"One of the most encouraging facts of life is that your weakness can become your greatest asset. Kites and airplanes rise against the wind. In climbing up a high mountain, we need the stony crags and rough places to aid us in our climb. So your weakness can become an asset if you will face it, examine it, and trace it to its origin. Set it in the very center of your mind. No weakness, such as drinking, ever turned into an asset until it was first fairly faced. Am I making my weakness my greatest asset?"
I can see how the process of recovery might make me a better person in the long run than if I had never gone through the experience at all. I see people who have had such easy lives that they take things for granted, they are spoiled rotten, they consume like there is no tomorrow, and they are selfish in general.
I just wonder -- what kind of person would I have been if I hadn't been an alcoholic?
And I know that we have to go through hard times to learn lessons in life, but having just come from the alcoholic battlefield so recently, I'm not sure I see the benefit just yet. I'm curious to hear what some of you who have more sober time think about this. Do you think that having gone through this experience has made you a better person? Is it an asset? Has what you learned from it helped you cope with other situations in your life?
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