The Twelve Steps in the High Desert

Step 1 — Powerlessness

The arroyos after monsoon

Most of the year, an arroyo looks harmless. Dust, stones, a forgotten beer can, tire tracks, maybe a coyote print. Then rain falls twenty miles away and suddenly it’s a violent river.

That’s alcoholism.

Step One is standing in a dry arroyo and realizing:
This thing can kill me, even when it looks asleep.

In Santa Fe, the land teaches this daily.


Step 2 — Hope

Piñon trees on impossible slopes

Piñons grow out of rock as if geology made a clerical error.

No soil. No water. Brutal sun.

Yet there they are.

Step Two is that absurd little thought:
Maybe I can live here too.

Not certainty. Just possibility. A crack in despair. AA itself describes Step Two as coming to believe restoration is possible. 


Step 3 — Surrender

The Rio Grande

You can’t push the river upstream.

A lot of us tried to run life like we were totally in control – control everything, hedge all loss, optimize outcomes.

Then life sends you a wake up call.

Step Three says:
Quit rowing against the current.

In New Mexico, the river wins every argument.


Step 4 — Inventory

The exposed strata at Bandelier National Monument

Rock layers don’t lie.

Fire.
Flood.
Ash.
Pressure.

Step Four is geology of the soul:
What happened?
What buried what?
What hardened?

No spin. No pass for the spirit.

Just the facts. The objective facts. No spin.


Step 5 — Confession

Echoes in the canyon

Say your secrets aloud in a canyon and the canyon gives them back changed.

Less monstrous.

That’s Step Five.

What festers in silence shrinks in air.

Like hearing your own voice say:
“I was selfish.”
“I was afraid.”
“I was cruel.”

Ugly, yes.
Fatal? Not usually.


Step 6 — Readiness

Shedding bark of the juniper

Junipers peel themselves slowly.

Not because they hate the bark.

Because growth requires it.

Step Six isn’t becoming good.
It’s becoming willing.

That’s harder.

We’ll quit drinking before we quit self-righteousness. Amazing species.


Step 7 — Humility

Echo Amphitheater north of Abiquiu

Stand in that space (preferably alone), look at the red streaks on the wall – you understand Sangre de Christo – and your ego gets resized.

Properly.

Humility isn’t humiliation.
It’s proportion.

You are not the center.
Good news, actually.

Because carrying the universe was exhausting.


Step 8 — The List

Animal tracks in fresh snow

Snow in the foothills shows where you’ve been.

Everywhere.

What you touched.
What you frightened.
What you chased.

Step Eight is tracking your impact.

Not your intentions.

Nature has no interest in your excuses.


Step 9 — Amends

Restoration after wildfire

The burn scar looks ruined.

But then:
grasses,
wildflowers,
new aspen.

Amends don’t erase fire.
They begin regrowth.

And sometimes the forest that comes back is wiser.

Less dense.
Less combustible.

A useful metaphor for alcoholics.


Step 10 — Daily Inventory

Morning weather in Santa Fe

If you live here, you look at the sky every day.

Not once.

Every day.

Because weather changes.

So do we.

Step Ten is checking the inner weather:
resentment?
fear?
self-pity?
hunger?
that weird superiority complex dressed as concern?

Especially that last one.


Step 11 — Prayer and Meditation

Dawn at Atalaya Mountain

Before sunrise, there’s that blue silence.

Not empty.

Full.

The kind of silence where your mind finally shuts up long enough for something wiser to get a word in.

Step Eleven is less about asking and more about listening.

The desert specializes in this.


Step 12 — Carrying the Message

Cottonwood shade

Cottonwoods don’t keep shade for themselves.

That’s Step Twelve.

Recovery isn’t hoarded.

You sit under the tree because someone planted it before you.
Now you plant.

AA frames Step Twelve as both awakening and service. 


Santa Fe bonus thought:

The high desert is unforgiving, but it reveals everything.

No lush overgrowth to hide behind.
No humidity to soften edges.

Just light.

Recovery is like that.

At first it feels harsh.

Then you realize:
clarity is mercy.

And in Santa Fe, even decay is beautiful.

Spencer Wright