AWG Secular 12 Step Self-Esteem Group 🚀

Looking for the old site? All of the original materials are still available on https://awg12steps.wordpress.com/
Zoom access and meeting times

Meetings are every Tuesday from 11 am to 12 pm Eastern US Time. See Meeting Time in a Different Time Zone


Meeting ID: 824 1142 4876
Code: 781927

Emails will be sent out to mailing list members in the rare case of a cancellation.
Get a weekly email reminder for meetings

Submit your email to receive a reminder each week about the upcoming AWG Self-Esteem group meeting
Your email address is only used to send you our newsletter and information about our activities. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Meeting description

This is a secular 12 Step meeting focused on self-esteem recovery for late-identified autistic women and members of all other marginalized genders (nonbinary, gender fluid, MTF/FTM trans, agender, autigender, and more).

We meet each Tuesday on Zoom, practice the AWG 12 Steps using the AWG 12 Step Workbook, share in response to weekly readings, and participate in the optional co-mentorship program if we so desire.

It is not mandatory to turn on your mic or camera. Coming to listen is totally fine.
B
y 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.
An
y 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 discover a more realistic sense of our place in the world
• Reassess our relationships, especially in terms of our responsibilities towards ourselves and others
• 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

Nonviolent detachment

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Nonviolent detachment means standing at the distance needed to make a relationship manageable.

Promise #3 says, "I can accept how things are while being able to practice nonviolent detachment from things or people that are not healthy for me."

This statement was confusing to me at first. Having just become identified, I was still in a place where nothing felt healthy to me. Was I supposed to detach from everything? And anyway, what with masking, dissociation, and chronically low spoons, wasn't I way too detached already? I wanted to be connecting, not detaching.

It wasn't long before I started to see detachment in a new light. Post-identification, I found myself thinking a lot about how to prove my autism to a certain friend. It was important to me that we connect around my true identity. But the more I thought about how to convince her, the more stressed and sad I became. At last, I realized that nothing would convince her. But how could I move forward without her believing me? I didn't want to leave our friendship behind or start treating her with coldness or anger. I felt I had nowhere else to go and couldn't afford to burn a bridge.

Then I remembered "nonviolent detachment" from Promise 3. Some 12 Step programs call it "detachment with love".  Nonviolent detachment means that I can accept someone as they are today without feeling pressured to like or contribute to whatever about them is bothering me. 

"Standing at a safe distance" is a metaphor that has helped me. For me, nonviolent detachment means standing at the distance needed to make a relationship manageable. If a person is important to me, I can stand far enough away to avoid harm, but close enough so that we can still connect on the things we do have in common. I can modify my distance closer or farther as time goes by, depending how life develops. Of course, if the person is actively trying to harm me or has harmed me in the past, the distance could be much greater and might no longer involve communication. Getting sufficient distance in those cases might take time and planning, and potentially asking for help from others.

When I am standing at a safe distance, nonviolent detachment gives me freedom: the freedom to choose how I interact with a person, freedom to develop a sense of self that doesn't depend on any one specific individual, freedom from my fear and anger towards them, freedom to use recovered time and energy to heal, and freedom to spend my spoons on things and people who really do fulfill my needs. For example, knowing I am accepted in AWG has made it easier for me to accept that my friend's attitudes about autism are not what I would like them to be. I accept her as she is, while standing at a distance at which her attitudes can no longer hurt me. I "take what I like and leave the rest." I find I can use nonviolent detachment with people, things, and even ideas. Life is starting to become safer and more manageable with nonviolent detachment.

Share questions:

  • What does nonviolent detachment mean to you? 
  • Have you ever used nonviolent detachment in your own life? What happened? 
  • Is there anything about the idea of nonviolent detachment that makes you uncomfortable? Please say more. 
  • Do you have any traits that make nonviolent detachment difficult, for example, black and white thinking, perfectionism, demand avoidance, holotropism (feeling merged with your environment, including with other people), concern with justice and fairness, other? 
  • Has using nonviolent detachment affected your sense of self in any way? Self-esteem? 
  • What is your idea of a "safe distance", metaphorically speaking, from someone else? 
  • Has it ever been hard to get to a safe distance from someone? What happened?  
  • Any tools, resources, or strategies that helped you? 
  • Anything else to add?
No comments yet

AWG 12 Step Self-Esteem Workbook

Step 1

We admitted that despite our efforts, many of the factors affecting our sense of self and self-esteem seemed out of control, leading to increased unmanageability in our lives.

Step 2

Coming Soon

Step 3

Coming Soon

Step 4

Coming Soon
Search