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Step 9: Made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others.

 


Introduction

Step 9 is about repair over righteousness—telling the truth and rebuilding trust. It’s not about forcing forgiveness; it’s about creating space for healing.

Type 1s value integrity, responsibility, and excellence—yet admitting harm can stir defensiveness or self-criticism, especially when you were “just trying to do it right.” At Surrender School, we remember we’re responsible for our choices, words, and actions—not for other people’s moods or stories. The same action—correcting, pointing out errors, insisting on the “right way”—might leave one person grateful, another shamed, another angry. Reactions are shaped by each person’s history, personality, and needs.

Step 9 calls Type 1s to take responsibility by naming the harm plainly and choosing repair—without lecturing, justifying, or re-arguing the facts. It’s about repairing what you can, making others whole where possible, and leaving the results to your Higher Power. This isn’t lowering standards—it’s practicing mercy and truth. Notice where criticism, rigidity, or urgency has harmed trust—and choose to repair.

 


Principles for a Healthy Step 9

  • Humility — Choose repair over being right.
  • Boundaries — Do not make amends that would injure you or others; don’t promise what you won’t keep.
  • Listening — Hear their experience without correcting or debating.
  • Repair, not perfection — Be specific about the harm and the repair. Ask, “How can we make our relationship better?”
  • Consistency — Follow through with concrete actions and dates (living amends).

 


Preparing to Make Amends (Amends Cards)


Translate your Step 8 Willingness Assessment into Amends Cards—one card per person or institution. These cards keep you focused and grounded when you make amends.

Each card includes:

  • Name or Institution
  • Amends for Behavior: “I am sorry I” or “I want to apologize/make amends” for…
  • Say: “That was selfish of me.” or name the specific defense (criticizing, correcting, being rigid/perfectionistic).
  • Say: “I deeply regret my actions. I think it harmed our relationship. How do you think we can make it better?”

 

Sample Amends Cards

  • Frank (My Brother)
    Amends for Behavior: “I want to apologize for insisting on the ‘right way’ for the eulogy and correcting you in front of others.”
    Say: “That was selfish of me—criticizing and being rigid.”
    Say: “I deeply regret my actions. I think it harmed our relationship. How do you think we can make it better?”

 

  • Bob (My Husband)
    Amends for Behavior: “I’m sorry for pointing out flaws instead of appreciating your effort.”
    Say: “That was selfish of me—correcting and shaming.”
    Say: “I deeply regret my actions. I think it harmed our relationship. How do you think we can make it better?”

 

  • My Recovery Group
    Amends for Behavior: “I want to apologize for using group time to critique others’ shares and the rules.”
    Say: “That was selfish of me—moralizing and being perfectionistic.”
    Say: “I deeply regret my actions. I will practice gentleness and keep my shares on my part.”

 


Tips for Making Amends as a Type 1

  • Be simple and specific — skip the lecture and the “why.”
  • Stick to your part — don’t argue about who was right.
  • Name the behavior — keep it concrete and clean.
  • Listen without correcting — let silence do some work.
  • Offer one concrete repair — and a date; don’t over-promise.
  • Pray first — ask your Higher Power for mercy, truth, and gentleness.


Even if the person doesn’t respond as you hope, the amends is still healing. Your task is willingness and right action, not proving you’re right.

 


Readiness, Living Amends & Moving Forward

Not being ready to make an amends is not failure—it’s simply information. Return to your Step 8 Willingness Assessment, pray for readiness, and consult your sponsor or support circle. Readiness takes time and doesn’t need to be perfect—just honest.

Some of your most powerful amends will never be spoken to another person. They are to your inner critic, your body, and your Higher Power. Practice compassion over perfection. Allow rest, accept “good enough,” and choose kindness with yourself and others. These living amends change how you meet every relationship.

