Step Working Guide
                                                           STEP FIVE

                                                    "We Admitted To God,
                                              To Ourselvels, And To Another
                                              Human Being The Exact Nature
                                                        Of Our Wrongs."



Our Basic Text tells us that "Step Five is not simply a reading of Step Four." Yet we know that reading our
Fourth Step to another human being is certainly part of Step Five. So what's the rest, the part that's more than
simply a reading?
It's the admission we make-to God, to ourselves, and to another human being-that brings about the spiritual
growth connected with this step. We've had some experience with making admissions already. We've admitted
we have a disease; we've admitted we need help; we've admitted there's a Power that could help us. Drawing on
our experience with these admissions will help us in Step Five.
Many of us finished our Fourth Step with a sense of relief, thinking that the really hard part was over, only to
realize that we still had the Fifth Step to do. That's when the fear set in.
Some of us were afraid that our sponsor would reject or judge us. Others hesitated because we didn't want to
bother our sponsor with so much. We weren't sure we trusted our sponsor to keep our secrets.
We may have been concerned about what the inventory might reveal. There might be something hidden from us
that our sponsor would spot immediately - and it probably wouldn't be anything good. Some of us were afraid of
having to re-feel old feelings, and wondered if there was really any benefit to stirring up the past. Some of us felt
that as long as we hadn't actually spoken our inventories out loud, the contents wouldn't be quite real.
If we consider all our feelings about the Fifth Step, we may find that we are also motivated to continue this
process by a desire for more recovery. We think about the people we know who have worked this step. We're
struck by their genuineness and by their ability to connect with others. They aren't always talking about
themselves. They're asking about others, and they're truly interested in knowing the answer. And if we ask them
how they learned so much about relationships with others, they'll probably tell us that they began learning when
they worked Step Five.
Many of us, having worked the Fourth and Fifth Steps before, knew that this process always resulted in change-in
other words, we'd have to stop behaving the same old way! We may not have been entirely sure we wanted that.
On the other hand, many of us knew we had to change, but were afraid we couldn't.
Two things we need to begin working Step Five are courage and a sense of trust in the process of recovery. If we
have both these things, we'll be able to work through more specific fears and go through with the admissions we
need to make in this step.

                                                                      
Facing fears

Any of the fears we've talked about here might be ours, or we might have other fears that plague us. It's essential
that we know what our fears are and move forward in spite of them so that we're able to continue with our
recovery.

1:What reservations do I have about working the Fifth
Step?_________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________

2:Do I have any fears at this point? What are
they?________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
No matter what our fears stem from, most of our members have done pretty much the same things to deal with
them: We pray for courage and willingness, read the section from It Works: How and Why on the Fifth Step, and
seek reassurance from other members. Many of us have had the experience of going to step study meetings and
finding that, coincidentally, the topic always seems to be Step Four or Five. If we make the effort to share what
we're going through, we're sure to get the support we need from other members. Calling upon the spiritual
resources we have developed through working the previous steps will allow us to proceed with our Fifth Step.

3:What am I doing to work through my fears about doing a Fifth
Step?________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
4:How has working the first four steps prepared me to work the Fifth
Step?____________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
                                                             
Admitted to God

The chapter on Step Five in It Works: How and Why answers the question about why we must admit the exact
nature of our wrongs to God in addition to admitting them to ourselves and another human being. In NA, we
experience a way of life where the spiritual meets the everyday, where the ordinary meets the extraordinary.
When we admit the exact nature of our wrongs to the God of our understanding, our admission becomes more
meaningful.
How we make our admission to the God of our understanding depends on the specifics of our understanding.
Some make a formal admission to God apart from the admissions we make to ourselves and another human
being. Others acknowledge or invite the presence of a Higher Power in some way before going over the inventory
with their sponsor. Those of us whose Higher Power is the spiritual principles of recovery or the power of the NA
Fellowship may have to explore different methods of working this portion of the Fifth Step. Our sponsor can help
with this process. Whatever we do is okay as long as we are aware that we are also making our admission to a
Higher Power.

5:How will I include the God of my understanding in my Fifth
Step?__________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
6:How is my Third Step decision reaffirmed by working the Fifth
Step?_______________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
                                                                   
To ourselves

When we were using, most of us probably had people telling us we had a drug problem and should get some
help. Their comments didn't really matter to us. Or even if they did matter, it wasn't enough to stop us from using.
Not until we admitted our addiction to ourselves and surrendered to the NA program were we able to stop using.
It's just the same with the admission we make in the Fifth Step. We can have everyone from our spouse to our
employer to our sponsor telling us what we're doing that's working against us, but until we admit to our own
innermost selves the exact nature of our wrongs, we're not likely to have the willingness or the ability to choose
another way.

