Step Working Guide
                                                          STEP TEN

                                           "We Continued To Take Personal
                                              Inventory And When We Were
                                              Wrong Promptly Admitted It."




Through working the first nine steps, our lives have changed dramatically - way beyond what we expected when
we first came to Narcotics Anonymous. We've become more honest, humble, and concerned about others, less
fearful, selfish, and resentful. But even such profound changes aren't guaranteed to be permanent. Because we
have the disease of addiction, we can always return to what we were before. Recovery has a price - it demands
our vigilance. We have to continue doing all the things we have been doing for our recovery so far. We have to
continue to be honest, to have trust and faith, to pay attention to our actions and reactions and to assess how
those are working for us or against us. We also have to pay attention to how our actions affect others, and when
the effects are negative or harmful, promptly step forward and take responsibility for the harm caused and for
repairing it. In short, we have to continue to take personal inventory and promptly admit our wrongs.
As you can see, the Tenth Step has us repeat much of the work we did in Steps Four through Nine, though in a
much-shortened format. The format suggested in this guide is one that covers in a general way the elements of a
personal inventory. Some of us may find that we need to add questions that focus on specific areas that are
affecting our individual recovery to the questions already in this guide. We may find some additional areas upon
which to focus from IP #9, Living the Program. Our sponsor may have specific direction for us on this point. As
noted before, this guide is meant to be a starting point, not the final word on any of the steps.

1:Why is a Tenth Step
necessary?______________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

2:What is the purpose of continuing to take personal
inventory?______________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

3:How can my sponsor help
me?_______________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

                                                            
Feeling versus doing

We use Step Ten to create and maintain a continuous awareness of what we're feeling, thinking, and, even more
importantly, what we're doing. Before we begin a regular pattern of personal inventory, it's imperative that we
understand what we are assessing. It won't do much good to make a list of our feelings without tying them to the
actions that they generate or fail to generate. We may often be feeling very badly though behaving very well, or
vice versa.
For instance, an NA member walks into her home group. "How are you?" someone asks. "Terrible," she replies.
Of course, this member is referring to the way she feels. She can't possibly be referring to what she's doing,
because she is behaving very well indeed: She's going to a meeting, honestly expressing how she feels, and
reaching out to another member who will be supportive.
On the other hand, we may be busy indulging our impulses and acting on character defects. On the surface, we
may feel very good. It usually takes a while before we notice the emptiness that goes along with living this way.
We're avoiding the work that will help us stay clean. We're indulging our impulses, and taking the easy way out.
And we know where this will take us!
The Tenth Step will keep us aware of ourselves so we don't end up going to either extreme. We don't have to
beat ourselves up because we feel badly. We can instead focus on the positive action we're taking. It may even
turn out that by shifting our focus this way, we'll wind up feeling better, too. Staying aware of what we're doing
helps us see patterns of destruction long before they become entrenched, so we don't wind up feeling good at the
cost of what's good for us.
We as addicts also tend to make judgments about what we are feeling. Anything that feels bad we immediately
want to stop. We often don't take into account that the way we're feeling makes perfect sense when we consider
the circumstances.
For instance, many of us have problems being angry. We don't like the way it feels. We judge it, concluding we
have no right to feel that way, and then we do our very best to suppress our angry feelings. Yet, we may be
experiencing a situation that would make anyone angry. Perhaps we're in a relationship with someone who
constantly fails to treat us with respect. Perhaps we've been passed over for several well-deserved promotions at
work. Our response to these situations is anger. We've been treated poorly - of course we're angry. Now comes
the moment when our recovery can propel us forward into greater self-respect or our disease can drag us down
into a thick fog of depression and resentment.
It all has to do with how we respond to our anger. If we scream and curse and throw things, we'll destroy any
possibility of making our relationship or job situation better. If we do nothing and bury our feelings of anger, we'll
become depressed and resentful, and that won't improve our situation either. But if we take positive action aimed
at improving the situation, it may get better; at the very least, we'll know when it's time to leave and be able to do
so without regrets.
Sometimes the only thing we need to do with our feelings is feel them. We don't need to react to them. For
instance, if we've lost someone, we are going to feel sorrow. Our sorrow may go on for a long time. It will lift
when we've grieved sufficiently. We can't afford to let our sorrow drag us down to the point where we can't go on
with our lives, but we should expect to be affected. We may be easily distracted or have a hard time participating
in activities that are supposed to be enjoyable. We need to strike a balance between being in denial of our feelings
and letting them overwhelm us; we don't want to go to either extreme. This seems like a simple concept- almost as
if it could go without saying-but many of our members share that it takes years of recovery before we're able to
achieve a balance most of the time.
So the Tenth Step grants us the freedom to feel our feelings by helping us see the difference between feeling and
doing.

4:Are there times in my life when I am confused about the difference between my feelings and my actions?
Expand on
this.___________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

                                                               
Right and wrong

The Tenth Step tells us that we have to promptly admit when we're wrong. The step seems to assume that we
know when we're wrong, but the fact is that most of us don't-at least not right away. It takes the consistent
practice of taking a personal inventory for us to become proficient at figuring out when we're wrong.
Let's face it. When we were new in recovery, we had been at odds with the rest of the world for some time. As
the Basic Text says, our "living skills were reduced to the animal level." We didn't know how to communicate with
others well. We began to learn in recovery, but in the process we made a lot of mistakes. Many of us went
through a period of time when we became very rigid about the values we had developed in recovery. We applied
that rigidity not only to ourselves, but to everyone around us. We thought it was principled and correct to confront
those whose behavior was "unacceptable." In truth, it was our behavior that was unacceptable. We were
self-righteous and overbearing. We were wrong.
Or some of us, after years of serving as a doormat for everyone to walk across, decided our recovery required
that we become assertive. But we went too far. We demanded that everyone treat us perfectly all the time. No
one could have a bad day and fail to return our phone call. No one was allowed to be emotionally unavailable to
us for any length of time. We angrily demanded perfect service at the places we did business. We weren't being
assertive. We were being immature and belligerent. We were wrong.
We can even end up being wrong if someone hurts us. How? Say our sponsor says something very hurtful to us.
Instead of taking it up with our sponsor, we talk to ten or twelve of our closest friends at the next three meetings
we go to. Before the week is through, half our local NA community is talking about the rotten thing so-and-so said
to one of his sponsees -and that's if the story stayed as it was originally! So the situation started out with us having
done no wrong, but ended up with us being responsible for damaging our sponsor's reputation in the program-the
place where he needs, as much as we do, to be allowed to make mistakes and recover at his own pace.

5:Have there been some times in my recovery when I've been wrong and not been aware of it until later? What
were
they?__________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

6:How do my wrongs affect my own life? Others'
lives?____________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

