Southern Nevada Intergroup (IG# 643)
Adult Children of Alcoholics and Dysfunctional Families (ACA or ACOA), is as an international 12 Step / 12 Tradition Recovery Program for individuals who grew up in alcoholic or otherwise dysfunctional homes.
ACA does not seek to assign blame to parents or caretakers, but we seek to understand the reality of how the disease of alcoholism AND family dysfunction infected and affected us as children, and continues to affect our adult behavior today.
Family dysfunction can include:
Alcoholism
- Addiction
- Abandonment
- Neglect
- Militaristic
- Emotionally ill parent
- Sexual abuse
- Perfectionist parent
- Hypochondriac parent
- Or any type of addiction or abuse.
ACA is synonymous with ACoA; Adult Children Anonymous; & Adult Children of Alcoholics and Dysfunctional Families. Adult Children can identify with many (if not all) of the 14 characteristics on the “Laundry List”.
What is an Adult Child?
The term “Adult Child” is used to describe adults who grew up in alcoholic or dysfunctional homes and who exhibit identifiable traits that reveal past abuse or neglect. The group includes adults raised in homes without the presence of alcohol or drugs. These ACA members have the trademark presence of abuse, shame, and abandonment found in alcoholic homes. Our 30 years of experience has shown that adult children who attend our meetings, work the Twelve Steps, and find a Higher Power experience astonishing improvement in body, mind and spirit. Ours is one of the few Twelve-Step fellowships that embraces the difficult task of trauma work, which can often lead to an exciting journey to the Inner Child or True Self. Along with sponsorship, we encourage informed counseling to help the adult child accomplish the greatest level of emotional healing from an abusive upbringing.
Excerpted from the Adult Children of Alcoholics/ Dysfunctional Families (ACA) Fellowship Text pp. xii-xiii (2006).