5925 Chapman Highway, Knoxville, Tennessee 37920
Flatiron 4 (Alano Club)
1933 miles away from Leona Valley, California
5925 Chapman Highway, Knoxville, Tennessee 37920
Flatiron 4 (Alano Club)
1933 miles away from Leona Valley, California
5925 Chapman Highway, Knoxville, Tennessee 37920
New Beginnings Knoxville
1933 miles away from Leona Valley, California
106 East Elizabeth Street, Fenton, Michigan 48430
The Fenton Group with Al Anon
1933.1 miles away from Leona Valley, California
3146 Chamblee Dunwoody Road, Chamblee, Georgia 30341
Primero de Noviembre
1933.1 miles away from Leona Valley, California
422 Valley River Avenue, Murphy, North Carolina 28906
No Place Like Home Group
1933.1 miles away from Leona Valley, California
1800 Packard Street, Ypsilanti, Michigan 48197
The Fellowship Group Ypsilanti
1933.1 miles away from Leona Valley, California
119 South Leroy Street, Fenton, Michigan 48430
Progress Not Perfection Fenton
1933.1 miles away from Leona Valley, California
1842 Airport Highway, Toledo, Ohio 43609
Sunday South End Sobriety
1933.1 miles away from Leona Valley, California
5320 Phillips Drive, Morrow, Georgia 30260
Jones Memorial United Methodist Church
1933.1 miles away from Leona Valley, California
1853 South Avenue, Toledo, Ohio 43609
Wayne Group
1933.1 miles away from Leona Valley, California
1456 Harvard Boulevard, Toledo, Ohio 43614
Park Sunday Night
1933.1 miles away from Leona Valley, California
AA is a program created to help its members get sober. Attendance is free at an AA Meeting in Leona Valley, California as the funding is accepted on a donation from its members.
AA is one of most commonly known programs in the United States and around the world that helps countless men and women achieve sobriety in the pursuit of lifelong recovery. They are usually small groups of recovering alcoholics who share their recovery journey and are there to help new members get sober.
Alcohol Addiction is a disease of the mind, body, and soul. AA has curated meetings to help with each individual piece of your sobriety. If you are in search of a meeting on the first three steps, you should choose a beginner meeting. If you are looking to get more in touch with your spiritual side, attending a meditation meeting would be an ideal choice. If you are in search of stories of inspiration for overcoming alcoholism, a speaker meeting is a good starting point. If you are through your steps and are now working on the traditions of AA, a tradition meetings will help. If you want to attend a single gender group, you can go to a men’s or women's meeting where you won't find anyone of the opposite gender there. The fact of the matter is there is a meeting for everyone. Try different meetings out until you find one that fits your needs.
In order to benefit the most from your first Alcoholics Anonymous meeting you should remain open minded. Everyone had preconceived notions of what these meetings were and generally it is the same misconception. The best advice I ever got was to sit down, shut up, listen to the message, and humbly ask for help. Regardless of the meeting, there will be the same message of recovering from hopelessness. The process of recovering from that hopeless state is in asking for help from another person suffering from alcoholism which you will find in any meeting you choose to start with.