It's hard enough to figure out when we're wrong; admitting our wrongs can be even more challenging. Just like in
the Ninth Step, we have to be careful that we aren't doing more damage by making the admission.
For instance, many of us realize we've hurt someone close to us-perhaps because the person stopped speaking to
us-but aren't quite sure what we said or did wrong. Rather than taking the time to reflect on what we might have
done, or ask the person, we decide we'll just cover all eventualities and make a blanket admission. We approach
the person and say, "Please forgive me for anything I've ever, in all the time we've known each other, done to
offend you or hurt you.
The Tenth Step requires that we take the time for personal reflection for instances just like this. Chances are that if
we think about when the person's attitude toward us changed, and think about our behavior immediately
preceding that change, we'll know what we did wrong. It might be painful or embarrassing to think about; it
definitely takes effort, but so do all the steps. Laziness is a character defect like any other, and we can't afford to
act on it. Then again, if we're truly stumped, if we just can't pinpoint anything we might have said or done that was
harmful, there's nothing wrong with approaching the person and saying we've noticed that he or she seems to be
angry or upset with us, that we care about our relationship with that person, and want to hear what he or she has
to say. Most of us are afraid of what we'll hear in a situation like this, but we can't let our fear stop us from
working Step Ten.
There's another way we can render our admission of wrong completely ineffective: admit we're wrong and then
immediately point out what the other person did first that made us act as we did. For instance, say one of our
children used poor manners, so we yelled at her and called her a name. Now when we admit we were wrong, if
we tell our child that her behavior made us act the way we did, we've just delivered a message that justified our
first wrong, thus making ourselves doubly wrong.
Unlike the process contained in Steps Four through Nine, when we go through events from the past, Step Ten is
designed to keep us current. We don't want to let unresolved wrongs pile up. We need to try our very best to stay
abreast of what we're doing. Most of our work will be done by making constant adjustments to our outlook. If we
find ourselves becoming negative and complaining all the time, we might want to spend some time thinking about
the things for which we are grateful. We need to pay attention to the way we react when we've done something
wrong. Is it our first impulse to make an excuse? Are we claiming to be victims of someone's negative influence -
or of our disease? All excuses aside, we are responsible for what we do. It may very well be that our character
defects got the better of us, but that doesn't excuse our behavior. We need to accept responsibility, and continue
to be willing to have our shortcomings removed.

7:"When we were wrong promptly admitted it" what does this mean to
me?_____________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

8:Have there been times in my recovery when I've made situations worse by talking to someone before I should
have or blaming my behavior on someone else? What were
they?____________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

9:How does promptly admitting my wrongs help me change my
behavior?______________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

Step Ten points out the need to continue taking personal inventory and seems to assert that we do this solely to
find out when we're wrong. But how can we identify the times we're wrong unless we also have times we're right
as a basis for comparison. Identifying the times we do things right and forming personal values are as much a part
of personal inventory as identifying our liabilities. Most of us have a very difficult time with the concept of being
right. We think of the times we vigorously defended an opinion because we just knew we were right, but in light of
our recovery, we've come to understand that trampling over others in a discussion makes us wrong. Or we think
of our personal values. We know they're right for us, but if we began insisting that others live them, we would no
longer be right, but self-righteous. So how do we get comfortable with being right? First and foremost, by working
the Sixth and Seventh Steps so that our character defects don't turn our positive acts into negative acts. Then, we
have to realize that it will probably take some time, and some trial and error, before we are completely
comfortable in our new lives in recovery.

10:Have there been situations in my recovery in which I felt uncomfortable about acknowledging something I had
done well? Describe.
______________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

                               
How often should we take a personal inventory?

It Works: How and Why tells us that while our goal is to maintain continuous awareness of ourselves throughout
each day, it's very helpful to sit down at the end of each day and "work" this step. We need the consistency of
doing something every day for it to become a habit and to internalize the spiritual principles of the activity. As we
stay clean and our days of continuous abstinence turn into weeks and months and years, we'll find that taking a
personal inventory has become second nature. We'll find that keeping track of our spiritual fitness comes naturally,
without our having to think too much about it. We'll notice right away when we're headed in a direction we don't
want to go or about to engage in a behavior that's sure to cause harm. We become able to correct it. So, the
frequency of our formal efforts to take personal inventory may depend on our experience with recovery. In the
beginning, some of us sat down at the beginning of our day, the end of our day, or even both times and went
through IP #9, Living the Program, or something similar and "took our spiritual temperature." The point is that we
want to keep at it until it becomes a habit, until it's second nature to continuously monitor our recovery and our
spiritual state, notice when we're going off-course right away, and work to change it.

11:Why is it important to continue to take personal inventory until it becomes second
nature?_______________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

                                                          
A personal inventory

The following questions address the general areas we want to look at in a personal inventory. There may be times
when our sponsor wants us to do an inventory on a specific area of our lives, such as romantic relationships or our
patterns at work, or our sponsor may have specific questions to add to this. We should always consult our
sponsor on any step work we're doing.

