THE FIRST STEP IS ADMITTING YOU HAVE A PROBLEM
A Twelve Step Program for Fishaholics
By Bill Schneider, 7-12-07
Most people find it difficult to admit they have a problem, and when they do, they confess only to a good friend or relative.
Not me. I’m fortunate enough to be in a position to admit it to everybody who uses the Internet. You could call it an Almost True Confession.
I have a problem. I’m a fishaholic. I can’t get fishing out of my mind. I think about it 20 times every day. I can’t concentrate on my work. I dream about it. I wake up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat after losing a dream fish. I’ve tried everything to cure myself, even going cold turkey for two whole weeks, but one trip down to the Man Room to visit my flies and lures, and I’m hooked again.
For decades, I’ve been in denial about my dependency, but now, finally, for the good of my loved ones and friends, I’ve decided to deal with it.
I heard about the famous Twelve Step Program that has helped so many addicts, so I checked it out and made a few minor modifications, and viola, I created a step-bystep program for rehabilitating fishaholics.
I know I’m not alone. I’ve met many others at boat ramps and fly shops, so I thought I should share the new program insead of keeping it to myself.
Twelve Steps to a Normal Fishing Life
Step 1: Admit that you are powerless to control your urge to fish and buy more fishing gear including all that stuff you don’t need and has no chance of catching a fish; that your addiction hurts those around you; that your life has become unmanageable because of it; and that you’ve hit bottom, bankrupt, friendless, jobless, mired in dispair.
Step 2: Start to believe that only a Higher Power greater than all of us, the Fishing God, can cure this insanity.
Step 3: Make a decision to turn over your life over to the care of the Fishing God.
Step 4: Make a fearless inventory of yourself, detailing all your deficiencies and paying special attention to stashes of lures, flies and nightcrawlers that should be in the refrigerator.
Step 5: Admit first to yourself, then to the Fishing God and then to a loved one or close friend, the exact nature of your wrongdoings, out loud, shamelessly, unrestrained. That means all the laughable exaggerations about the length of your fish, the lame excuses to your spouse about why you needed a new boat or rod, and those reprehensible lies to your boss about why you weren’t coming into work.
Step 6: Ready yourself to ask the Fishing God to cleanse away all of defects in your character. And be sure to allow a lot of time for this.
Step 7: Humbly request that the Fishing God erase your shortcomings. Again, allow lots of time for this.
Step 8: Make a list of all persons you have harmed with your defects and wrongdoings and lies and become willing to make amends to all of them.
Step 9: Make direct amends to all these people. This will require even more time, at least several months.
Step 10: Should you forget and fall from grace and return to your shameful ways, commit to make amends immediately after your future misdeeds. This may add an hour or so to each day you go fishing, but it’s allowable to make amends to your fishing buddies in the saloon after a long day on the river.
Step 11: Commit to maintain your improved character and devotion to the Fishing God. Otherwise, He will continue to frown upon you and send you home fishless day after day after day.
Step 12: Have a spiritual awakening as the result of taking these steps and carry this message to other fishaholics you meet along the river or on the lake.
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Comments
A dogfish will-
1. eat skates,
2. chase catfish,
3. bark at the mailman,
4. go on point when peacock bass are present,
5. fetch sticks, or
6. or take a hunk out of the backside of Bob Wire?
the bug is still there and maybe i have lied. i drive to Jackson tomorrow and can't help but think about stopping for a bit on the New Fork, Green, Hoback, Snake, Gros Ventre . . . On return, the Wind, Bull Lake Cr, Gray Reef, Encampment. Damnit, no time. i want to fish again. what happened to the good life. 20" bighorn browns . . .
i used to play golf. was pretty good and more or less, addicted. I quit. no 12 steps, just cold turkey due to migration. out here though, golf is a joke, a waste of water and money, something you can do when retired. sure, i missed it but am over that. no withdraw, no lust for Augusta azaleas.
but Fishing is different! the fishing is phenominal wherever you live. you can't escape them. they will always be there and they require your endurance, patience, and skill. all qualities that make one feel truely alive. smallies, reds, stripers, steelhead.
maybe bill is right. worse than birders and they are called weird.
There has never been a more important time to stand up against the development of more dirty coal. New coal plants that are built will operate for approximately 50-60 years, adding carbon dioxide, mercury, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides and other small particulates to the air we breathe. In addition, coal plants use massive amounts of water - an average 1,500 MW plant uses 10 million gallons per day - that the arid West simply cannot afford to lose. New technologies have eliminated the need for new coal plants, and it is possible to meet the energy needs of the West through energy efficiency measures, renewable energy and, if absolutely necessary, new coal technologies like IGCC with carbon capture.
Stand up and show the utilities that you do not want or need a new coal fired power plant.
Here are five things you can do:
1. Submit comments to the BIA and tell the agency what you think about proposed Desert Rock coal-fired power plant (Must arrive by August 20th).
2. Encourage your friends, neighbors and family to write a letter too.
3. Attend a public hearing and bring two people with you. The more people that attend the meeting the stronger the message will be to the BIA that New Mexicans don¢t want Sithe's dirty coal plant.
4. Write a letter to the editor of your local paper, a blog, or a list-serve expressing your concern about the proposed Desert Rock coal plant.
5. Demand national legislation that would move the entire country away from coal.
Check out http://www.sanjuancitizens.org/air/desertrock.shtml to get the schedule for the public hearings and find out more information about Desert Rock. Protect the air we breathe and the earth we depend on by making your voice heard!