Twelve
Steps Twelve Traditions Tools
of Recovery
What is OA?
Who belongs
to OA?
How do OA members lose weight and maintain
their normal weight?
What does OA offer?
Why is OA anonymous?
How is OA funded?
Is OA a religious organization?
Where can I find OA?
How did
OA start?
What is OA?
Overeaters Anonymous is a Fellowship of
individuals who, through shared experience, strength and hope,
are recovering from compulsive overeating. We welcome everyone
who wants to stop eating compulsively.
There are no dues or fees for members;
we are self-supporting through our own contributions, neither
soliciting nor accepting outside donations. OA is not affiliated
with any public or private organization, political movement,
ideology or religious doctrine; we take no position on outside
issues.
Our primary purpose is to abstain from
compulsive overeating and to carry this message of recovery to
those who still suffer.
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Who Belongs to
OA?
In Overeaters Anonymous, you'll find members
who are extremely overweight, even morbidly obese; moderately
overweight; average weight; underweight; still maintaining periodic
control over their eating behavior; or totally unable to control
their compulsive eating.
OA members experience many different patterns
of food behaviors. These "symptoms" are as varied as our membership.
Among them are:
- obsession with body weight, size and
shape
- eating binges or grazing
- preoccupation with reducing diets
- starving
- laxative or diuretic abuse
- excessive exercise
- inducing vomiting after eating
- chewing and spitting out food
- use of diet pills, shots and other
medical interventions to control weight
- inability to stop eating certain foods
after taking the first bite
- fantasies about food
- vulnerability to quick-weight-loss
schemes
- constant preoccupation with food
- using food as a reward or comfort
Our symptoms may vary, but we share a
common bond: we are powerless over food and our lives are unmanageable.
This common problem has led those in OA to seek and find a common
solution in the Twelve Steps,
the Twelve Traditions and eight
tools of Overeaters Anonymous.
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How do OA members
lose weight and maintain their normal weight?
The concept of abstinence is the basis
of OA's program of recovery. By admitting inability to control
compulsive overeating in the past and abandoning the idea that
all one needs is "a little willpower," it becomes possible
to abstain from overeatingone day at a time.
While a diet can help us lose weight,
it often intensifies the compulsion to overeat. The solution
offered by OA does not include diet tips. We don't furnish food
plans or diets, counseling services, hospitalization or treatment;
nor does OA participate in or conduct research and training in
the field of eating disorders. For weight loss, any medically
approved eating plan is acceptable.
OA members interested in learning about
nutrition or who seek professional advice are encouraged to consult
qualified professionals. We may freely use such help, with the
assurance that OA supports each of us in our efforts to recover.
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What does
OA offer?
We offer unconditional acceptance and
support through readily available OA meetings, which are self-supported
through voluntary contributions.
We in OA believe we have a threefold illnessphysical,
emotional and spiritual. Tens of thousands have found that OA's
Twelve-Step program effects recovery on all three levels.
The Twelve Steps embody a set of principles
which, when followed, promote inner change. Sponsors help us
understand and apply these principles. As old attitudes are discarded,
we often find there is no longer a need for excess food.
Those of us who choose to recover one
day at a time practice the Twelve Steps. In so doing, we achieve
a new way of life and lasting freedom from our food obsession.
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Why is OA anonymous?
Anonymity allows
the Fellowship to govern itself through principles rather than
personalities. Social and economic status have no relevance in
OA; we are all compulsive overeaters. Anonymity at the level
of press, radio, television and other media of communication
provides assurance that OA membership will not be disclosed.
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How is OA funded?
Overeaters Anonymous has no dues or fees
for membership. It is entirely self-supporting through literature
sales and member contributions. Most groups "pass the basket" at
meetings to cover expenses. OA does not solicit or accept outside
contributions.
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Is OA a religious
organization?
OA is not a religious society, since it
requires no definite religious belief as a condition of membership.
OA has among its membership people of many religious faiths as
well as atheists and agnostics.
The OA recovery program is based on acceptance
of certain spiritual values. Members are free to interpret these
values as they think best, or not to think about them at all
if they so choose.
Many individuals who come to OA have reservations
about accepting any concept of a power greater than themselves.
OA experience has shown that those who keep an open mind on this
subject and continue coming to OA meetings will not find it too
difficult to work out their own solution to this very personal
matter.
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Where can I
find OA?
Go to All
About Meetings on this Web site and follow the instructions
to find a meeting in your area. Or you can contact the World
Service Office at (505) 891-2664 or by e-mailing for
further assistance. You can also look for Overeaters Anonymous
in your local telephone directory and in your local newspaper's
social or community calendar section.
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How did OA
start?
The idea of OA came to cofounder Rozanne
S. at a Gamblers Anonymous (GA) meeting she attended with a compulsive
gambling friend in 1958. As GA members shared their stories,
she heard her storynot of gambling, but of compulsive overeating.
She knew then that the Twelve-Step and Twelve-Tradition program
founded by Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and modeled by GA offered
her a chance to change her life and reduce her 152-pound body
to a size that would fit her 5-foot-2-inch frame. Not until 1960,
when her weight had increased to 161 pounds, could she find other
people who shared her convictions.
Her chance meeting with a new neighbor,
Jo S., gave Rozanne strength in numbers, even if it was only
one person. Together they found another compulsive overeater,
Bernice S., and convened the first OA meeting in Hollywood, California,
January 19, 1960.
Today, about 6,500 OA groups meet each
week in over 75 countries. With OA divided into 10 regions worldwide
and approximately 400 intergroups, it helps thousands of compulsive
overeaters find themselves through a threefold recovery: physical,
emotional and spiritual.
(For more on OA's history, read Beyond
Our Wildest Dreams.) |