12:Have I reaffirmed my faith in a loving, caring God
today?________________________________________________

13:Have I sought out the guidance of my Higher Power today?
How?_________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

14:What have I done to be of service to God and the people around
me?_______________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

15:Has God given me anything to be grateful for
today?____________________________________________________

16:Do I believe that my Higher Power can show me how to live and better align myself with the will of that
power?____
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

17:Do I see any "old patterns" in my life today? If so, which
ones?___________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

18:Have I been resentful, selfish, dishonest, or afraid? Have I set myself up for
disappointment?____________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

19:Have I been kind and loving toward
all?_______________________________________________________________

20:Have I been worrying about yesterday or
tomorrow?____________________________________________________

21:Did I allow myself to become obsessed about
anything?__________________________________________________

22:Have I allowed myself to become too hungry, angry, lonely, or
tired?_______________________________________

23:Am I taking myself too seriously in any area of my
life?__________________________________________________

24:Do I suffer from any physical, mental, or spiritual
problems?______________________________________________

25:Have I kept something to myself that I should have discussed with my
sponsor?______________________________

26:Did I have any extreme feelings today? What were they and why did I have
them?____________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

27:What are the problem areas in my life
today?__________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

28:Which defects played a part in my life today?
How?_____________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

29:Was there fear in my life
today?____________________________________________________________________

30:What did I do today that I wish I hadn't
done?_________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

31:What didn't I do today that I wish I had
done?__________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

32:Am I willing to
change?____________________________________________________________________________

33:Has there been conflict in any of my relationships today?
What?___________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

34:Am I maintaining personal integrity in my relations with
others?___________________________________________

35:Have I harmed myself or others, either directly or indirectly, today?
How?___________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

36:Do I owe any apologies or
amends?_________________________________________________________________

37:Where was I wrong? If I could do it over again, what would I do differently? How might I do better next
time?_____
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

38:Did I stay clean
today?____________________________________________________________________________

39:Was I good to myself
today?_______________________________________________________________________

40:What were the feelings I had today? How did I use them to choose principle-centered
action?___________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

41:What did I do to be of service to others
today?_________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

42:What have I done today about which I feel
positive?_____________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

43:What has given me satisfaction
today?________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

44:What did I do today that I want to be sure I
repeat?_____________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

45:Did I go to a meeting or talk to another recovering addict
today?___________________________________________

46:What do I have to be grateful for
today?______________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

                                                            
Spiritual principles

In the Tenth Step, we will focus on self-discipline, honesty and integrity.
Self-discipline is essential to our recovery. When we were using, we were self-seeking and self-absorbed. We
always took the easy way out, giving in to our impulses, ignoring any opportunity for personal growth. If there was
anything in our lives that required a regular commitment, chances are that we only followed through if it wasn't too
hard, if it didn't get in the way of our self-indulgence, or if we happened to feel like it.
The self-discipline of recovery calls on us to do certain things regardless of how we feel. We need to go to
meetings regularly even if we're tired, busy at work, having fun, or filled with despair; we need to go regularly even
when - especially when -we re feeling hostile toward the demands that recovery makes on us. We go to meetings,
call our sponsor, and work with others because we have decided we want recovery in NA, and those things are
the actions that will help assure our continued recovery. Sometimes we're enthusiastic about these activities.
Sometimes it takes every bit of willingness we possess to continue with them. Sometimes they become so woven
into our daily existence, we're hardly aware that we're doing them.

47:Why is the principle of self-discipline necessary in this
step?______________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

48:How can practicing the principle of self-discipline in this step affect my entire
recovery?_______________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

The principle of honesty originates in Step One, and is brought to fruition in Step Ten. We are usually nothing less
than amazed at the range and depth of our honesty by this point in our recovery. Where before we may have had
honest hindsight, able to see our true motives long after a situation was over, we are now able to be honest with
ourselves, about ourselves, while the situation is still occurring.

