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Continuer la lecture du chapitre suivant


un "je t'aime" coupé à l'ammoniaque
« Je pourrais me lever pour conquérir le monde que si tu m'accompagnes... »
Alyanour : La rencontre de deux mondes.
Tome 2 :
Suivez la vie pleine de rebondissements de la fille aînée de Ruben et Dayna.
Où les histoires vivent. Découvrez maintenant


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Je donne en général de très bons conseils en amour et en amitié.
Vous pouvez me demander en messages privés des conseils sur vos relations amoureuses, amicales ou autres j'y répondrai en anonyme sans mettre vos pseudo sur ma page.
J'ai assez de ma...

# ami
# amis
# amour
# docteur
# friend
# life
# love

Si on aime un mec et qu'on ne sait pas comment lui dire comment faire ?

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Il ne faut pas lui dire, j'ai déjà dit à des mecs que je les aimais et j'ai prit que des vents (et pourtant on me dit que je suis jolie). Il faut que tu es un contact proche et que cela se fasse naturellement entre vous. S'il ignore que tu l'aimes, si tu lui dit d'un coup que tu es amoureuse de lui, ce n'est pas naturel, donc ça ne risque pas d'être réciproque. Essaie d'être proche de lui et tu l'aimera sans lui dire. Le mot "Je t'aime" est très important, cela représente un sentiment très important. Il faut que tu lui dise au bon moment une fois que tu sera dans une relation de "couple" avec lui et que tu sais qu'il t'aimera également.

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The Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous

Verywell Mind's content is for informational and educational purposes only. Our website is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

Ⓒ 2022 Dotdash Media, Inc. — All rights reserved

Buddy T is an anonymous writer and founding member of the Online Al-Anon Outreach Committee with decades of experience writing about alcoholism.


Verywell Mind content is rigorously reviewed by a team of qualified and experienced fact checkers. Fact checkers review articles for factual accuracy, relevance, and timeliness. We rely on the most current and reputable sources, which are cited in the text and listed at the bottom of each article. Content is fact checked after it has been edited and before publication. Learn more .

Verywell Mind uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.

Tradition 8 of AA (Alcoholics Anonymous)


The Big Book "Alcoholics Anonymous" Outlines How It Works


Differences Between AA Open and Closed Meetings


Where to Find Free Alcohol and Drug Treatment Programs


How Is the Serenity Prayer Used in 12-Step Groups?


How Tradition 1 Helps Maintain Unity at AA Meetings


A Study of Step 12 of the Twelve Step Programs


New York City Psychiatric Bill Hopes to Address Growing Mental Health Crisis


The Historic Significance of Dr. Bob's Last Drink


Jean's Alcoholic Story: I Tried to Blame Everyone and Everything


Verywell Mind's content is for informational and educational purposes only. Our website is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

Ⓒ 2022 Dotdash Media, Inc. — All rights reserved





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Emily is a board-certified science editor who has worked with top digital publishing brands like Voices for Biodiversity, Study.com, GoodTherapy, Vox, and Verywell.

A meeting in 1935 between the future founders of Alcoholics Anonymous , both of whom were termed "hopeless" alcoholics, began a program of recovery that has helped millions find sobriety and serenity.


Bill W., a stockbroker from New York, was one of those men. In fighting his own battle against drinking, he had already learned that helping other people with alcoholism was the key to maintaining his own sobriety, the principle that would later become step 12 in the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous.


He had been sober for about five months and had traveled to Akron, Ohio in 1935 for a shareholders' meeting and proxy fight, which did not turn out his way. 


After losing the proxy fight, Bill found himself alone and depressed, according to accounts of the events. He felt drawn to the bar in the Mayflower Hotel where he was staying. Fighting desperately to maintain his sobriety, his immediate reaction was, "I've got to find another alcoholic."


There are conflicting versions of exactly what happened next. According to the Alcoholics Anonymous website, Bill W. called various people and was eventually introduced to an Akron surgeon, forever to be remembered simply as "Dr. Bob." The surgeon had struggled for years with his own drinking problem. The two men had their first meeting on May 12, 1935.


The effect the meeting had on Dr. Bob was immediate, and soon he too put down the bottle (June 10, 1935), never to pick it up again. The bond formed between the two men would grow into a movement that would literally affect the lives of millions.


Starting in Bill W.'s home in Brooklyn and later moving to Dr. Bob's residence in Akron, the two men began helping other individuals with alcoholism , one person at a time.

It took four years to get the first 100 participants sober in the first three groups that formed in Akron, New York, and Cleveland.

But after the publication in 1939 of the group's "textbook", Alcoholics Anonymous , and the publication of a series of articles about the group in the Cleveland Plain Dealer , the A.A. rapidly developed, and the membership in the Cleveland group soon grew to 500.


The response was so overwhelming, the group found itself sending out members, who had gotten only a short time in the program themselves, to work with other new members. For the first time, the founders learned they could mass produce recovery and not be limited to the ground that they themselves could cover.


