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Daily Discipline

Every 24 Hours,
Begin Again.

Wednesday, July 8, 2026
Alcoholics Anonymous

Daily Reflection

Today's reflection from the fellowship.

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Hazelden Betty Ford

Twenty-Four Hours a Day

Thought, meditation, and prayer for the day.

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AA Grapevine

Quote of the Day

A line from the meeting in print.

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Tao Te Ching · Legge translation
Chapter 18

When the Great Tao (Way or Method) ceased to be observed, benevolence and righteousness came into vogue. (Then) appeared wisdom and shrewdness, and there ensued great hypocrisy. When harmony no longer prevailed throughout the six kinships, filial sons found their manifestation; when the states and clans fell into disorder, loyal ministers appeared.

What it's pointing at

When we lose touch with the natural way—the seamless flow of life itself—we compensate by inventing elaborate systems of morality, cleverness, and rules. We become performers rather than beings. The chapter suggests that benevolence, righteousness, and loyalty aren't failures in themselves, but their very prominence signals that we've already strayed from something more fundamental: a state where right action flows without effort or announcement.

Read against today

We live in an age of declared virtues and visible performance. Everywhere we see urgent campaigns for goodness, platforms for righteousness, and the constant management of reputation. Yet the underlying fractures—loneliness, disconnection, the hollowing of trust—only deepen. The Tao Te Ching invites us to notice: when a culture must constantly speak of integrity, something has already broken. It asks us to look beneath the noise of what we're claiming to be, and ask what ground we've actually lost. This is not cynicism, but clarity about cause and effect.

To carry today

Today, notice where you feel the pull to *prove* something about yourself—your goodness, your correctness, your loyalty. Each time you catch it, pause and ask: am I reaching for this because it's naturally mine, or because I've wandered from a simpler ground? There is no judgment in noticing. That noticing itself is the return.