49:How does being aware of my wrongs (self-honesty) help me change my
behavior?____________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________
______________________________________________________________________________________
____________

The principle of integrity can be quite complex, but it is integrity, more than anything else, that commands our
ability to practice other principles. In fact, integrity is knowing which principles we need to practice in a given
situation, and in what measure. For instance, we're standing outside a meeting one night, and happen to be part of
a group that begins gossiping about someone else in the program. Let's say they're discussing the affair our best
friend's spouse is having, and we know it to be true because we heard it from our best friend the previous night.
Knowing what to do in this situation will probably take every ounce of integrity we possess. So which spiritual
principles do we need in this situation? Honesty? Tolerance? Respect? Restraint? It's probably our first impulse to
rush in, condemning the gossip because we know how much it would hurt our friend to have such private matters
discussed publicly. But by doing so, we may confirm the gossip's truth and so hurt our friend more, or we may end
up self-righteously humiliating the people involved in the gossip. Most of the time, it isn't necessary to prove we
have integrity by confronting a situation we don't approve of. There are a couple of things we could do in this
situation. We could either change the subject, or we could excuse ourselves and walk away. Either of these
choices would send a subtle message about our feelings, and at the same time, allow us to be true to our own
principles and spare our friend as much as possible.

50:What situations in my recovery have called on me to practice the principle of integrity? How have I
responded? Which times have I felt good about my response, and which times have I not?
________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

                                                                     
Moving on

One of the most wonderful things about the Tenth Step is that the more we work it, the less we'll need the second
half of it. In other words, we won't find ourselves in the wrong as often. When we come to recovery, most of us
have never been able to have any kind of long-term relationship, certainly not any in which we resolved our
conflicts in a healthy and mutually respectful way. Some of us had raging fights with people and, once they were
over, never spoke of the underlying problems that caused the fights. Some of us went to another extreme, never
disagreeing at all with the people who were supposed to be our closest friends and relatives. It seemed easier to
keep our distance than to risk creating a conflict that we may then have had to deal with. Finally, some of us just
walked away from any relationship in which conflict arose. It didn't matter how much we were hurting the other
person; it seemed easier than working through a problem and building a stronger relationship.
The Tenth Step makes it possible for us to have long-term relationships - and we need to have long-term
relationships, especially in NA. After all, we depend on each other for our very lives. Many of us feel deeply
connected to the people who came to NA when we did and have stayed around. We've done service work with
one another, shared apartments with one another, married one another, and sometimes divorced one another.
We've celebrated milestones in each other's lives: births, graduations, buying homes, promotions, and recovery
anniversaries. We've mourned losses together, and we've comforted one another through the painful times in life.
We've touched each other's lives and formed a shared history. We are a community.
Along with learning to admit when we're wrong comes a freedom that is unlike any we've ever experienced
before. It becomes so much more natural for us to admit when we re wrong that we wonder why we ever found it
so terrifying. Perhaps because we felt so "less than" in so many ways, an admission of a mistake felt like we were
revealing our deepest secret: our inferiority. But when we found out through working the steps that we weren't
inferior at all, that we had just as much value as anyone else, it no longer seemed so crushing to admit we were
wrong. We began to feel whole.

51:How does the Tenth Step help me live in the
present?____________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

52:What am I doing differently as a result of working Step
Ten?_____________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________________________
___________

Working the Tenth Step makes it possible for us to achieve more balance and harmony in our lives. We find that
we're happy and serene much more often than not. Feeling out of sorts becomes so rare that, when it does
happen, it's a signal that something is wrong. We can readily identify the cause of our discomfort by taking a
personal inventory.
The personal freedom that has been building since we began working the steps yields an increase in our choices
and options. We have total freedom to create any kind of life we want for ourselves. We begin to look for the
meaning and purpose in our lives. We ask ourselves if the lifestyle we have chosen helps the still-suffering addict
or makes the world a better place in some other way. What we are searching for, we'll find in the Eleventh Step.






                                      Copyright © 1998, Narcotics Anonymous World Services, Inc.