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The Original Manuscript of Alcoholics Anonymous
Page 1 of 2 To Page 2
A L C O H O L I C S
A N O N Y M O U S
Published by:
Works Publishing Co.,
17 Williams St.,
Newark, N. J.
-------------------------------
INDEX
FOREWORD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . .
THE DOCTOR'S OPINION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
CHAPTER 1
BILL'S STORY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . Page 1
CHAPTER 2
THERE IS A SOLUTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . 8
CHAPTER 3
MORE ABOUT ALCOHOLISM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . 14
CHAPTER 4
WE AGNOSTICS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 20
CHAPTER 5
HOW IT WORKS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 26
CHAPTER 6
INTO ACTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 33
CHAPTER 7
WORKING WITH OTHERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . 41
CHAPTER 8
TO WIVES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
48
CHAPTER 9
THE FAMILY AFTERWARD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . 56
CHAPTER 10
TO EMPLOYERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 62
CHAPTER 11
A VISION FOR YOU . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .
. . . . 70
THE ALCOHOLIC FOUNDATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . .
-------------------------------
FOREWORD
We, of Alcoholics Anonymous, are more than one hundred
men and women who have recovered from a seemingly
hopeless state of mind and body. To show other
alcoholics PRECISELY HOW THEY CAN RECOVER is the main
purpose of this book. For them, we think these pages
will prove so convincing that no further authentication
will be necessary. We hope this account of our
experiences will help everyone to better understand the
alcoholic. Many do not yet comprehend that he is a very
sick person. And besides, we are sure that our new way
of living has its advantages for all.
It is important that we remain anonymous because we are
too few, at present, to handle the overwhelming number
of personal appeals which will result from this
publication. Being mostly business or professional folk
we could not well carry on our occupations in such an
event. We would like it clearly understood that our
alcoholic work is an avocation only, so that when
writing or speaking publicly about alcoholism, we urge
each of our Fellowship to omit his personal name,
designating himself instead as "A Member of Alcoholics
Anonymous. "
Very earnestly we ask the press also, to observe this
request, for otherwise we shall be greatly handicapped.
We are not an organization in the conventional sense of
the word. There are no fees nor dues whatsoever. The
only requirement for membership is an honest desire to
stop drinking. We are not allied with any particular
faith, sect or denomination, nor do we oppose anyone. We
simply wish to be helpful to those who are afflicted.
We shall be interested to hear from those who are
getting results from this book, particularly from those
who have commenced work with other alcoholics. We shall
try to contact such cases.
Inquiry by scientific, medical and religious societies
will be welcomed.
(This multilith volume will be sent upon receipt of
$3.50, and the printed book will be mailed, at no
additional cost, as soon as published. )
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
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Page 1.
THE DOCTOR'S OPINION
We of Alcoholics Anonymous believe that the reader will
be interested in the medical estimate of the plan of
recovery described in this book. Convincing testimony
must surely come from medical men who have had
experience with the sufferings of our members and have
witnessed our return to health. A well known doctor,
chief physician at a nationally prominent hospital
specializing in alcoholic and drug addiction, gave
Alcoholics Anonymous this letter:
To Whom It May Concern:
I have specialized in the treatment of alcoholism for
many years.
About four years ago I attended a patient who, though he
had been a competent business man of good earning
capacity, was an alcoholic of a type I had come to
regard as hopeless.
In the course of his third treatment he acquired certain
ideas concerning a possible means of recovery. As part
of his rehabilitation he commenced to present his
conceptions to other alcoholics, impressing upon them
that they must do likewise with still others. This has
become the basis of a rapidly growing fellowship of
these men and their families. This man and over one
hundred others appear to have recovered.
I personally know thirty of these cases who were of the
type with whom other methods had failed completely.
These facts appear to be of extreme medical importance;
because of the extraordinary possibilities of rapid
growth inherent in this group they mark a new epoch in
the annals of alcoholism. These men may well have a
remedy for thousands of such situations.
You may rely absolutely on anything they say about
themselves.
Very truly yours,
(Signed)- - - - - M. D.
The physician who, at our request, gave us this letter,
has been kind enough to enlarge upon his views in
another statement which follows. In this statement he
confirms what anyone who has suffered alcoholic torture
must believe that the body of the alcoholic is quite
as abnormal as his mind. It does not satisfy us to be
told that we cannot control our drinking just because we
were maladjusted to life, that we were in full flight
from reality, or were outright mental defectives. These
things were true to some extent, in fact, to a
considerable extent with some of us. But we are sure
that our bodies were sickened as well. In our belief,
any picture of the alcoholic which leaves out this
physical factor is incomplete.
The doctor's theory that we have a kind of allergy to
alcohol interests us. As laymen, our opinion as to its
soundness may, of course, mean little. But as
ex-alcoholics, we can say that his explanation makes
good sense. It explains many
-------------------------------
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things for which we cannot otherwise account.
