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Access the online digital meeting schedule by clicking above!

There are 2 main types of Alcoholics Anonymous meetings;

OPEN meetings which are available to anyone interested in the Alcoholics Anonymous program of recovery from Alcoholism.
CLOSED meetings are for AA members ONLY, or those who  have a problem with alcohol and “have a desire to stop drinking.”
Download the free meeting guide app for your smart phone at

https://meetingguide.org/

With this app you can find meetings using cellular GPS in several hundred participating central office/intergroup areas across the USA.

 

Printable local schedules are available below. Click on the link for the size you wish to print.   
 They were last updated May 28 2024

For changes or updates, contact schedules@readingberksintergroup.org

These are 2 sided documents. If you do not have a printer that does this automatically, you will have to print one side at a time.


You can find meetings outside Berks County here->>

Check Out The Vast Selection of Virtual Meetings Available at the Online Intergroup of Alcoholics Anonymous->>


Guidelines on Anonymity & Online Meetings:

FAQ’s on 7th Tradition contributions at Virtual Meetings:

Often used meeting related documents can be found below. All are usable on-line, or printable for future use!


The Preamble

How it Works

Safety Statement

The 12 Steps for Recovery

The 12 Traditions for Unity

Primary Purpose Open/Closed Meeting Card

Declaration of Unity

Responsibility Pledge

12 Concepts for World Service

9th Step Promises

10 Step Promises

A Vision for You

Meeting Topics

Leading a Beginner Meeting Suggestions

12 Rewards of Recovery

Meeting Format On-A-Page

Full Meeting Format Suggestion
PLEASE RESPECT OUR SINGLENESS OF PURPOSE
“You also have some people who are not alcoholics, but addicts of other kinds.  A great many AA’s have taken pity of these people, and have actually tried to make them full fledged AA’s. Of course, their identification with alcoholics is no good at all, and the groups themselves easily stop this practice in the normal course of AA affairs.”
“Thoughtful AAs, however, encourage these sponsors to bring addicts to open meetings, just as they would other interested people. In the end, these addicts usually gravitate to other forms of therapy.  They are not received on the platform in open meetings unless they have an alcohol problem, and closed meetings, of course, are denied them.  We know that we cannot do everything for everybody with an addiction problem.”
Bill Wilson, cofounder of Alcoholics Anonymous from the AA Grapevine March 1971. Reprinted with permission of the AA Grapevine Inc.
Read the full article
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