. . . the new
version of the program, now the “Twelve Steps.”
(Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 162)
Here
is enough of the context so that you can see what Bill meant when he was
talking about
[Page
161]
This particular evening, as my mind
ran over these developments, it seemed to me that the program was still not
definite enough. . . . Our steps would have to be more explicit. . . . Maybe
our six chunks of truth should be broken up into smaller pieces. . . .
Finally I started to write. I set
out to draft more than six steps; how many more I did not know. . . . They
added up to twelve. . . .
At this moment a couple of late
callers arrived. . . .
[Page
162]
.
. . I was greatly pleased with what I had written, and I read them the new
version of the program, now the “Twelve Steps.” . . .
. . .
Akronites like Paul and Dick S. like
the new steps very much. As the remainder of the book text developed, based on
the Twelve Steps, they continued to report their approval. But in New York the
hot debate about the Twelve Steps and the book’s contents was doubled and
redoubled.
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