Though we work out our solution on the spiritual plane,
we favor hospitalization for the alcoholic who is very
jittery or befogged. More often than not, it is
imperative that a man's brain be cleared before he is
approached, as he has then a better chance of
understanding and accepting what we have to offer.
The doctor writes:
The subject presented in this book seems to me to be of
paramount importance to those afflicted with alcoholic
addiction.
I say this after many years' experience as Medical
Director of one of the oldest hospitals in the country
treating alcoholic and drug addiction.
There was, therefore, a sense of real satisfaction when
I was asked to contribute a few words on a subject which
is covered in such masterly detail in these pages.
We doctors have realized for a long time that some form
of moral psychology was of urgent importance to
alcoholics, but its application presented difficulties
beyond our conception. What with our ultra-modern
standards, our scientific approach to everything, we are
perhaps not well equipped to apply the powers of good
that lie outside our synthetic knowledge.
About four years ago one of the leading contributors to
this book came under our care in this hospital and while
here he acquired some ideas which he put into practical
application at once.
Later, he requested the privilege of being allowed to
tell his story to other patients here and perhaps with
some misgiving, we consented. The cases we have followed
through have been most interesting; in fact, many of
them are amazing. The unselfishness of these men as we
have come to know them, the entire absence of profit
motive, and their community spirit, is indeed inspiring
to one who has labored long and wearily in this
alcoholic field. They believe in themselves, and still
more in the Power which pulls chronic alcoholics back
from the gates of death.
Of course an alcoholic ought to be freed from his
physical craving for liquor, and this often requires a
definite hospital procedure, before psychological
measures can be of maximum benefit.
We believe, and so suggested a few years ago, that the
action of alcohol on these chronic alcoholics is a
manifestation of an allergy; that the phenomenon of
craving is limited to this class and never occurs in the
average temperate drinker. These allergic types can
never safely use alcohol in any form at all; and once
having formed the habit and found they cannot break it,
once having lost their self-confidence, their reliance
upon things human, their problems pile up on them and
become astonishingly difficult to solve.
Frothy emotional appeal seldom suffices. The message
which can interest and hold these alcoholic people must
have depth and weight. In nearly all cases, their ideals
must be grounded in a power greater than themselves, if
they are to re-create their lives.
If any feel that as psychiatrists directing a hospital
for alcoholics we appear somewhat sentimental, let them
stand with us a while on the firing line, see
-------------------------------
Page 3.
the tragedies, the despairing wives, the little
children; let the solving of these problems become a
part of their daily work, and even of their sleeping
moments, and the most cynical will not wonder that we
have accepted and encouraged this movement. We feel,
after many years of experience, that we have found
nothing which has contributed more to the rehabilitation
of these men than the community movement now growing up
among them.
Men and women drink essentially because they like the
effect produced by alcohol. The sensation is so elusive
that, while they admit it is injurious, they cannot
after a time differentiate the true from the false. To
them, their alcoholic life seems the only normal one.
They are restless, irritable and discontented, unless
they can again experience the sense of ease and comfort
which comes at once by taking a few drinks drinks
which they see others taking with impunity. After they
have succumbed to the desire again, as so many do, and
the phenomenon of craving develops, they pass through
the well-known stages of a spree, emerging remorseful,
with a firm resolution not to drink again. This is
repeated over and over, and unless this person can
experience an entire psychic change there is very little
hope of his recovery.
On the other hand and strange as this may seem to
those who do not understand once a psychic change has
occurred, the very same person who seemed doomed, who
had so many problems he despaired of ever solving them,
suddenly finds himself easily able to control his desire
for alcohol, the only effort necessary being that
required to follow a few simple rules.
Men have cried out to me in sincere and despairing
appeal: "Doctor, I cannot go on like this! I have
everything to live for! I must stop, but I cannot! You
must help me!"
Faced with this problem, if a doctor is honest with
himself, he must sometimes feel his own inadequacy.
Although he gives all that is in him, it often is not
enough. One feels that something more than human power
is needed to produce the essential psychic change.
Though the aggregate of recoveries resulting from
psychiatric effort is perhaps considerable, we
physicians must admit we have made little impression
upon the problem as a whole. Many types do not respond
to the ordinary psychological approach.
I do not hold with those who believe that alcoholism is
entirely a mental condition. I have had many men who
had, for example, worked a period of months on some
problem or business deal which was to be settled on a
certain date, favorably to them. They took a drink a day
or so prior to the date, and then the phenomenon of
craving at once became paramount to all other interests
so that the important appointment was not met. These men
were not drinking to escape; they were drinking to
overcome a craving beyond their mental control.
There are many situations which arise out of the
phenomenon of craving which cause men to make the
supreme sacrifice rather than continue to fight.
The classification of alcoholics seems most difficult,
and in much detail is outside the scope of this book.
There are, of course, the constitutional psychopaths who
are emotionally unstable. We are all familiar with this
type. They are always "going on the wagon for keeps. "
They are over-remorseful and make many resolutions, but
never a decision.
