AWG Secular 12 Step Self-Esteem Group 🚀
Code: 781927
Meeting description
It is not mandatory to turn on your mic or camera. Coming to listen is totally fine.
By taking part, we hold space for others, and ourselves, to participate in a way that is manageable for us as we exist right now.
It is not necessary to actively be doing the AWG 12 Steps in order to be a full participant.
Any contact with the group and its resources can be beneficial as long as it’s sustainable for each of us as individuals. Many of us participate simply by attending meetings.
As we participate in this meeting over time, we might find ourselves seeking to…
• Find our own concept of self-esteem and grow toward it
• Come to understand personal boundaries, their roles in our lives, and how to develop and maintain healthy boundaries
• Understand the concept of nonviolent detachment and how and when to enact it
• Develop more manageable lifestyles
• Develop a sense of self that leads to more health, well being, and manageability in our lives
• Release others from the responsibility of defining or reinforcing our sense of self-esteem
• Form personal goals about self-esteem and self-concept based on our own understanding of our own needs, as they exist today
AWG 12 Step Self-Esteem Readings
My favorite things
Learning I'm autistic has allowed me to move towards the things I love
Special interests, my safe foods, the books, films, and TV I watch over and over, and more... things things have always been important to me, but now that I know I'm autistic, they mean even more. Before, some of these felt like guilty pleasures. Learning I'm autistic has allowed me to move towards the things I love. They're necessities, not concessions. I also have a new appreciation for good things I didn't know the full value of before, like people who understand autism, sensory-friendly environments, and how much better my life can be when I get enough rest. What about you--post-identification, have any longtime pleasures gotten even better? Have you identified any new ones?
- Has learning about autism helped you move towards things you enjoy?
- Identify new good things you hadn't noticed before? Please describe.
- Do you feel more confident "owning" your pleasures now? Why might that be?
- Are there any pleasures you still feel private, protective, or perhaps embarrassed about? Please describe.
- Any tools, strategies, or resources that helped you?
- Anything else to add?


