The SEA's Program
SEA's 12 Step Guide
Step 12
Content:
Step 12: Having
had a spiritual awakening or renewal as a result of these steps, we tried to
carry this message to others hurting from low self-esteem and to practice these
principles in our life.

-
When
the SEA was a foaming, raging enemy
-
When
I needed nurturance and sustenance
-
When
I needed challenge and motivation
-
The
SEA has an ever changing face and persona
-
My
Self-Esteem is open to change
-
Will
I grow to be strong and healthy.
James
J Messina Ph.D.

Carry the message to others hurting from low self-esteem
Step
12 encourages you to join with others who are hurting from low self-esteem to
form a community of support. This is why Self-Esteem Seekers Anonymous was
created. The SEA's program is a way of creating a safe harbor for your self in
the sea of life in which you can lay anchor to give and receive support in
your recovery efforts.
The
Buddy system and group sharing aspects of the SEA's program ensure you are
giving and receiving feedback concerning the practice of the SEA's principles.
By your ongoing utilization of the SEA's program, you ensure that you are
meeting the intent of Step 12.
By
being in a support group in which you are sharing with others the recovery
model and by regular self-assessment
you will be prodded to be honest about your efforts at recovery and practice
of the SEA's program principles.
A
second aspect of Step 12 is to assist people you live, work, or play with who
are suffering from low self-esteem to recognize the negative impact it has on
their lives. A Step 12 action would be to invite them to gain the benefits of
utilizing the SEA's program on the www.coping.org
website. Tools for Relationships,
Helping Another Recognize the Need for Help,'
provides useful directions on how to do this. A behavioral intervention as
outlined is a beneficial tool to make the person aware of the impact of the
negative consequences of low self-esteem making life unmanageable and out of
control. Willingness to participate in behavioral interventions with others
hurting from low self-esteem is a way to draw them to the twelve step healing
process of Self-Esteem Seekers Anonymous.
In
your journal,
1.
give examples of people in your
personal, work, and social life whom you believe to be suffering from the
negative impact of low self-esteem.
2.
How comfortable are you in carrying the healing message of the SEA's twelve
steps to these people? Answer this for each of the people you identified.
3.
What people could you enlist to help you perform a behavioral intervention with
these people? List specific intervenors for each of the people you identified.
4.
How comfortable are you in performing a behavioral intervention with each of the
people you identified? What obstacle(s) exist for each of these people
preventing them from being open to your message of hope and healing?
5.
How do these people's problems impact your own personal efforts of
recovery and self-healing? Give specific examples for each of these people.
6. In order to maintain your serenity and
personal recovery, you might need to "let go'' of people who are not able
at this time to accept their own need to change and heal. If their problems
prevent you from staying on track with your program of recovery, your only
option may be to work away from them. How comfortable are you in this
possibility of letting go of these people? Answer this for each person
identified.
7.
What role does your partnership with your Higher Power play in gaining the
confidence to let go of the uncontrollable and non-changeable people in your
life who are not open to your Step 12 message to them?
8.
Maintaining your recovery is enhanced by involving positive support people in
your life. Identify the people in your personal, work, and social life who help
you maintain the principles of the SEA's program. Identify how you feel about
each of these people and identify a positive affirmation you can share with each
one to encourage them to continue to be the healthy support you need in your
recovery program.
-
Support
people in my family life
-
Support
people in my work/school life
-
Support
people in my social life

Practice these principles in your life for full
recovery
The
twelve step program of recovery of Self-Esteem Seekers Anonymous (The SEA's
Program) is based on the principle that self-esteem is the key to health for
every person on earth. For this reason a person actively pursuing personal
recovery from low self-esteem would never intentionally bring down, harm, or
discount the self-esteem of another person.
The
person who has increased healthy self-esteem is an individual who has the
skills to cope with the daily trials and challenges of life. Also, a person
with healthy self-esteem has the ability to size up a problem and use problem
solving and decision making skills to address it. A third and important mark
of a person with healthy self-esteem is the desire to be altruistic and
helpful to others. The ability to cope with life, solve problems, and be
generous and helpful to others is the goal of the SEA's program's twelve steps
to recovery. The essence of this goal is contained in the Prayer for Peace of
St. Francis of Assisi.
-
Prayer
for Peace
-
Lord,
-
Make
me an instrument of your peace.
-
Where
there is hatred,
-
Let
me sow love;
-
Where
there is injury, pardon;
-
Where
there is doubt, faith;
-
Where
there is despair, hope;
-
Where
there is darkness, light;
-
Where
there is sadness, joy.
-
O
Divine Master,
-
Grant
that I may seek
-
Not
so much to be consoled,
-
As
to console;
-
To
be understood,
-
As
to understand;
-
To
be loved,
-
As
to love.
-
For
it is in giving
-
That
we receive;
-
It
is in pardoning
-
That
we are pardoned;
-
It
is in dying
-
That
we are born to eternal life.
In your journal answer:
1.
How well are you functioning as an instrument of
peace, since you have begun to recover from low self-esteem? Are you still
caught up in a compulsive need to have others make you feel good about yourself?
Or are you more self-reliant in self-affirmation? Are you caught up in the
unhealthy selfish need to have people "do for'' you? Or are you practicing
healthy selfishness and "doing for'' yourself, requiring no one in your
life to serve you in order to get your approval or recognition?
2.
How do you
feel about your relationships with the people in your personal, work, and social
life? How healthy are you in these relationships? How well do you affirm the
self-esteem of these people? How giving and helping are you to them? How open
are you to see your behaviors as having a potentially negative impact on their
own self-esteem? Give examples of people in your current life with whom you have
a relationship and answer these questions for each one of them.
3.
In your relationships with your SEA's buddies and members of your support
group(s), you are expected to experiment with new behaviors which will enhance
your carrying the message of hope about the SEA's program. How well do you apply
the following Buddy rules in your SEA's recovery efforts?
-
How
well do you listen to and affirm your buddies and group members?
-
How
do you feel when you think you have "given'' more than received by
listening and affirming in a group or to a buddy?
-
How
do you feel about your efforts and progress to keep your buddies at SEA
relationships one of support, affirmation, and fun and not of gossip, self-pity,
and mutual commiseration?
-
How
well do you function as an instrument of peace in the groups and with your
buddies at SEA's?
4.
By practicing in all aspects of your life the SEA's helping, listening, and
affirming principles, you can enhance your effectiveness as a spouse, parent,
supervisor, coworker, and friend. How well do you carry these principles
practiced at SEA's into your daily life? How do you feel about your increased
efficiency and productivity in your daily life? How do you feel about the
response of people to your new changed behaviors and "new you?'' Give
examples from various aspects of your life about how your relationships have
changed with people and answer these questions for each person.
5.
What more do you need to do to become a true SEA's healthy self-esteem
instrument of peace?
6.
What monitoring directions and permission do you
need to give others in your life to keep you on track in putting the principles
of the twelve step program of recovery of SEA's into your personal, work, and
social life?

As you utilize the SEA's program and
incorporate the principles in your personal, work, and social life, reframe Step
12 and state it in a way which clearly emphasizes how it helps you on your road
to recovery from low self-esteem.

|