Then there are those who are never properly adjusted to
life, who are the so-called neurotics. The prognosis of
this type is unfavorable.
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There is the type of man who is unwilling to admit that
he cannot take a drink. He plans various ways of
drinking. He changes his brand or his environment. There
is the type who always believes that after being
entirely free from alcohol for a period of time he can
take a drink without danger. There is the
manic-depressive type, who is, perhaps, the least
understood by his friends, and about whom a whole
chapter could be written.
Then there are types entirely normal in every respect
except in the effect alcohol has upon them. They are
often able, intelligent, friendly people.
All these, and many others, have one symptom in common:
they cannot start drinking without developing the
phenomenon of craving. This phenomenon, as we have
suggested, may be the manifestation of an allergy which
differentiates these people, sets them apart as a
distinct entity. It has never been, by any treatment
with which we are familiar, permanently eradicated. The
only relief we have to suggest is entire abstinence.
This immediately precipitates us into a seething caldron
of debate. Much has been written pro and con, but among
physicians, the general opinion seems to be that most
chronic alcoholics are doomed.
What is the solution? Perhaps I can best answer this by
relating an experience of two years ago.
About one year prior to this experience a man was
brought in to be treated for chronic alcoholism. He had
but partially recovered from a gastric hemorrage and
seemed to be a case of pathological mental
deterioration. He had lost everything worth while in
life and was only living, one might say, to drink. He
frankly admitted and believed that for him there was no
hope. Following the elimination of alcohol, there was
found to be no permanent brain injury. He accepted the
plan outlined in this book. One year later he called to
see me, and I experienced a very strange sensation. I
knew the man by name, and partly recognized his
features, but there all resemblance ended. From a
trembling, despairing, nervous wreck, had emerged a man
brimming over with self-reliance and contentment. I
talked with him for some time, but was not able to bring
myself to feel that I had known him before. To me he was
a stranger, and so he left me. More than three years
have now passed with no return to alcohol.
When I need a mental uplift, I often think of another
case brought in by a physician prominent in New York
City. The patient had made his own diagnosis, and
deciding his situation hopeless, had hidden in a
deserted barn determined to die. He was rescued by a
searching party, and, in desperate condition, brought to
me. Following his physical rehabilitation, he had a talk
with me in which he frankly stated he thought the
treatment a waste of effort, unless I could assure him,
which no one ever had, that in the future he would have
the "will power" to resist the impulse to drink.
His alcoholic problem was so complex, and his depression
so great, that we felt his only hope would be through
what we then called "moral psychology", and we doubted
if even that would have any effect.
However, he did become "sold" on the ideas contained in
this book. He has not had a drink for more than three
years. I see him now and then and he is as fine a
specimen of manhood as one could wish to meet.
I earnestly advise every alcoholic to read this book
through, and though perhaps he came to scoff, he may
remain to pray.
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Page 1.
Chapter One
BILL'S STORY
War fever ran high in the New England town to which we
new, young officers from Plattsburg were assigned, and
we were flattered when the first citizens took us to
their homes, making us feel heroic. Here was love,
applause, war; moments sublime with hilarious intervals.
I was part of life at last, and in the midst of the
excitement I discovered liquor. I forgot the strong
warnings and the prejudices of my people concerning
drink. In time we sailed for "Over There". I was very
lonely and again turned to alcohol.
We landed in England. I visited Winchester Cathedral.
Much moved, I wandered outside. My attention was caught
by a doggerel on an old tombstone:
"Here lies a Hampshire Grenadier
Who caught his death
Drinking cold small beer
A good soldier is ne'er forgot
Whether he dieth by musket
Or by pot. "
Ominous warning which I failed to heed.
Twenty-two, and a veteran of foreign wars, I went home
at last. I fancied myself a leader, for had not the men
of my battery given me a special token of appreciation?
My talent for leadership, I imagined, would place me at
the head of vast enterprises which I would manage with
utmost assurance.
I took a night law course, and obtained employment as
investigator for a surety company. The drive for success
was on. I'd prove to the world I was important. My work
took me about Wall Street and little by little I became
interested in the market. Many people lost money but
some became very rich. Why not I? I studied economics
and business as well as law. Potential alcoholic that I
was, I nearly failed my law course. At one of the finals
I was too drunk to think or write. Though my drinking
was not yet continuous, it disturbed my wife. We had
long talks when I would still her forebodings by telling
her that men of genius conceived their best projects
when drunk; that the most majestic constructions of
philosophic thought were so derived.
By the time I had completed the course, I knew the law
was not for me. The inviting maelstrom of Wall Street
had me in its grip. Business and financial leaders were
my heroes. Out of this alloy of drink and speculation, I
commenced to forge the weapon that one day would turn in
its flight like a boomerang and all but cut me to
ribbons. Living modestly, my wife and I saved $1, 000.
It went into certain securities then cheap and rather
unpopular. I rightly imagined that they would some day
have a great rise. I failed to persuade my broker
friends to send me out looking over factories and
managements, but my wife and I decided to go anyway. I
had developed a theory that most people lost money in
stocks through ignorance of markets. I discovered many
more reasons later on.