Before each amends, pause and ask yourself:

  • Am I approaching this with humility—or trying to make it perfectly right?
  • Have I prayed or grounded myself first?
  • Am I willing to accept any response without correcting, justifying, or judging?
  • What is one way I will live this amends after the conversation?

 

You don’t need to complete every amends before beginning Step 10—but you do need to start. Follow your Higher Power’s lead on where to begin. The past is not healed by perfection; it is healed by presence, truth, and willingness. Begin your first amends with full preparation and a surrendered heart. That’s how Step 9 becomes real—and Step 10 becomes possible.

Step 9 Promises

If we are painstaking about this phase of our development, we will be amazed before we are half way through

  • We are going to know a new freedom and a new happiness.
  • We will not regret the past nor wish to shut the door on it.
  • We will comprehend the word serenity and we will know peace.
  • No matter how far down the scale we have gone, we will see how our experience can benefit others.
  • That feeling of uselessness and self-pity will disappear.
  • We will lose interest in selfish things and gain interest in our fellows.
  • Fear of people and of economic insecurity will leave us.
  • We will intuitively know how to handle situations which used to baffle us.
  • We will suddenly realize that God is doing for us what we could not do for ourselves.

 

Are these extravagant promises? We think not. They are being fulfilled among us—sometimes quickly, sometimes slowly. They will always materialize if we work for them. (Pages, 83 & 84).

Prayer for Step 9 – Type 1

God, temper my zeal for being right with mercy and truth. Help me name where I criticized, corrected, or judged, and guide me to make simple, concrete repairs. Let my standards be rooted in love, my words be gentle and clear, and my heart rest in Your grace. Amen.

*Making amends is not lowering standards—it is practicing mercy and truth.*

 


Summary

By working Steps 1–8 and beginning your amends in Step 9, you have shifted from criticism and rigidity toward humility, repair, and trust in your Higher Power. You have faced others honestly, named your part without excuse, and sought ways to improve the relationship. Throughout your Surrender School journey, you have discovered that real goodness grows from truth, compassion, and connection.

The promises of recovery are becoming real as you move into Step 10, where you will practice all the previous Steps daily — carrying forward gentleness, clarity, and faithful follow-through into a life rooted in trust, service, and love.

Want to Go Deeper?

Explore Going Deeper: Type 1, Step 9

Living Freer

Step Nine asks a Type 1 to walk into a room and choose repair over being right, the hardest exchange rate for someone who has equated correctness with worth their whole life. Making amends here isn’t about relitigating who did what or securing agreement that their intentions were good; it’s about naming the harm plainly and letting the relationship matter more than the record. Freedom in this Step looks like mercy in motion: showing up not as the moral authority but as one imperfect person offering repair to another, and trusting a Higher Power with whatever happens next.

Freedom From

  • The need to relitigate who was right before making amends
  • Using amends as an opportunity to justify or explain yourself
  • Fear that admitting harm collapses your entire sense of integrity
  • Controlling how the other person responds to your amends
  • Treating repair as a debate to be won

Freedom To

  • Naming harm plainly, without qualification or self-defense
  • Letting relationships matter more than being correct
  • Mercy practiced as an action, not just a belief
  • Trusting your Higher Power with outcomes beyond your control
  • The dignity of showing up as one flawed person among others

Why This Matters

Type 1s often fear that making amends means conceding they were entirely wrong, when in truth Step Nine asks for something more freeing: the willingness to repair without keeping score at all. This matters because their integrity was never actually threatened by admitting harm, it’s deepened by it. Choosing mercy over being right, again and again, teaches Type 1s that connection doesn’t require a verdict. What’s gained is sturdier than vindication: relationships built on honesty instead of on always having been correct.

Step Nine Invitation

When you make an amend this week, practice stopping after the apology, resisting the urge to explain, justify, or add “but.”

Prayer for Step Nine

Higher Power, let me choose repair over rightness today. Give me the humility to make amends without needing the final word. Help me trust you with what happens after I’ve told the truth. Amen.