7:Can I acknowledge and accept the exact nature of my
wrongs?_____________________________________________
8:How will making this admission change the direction of my
life?____________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
                                                     
And to another human being

As addicts, one of the biggest problems we have is telling the difference between our responsibility and the
responsibilities of others. We blame ourselves for catastrophes over which we have no control. Conversely, we're
often in complete denial about how we have hurt ourselves and others. We overdramatize minor troubles, and we
shrug off major problems we really should be taking a look at. If we're not sure what the exact nature of our
wrongs is when we begin our Fifth Step, we'll know by the time we finish-because of making our admissions to
another human being. What we can't see, our listener can, and he or she will help us sort out what we need to
accept as our responsibility and what we don't.
Most of us asked someone to be our sponsor before we began formally working the steps, and have been
developing a relationship with that person ever since. For most of us, our sponsor will be the "another human
being" we choose to hear our Fifth Step He or she will help us separate the things that were not our responsibility
from the things that were. The relationship we have been building with our sponsor will give us the trust we need
to have in him or her. The therapeutic value of one addict helping another is often powerfully demonstrated when
our sponsor shares details from his or her own inventory as we share ours. This goes a long way toward
reassuring us that we are not unique.
The trust we must have in the person who is to hear our Fifth Step goes beyond simply being assured that he or
she will keep our confidences. We need to trust that our listener can respond appropriately to what we are
sharing. One of the primary reasons that so many of us find ourselves choosing our sponsor as the person who
will listen to our Fifth Step is because he or she understands what we're doing and therefore knows just what kind
of support we need during this process. Also, if our sponsor is our listener, it will help promote continuity when
we work the following steps. Still, if for any reason we choose someone else to hear our Fifth Step admission, his
or her "qualifications" are the same ones we would look for in our sponsor: an ability to be supportive without
minimizing our responsibility, someone who can provide a steadying influence if we begin to feel overwhelmed
during our Fifth Step - in short, someone with compassion, integrity, and insight.

9:What qualities does my listener have that are attractive to
me?______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
10:How will his or her possession of these qualities help me make my admissions more
effectively?_________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
For most of us, developing an honest relationship is something new. We're very good at running away from
relationships the first time someone tells us a painful truth. We're also good at having polite, distant interactions
with no real depth. The Fifth Step helps us to develop honest relationships. We tell the truth about who we are -
then, the hard part: we listen to the response. Most of us have been terrified of having a relationship like this. The
Fifth Step gives us a unique opportunity to try such a relationship in a safe context. We can be pretty much
assured that we won't be judged.

11:Am I willing to trust the person who is to hear my Fifth
Step?_____________________________________________
12:What do I expect from that
person?__________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
13:How will working the Fifth Step help me begin to develop new ways of having
relationships?____________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
                                                
The exact nature of our wrongs

Another way to ensure that our Fifth Step is "not simply a reading of Step Four" is to focus on what we are
supposed to be admitting: the exact nature of our wrongs. There is a diversity of experience in our fellowship
about what, precisely, is "the exact nature of our wrongs. Most of us agree that, in working Step Five, we should
be focusing our attention on what's behind the patterns of our addiction and the reasons we acted out in the ways
we did. Identifying the exact nature of our wrongs is often something that happens while we're sharing our
inventory. Sometimes the repetition of the same type of situation will reveal the exact nature of that situation. Why
do we, for example, keep choosing to involve ourselves with people who don't have our best interests at heart?
Why do we keep approaching every relationship we have as though our very lives depended on having the upper
hand? Why do we feel threatened by new experiences, and so keep avoiding them? Finding the common thread
in our own patterns will lead us right to the exact nature of our wrongs.
At some point in this process, we will probably begin calling certain patterns of behavior our "character defects."
Though it won't be until the Sixth Step that we begin an in-depth examination of how each one of our defects
plays a role in keeping us sick, it certainly won't hurt to allow this knowledge to begin forming in us now.

14:How does the exact nature of my wrongs differ from my
actions?_________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
15:Why do I need to admit the exact nature of my wrongs, and not just the wrongs
themselves?____________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
                                                              
Spiritual principles

In the Fifth Step, we will focus on trust, courage, self-honesty, and commitment.
Practicing the spiritual principle of trust is essential if we are to get through the Fifth Step. As mentioned above,
we will probably have some experience with our sponsor that allows us to trust him or her enough to go ahead
with this step; but what about the more profound issues that arise when we wonder if working this step will really
do any good? We have to trust a process as well as another person. The connection between the Fifth Step and
our spiritual development isn't always clear to us. This doesn't mean that the connection is any less real, but it may
make it harder for us to trust the process.

