"Do not underestimate good, thinking it will not affect you. Dripping water can fill a pitcher, drop by drop; one who is wise is filled with good, even if one accumulates it little by little."

These are the words of the Buddha (Dhammapada 9.7) quoted in Jesus and Buddha, the Parallel Sayings edited by Marcus Borg. I stumbled upon this passage when I was leafing through the book with no particular purpose this morning. The line brought to mind a friend's story about his friend who had been struggling with a drinking problem for years.

"This guy fought the bottle for years. I mean fought it. He'd sweat it out every night, would he drink or wouldn't. He'd sit in his car outside the liquor store and then go in before closing time and then hate himself in the morning for doing it again," my friend told me.

"Then one day he said, 'Hey, I can't drink. I just can't handle it.' And he stopped."

Of course, that's the simplified version of this recovery story, but I think it gets at the heart of recovery as well as what the passage from the Buddha says.

It's the difference between loathing and loving himself. Rather than seeing himself hemmed in by a weakness, flaw, shortcoming, problem--call it what you want--the man accepted himself for who he was. Rather than being a problem with a person attached, he became a person. He stopped defining himself by alcoholism and mistakes and started anew by loving himself exactly as he was.

The transformation likely started with our mutual friend, who is a wonderful listener who respects all life. He is a kind and humble man who's ready to hear and to learn. He accepts the possibilities that come through the open door of a kind heart. His drop of human kindness helped a friend wash away years of pain and struggle and to live anew. I love that.