Find AA meetings in Bridgeport, West Virginia to help you on your road to recovery. Our comprehensive directory of AA meetings in West Virginia includes open, closed, speaker, and other specialized meetings, all of which are designed to help you get sober and remain sober.
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Time | Name | Location / Group | Address / Platform | Region | |
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10:00 AM | Log Cabin Meeting | Log Cabin | 500 DuPont Road | Westover | Closed Meeting Discussion English |
10:00 AM | We Agnostics | Law offices | 244 Pleasant St | Morgantown | Discussion English Open Meeting + Wheelchair Access |
12:00 PM | Meeting | 17 Club | 399 Crowl St | Westover | Discussion English Open Meeting + Wheelchair Access |
2:00 PM | Live and Let Live Group | Live and Let Live | 400 Indiana Ave | Nutter Fort | Discussion English Open Meeting |
6:00 PM | Lighten Up Group | 17 Club | 399 Crowl St | Westover | Discussion English Open Meeting + Wheelchair Access |
7:00 PM | Saturday Nite Fever Group | Marion Health Care Hospital | 401 Guffey St | Fairmont | Discussion English |
7:00 PM | Clarksburg Sunday Night Group | Clarksburg Sunday Night Group | 123 S 6th St | Clarksburg | Discussion English Open Meeting + Wheelchair Access |
7:00 PM | Morgantown Phone Group | Morgantown Phone Group | Online Morgantown, WV | Morgantown | English |
7:00 PM | Upshur Uphill Group | Upshur Uphill Group | 88 S Kanawha St | Buckhannon | Closed Meeting Discussion English + Wheelchair Access Wheelchair-Accessible Bathroom |
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Bridgeport, West Virginia AA Meetings
Bridgeport is a small city in Harrison County, West Virginia. Our online directory of AA meetings in Bridgeport may help those living or working in the local area with an alcohol addiction find a local recovery program.
Alcoholism is considered a family disease. A family disease means that when one person in the family has an alcohol use disorder, it adversely impacts the entire family. Al-Anon is a fellowship of men and women whose lives have been affected by someone’s alcohol addiction. Much like Alcoholics Anonymous, Al-Anon is a 12-Step recovery program. Al-Anon group members meet regularly (usually weekly) to share their experience, strength and hope gained from working the 12 Steps.
If you or your family member are newcomers to the program of Al-Anon, you may be pleased to learn that experienced members of Al-Anon aim to help newcomers learn about how to integrate the 12-Steps into their day-to-day lives. By learning to focus on one’s own recovery, instead of worrying or obsessing about a person’s drinking, Al-Anon members often come to a place of acceptance and serenity. When loved ones support a person in addiction recovery, it promotes the overall health of the family and each person’s recovery journey.