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Underearners Anonymous

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Underearners Anonymous
Founded2005
Location
Area served
Canada, Columbia, Denmark, Israel, United Kingdom, American states of California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Massachusetts, Maryland, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Texas, Vermont (face-to-face meetings); world wide (phone meetings)
Website[1]

According to its website, Underearners Anonymous, often abbreviated “UA”, is a twelve-step program for men and women who have come together to help themselves and one another recover from underearning. The website also states that underearning not just about “the inability to provide for one’s needs, including future needs”, but also “the inability to fully acknowledge and express our capabilities and competencies. It is about underachieving, or under-being, no matter how much money we make”.

The underlying premise of Underearners’ Anonymous is that underearning is a kind of mental disorder, rather like the alcoholic’s self-destructive compulsion to drink to excess. Indeed, members of UA sometimes refer to themselves as “time drunks”, because they have a propensity to fritter away their time in useless activities, rather than pursuing constructive goals. This parallel with alcoholism has led the fellowship to advocate a self-help system that involves much of the apparatus of Alcoholics’ Anonymous (AA), including the Twelve Steps, regular meetings to share “experience, strength, and hope,” and much of the philosophy of AA. UA also uses additional innovations, such as keeping written records of how one spends one’s time, “possession consciousness”, or the disposal of “what no longer serves us,” and the avoidance of “debting”, or unsecured borrowing.

UA suggests studying AA literature to gain a better understanding of addictive diseases. Specifically, UA endorses the use of the Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions[2] and Alcoholics Anonymous[3] (also known as the "Big Book").

Relation to Debtors Anonymous

Underearners Anonymous was founded in 2005 by members of Debtors Anonymous who felt that a healthly relationship with money required more than just recovery from compulsive overspending[4] .


Development

It has grown rapidly, and weekly meetings take place in, among other places, New York City, Massachusetts, California, Michigan, London, and Canada. In addition, there are conference call “phone meetings” throughout most days. Due to the decentralized nature of UA, it is impossible to make an accurate count of its membership. However, the hundred or so attendees of recent "Prosperity Express" events in New York and Los Angeles suggests a total membership that is well into the hundreds, if not over a thousand, world-wide.

Notes

  1. ^ Debtors Anonymous 1999, p. 11
  2. ^ Bill W. 2002a
  3. ^ Bill W. 2002b
  4. ^ [1]

References

  • Kadet, Ann (20 November 2010). "A Program for Poor-aholics". Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on 2011-10-22. Retrieved 2011-10-22. {{cite news}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Bill W. (2002a). Alcoholics Anonymous (4th ed.). New York, New York: Alcoholics Anonymous World Services. ISBN 1893007162. OCLC 408888189. Retrieved 2010-06-14. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Bill W. (2002b). Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions. Alcoholics Anonymous World Services. ISBN 0916856011. OCLC 13572433. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)