Georgia Nar-Anon
for Families, Friends, and Relatives of Drug Abusers
This page:
12 Traditions
Do You Need Nar-Anon
About Addiction

World Headquarters contact

Serenity Prayer
Our World Headquarters information is:
(800) 477-6291

http://nar-anon.org/index.html

Nar-Anon Family Group Headquarters, Inc.
22527 Crenshaw Blvd. Suite 200B
Torrance, CA 90505 USA

or e-mail:
naranonWSO@gmail.com
Serenity Prayer

God, grant me the serenity
To accept the things I cannot change,
Courage to change the things I can,
And the wisdom to know the difference .
Suggested Reading Material
*One Day At A Time
Inspirational daily readings relating recovery philosophy to everyday situations. 378 pages

*Courage to Change
A collection of insightful daily reflections that can transform lives. 380 pages

*Paths to Recovery
The Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, with insights, personal stories, and questions. 354 pages

*As We Understood
Sharings about prayer, letting go, fellowship, meditation, Higher Power, spiritual awakening. 262 pages

Narcotics Anonymous- Basic Text ( NA meetings)

**Alcoholics Anonymous -Big Book (AA meetings)


At Bookstores:
Co-Dependents Guide to the 12 Steps- Melody Beattie

Co-Dependent No More- Melody Beattie

The Language of Letting Go- Melody Beattie

Beyond Co-Dependency- Melody Beattie

Choices & Consequences- Dick Schafer

The Recovery Book- Mood, Eisenberg & Eisenberg

Link to Naranon World Service Organization Literature list

link for WSO literature list(leaves this site)

You can download WSO literature order form pdf there.

*Al-Anon Family Groups have given permission to Nar-Anon WSO to distribute these Al-Anon materials from Nar-Anon Family Groups Headquarters, available at most Naranon meetings
**Available at AA meetings
Meetings Worldwide and by State
Do You Need Nar-Anon?

Ask yourself the following questions and answer them as honestly as you can:

~>Do you find yourself making excuses, lying or covering up for your child, spouse, relative or friend?

~>Do you have reason not to trust your child, spouse, relative or friend?

~>Is it becoming difficult for you to believe his/her explanations?

~>Do you lie awake worrying about your child, spouse, relative or friend?

~>Is your child missing school without your knowledge?

~>Is your spouse missing work and are the bills piling up?

~>Are your savings mysteriously disappearing?

~>Are the unanswered questions causing hostility and undermining your marriage?

~>Are you asking yourself "what's wrong?" and "is it my fault?"

~>Are your suspicions turning you into a detective and are you afraid of what you might find?

~>Are normal family disagreements becoming hostile and violent?

~>Are you canceling your social functions with vague excuses?

~>Are you becoming increasingly reluctant to invite friends to your home?

~>Is concern for your spouse, child or friend causing you headaches, a knotty stomach and extreme anxiety?

~>Is your spouse/child easily irritated by minute matters?

~>Does you whole life seem a nightmare?

~>Are you unable to discuss the situation with friends or relatives because of embarrassment?

~>Are your attempts at control frustrating?

~>Do you over compensate and try not to make waves?

~>Do you keep trying to make things better and nothing helps?

~>Are the life styles and friends of the child/spouse changing? Do you ever think they may be using drugs?

If you have answered Yes to four or more of these questions, Nar-Anon may be able to give you the answers you are looking for.

About Addiction:

We have learned that addiction is an illness -- not a moral issue. It is a two-fold disease: A physical allergy coupled with an obsession of the mind. It can be arrested but never cured. It is similar in nature to diabetes in this respect. Only complete abstinence, from the use of drugs or alcohol in any form including medicine, can arrest this disease. We can no more prevent the addict's use of drugs than we can stop the tubercular's coughing. No one, not even the doctor, nor the clergy, nor the family can do this for him or her.

We have found that compulsive use of drugs does not indicate lack of affection for the family. It is not a matter of love but of illness. The addict has lost the power of choice in the matter of drugs. Even when he knows what will happen when he takes the first drink, pill or fix he will do so. This is the "insanity" we speak of in regard to this illness. When we fully understand and accept that addiction is a disease, that it is both mental and physical, and that we are powerless over it, we become ready to learn a better way to live.


----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Home
Georgia Meetings

Nar-Anon's 12 Steps

Nar-Anon's Traditions

Resources & Links

Suggested Literature
NEWS & Events


Georgia
HELPLINE Number:
404-633-2421


e-mail us