Working With Others
The Message Never Changes, But The Methods Do
One of the gifts of studying the Big Book with other alcoholics is discovering that sometimes the most interesting conversations happen in the tension between what the book says and how we experience recovery today.
Tonight, I was in a Big Book study discussing pages 90-91 of Working With Others. The conversation centered around a passage many of us know well:
“If he does not want to stop drinking, don’t waste time trying to persuade him. You may spoil a later opportunity.”
At first glance, the instruction seems straightforward. If someone isn’t ready, move on.
Yet as the discussion unfolded, several members shared something interesting. They talked about people who stayed in touch with them before they were ready. Sponsors who kept calling. A.A. members who kept inviting them to meetings. Friends who refused to give up hope.
Some of them admitted they ignored those efforts at the time. But years later, they remembered them. Those people had planted seeds.
So which is it? Do we move on? Or do we stay engaged?
Perhaps the answer lies in understanding the difference between carrying the message and trying to control the outcome.
A Book Written For A Particular Time
One thing that is easy to forget is that the Big Book was written in 1939. The people described in Working With Others lived in a very different world.
- There were no treatment centers.
- There were no recovery podcasts.
- There were no online meetings.
- There were no text messages.
- There were no sobriety apps.
- In many places there weren’t even local A.A. meetings.
When a prospect was identified, members often physically went to visit them. The Big Book describes sitting in kitchens, talking with spouses, meeting alcoholics in hospitals, and making what became known as Twelfth Step calls.
When I got sober in 1987, I was still being taken on Twelfth Step calls with my sponsor and other men. We would drive across town to meet someone who had reached out for help. We would sit in living rooms, on front porches, or around kitchen tables sharing our stories.
That was simply how it was done.
Today, many alcoholics first encounter A.A. through a website, a podcast, a treatment center, a social media post, or an online meeting. The methods have changed dramatically. The spiritual principles have not.
What The Big Book Is Actually Warning Us About
When I read pages 90-91 today, I don’t hear the author telling me to stop caring about someone who isn’t ready. I hear them warning me not to become a salesman. There is a significant difference.
The Big Book repeatedly reminds me that I do not have the power to make someone sober. I believe:
- We cannot argue someone into recovery.
- We cannot lecture them into willingness.
- We cannot shame them into surrender.
- We cannot even love them enough to make them willing.
The book is possibly cautioning us against trying to force a spiritual awakening before a person is ready for one. When we cross that line, we often stop being helpful and start trying to play God. That rarely ends well.
The Difference Between Availability and Pursuit
Many of us can think of someone who helped us long before we were ready. But when we look closely, what did they actually do? Most of the time, they didn’t chase us. They didn’t corner us. They didn’t pressure us. They didn’t demand that we get sober. Instead, they remained available.
They answered the phone, extended invitations, shared their experience, and left the door open. In other words, they carried the message without carrying the alcoholic. That’s a very different thing.
The person who planted the seed in my life wasn’t responsible for making it grow. They were simply responsible for planting it. God handled the rest.
A Matter Of Balance
Like so many things in recovery, this becomes a matter of balance. On one side is indifference. “Well, he isn’t ready. Not my problem.” On the other side is obsession. “If I just say the right thing, call enough times, or work hard enough, he will get sober.” Neither position reflects the spirit of the Big Book.
If I’m honest, I often prefer life to be much simpler than that. My natural tendency is to see things in black and white. I want clear rules. I want definitive answers. I want to know exactly where the line is so I can stay safely on one side of it. But recovery has taught me that many of the most important spiritual lessons are found somewhere in the grey.
The alcoholic mind often wants certainty. We want a formula. We want to know whether we should keep calling or stop calling. Whether we should stay involved or walk away. Whether we should help or detach.
The program frequently responds with something less concrete: “It depends.”
- It depends on the person.
- It depends on the circumstances.
- It depends on our motives.
- It depends on whether we are being helpful or whether we are trying to control.
That can be uncomfortable because grey areas require discernment. They require prayer. They require humility. They require us to admit that there may not always be a single correct answer.
The longer I stay sober, the more I realize that spiritual maturity (emotional sobriety) is often learning how to live faithfully in that tension. The beauty of our program is not that it provides a black-and-white answer for every situation. The beauty is that it teaches us spiritual principles that help ,e navigate the grey areas of life.
The middle path here is to remain willing, available, compassionate, and honest while remembering that another person’s recovery does not belong to me.
My responsibility is to carry the message. Their responsibility is to decide what to do with it. God’s responsibility is everything else.
The Question For Me
Perhaps the real question isn’t whether I should stay in touch with someone who isn’t ready. Perhaps the question is why I am staying in touch.
Am I reaching out because I genuinely care?
Or because I need them to get sober?
Am I making myself available?
Or am I trying to manage their journey?
Am I carrying the message?
Or am I carrying the alcoholic?
The answer to those questions often reveals where the line is. The methods of A.A. have changed over the decades. Twelfth Step calls are less common. Technology has transformed how we connect. The pathways into recovery look different than they did in 1939.
But the spiritual principles found in Working With Others remain remarkably relevant.
- Be helpful.
- Be honest.
- Be available.
- Don’t play God.
- Plant seeds when you can.
- And trust that, when the time is right, the One who makes things grow will do what none of us ever could.
As I reflect on those discussions from our Big Book study tonight, I find myself grateful that A.A. rarely asks me to master a technique. Instead, it asks me to practice principles. Methods evolve. Culture changes. Technology advances. But the spiritual responsibility remains the same: offer what was freely given to me and leave the results in God’s hands.
That may be one of the hardest lessons in sponsorship, service, and recovery as a whole.
And it may also be one of the most freeing.
In love and service,



