Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Workaholics_Anonymous> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 33 of
33
with 100 items per page.
- Workaholics_Anonymous abstract "Workaholics Anonymous (WA) is a twelve-step program for people identifying themselves as "powerless over compulsive work, worry, or activity" including, but not limited to, workaholics–including overworkers and those who suffer from unmanageable procrastination or work aversion. Anybody with a desire to stop working compulsively is welcome at a WA meeting. Unmanageability can include compulsive work in housework, hobbies, fitness, or volunteering as well as in paid work. Anyone with a problematic relationship with work is welcomed. Workaholics Anonymous is considered an effective program for those who need its help. In 1983, one of the first formal efforts to create a fellowship around work addiction recovery began in New York when a corporate financial planner and a school teacher met. They formed Workaholics Anonymous to stop working compulsively themselves and to help others who suffered from the disease of workaholism. In their first meetings, spouses joined them and in retrospect were the first Work-Anon group, seeking recovery for family and friends of workaholics. Workaholics Anonymous is an international fellowship of over fifty in-person, phone, and online meetings with over an estimated thousand active members. WA's World Service Office has a Menlo Park central address. WA has developed its own literature, most notably the Workaholics Anonymous Book of Recovery, but also uses the Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) books Alcoholics Anonymous and Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions.".
- Workaholics_Anonymous wikiPageExternalLink www.arbeitssucht.de.
- Workaholics_Anonymous wikiPageExternalLink www.workaholics-anonymous.org.
- Workaholics_Anonymous wikiPageExternalLink book_of_recovery.html.
- Workaholics_Anonymous wikiPageExternalLink www.workanon.org.
- Workaholics_Anonymous wikiPageID "17029643".
- Workaholics_Anonymous wikiPageRevisionID "598705409".
- Workaholics_Anonymous hasPhotoCollection Workaholics_Anonymous.
- Workaholics_Anonymous subject Category:Addiction_and_substance_abuse_organizations.
- Workaholics_Anonymous subject Category:International_non-profit_organizations.
- Workaholics_Anonymous subject Category:Non-profit_organizations_based_in_the_United_States.
- Workaholics_Anonymous subject Category:Organizations_established_in_1983.
- Workaholics_Anonymous subject Category:Twelve-step_programs.
- Workaholics_Anonymous type Abstraction100002137.
- Workaholics_Anonymous type Group100031264.
- Workaholics_Anonymous type InternationalNon-profitOrganizations.
- Workaholics_Anonymous type Non-profitOrganizationsBasedInTheUnitedStates.
- Workaholics_Anonymous type Organization108008335.
- Workaholics_Anonymous type OrganizationsEstablishedIn1983.
- Workaholics_Anonymous type SocialGroup107950920.
- Workaholics_Anonymous type YagoLegalActor.
- Workaholics_Anonymous type YagoLegalActorGeo.
- Workaholics_Anonymous type YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity.
- Workaholics_Anonymous comment "Workaholics Anonymous (WA) is a twelve-step program for people identifying themselves as "powerless over compulsive work, worry, or activity" including, but not limited to, workaholics–including overworkers and those who suffer from unmanageable procrastination or work aversion. Anybody with a desire to stop working compulsively is welcome at a WA meeting. Unmanageability can include compulsive work in housework, hobbies, fitness, or volunteering as well as in paid work.".
- Workaholics_Anonymous label "Anonyme Arbeitssüchtige".
- Workaholics_Anonymous label "Workaholics Anonymous".
- Workaholics_Anonymous sameAs Anonyme_Arbeitssüchtige.
- Workaholics_Anonymous sameAs m.04162m6.
- Workaholics_Anonymous sameAs Q567600.
- Workaholics_Anonymous sameAs Q567600.
- Workaholics_Anonymous sameAs Workaholics_Anonymous.
- Workaholics_Anonymous wasDerivedFrom Workaholics_Anonymous?oldid=598705409.
- Workaholics_Anonymous isPrimaryTopicOf Workaholics_Anonymous.