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You've taken steps to get here--even if it's only by being curious. Embrace your courage and visit OA.org to learn more. We will be here for you in Virginia for meetings and local help.
OA's 12-step program works like Alcoholics Anonymous , only it helps us deal with food and compulsive eating behaviors. Learn how others like you work the program of recovery.
Visit OA.org to find zoom meetings at any time of day or night, but we also have a number of in person and Zoom meetings based here in Central Virginia. We love to see you.
We are so glad you are here.
Overeaters Anonymous is a fellowship of individuals who, through shared experience, strength and hope, are recovering from compulsive eating. We welcome everyone who wants to stop eating compulsively.
If you’re wondering whether OA is for you, we invite you to take this quiz to learn more.
We have a number of meetings here in Central Virginia, and all are welcome, newcomers and oldtimers alike.
We have in-person meetings as well as Zoom meetings hosted locally.
If you have concerns about your relationship with food, we hope that you’ll give yourself a chance for recovery in OA.
Meetings are available in person, online and by phone.
We recommend that newcomers attend at least six different meetings to help you decide if OA is for you.
Below are some resources, but please don’t think you have to figure it all out at once; going to a meeting is a great first step.
Program Basics
We of Overeaters Anonymous have made a discovery. At the very first meeting we attended, we learned that we were in the clutches of a dangerous illness, and that willpower, emotional health, and self-confidence, which some of us had once possessed, were no defense against it.
We have learned that the reasons for the illness are unimportant. What deserves the attention of the still-suffering compulsive overeater is this: There is a proven, workable method by which we can arrest our illness.
The OA recovery program is patterned after that of Alcoholics Anonymous. As our personal stories attest, the Twelve Step program of recovery works as well for compulsive eaters as it does for alcoholics.
Can we guarantee you this recovery?
The answer is up to you.
If you will honestly face the truth about yourself and the illness; if you will keep coming back to meetings to talk and listen to other recovering compulsive overeaters; if you will read our literature and that of Alcoholics Anonymous with an open mind; and, most important, if you are willing to rely on a Power greater than yourself for direction in your life and to take the Twelve Steps to the best of your ability, we believe you can indeed join the ranks of those who recover.
The disease of compulsive eating causes or contributes to illness on a three levels—emotional, physical, and spiritual. To remedy this threefold illness we offer several suggestions, but the reader should keep in mind that the basis of the program is spiritual, as evidenced by the Twelve Steps.
We are not a “diet” club. We do not endorse any particular plan of eating. In OA, abstinence is the act of refraining from compulsive eating and compulsive food behaviors while working towards or maintaining a healthy body weight. Once we become abstinent, the preoccupation with food diminishes and in many cases leaves us entirely. We then find that, to deal with our inner turmoil, we have to have a new way of thinking, of acting on life rather than reacting to it — in essence, a new way of living.
From this vantage point, we begin the Twelve Step program of recovery, moving beyond the food and the emotional havoc to a fuller living experience.
As a result of practicing the Steps, the symptoms of compulsive eating and compulsive food behaviors are removed on a daily basis, achieved through the process of surrendering to something greater than ourselves; the more total our surrender, the more fully realized our freedom from food obsession.
Here are the Steps as adapted for Overeaters Anonymous:
“But I’m too weak. I’ll never make it!”
Don’t worry, we have all thought and said the same thing. The amazing secret to the success of this program is just that: weakness. It is weakness, not strength, that binds us to each other and to a Higher Power and somehow gives us the ability to do what we cannot do alone.
If you decide you are one of us, we welcome you with open arms. Whatever your circumstances, we offer you the gift of acceptance. You are not alone anymore! Welcome to Overeaters Anonymous. Welcome home!
Permission to use the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous for adaptation granted by AA World Services, Inc.
Here are the Twelve Steps, as adapted for Overeaters Anonymous:
OA Central Virginia Intergroup
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