After a dinner in New York in 1940, given by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., to publicize the group, membership soon grew to 2,000. An article in the Saturday Evening Post in 1941 resulted in another growth period, and membership in the United States and Canada rose to a reported 6,000.


By 1950, Alcoholics Anonymous had helped more than 100,000 people recover from alcoholism, and by 1973, more than one million copies of the Big Book had been distributed. By 2005, the number of copies sold had reached 25 million. 1


Since that time, the fellowship has continued to grow and has become worldwide. A number for Alcoholics Anonymous can be found in the white pages of virtually every local telephone directory.

Today members can also attend electronic meetings from any computer, cell phone, or mobile device.

Dr. Bob died Nov. 16, 1950, and Bill W. passed on Jan. 24, 1971, but the legacy they left behind continues to touch the lives of millions.

Alcoholics Anonymous. A.A. timeline .
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
19/20th-century American physician and cofounder of Alcoholics Anonymous
"Doctor Bob" redirects here. For other uses, see Doctor Bob (disambiguation) .
This article includes a list of general references , but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations . Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. ( December 2012 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )

^ "Ancestry of "Dr. Bob S." " . Wargs.com. 1950-11-16 . Retrieved 2013-03-14 .

^ Alcoholics Anonymous. Dr. Bob and the Good Oldtimers: a Biography, with Recollections of Early A.A. in the Midwest . New York: Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, 1980. N.B .: No identification of individual author(s) or editor(s) of the text is made. ISBN 0-916856-07-0

^ "History" . Dr. Bob's Home .


Dartmouth College AB 1902
kappa
University of Michigan Medical School attended 1905-1906

Robert Holbrook Smith (August 8, 1879 – November 16, 1950), also known as Dr. Bob , was an American physician and surgeon who founded Alcoholics Anonymous with Bill Wilson (more commonly known as Bill W. ).

Smith was born in St. Johnsbury, Vermont , where he was raised, to Susan A. (Holbrook) and Walter Perrin Smith. [1] His parents took him to religious services four times a week, and in response he determined he would never attend religious services when he grew up. He graduated from St Johnsbury Academy in 1898, having met his future wife Anne Robinson Ripley at a dance there. [2]

Smith began drinking at college attending Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire . Early on he noticed that he could recover from drinking bouts quicker and easier than his classmates and that he never had headaches, which caused him to believe he was an alcoholic from the time he began drinking. Smith was a member of Kappa Kappa Kappa fraternity at Dartmouth. After graduation in 1902, he worked for three years selling hardware in Boston, Chicago, and Montreal and continued drinking heavily. He then returned to school to study medicine at the University of Michigan . By this time drinking had begun to affect him to the point where he began missing classes. His drinking caused him to leave school, but he returned and passed his examinations for his sophomore year. He transferred to Rush Medical College , but his alcoholism worsened to the point that his father was summoned to try to halt his downward trajectory. But his drinking increased and after a dismal showing during final examinations, the university required that he remain for two extra quarters and remain sober during that time as a condition of graduating.

After graduation, Smith became a hospital intern, and for two years he was able to stay busy enough to refrain from heavy drinking. He married Anne Robinson Ripley on January 25, 1915, and opened up his own office in Akron, Ohio , specializing in colorectal surgery and returned to heavy drinking. Recognizing his problem, he checked himself into more than a dozen hospitals and sanitariums in an effort to stop his drinking. He was encouraged by the passage of Prohibition in 1919, but soon discovered that the exemption for medicinal alcohol, and bootleggers , could supply more than enough to continue his excessive drinking. For the next 17 years his life revolved around how to subvert his wife's efforts to stop his drinking and obtain the alcohol he craved while trying to hold together a medical practice in order to support his family and his drinking.

In January 1933, Bob Smith attended a lecture by Frank Buchman , the founder of the Oxford Group . For the next two years he and Smith attended local meetings of the group in an effort to solve his alcoholism, but recovery eluded him until he met Bill Wilson on May 12, 1935. Wilson was an alcoholic who had learned how to stay sober, thus far only for some limited amounts of time, through the Oxford Group in New York, and was close to discovering long-term sobriety by helping other alcoholics. Wilson was in Akron on business that had proven unsuccessful and he was in fear of relapsing. Recognizing the danger, he made inquiries about any local alcoholics he could talk to and was referred to Smith by Henrietta Seiberling, one of the leaders of the Akron Oxford Group. After talking to Wilson, Smith stopped drinking and invited Wilson to stay at his home. He relapsed almost a month later while attending a professional convention in Atlantic City. Returning to Akron on June 9, he was given a few drinks by Wilson to avoid delirium tremens . He drank one beer the next morning to settle his nerves so he could perform an operation, which proved to be the last alcoholic drink he would ever have. The date, June 10, 1935, is celebrated as the anniversary of the founding of Alcoholics Anonymous .

Smith was called the "Prince of Twelfth Steppers" by Wilson because he helped more than 5000 alcoholics before his death. He was able to stay sober from June 10, 1935, until his death in 1950 from colon cancer. He is buried at the Mount Peace Cemetery in Akron, Ohio. [3]


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