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- Did you ever lose time from work or
school due to gambling?
- Has gambling ever made your home life
unhappy?
- Did gambling affect your reputation?
- Have you ever felt remorse after
gambling?
- Did you ever gamble to get money with
which to pay debts or otherwise solve financial difficulties?
- Did gambling cause a decrease in your
ambition or efficiency?
- After losing did you feel you must
return as soon as possible and win back your losses?
- After a win did you have a strong urge
to return and win more?
- Did you often gamble until your last
dollar was gone?
- Did you ever borrow to finance your
gambling?
- Have you ever sold anything to finance
gambling?
- Were you reluctant to use "gambling
money" for normal expenditures?
- Did gambling make you careless of the
welfare of yourself or your family?
- Did you ever gamble longer than you
had planned?
- Have you ever gambled to escape worry
or trouble?
- Have you ever committed, or considered
committing, an illegal act to finance gambling?
- Did gambling cause you to have
difficulty in sleeping?
- Do arguments, disappointments or
frustrations create within you an urge to gamble?
- Did you ever have an urge to celebrate
any good fortune by a few hours of gambling?
- Have you ever considered self
destruction or suicide as a result of your gambling?
Most compulsive gamblers will answer yes
to at least seven of these questions.
Get more information on Compulsive Gambling
- We admitted we were powerless over
gambling - that our lives had become unmanageable.
- Came to believe that a Power greater
than ourselves could restore us to a normal way of thinking and
living.
- Made a decision to turn our will and
our lives over to the care of this Power of our own understanding.
- Made a searching and fearless moral
and financial inventory of ourselves.
- Admitted to ourselves and to another
human being the exact nature of our wrongs.
- Were entirely ready to have these
defects of character removed.
- Humbly asked God (of our
understanding) to remove our shortcomings.
- Made a list of all persons we had
harmed and became willing to make amends to them all.
- Make direct amends to such people
wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others.
- Continued to take personal inventory
and when we were wrong, promptly admitted it.
- Sought through prayer and meditation
to improve our conscious contact with God as we understood Him,
praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry
that out.
- Having made an effort to practice
these principles in all our affairs, we tried to carry this message to
other compulsive gamblers.
The 12 Step Program is
fundamentally based on ancient spiritual principles and rooted in sound
medical therapy. The best recommendation for the program is the fact
that "it works."
Gamblers Anonymous
would like to indicate that we are not soliciting members. Our intention
is to highlight that gambling for certain individuals is an illness
called "compulsive gambling." Gamblers Anonymous provides
the message that there is an alternative to the destruction of
compulsive gambling and this alternative is the Gamblers Anonymous
program.
Our ranks are filled with members who
have recovered from the illness by stopping gambling and attaining a
normal way of life. These members remain ready to help any individual
who passes through the Gamblers Anonymous door.
Find a GA
meeting in Louisiana
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