Today's
thought
from
Hazelden
is:
Nothing
great
was
ever
achieved
without
enthusiasm.
--Ralph
Waldo
Emerson
Many
of
us
can
probably
recount
the
details
of
the
"last
straw,"
the
turning
point,
the
moment
we
began
the
journey
on
the
road
to
recovery.
Up
until
then
all
roads,
however
different,
led
downhill.
For
some
of
us
the
descent
was
steep,
rough,
and
swift;
for
others,
long
and
winding
across
years
of
denial,
the
pain
just
under
the
surface.
But
today
we
are
on
the
brink
of
recovery.
Maybe
it
still
looks
like
the
bottom,
but
now
we're
looking
up.
And
that's
what
counts.
Part
of
looking
up
involves
enthusiasm
for
life's
smaller
offerings.
We
relish
the
little
things
we
once
overlooked:
apple-picking
with
children
on
an
autumn
afternoon;
planting
seedlings
in
the
spring
that,
come
summer,
will
yield
flowers;
the
joy
of
going
to
sleep
with
a
contented
heart.
Enthusiasm
breathes
hope
into
our
resolve
to
begin
a
new
sober
life.
Life
looks
better
in
sobriety
and
it
will
be
better.
Enthusiasm
can
be
a
key.
Today,
help
me
greet
my
recovery
with
gratitude
for
all
that
has
happened
and
enthusiasm
for
all
that
can
be.
You
are
reading
from
the
book:

Body,
Mind,
and
Spirit
by
Anonymous
Body,
Mind,
and
Spirit.
Copyright
1990
by
Hazelden
Foundation.
All
rights
reserved.
Printed
in
the
United
States
of
America.
No
portion
of
this
publication
may
be
reproduced
in
any
manner
without
the
written
permission
of
Hazelden.