16:Do I believe that working the Fifth Step will somehow make my life better?
How?_____________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________

Courage is one principle we'll have to practice just to get started on this step. We'll probably need to continue
drawing on our courage periodically throughout our work on this step. When we replace the phone on its hook
just as we are about to call our sponsor for an appointment to make our admissions, we're feeling fear and we
need to practice courage. When we're sharing our inventory and we see a paragraph that we just can't tell anyone
about, we need to face that moment of fear with courage and go ahead with sharing all of our inventory. When
we've just shared something excruciatingly painful, and our feelings of vulnerability are so overwhelming that we
want to shut down before we hear what our sponsor has to say, we're at a defining moment in our recovery and
we need to choose the courageous path. Doing so will influence the future course of our lives. Each time we feel
fear, we remind ourselves that giving in to it has rarely had anything but negative consequences in our lives, and
doing so this time won't be any different. Such a reminder should be sufficient to motivate us to gather our courage.

17:What are some of the ways in which I can find the courage I need to work this
step?__________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
18:How does practicing the principle of courage in working this step affect my whole
recovery?___________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________

19:Have I set a time and place for my Fifth Step? When and
where?__________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________

Practicing the principle of self-honesty is essential when we admit to ourselves the exact nature of our wrongs.
Just as we mustn't disassociate ourselves from our emotions simply because we're afraid of our listener's
response, so we can't afford to shut down our own reactions. We must allow ourselves to experience the natural
and human reaction to the subject under discussion: our lives as addicts. Our lives have been sad. We've missed
out on a lot because of our addiction. We've hurt people we loved because of our addiction. These realizations
are painful. However, if we pay close attention, we'll probably recognize another feeling that's beginning to form in
the wake of the pain: hope.
We've finally stopped using over our feelings, running away from our feelings, and shutting down because of our
feelings; now, for the first time, we have a chance to walk through our feelings, even the painful ones, with
courage. Doing so will, in the long run, make us feel better about ourselves. This is one of the paradoxes that we
often find in recovery. What begins in pain ends in joy and serenity.

20:How have I avoided self-honesty in the past? What am I doing to practice it
now?_____________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________

21:How is a more realistic view of myself connected to
humility?_____________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________

22:How does practicing the principle of self-honesty help me accept
myself?___________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________

The principle of commitment is demonstrated by the action we take in this step. Many of us have made so-called
"commitments" in our lives, commitments to which we had no intention of sticking to in tough times; our
"commitments" were made solely for the sake of convenience. With each step we've taken in the program of NA,
we've deepened our real, practical commitment to the program. Getting a sponsor, working the steps, finding a
home group and going to its meetings - each one of these actions demonstrates that we're committed to our
recovery in a practical, meaningful way.

23:How does sharing my inventory with my sponsor further my commitment to the NA
program?__________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________

                                                                       
Moving on

One of the many benefits we get from working Step Five is a sense of self-acceptance. We clearly recognize who
we are today, and accept ourselves without reservation. Just because we're lacking in certain areas doesn't mean
we're worthless. We begin to see that we have both assets and defects. We're capable of great good - and of
inflicting great harm. There are aspects of our personalities that make us very special. Our experiences, even the
negative ones, have often contributed to the development of the very best parts of us. For the first time, we're able
to acknowledge that we're okay just as we are, right at this moment. But accepting ourselves as we are today
doesn't mean we can relax and stop striving for improvement. True self-acceptance includes accepting what we're
lacking. It wouldn't be self-acceptance if we believed we had no further growing to do - it would be denial. So we
acknowledge what we're lacking, and we make a commitment to work on it. If we want to be more
compassionate, we work on it by practicing the principle of compassion. If we want to be better educated, we
take the time to learn. If we want to have more friends, we take the time to develop our relationships.

24:How has working Step Five increased my humility and
self-acceptance?_____________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________

As we finish Step Five, we may feel a sense of relief; we've unburdened ourselves by sharing what we previously
had put a lot of energy into hiding or suppressing. It is true that our "defects... die in the light of exposure."
Exposure to the light brings a sense of freedom that we feel no matter what the outer circumstances of our lives
may be like.
All of our relationships begin to change as a result of working this step. We especially need to acknowledge how
much our relationship with ourselves, with a Higher Power, and with other people have changed:

25:How has my relationship with a Higher Power changed as a result of working the Fifth
Step?___________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________

26:How has my relationship with my sponsor changed as a result of working the Fifth
Step?______________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________

27:How has my view of myself changed as a result of working this
step?______________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________

28:To what extent have I developed love and compassion for myself and
others?________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
____________

Along with a sense of relief, our weariness with our character defects has probably reached a peak. This will
translate easily into a state of being entirely ready-just what we need to begin Step Six!






                                   Copyright © 1998, Narcotics Anonymous World Services, Inc
.