We gave up our positions and off we roared on a
motorcycle, the sidecar stuffed with tent, blankets,
change of clothes, and three huge volumes of a financial
reference service. Our friends thought a lunacy
commission should be appointed. Perhaps
-------------------------------
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they were right. I had had some success at speculation,
so we had a little money, but we once worked on a farm
for a month to avoid drawing on our small capital. That
was the last honest manual labor on my part for many a
day. We covered the the whole eastern United States in a
year. At the end of it, my reports to Wall Street
procured me a position there and the use of a large
expense account. The exercise of an option brought in
more money, leaving us with a profit of several thousand
dollars for that year.
For the next few years fortune threw money and applause
my way. I had arrived. My judgment and ideas were
followed by many to the tune of paper millions. The
great boom of the late twenties was seething and
swelling. Drink was taking an important and exhilarating
part in my life. There was loud talk in the jazz places
uptown. Everyone spent in thousands and chattered in
millions. Scoffers could scoff and be damned. I made a
host of fair-weather friends.
My drinking assumed more serious proportions, continuing
all day and almost every night. The remonstrances of my
friends terminated in a row and I become a lone wolf.
There were many unhappy scenes in our sumptuous
apartment. There had been no real infidelity, for
loyalty to my wife, helped at times by extreme
drunkenness, kept me out of those scrapes.
In 1929 I contracted golf fever. We went at once to the
country, my wife to applaud while I started out to
overtake Walter Hagen. Liquor caught up with me much
faster than I came up behind Walter. I began to be
jittery in the morning. Golf permitted drinking every
day and every night. It was fun to carom around the
exclusive course which had inspired such awe in me as a
lad. I acquired the impeccable coat of tan one sees upon
the well-to-do. The local banker watched me whirl fat
checks in and our of his till with amused skepticism.
Abruptly in October 1929 hell broke loose on the New
York stock exchange. After one of those days of inferno,
I wobbled from a hotel bar to a brokerage office. It was
eight o'clock five hours after the market closed. The
ticker still clattered. I was staring at an inch of the
tape which bore the inscription PKF-32. It had been 52
that morning. I was finished and so were many friends.
The papers reported men jumping to death from the towers
of High Finance. That disgusted me. I would not jump. I
went back to the bar. My friends had dropped several
million since ten oclock so what? Tomorrow was another
day. As I drank, the old fierce determination to win
came back.
Next morning I telephoned a friend in Montreal. He had
plenty of money left and thought I had better go to
Canada. By the following spring we were living in our
accustomed to style. I felt like Napoleon returning from
Elba. No St. Helena for me! But drinking caught up with
me again and my generous friend had to let me go. This
time we stayed broke.
We went to live with my wife's parents. I found a job;
then lost it as the result of a brawl with a taxi
driver. Mercifully, no one could guess that I was to
have no real employment for five years, or hardly draw a
sober breath. My wife began to work in a department
store, coming home exhausted to find me drunk. I became
an unwelcome hanger-on at brokerage places.
Liquor ceased to be a luxury; it became a necessity.
"Bathtub" gin, two bottles a day, and often three, got
to be routine. Sometimes a small deal would net a few
hundred dollars, and I would pay my bills at the bars
and delicatessens. This went on endlessly, and I began
to waken very early in the morning shaking violently. A
tumbler full of gin followed by half a dozen bottles of
beer would be required if I were to eat any breakfast.
Nevertheless, I still thought I could control the
situation, and there were periods of sobriety which
renewed my wife's hope.
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Gradually things got worse. The house was taken over by
the mortgage holder, my mother-in-law died, my wife and
father-in-law became ill.
Then I got a promising business opportunity. Stocks were
at the low point of 1932, and I had somehow formed a
group to buy. I was to share generously in the profits.
Then I went on a prodigious bender, and that chance
vanished.
I woke up. This had to be stopped. I saw I could not
take so much as one drink. I was through forever. Before
then, I had written lots of sweet promises, but my wife
happily observed that this time I meant business. And so
I did.
Shortly afterward I came home drunk. There had been no
fight. Where had been my high resolve? I simply didn't
know. It hadn't even come to mind. Someone had pushed a
drink my way, and I had taken it. Was I crazy? I began
to wonder, for such an appalling lacks of perspective
seemed near being just that.
Renewing my resolve, I tried again. Some time passed,
and confidence began to be replaced by cocksureness. I
could laugh at the gin mills. Now I had what it takes!
One day I walked into a cafe to telephone. In no time I
was beating on the bar asking myself how it happened. As
the whiskey rose to my head I told myself I would manage
better next time, but I might as well get good and drunk
then. And I did.
The remorse, horror and hopelessness of the next morning
are unforgettable. The courage to do battle was not
there. My brain raced uncontrollably and there was a
terrible sense of impending calamity. I hardly dared
cross the street, lest I collapse and be run down by an
early morning truck, for it was scarcely daylight. An
all night place supplied me with a dozen glasses of ale.
