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About OA

The 12 Steps
The 12 Traditions

The Tools of Recovery
15 Questions


What is OA?

Who belongs to OA?
What will you find at an OA meeting?
How do OA members lose weight
and maintain a normal weight?

How is OA funded?
Who runs OA?
How did OA start?

What is OA?

Overeaters Anonymous is a Fellowship of individuals who, through shared experience, strength and hope, are recovering from compulsive overeating. We
welcome everyone who wants to stop eating compulsively.

There are no dues or fees for members; we are self-supporting through our own contributions, neither soliciting nor accepting outside donations. OA is not affiliated with any public or private organization, political movement, ideology or religious doctrine; we take no position on outside issues.

Our primary purpose is to abstain from compulsive overeating and to carry
this message of recovery to those who still suffer.



Who belongs to OA?

In Overeaters Anonymous, you'll find members who are extremely overweight, even morbidly obese; moderately overweight; average weight; underweight; still maintaining periodic control over their eating behavior; or totally unable to control their compulsive eating.

OA members experience many different patterns of food behaviors. These "symptoms" are as varied as our membership. Among them are:

bulletobsession with body weight, size and shape
bulleteating binges or grazing
bulletpreoccupation with reducing diets
bulletstarving
bulletlaxative or diuretic abuse
bulletexcessive exercise
bulletinducing vomiting after eating
bulletchewing and spitting out food
bulletuse of diet pills, shots and other medical interventions to control weight
bulletinability to stop eating certain foods after taking the first bite
bulletfantasies about food
bulletvulnerability to quick-weight-loss schemes
bulletconstant preoccupation with food
bulletusing food as a reward or comfort

Our symptoms may vary, but we share a common bond: we are powerless over food and our lives are unmanageable. This common problem has led those in OA to seek and find a common solution in the Twelve Steps, the Twelve Traditions and eight tools of Overeaters Anonymous.



What you will find at OA meetings is:

bulletAcceptance of you - as you are now, as you were, as you will be.
bulletUnderstanding of the problems you now face - problems almost certainly shared by others in the group.
bulletCommunication that comes as the natural result of our mutual understanding and acceptance.
bulletRecovery from your illness.
bulletPower to enter a new way of life through the acceptance and understanding of yourself, the practice of the Twelve-Step recovery program, the belief in a power greater than yourself, and the support and companionship of the group
bulletWhat you WON'T find at OA meetings are weigh-ins, packaged meals,
dues, fees, "shoulds," "musts" or judgment.



How do OA members lose weight
and maintain their normal weight?

OA is not a diet club, and makes no claims for weight loss. The concept of abstinence is the basis of OA's program of recovery. By admitting inability to control compulsive overeating in the past and abandoning the idea that all one needs is "a little willpower," it becomes possible to abstain from overeating—one day at a time.

While a diet can help us lose weight, it often intensifies the compulsion to overeat. The solution offered by OA does not include diet tips. We don't furnish food plans or diets, counseling services, hospitalization or treatment; nor does OA participate in or conduct research and training in the field of eating disorders. For weight loss, any medically approved eating plan is acceptable.

OA members interested in learning about nutrition or who seek professional advice are encouraged to consult qualified professionals. We may freely use such help, with the assurance that OA supports each of us in our efforts to recover.



How is OA funded?

Overeaters Anonymous has no dues or fees for membership. It is entirely self-supporting through contributions and sale of publications. Most groups "pass the basket" at meetings to cover expenses. OA does not solicit or accept outside contributions.



Who runs OA?

OA has no central government and a minimum of formal organization. At the local, regional, and international levels responsible members serve OA and its fellowship by volunteering to organize and lead meetings, conduct activities and sit on the Board of Trustees.

The World Service Office is a service center whose main function is to carry the OA message to the many compulsive overeaters who still suffer. The World Service Office publishes and distributes literature, maintains records on all registered groups, Intergroup, regions and national service boards, and issues meeting directories. The World Service Office also acts as a public information clearing house.



How did OA start?

The idea of OA came to cofounder Rozanne S. at a Gamblers Anonymous (GA) meeting she attended with a compulsive gambling friend in 1958. As GA members shared their stories, she heard her story—not of gambling, but of compulsive overeating. She knew then that the Twelve-Step and Twelve-Tradition program founded by Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and modeled by GA offered her a chance to change her life and reduce her 152-pound body to a size that would fit her 5-foot-2-inch frame. Not until 1960, when her weight had increased to 161 pounds, could she find other people who shared her convictions.

Her chance meeting with a new neighbor, Jo S., gave Rozanne strength in numbers, even if it was only one person. Together they found another compulsive overeater, Bernice S., and convened the first OA meeting in Hollywood, California, January 19, 1960.

Today, about 7,000 OA groups meet each week in over 52 countries. With OA divided into 10 regions worldwide and nearly 400 Intergroup, it helps thousands of compulsive overeaters find themselves through a threefold recovery: physical, emotional and spiritual (from Recovery into the Millennium, copyright 2000, OA, Inc.).

(For more on OA's history, read Beyond Our Wildest Dreams and Recovery into the Millennium).