| 1. |
Q. |
What is
alcoholism? |
|
A. |
Since
1954, alcoholism has been recognized by the American Medical
Association as a chronic, progressive disease.
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| 2. |
Q. |
What is
Al-Anon? |
|
A. |
Al-Anon
Family Groups is a fellowship of relatives and friends of alcoholics
who share their experience, strength and hope with each other in
order to solve their common problems. We believe alcoholism is a
family disease and that changed attitudes can aid recovery.
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| 3. |
Q. |
How
long has Al-Anon been in existence? |
|
A. |
Al-Anon has been offering hope and help
to the families and friends of alcoholics since 1951. Al-Anon /
Alateen has approximately 31,000 groups in 112 countries.
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| 4. |
Q. |
What
is Al-Anon's purpose? |
|
A. |
Al-Anon
has but one purpose: to help families and friends of alcoholics.
Al-Anon is non-professional. We do not counsel or advise our members
nor do we endorse or affiliate with other agencies or organizations.
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| 5. |
Q. |
Who can be
a member of Al-Anon / Alateen? |
|
A. |
Anyone
whose life has been or is being affected by someone else’s
drinking. This includes immediate family members, relatives,
friends, co-workers, employees, etc.
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| 6. |
Q. |
Does
the alcoholic in a person’s life have to be a member of AA
before that person goes to Al-Anon? |
|
A. |
No,
many people come into Al-Anon whether or not the alcoholic is
drinking.
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| 7. |
Q. |
Does
Al-Anon help parents whose children have a drinking problem? |
|
A. |
Yes.
In Al-Anon, members have a variety of relationships with the
alcoholic. Sometimes it is a parent, teen or adult child,
spouse/partner, sibling, grandparent or a friend. All members can
offer and receive insight to recovering from the effects of this
disease.
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. |
| 8. |
Q. |
Are
people hesitant to come to Al-Anon or Alateen? |
|
A. |
Yes,
and there can be several reasons. There is still a stigma attached
to the disease. For example, people are afraid that someone will
find out there is a drinking problem in the home. The family also
becomes entrenched in the disease. Denial and isolation can become a
way of life and make reaching out for help very difficult.
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. |
| 9. |
Q. |
What
is the purpose of anonymity? |
|
A. |
Personal
anonymity, as well as confidentiality of members sharing in our
program, creates a safe place to get help. We often say, “Whom you
see here, what you hear here, when you leave here, let it stay
here.”
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| 10. |
Q. |
Do
you find most of the people in Al-Anon have the same
frustrations? |
|
A. |
Yes.
Even though people’s situations differ, fear, anger, resentment
and loneliness are some of the common effects from the family
disease of alcoholism. Many people in Al-Anon and Alateen have
discovered that no situation is really hopeless and that it is
possible to find contentment and even happiness, whether the
alcoholic is drinking or not.
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| 11. |
Q. |
Will
Al-Anon tell me how to get
my loved one sober? |
|
A. |
We
come to realize that we can’t control or change another person and
that our efforts to do this only frustrate us and can even make
situations worse. In Al-Anon, we learn to detach by taking the focus
off the alcoholic and concentrating on our own healing.
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| 12. |
Q. |
How
do Al-Anon members learn to detach? |
|
A. |
By
sharing with each other and by trying to apply the Al-Anon Twelve
Steps to their everyday lives. As we learn healthy ways of dealing
with our problems, we find that we live happier and better lives in
spite of what’s going on around us.
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| 13. |
Q. |
What are the Twelve
Steps? |
|
A. |
The
twelve principles for personal recovery adapted from Alcoholics
Anonymous. Click here to link
to the Twelve Steps.
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. |
| 14. |
Q. |
Are
the children in the family affected by alcoholism? |
|
A. |
Yes.
Many children are profoundly affected. They experience many of the
same feelings that adults do including a sense of loss, confusion
and guilt. Alateen is a program for our younger members. In Alateen,
young people meet to exchange experiences and to gain an
understanding of themselves and the alcoholic. This helps their own
personal development and can help stabilize troubled thinking
resulting from close association with an alcoholic.
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| 15. |
Q. |
What
is the age range for Alateens? |
|
A. |
Their
ages usually range between 12 and 18; however, some groups have
members younger than 12.
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| 16. |
Q. |
Does
alcoholism result in cases of physical abuse toward adults and
children in the family? |
|
A. |
Yes,
sometimes this is a result of alcoholism. As members grow and heal,
sound decision-making skills are learned. We learn to protect
ourselves physically as well as emotionally.
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| 17. |
Q. |
How
are Al-Anon and Alateen groups financed? |
|
A. |
There
are no dues or fees. Al-Anon is fully self-supported by voluntary
contributions from members and the sale of literature. We do not
accept any outside funding.
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| 18. |
Q. |
Where
can a person in this area get more information
about Al-Anon and Alateen? |
|
A. |
Call
the Al-Anon Information Service in your area listed in the telephone
directory under Al-Anon, or Alcoholism.
Call the following toll-free telephone number for meeting
information outside your local area:
1-888-4AL-ANON(1-888-425-2666).
You may also visit our web site at www.al-anon.alateen.org
Al-Anon
Family Group Headquarters, Inc.
1600 Corporate Landing Parkway
Virginia Beach, VA 23454-5617
757-563-1600 (fax: 757-563-1655)
National
Public Information Guide
9 Antares Drive, Suite 245
Ottawa, Ontario
K2E 7V5 Canada
613-723-8484 (fax: 613-723-0151)
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