My writhing nerves were stilled at last. A morning paper
told me the market had gone to hell again. Well, so had
I. The market would recover, but I wouldn't. That was a
hard thought. Should I kill myself? No not now. Then a
mental fog settled down. Gin would fix that. So two
bottles, and oblivion.
The mind and body are marvelous mechanisms, for mine
endured this agony for two more years. Sometimes I stole
from my wife's slender purse when the morning terror and
madness were on me. Again I swayed dizzily before an
open window, or the medicine cabinet, where there was
poison, cursing myself for a weakling. There were
flights from city to country and back, as my wife and I
sought escape. Then came the night when the physical and
mental torture was so hellish I feared I would burst
through my window, sash and all. Somehow I managed to
drag my mattress to a lower floor, lest I suddenly leap.
A doctor came with a heavy sedative. Next day found me
drinking both gin and sedative. This combination soon
landed me on the rocks. People feared for my sanity. So
did I. I could eat little or nothing when drinking, and
I was forty pounds under weight.
My brother-in-law is a physician, and through his
kindness I was placed in a nationally-known hospital for
the mental and physical rehabilitation of alcoholics.
Under the so-called belladonna treatment my brain
cleared. Hydrotherapy and mild exercise helped much.
Best of all, I met a kind doctor who explained that
though certainly selfish and foolish, I had been
seriously ill, bodily and mentally.
It relieved me somewhat to learn that in alcoholics the
will is amazingly weakened when it comes to combatting
liquor, though It often remains strong in other
respects. My incredible behavior in the face of a
desparate desire to stop was explained. Understanding
myself now, I fared forth in high hope. For three or
four months the goose hung high. I went to town
regularly and even made a little money. Surely this was
the answer self-knowledge.
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Page 4.
But it was not, for the frightful day came when I drank
once more. The curve of my declining moral and bodily
health fell off like a ski-jump. After a time I returned
to the hospital. This was the finish, the curtain, it
seemed to me. My weary and despairing wife was informed
that it would all end with heart failure during delirium
tremens, or I would develop a wet brain, perhaps within
a year. She would soon have to give me over to the
undertaker, or the asylum.
They did not need to tell me. I knew, and almost
welcomed the idea. It was a devastating blow to my
pride. I, who had thought so well of myself and my
abilities, of my capacity to surmount obstacles, was
cornered at last. Now I was to plunge into the dark,
joining that endless procession of sots who had gone on
before. I thought of my poor wife. There had been much
happiness after all. What would I not give to make
amends. But that was over now.
No words can tell of the loneliness and despair I found
in that bitter morass of self-pity. Quicksand stretched
around me in all directions. I had met my match. I had
been overwhelmed. Alcohol was my master.
Trembling, I stepped from the hospital a broken man.
Fear sobered me for a bit. Then came the insidious
insanity of that first drink, and on Armistice Day 1934,
I was off again. Everyone became resigned to the
certainty that I would have to be shut up somewhere, or
would stumble along to a miserable end. How dark it is
before the dawn! In reality that was the beginning of my
last debauch. I was soon to be catapulted into what I
like to call the fourth dimension of existence. I was to
know happiness, peace, and usefulness, in a way of life
that is incredibly more wonderful as time passes.
Near the end of that bleak November, I sat drinking in
my kitchen. With a certain satisfaction I reflected
there was enough gin concealed about the house to carry
me through that night and the next day. My wife was at
work. I wondered whether I dared hide a full bottle of
gin near the head of our bed. I would need it before
daylight.
My musing was interrupted by the telephone. The cheery
voice of an old school friend asked if he might come
over. He was sober. It was years since I could remember
his coming to New York in that condition. I was amazed.
Rumor had it that he had been committed for alcoholic
insanity. I wondered how he had escaped. Of course he
would have dinner, and then I could drink openly with
him. Unmindful of his welfare, I thought only of
recapturing the spirit of other days. There was that
time we had chartered an airplane to complete a jag! His
coming was an oasis in this drear desert of futility.
The very thing an oasis! Drinkers are like that.
The door opened and he stood there, fresh-skinned and
glowing. There was something about his eyes. He was
inexplicably different. What had happened?
I pushed a drink across the table. He refused it.
Disappointed but curious, I wondered what had got into
the fellow. He wasn't himself.
"Come, what's all this about?" I queried.
He looked straight at me. Simply, but smilingly, he
said, "I've got religion. "
I was aghast. So that was it last summer an alcoholic
crackpot; now, I suspected, a little cracked about
religion. He had that starry-eyed look. Yes, the old boy
was on fire all right. But bless his heart, let him
rant! Besides, my gin would last longer than his
preaching.
But he did no ranting. In a matter of fact way he told
how two men had appeared
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in court, persuading the judge to suspend his
commitment. They had told of a simple religious idea and
a practical program of action. That was two months ago
and the result was self evident. It worked!
