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James Christopher


Marquis Who’s Who in the World, since 1995
Named International Man of the Year, 1993, by the International Biographical Center, Cambridge, UK

  Dictionary of International Biography, since 1995 (International Biographical Center, Cambridge, UK)

Included in Five Thousand Personalities of the World, 1994/95 (American Biographical Institute, Inc)

Certified Addictions Specialist (C.A.S.), American Academy of Health Care Providers in Addictive Disorders, Cambridge M.A.


Certified Diplomat in Psychotherapy ( D.A.P.A), American Psychotherapy Association, Washington D.C.

Member, American Counseling Association

Member, American Council on Alcoholism

For further information
4773 Hollywood Blvd
 Hollywood, CA 90027, USA
Tel : (323) 666-4295/
Fax: (323) 666-4271
email : mailto:{sos@cfiwest.org}


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The SOS Story

Jim Christopher - A Brief Biography

James Christopher, a sober alcoholic since April 24, 1978, originally attended Alcoholics Anonymous, but broke from AA  early in his recovery due to his discomfort with the AA approach. Staying sober with his own “Sobriety Priority” program, he went on to found SOS (Secular Organizations for Sobriety / Save our Selves) in 1985. He arranged for the first SOS self-help support group to be held in North Hollywood, Los Angeles, California on a Monday evening in November, after giving numerous public lecturers and authoring numerous articles dating back to 1984. the key article “Sobriety without Superstition” was published in the national periodical Free Inquiry and received worldwide responses from recovering alcoholics and addicts, treatment professional and the media.   

James Christopher has since authored four books : How to Stay Sober (Prometheus Books, 1988), Unhooked (Prometheus Books, 1989), SOS Sobriety (Prometheus Books, 1992) and Escape from Nicotine Country (Prometheus Books, 1999). He was also a contributor to Substance Abuse : A Comprehensive Textbook (Williams and Williams, 1997).  

SOS has grown from one meeting in Los Angeles to a data base of over 20,000 members worldwide. Each SOS meeting is autonomous and held on an anonymous basis at no charge to participants and stresses James Christopher’s “Sobriety Priority” abstinence-based, self-empowerment.
James Christopher has appeared on over 300 radio and television shows and the SOS alternative has received extensive coverage in hundreds of print media feature articles including the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, the British Guardian, Newsweek, the Journal of the American Medical Association, Glamour, Playboy, Modern Maturity, Professional Counselor and Sober Times.  

James Christopher worked as a Program Director for Priority One, an outpatient treatment facility in Beverly Hills, California for two years. He moved the SOS International Clearing House to Buffalo, New York, in June 1990, accepting sponsorship by CODESH, an international humanist organization. The SOS movement is separately incorporated as a non-profit organization and has been publishing a quarterly newsletter since 1987.  

The US Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration includes SOS in its official literature; the US Congress Employee Assistance Program subscribes to the SOS Newsletter, and since 1987, the Los Angeles Court system, as well as numerous courts across the US, have offered SOS as a viable recovery choice to persons mandated to attend a self-help program.  

In February 1995 James Christopher returned to the Clearing House to Los Angeles and currently divides his time among three activities : SOS Clearing House duties, holding recovery workshops across the US and abroad, and doing research  on the evolution of the SOS Sobriety Priority program, described by James Christopher as the “CVS Method” (Cognitive / Visceral Synchronization).  

SOS  
A BRIEF HISTORY 


"During my first years of sobriety I questioned a number of alcoholics, searching for the common thread of their successes in maintaining a lasting sobriety. When I was about three years into my sobriety I began to challenge the concepts of Alcoholics Anonymous.... By the time I was sober five years I had compiled an extensive file of responses and, four years to the present day, I've collected data from more than two thousand « sobrietists ». Both from this research and my own experience of recovery, I have put together a specific secular approach to achieving and maintaining long-term sobriety. I call it the « Sobriety Priority ». I wish to offer it here as « a » way (beware of anyone who offers « the » way) to achieve and maintain sobriety for life” James Christopher, 1986.

The SOS movement began with an article in the Summer 1985 issue of FREE INQUIRY magazine, the leading secular humanist journal in the USA. James Christopher, the son of an alcoholic, and a sober alcoholic himself, wrote « Sobriety Without Superstition », an account of the path he took to sobriety.
This path led Christopher from seventeen years of a fearful and guilty alcoholism to a fearful and guilty sobriety with Alcoholics Anonymous. Christopher felt that there must be other alcoholics who wanted to achieve and maintain sobriety through personal responsibility and self-reliance. He also felt that turning ones life over to a « Higher Power » was not compatible with current research which indicated that addiction is the result of physiology, not psychology.

As a result of the tremendous response to the article from those who wanted to maintain sobriety as a separate issue from religion, Jim Christopher founded the Secular Organizations for Sobriety.
Today there are SOS groups meeting in every state in the USA and throughout the United Kingdom, Belgium, Australia and Israel. SOS has gained official recognition from health professionals, clinics and US court system. In 1987 the California courts recognized SOS as an alternative to AA for recovery programs and the Veterans Administration has adopted a policy which prohibits mandatory participation in programs of a religious nature. In 1998, the American Association of Psychiatrists published a chapter written by James Christopher in its main professional textbook "Substance Abuse".

Recovery Without AA:
SOS Founder Sober 25 Years



April 24, 2003 marks a quarter century of personal freedom from active alcohol addiction for SOS founder Jim Christopher. "SOS (Secular Organizations for Sobriety / Save Our Selves) is a friendly self-empowerment alternative to AA's spiritual 12-step support groups," said Christopher. "Although early SOS members, including myself, initially met with rather mean-spirited reactions from individual AA members," Christopher continued, "that's par for the course when you create something new; for instance in 1986, soon after SOS was founded, I was leaving the parking lot of a Los Angeles radio station, after having presented SOS on a live phone-in talk show, when one of the station producers blocked my exit with her car and emerged screaming that AA had saved her life and how dare we offer something else." 

Through the years—in spite of opposition—a global movement has grown into providing free, anonymous, self-empowerment support group meetings for thousands of individuals worldwide. The secular option that SOS provides has been more widely utilized as a referral to persons in addiction recovery owing to numerous U.S. court decisions ruling AA to be religious in nature. As a result hundreds of SOS meetings are now in place in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and other correctional institutions, as well as other government- funded addiction recovery facilities. Christopher plans to celebrate his 25th sobriety anniversary at numerous SOS meetings in the Los Angeles area.
 

 

Save Our Selves (SOS)
4773 Hollywood Blvd
Hollywood, CA 90027

Phone # 323-666-4295