I bought this book as a sort of update. I am the former spouse of a person with deepseated anger issues. I had participated in Alanon back in the 1990's but had fallen away from it, and since my divorce from that person with recovery issues, I learned that she had become heavily involved in Alanon to sort through things related to her own Family Of Origin. So I bought this book because I wanted to fully understand the attraction of The Program.... she is now going mulitple times per week....When we were together I had experienced her problems, and born the brunt of anger which shredded my self esteem, but not been able to help her. She was in denial up until a period after the divorce when she finally hit her own Rock Bottom. I needed to "let go and let God" help her, a difficult decision for sure.
Now, the book is inseparable from the Alanon Program; and this is something you love or hate - or maybe I should say, which you either buy into totally, or fail to understand. I agree with the other reviewers who said you need more than just this, in order to begin "recovery".
The heart and soul of Alanon for those persons who desperately need it, is not the book; not the slogans; but the other persons who are further along in the process and who become your "sponsor" - these people become your new support system and help you learn to re-parent yourself. In this way, to truly work the Program is akin to joining a cult, since you will go through a period of depending on these persons to help you relearn the world. My former spouse said something they all say " I don't know what my old friends think of my new Alanon friends, but they are my family now"... you get the picture. It was particularly striking when I was on the phone with her, several years after the divorce, prompted by issues with one of our daughters. She seemed unable to complete a phone conversation unless she interrupted it and called back. I realized that in the interim she was phoning a sponsor, discussing my call, and then calling me back parroting what The Program said in this situation. This is a level of dependence on the Alanon lifeline which is dazzling. The role of the sponsor is only alluded to in a tangential way in the book.
I feel sorry to realize that there are so any wounded souls out there who need this, but the truth is, Alanon has saved many people's lives and helped them during their crises. If you are a person with co-dependent issues the Program is for you. It has helped many people with personality disorders in addition to the families of alcoholics.
Anger has a place in recovery, but this is my main area where I have difficulties with The Program. One bone to pick with Alanon is on the area of "detaching with love" - a strategy or technique used to cope with any person causing difficulty. In my case, I was the spouse of an Alanon person whose issues mainly dealt with her Family Of Origin, but detaching with love was used to cut *me* off since I was not also using The Program. It was not until years later that the person realized the craziness and injustice of this. If you are the non-offending family member, be alert for this, because it can be misused against you as a means to pull the person into the cultish aspects of Alanon.
Alanon teaches the new disciples how to do this, but I do not think it is fair to the recipient of the strategy because it is never explained. True Love can be similar to enmeshment - it is a mystery of life......
Also, Alanon adherents will often go through a period of learning how to express their anger as they re-establish their personal identity, and if the person has deep-seated anger issues which are rooted in their basic personality, the lingo of Alanon can be used to rationalize the way that a person delivers verbal abuse under the guise of "being honest....."
Now, when "owning you own anger " gets confused with "only owning your side of ther street", it is a subtle way to condone emotional violence toward those persons around the new Alanon convert. Would you unleash your anger at a two-year-old? No, because the kid doesn't have the tools...Most adult persons caught up with a person who has a personality disorder likewise do not have the tools to deal with this kind of verbal abuse, and a new convert can use the wrong parts of The Program to justify evil behavior. It goes without saying that there is never any excuse for the kind of unkindness sometimes unleashed by Alanon adherents toward those around them who are non-disciples. That was my experience.
So,in balance, as I wrote, the book is not separable from The Program. take it or leave it!