He had come to pass his experience along to me if I
cared to have it. I was shocked, but interested.
Certainly I was interested. I had to be, for I was
hopeless.
He talked for hours. Childhood memories rose before me.
I could almost hear the sound of the preacher's voice as
I sat, on still Sundays, way over there on the hillside;
there was that proffered temperance pledge I never
signed; my grandfather good natured contempt of some
church folk and their doings; his insistence that the
spheres really had their music; but his denial of the
preacher's right to tell him how he must listen; his
fearlessness as he spoke of these things just before he
died; these recollections welled up from the past. They
made me swallow hard.
That war-time day in old Winchester Cathedral came back
again.
I had always believed in a power greater than myself. I
had often pondered these things. I was not an atheist.
Few people really are, for that means blind faith in the
strange proposition that this universe originated in a
cipher, and aimlessly rushes nowhere. My intellectual
heroes, the chemists, the astronomers, even the
evolutionists, suggested vast laws and forces at work.
Despite contrary indications, I had little doubt that a
mighty purpose and rhythm underlay all. How could there
be so much of precise and immutable law, and no
intelligence? I simply had to believe in a Spirit of the
Universe, who knew neither time nor limitation. But that
was as far as I had gone.
With ministers, and the world's religions, I parted
right there. When they talked of a God personal to me,
who was love, superhuman strength and direction, I
became irritated and my mind snapped shut against such a
theory.
To Christ I conceded the certainty of a great man, not
too closely followed by those who claimed Him. His moral
teaching most excellent. For myself, I had adopted
those parts which seemed convenient and not too
difficult; the rest I disregarded.
The wars which had been fought, the burnings and
chicanery that religious dispute had facilitated, made
me sick. I honestly doubted whether, on balance, the
religions of mankind had done any good. Judging from
what I had seen in Europe and since, the power of God in
human affairs was negligible, the Brotherhood of Man a
grim jest. If there was a Devil, he seemed the Boss
Universal, and he certainly had me.
But my friend sat before me, and he made the point-blank
declaration that God had done for him what he could not
do for himself. His human will had failed. Doctors had
pronounced him incurable. Society was about to lock him
up. Like myself, he had admitted complete defeat. Then
he had, in effect, been raised from the dead, suddenly
taken from the scrap heap to a level of life better than
the best he had ever known!
Had this power originated in him? Obviously it had not.
There had been no more power in him than there was in me
at that minute; and this was none at all.
That floored me. It began to look as though religious
people were right after all. Here was something at work
in a human heart which had done the impossible. My ideas
about miracles were drastically revised right then.
Never mind the musty past; here sat a miracle directly
across the kitchen table. He shouted great tidings.
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Page 6.
I saw that my friend was much more than inwardly
reorganized. He was on a different footing. His roots
grasped a new soil.
Thus was I convinced that God is concerned with us
humans, when we want Him enough. At long last I saw, I
felt, I believed. Scales of pride and prejudice fell
from my eyes. A new world came into view.
The real significance of my experience in the Cathedral
burst upon me. For a brief moment, I had needed and
wanted God. There had been a humble willingness to have
Him with me and He came. But soon the sense of His
presence had been blotted out by worldly clamors, mostly
those within myself. And so it had been ever since. How
blind I had been.
At the hospital I was separated from alcohol for the
last time. Treatment seemed wise, for I showed signs of
delirium tremens. I have not had a drink since.
There I humbly offered myself to God, as I then
understood Him, to do with me as He would. I placed
myself unreservedly under His care and direction. I
admitted for the first time that of myself I was
nothing; that without Him I was lost. I ruthlessly faced
my sins and became willing to have my new-found Friend
take them away, root and branch.
My school mate visited me, and I fully acquainted him
with my problems and deficiencies. We made a list of
people I had hurt or toward whom I felt resentment. I
expressed my entire willingness to approach these
individuals, admitting my wrong. Never was I to be
critical of them. I was to right all such matters to the
utmost of my ability.
I was to test my thinking by the new God-consciousness
within. Common sense would thus become uncommon sense. I
was to sit quietly when in doubt, asking only for
direction and strength to meet my problems as He would
have me. Never was I to pray for myself, except as my
requests bore on my usefulness to others. Then only
might I expect to receive. But that would be in great
measure.
My friend promised when these things were done I would
enter upon a new relationship with my Creator; that I
would have the elements of a way of life which answered
all my problems. Belief in the power of God, plus enough
willingness, honesty and humility to establish and
maintain the new order of things, were the essential
requirements.
Simple, but not easy; a price had to be paid. It meant
destruction of self-centeredness. I must turn in all
things to the Father of Light who presides over us all.
These were revolutionary and drastic proposals, but the
moment I fully accepted them, the effect was electric.
There was a sense of victory, followed by such a peace
and serenity as I had never known. There was utter
confidence. I felt lifted up, as though the great clean
wind of a mountain top blew through and through. God
comes to most men gradually, but His impact on me was
sudden and profound.
