were we angry and impatient with friends
and relatives who tried to give us advice we did not want to hear?
Did we cut ourselves off from others in an attempt to protect the
secrets resulting from the addiction? Did we lie or engage in some
form of illegal conduct in an attempt to cover for the addict? Clearly
all who were affected by such behaviour can be added to our list.
As
we reflect further, we may conclude that we also have harmed people
unrelated to the problem of addiction in our lives. Our character
defects existed long before our involvement with the addict. We may
list harms done to friends, relatives, colleagues... to people in
all areas of our lives.
The
next part of this Step is to become willing to make amends. Note:
it doesn't say make amends (yet); it just says to become willing.
Granted, this willingness may not come easily. The best incentive
will be to watch the progress of other NarAnon members who have already
taken this Step. Without a doubt, the same humility necessary for
the Fifth Step (admitting the exact nature of our wrongs) will be
needed for true willingness to make amends. Amends absolutely cannot
come from a heart still filled with resentment. The honesty and insight
that has grown from working the earlier Steps may lead us to see that
we can make little further progress without cleaning up the past by
making these amends.
"What?!
Me, make amends? This is absurd. What about my husband? He was the
one who was high all day. He was he one who couldn't finish college
or keep a job. He was the one hitting me when he got too high (or
too low). I was the one with the steady salary. I was the one who
did the chores. And it was my credit rating that was wiped out by
bankruptcy, thanks to his drug addiction.
"I
never sympathized with his pain. I didn't even try to understand his
problems. On a more subtle level, I started judging him and other
people, too. No one could compare with me and my dedication, my tenacity,
my heroic martyrdom."
I
was the good one. I didn't hurt anyone and I don't have any amends
to make. Well, maybe I shouldn't have called that drug dealer a revolting
worm, but he really asked for it. I guess it was dumb to hit my husband
back just because he hit me first. My friends must have been hurt
when I stopped seeing them because he didn't like them. It was certainly
wrong to lie to family members to get money from them.
"All
right, maybe I do have a list to make."