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Daily Discipline

Every 24 Hours,
Begin Again.

Wednesday, July 1, 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 22

The partial becomes complete; the crooked, straight; the empty, full; the worn out, new. He whose (desires) are few gets them; he whose (desires) are many goes astray. Therefore the sage holds in his embrace the one thing (of humility), and manifests it to all the world. He is free from self-display, and therefore he shines; from self-assertion, and therefore he is distinguished; from self-boasting, and therefore his merit is acknowledged; from self-complacency, and therefore he acquires superiority. It is because he is thus free from striving that therefore no one in the world is able to strive with him. That saying of the ancients that 'the partial becomes complete' was not vainly spoken:--all real completion is comprehended under it.

What it's pointing at

The chapter teaches that paradoxically, by releasing the hunger to be somebody, we become whole. When we stop grasping—for status, recognition, superiority—we find what we were already looking for. The sage doesn't earn respect through self-promotion but through the quiet integrity of holding few desires and embodying humility. Completion comes not from accumulation but from letting go.

Read against today

We live in an age of endless amplification: every thought broadcast, every achievement announced, every grievance weaponized for attention. The chapter whispers against this current with startling relevance. Our divisions deepen not because we have too few desires but too many—for victory, vindication, the last word. Nations and movements strain themselves crooked trying to prove their righteousness. Meanwhile, those rare people who simply tend what matters, who speak only when necessary, who carry no need to win, seem to move through the chaos with an unsettling grace. The world mistakes their quiet for weakness until it becomes impossible to ignore their strength.

To carry today

Today, notice one moment where you felt the urge to explain yourself, defend yourself, or prove something. Pause there. See if you can set it down—just for that moment—and breathe into the space that opens. You are already enough.