For a moment I was alarmed, and called my friend, the
doctor, to ask if I were still sane. He listened in
wonder as I talked.
Finally he shook his head saying, "Something has
happened to you I don't understand. But you had better
hang on to it. Anything is better than the way you were.
" The good doctor now sees many men who have such
experiences. He knows they are real.
While I lay in the hospital the thought came that there
were thousands of hope-
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Page 7.
less alcoholics who might be glad to have what had been
so freely given me. Perhaps I could help some of them.
They in turn might work with others.
My friend had emphasized the absolute necessity of my
demonstrating these principles in all my affairs.
Particularly was it imperative to work with others, as
he had worked with me. Faith without works was dead, he
said. And how appallingly true for the alcoholic! For if
an alcoholic failed to perfect and enlarge his spiritual
life through work and self sacrifice for others, he
could not survive the certain trials and low spots
ahead. If he did not work, he would surely drink again,
and it he drank, he would surely die. Then faith would
be dead indeed. With us it is just like that.
My wife and I abandoned ourselves with enthusiasm to the
idea of helping other alcoholics to a solution of their
problems. It was fortunate, for my old business
associates remained skeptical for a year and a half,
during which I found little work. I was not too well at
the time, and was plagued by waves of self-pity and
resentment. This sometimes nearly drove me back to
drink. I soon found that when all other measures failed,
work with another alcoholic would save the day. Many
times I have gone to my old hospital in despair. On
talking to a man there, I would be amazingly lifted up
and set on my feet. It is a design for living that works
in rough going.
We commenced to make many fast friends and a fellowship
has grown up among us of which it is a wonderful thing
to feel a part. The joy of living we really have, even
under pressure and difficulty. I have seen one hundred
families set their feet in the path that really goes
somewhere; have seem the most impossible domestic
situations righted; feuds and bitterness of all sorts
wiped out. I have seen men come out of asylums and
resume a vital place in the lives of their families and
communities. Business and professional men have regained
their standing. There is scarcely any form of trouble
and misery which has not been overcome among us. In one
Western city and its environs there are eighty of us and
our families. We meet frequently at our different homes,
so that newcomers may find the fellowship they seek. At
these informal gatherings one may often see from 40 to
80 persons. We are growing in numbers and power.
An alcoholic in his cups is an unlovely creature. Our
struggles with them are variously strenuous, comic, and
tragic. One poor chap committed suicide in my home. He
could not, or would not, see our way of life.
There is, however, a vast amoung of fun about it all. I
suppose some would be shocked at our seeming worldliness
and levity. But just underneath there is deadly
earnestness. God has to work twenty-four hours a day in
and through us, or we perish.
Most of us feel we need look no further for Utopia, nor
even for Heaven. We have it with us right here and now.
Each day that simple talk in my kitchen multiplies
itself in a widening circle of peace on earth and good
will to men.
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Chapter Two
THERE IS A SOLUTION
We, of ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS, know one hundred men who
were once just as hopeless as Bill. All have recovered.
They have solved the drink problem.
We are ordinary Americans. All sections of this country
and many of its occupations are represented, as well as
many political, economic, social and religious
backgrounds. We are people who normally would not mix.
But there exists among us a fellowship, a friendliness,
and an understanding which is indescribably wonderful.
We are like the passengers of a great liner the moment
after rescue from shipwreck, when camaraderie,
joyousness and democracy pervade the vessel from
steerage to Captain's table. Unlike the feelings of the
ship's passengers, however, our joy in escape from
disaster does not subside as we go our individual ways.
The feeling of having shared in a common peril is one
element in the powerful cement which binds us. But that
in itself would never have held us together as we are
now joined.
The tremendous fact for every one of us that we have
discovered a common solution. We have a way out on which
we can absolutely agree, and upon which we can join in
brotherly and harmonious action. This is the great news
this book carries to those who suffer alcoholism.
An illness of this sort and we have come to believe it
an illness involves those about us in a way no other
human sickness can. If a person has cancer all are sorry
for him and no one is angry or hurt. But not so with the
alcoholic illness, for with it there goes annihilation
of all the things worth while in life. It engulfs all
whose lives touch the sufferer's. It brings
misunderstanding, fierce resentment, financial
insecurity, disgusted friends and employers, warped
lives of blameless children, sad wives and parents
anyone can increase the list.
This volume will inform, instruct and comfort those who
are, or who may be affected. They are many.
Highly competent psychiatrists who have dealt with us
(often fruitlessly, we are afraid) find it almost
impossible to persuade an alcoholic to discuss his
situation without reserve. Strangely enough, wives,
parents and intimate friends usually find us even more
unapproachable than do the psychiatrist and the doctor.
But the ex-alcoholic who has found this solution, who is
properly armed with certain medical information, can
generally win the entire confidence of another alcoholic
in a few hours. Until such an understanding is reached,
little or nothing can be accomplished.
