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Daily Discipline

Every 24 Hours,
Begin Again.

Sunday, July 12, 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 62

Tao has of all things the most honoured place. No treasures give good men so rich a grace; Bad men it guards, and doth their ill efface. (Its) admirable words can purchase honour; (its) admirable deeds can raise their performer above others. Even men who are not good are not abandoned by it. Therefore when the sovereign occupies his place as the Son of Heaven, and he has appointed his three ducal ministers, though (a prince) were to send in a round symbol-of-rank large enough to fill both the hands, and that as the precursor of the team of horses (in the court-yard), such an offering would not be equal to (a lesson of) this Tao, which one might present on his knees. Why was it that the ancients prized this Tao so much? Was it not because it could be got by seeking for it, and the guilty could escape (from the stain of their guilt) by it? This is the reason why all under heaven consider it the most valuable thing.

What it's pointing at

The Tao is the most precious thing because it cannot be grasped through ambition or force—yet it works for everyone, good and bad alike. Words and deeds that align with it naturally carry power and grace, while those who follow it can be cleansed of guilt and shame. The chapter suggests that what we most deeply need is already available to us; we need only to stop trying to buy it or earn it through external means.

Read against today

In a world of endless striving—where we accumulate credentials, status symbols, and certainties to prove our worth—this chapter whispers that the most valuable thing cannot be purchased or performed for an audience. We live among people who are grasping, divided, afraid; we see leaders offering grand gestures while the Tao asks only that we be present and honest. The teaching cuts through the noise: guilt and separation are not permanent conditions; they dissolve when we stop defending and start listening. In times of fracture, this radical availability—that the Tao abandons no one, not even those who have failed—is countercultural medicine.

To carry today

Today, notice where you are still trying to earn what is already yours—acceptance, worth, the chance to begin again. Each time you catch yourself performing or proving, pause and return to the simple truth: the way forward asks nothing but your honest presence, and even your failures are not final.