The Slow Drift
Daily Traditions · July 27
Picture a local business that becomes the group's ongoing "sponsor" — covering costs, in exchange for a little visibility. First a logo on the flyer. Then a mention from the front. Then the meeting is, softly, a marketing channel. Tradition 6 warns the group never to "endorse, finance or lend the A.A. name to any related facility or outside enterprise." Sponsorship rarely arrives as a takeover. It arrives as a favor, and drifts, one reasonable step at a time, until the room is working for someone else.
What favor have I accepted that's slowly rewriting the terms?
Grounded in: Long form (T6 — endorsement / affiliation).
This is a hypothetical. The situation described above is illustrative — an imagined scenario used to think a Tradition through. It is not a real group, not a report of anything that happened, and not a rule we invented. The Traditions belong to A.A.; we're only reading them plainly.
Tradition 7
"Every A.A. group ought to be fully self-supporting, declining outside contributions."
And a distinction worth keeping straight: the Traditions are governance, not theology. They bind A.A. groups and the Fellowship — not individuals, and not outside businesses. They were adopted in 1950 to keep A.A. from being owned or co-opted. They are not a rulebook for your personal life.
Daily Traditions is an independent educational resource from Recovery Starts — not official A.A. literature, not affiliated with Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, and not medical advice. The Twelve Traditions are the property of A.A. Page references are to Alcoholics Anonymous (the Big Book), 4th Edition: short form 561–562, long form 563–566. If you're in crisis, call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline).