“Somtimes
incompetence is
useful. It helps you
keep an open
mind.
Roberto Cavalli (1940 – ) Italian inventor / fashion designer
– Sign up to Zonr for Today’s Full SFZ
~~~
How have you been open to seeking spiritual solutions, lately?
~~~
Roberto Cavalli Brief Bio (5:59 )
Life is a Highway – Rascal Flatts (5:05)
Analysis of: The Vast Richness of the Universe Unfurls as Sanity is Restored with a Sigh
Today’s SFZ kicks off this month’s exploration of Step Two’s spiritual and psychological journey in recovery: restoring sanity through belief in a Higher Power. This step invites individuals to recognize the limits of their own willpower. Carl Jung, whose correspondence with Bill Wilson influenced the founding of Alcoholics Anonymous, suggested that a vital spiritual experience is essential for transformation. He believed that healing requires a connection to something greater than the ego.
The dilemma of repeated failure echoes Albert Einstein’s insight: “We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.” Step Two urges a shift in perspective, an openness to transcendence. As the It Works, How & Why text explains, the desire for a power beyond oneself emerges when all self-reliant strategies collapse. This is not weakness, but wisdom.
Psychologist William James argued that religious experiences can offer a “new zest” for life. That zest begins as we become willing to see our problems from a different vantage point. Sanity, then, is not merely the absence of chaos but the presence of clarity. As How Al-Anon Works notes, it shows in the choice not to act on destructive impulses. Open-mindedness becomes the channel through which spiritual solutions arise.
Roberto Cavalli’s quote offers a humble insight: not knowing can lead to growth. Incompetence invites curiosity. As we admit we don’t have all the answers, we make space for healing. The vastness of the universe, once terrifying, now comforts. Sanity returns—quietly, like a sigh—and reveals a richer life.
Leave a Reply