About

The Hutto Fellowship Group is an Alcoholics Anonymous group. We are a fellowship of persons who share their experience, strength, and hope with each other that we may solve our common problem and help others to recover from alcoholism.

This website serves as a landing page for our community, with updates on events, meeting times, and other group happenings. Just like you can identify our outdoor signs at our physical location from the street, you can identify this virtual posting in the digital world. This website is not a form of promotion, nor does it constitute an affiliation with any outside enterprise; we do not spend group or personal funds on advertising for this website or any event.

Pillars of Our Community

Known as the Three Legacies, these concepts were formalized during AA’s 1955 International Convention.

Unity

Our community supports the long-term sobriety of all its members through fellowship and sponsorship. We have come to understand that our personal journeys are enriched by the lives of our fellows. Each peer-led meeting starts by reciting the 12 Steps and 12 Traditions, principles that unite us.

Recovery

The experience, strength, and hope that we share in meetings are a constant source of inspiration that sustains personal recovery. By communicating stories of what we used to be like, what happened, and what we are like now, we allow others to find a similar path and reinforce our own commitment to sobriety.

Service

No program of recovery is complete without service to others. We are responsible for living generously, acting with others in mind, and bringing the AA message to the alcoholic who still suffers. By packing kindness into the stream of life and not drifting into worry or remorse, we enhance our usefulness to others.

“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.”

The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous, Page 84