That the man who is making the approach has had the same
difficulty, that he obviously knows what he is talking
about, that his whole deportment shouts at the new
prospect that he is a man with a real answer, that he
has no attitude of holier than thou, nothing whatever
except the sincere desire to be helpful; that there are
no fees to pay, no axes to grind, no people to please,
no lectures to be endured these are the conditions we
have found necessary. After such an approach many take
up their beds and walk again.
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None of us makes a vocation of this work, nor do we
think its effectiveness would be increased if we did. We
feel that elimination of the liquor problem is but a
beginning. A much more important demonstration of our
principles lies before us in our respective homes,
occupations, and affairs. All of us spend much of our
spare time in the sort of effort which we are going to
describe. A few are fortunate enough to be so situated
that they can give nearly all of their time to the work.
If we keep on the way we are going there is little doubt
that much good will result, but the surface of the
problem would hardly be scratched. Those of us who live
in large cities are overcome by the reflection that
close by hundreds are dropping into oblivion every day,
Many could recover if they had the opportunity we have
enjoyed. How then shall we present that which has been
so freely given us?
We have concluded to publish an anonymous volume setting
forth the problem as we see it. We shall bring to the
task our combined experience and knowledge. This ought
to suggest a useful program for anyone concerned with a
drinking problem.
Of necessity there will have to be discussion of matters
medical, psychiatric, social, and religious. We are
aware that these matters are, from their very nature,
controversial. Nothing would please us so much as to
write a book which would contain no basis for contention
or argument. We shall do our utmost to achieve that
ideal. Most of us sense that real tolerance of other
people's shortcomings and viewpoints and a respect for
their opinions are attitudes which make us more useful
to others. Our very lives, as ex-alcoholics, depend upon
our constant thought of others and how we may help meet
their needs.
You may already have asked yourself why it is that all
of us became so very ill from drinking. Doubtless you
are curious to discover how and why, in the face of
expert opinion to the contrary, we have recovered from a
hopeless condition of mind and body. If you are an
alcoholic who wants to get over it, you may already be
asking "What do I have to do?"
It is the purpose of this book to answer such questions
specifically. We shall tell you what we have done.
Before going into a detailed discussion, it may be well
to summarize some points as we see them.
How many times people have said to us: "I can take it or
leave it alone. Why can't he?" "Why don't you drink like
a gentleman or quit?" "That fellow can't handle his
liquor. " "Why don't you try beer and wine?" "Lay off
the hard stuff. " "His will power must be weak. " "He
could stop if he wanted to. " "She's such a sweet girl,
I should think he'd stop for her. " "The doctor told him
that if he ever drank again it would kill him, but there
he is all lit up again. "
Now, these are commonplace observations on drinkers
which we hear all the time. Back of them is a world of
ignorance and misunderstanding. We see that these
expressions refer to people whose reactions are very
different from ours.
Moderate drinkers have little trouble in giving up
liquor entirely if they have good reason for it. They
can take it or leave it alone.
Then we have a certain type of hard drinker. He may have
the habit bad enough to gradually impair him physically
and mentally. It may cause him to die a few years before
his time. If a sufficiently strong reason ill health,
falling in love, change of environment, or the warning
of a doctor becomes operative, this man can also stop
or moderate, although he may find it difficult and
troublesome and may ever need medical attention.
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But what about the real alcoholic? He may start off as a
moderate drinker; he may or may not become a continuous
hard drinker; but at some stage of his drinking career
he begins to lose all control of his liquor consumption,
once he starts to drink.
Here is the Fellow who has been puzzling you, especially
in his lack of control. He does absurd, incredible,
tragic things while drinking. He is a real Dr. Jekyll
and Mr. Hyde. He is seldom mildly intoxicated. He is
always more or less insanely drunk. His disposition
while drinking resembles his normal nature but little.
He may be one of the finest fellows in the world. Yet
let him drink for a day, and he frequently becomes
disgustingly, and even dangerously anti-social. He has a
positive genius for getting tight at exactly the wrong
moment, particularly when some important decision must
be made or engagement kept. He is often perfectly
sensible and well balanced concerning everything except
liquor, but in that respect is incredibly dishonest and
selfish. He often possesses special abilities, skills,
and aptitudes, and has a promising career ahead of him.
He uses his gifts to build up a bright outlook for his
family and himself, then pulls the structure down on his
head by a senseless series of sprees. He is the fellow
who goes to bed so intoxicated he ought to sleep the
clock around. Yet early next morning he searches madly
for the bottle he misplaced the night before. If he can
afford it, he may have liquor concealed all over his
house to be certain no one gets his entire supply away
from him to throw down the wastepipe. As matters grow
worse, he begins to use a combination of high-powered
sedative and liquor to quiet his nerves so he can go to
work. Then comes the days when he simply cannot make it
and gets drunk all over again. Perhaps he goes to a
doctor who gives him a dose of morphine or some
high-voltage sedative with which to taper off. Then he
begins to appear at hospitals and sanitariums.
This is by no means a comprehensive picture of the true
alcoholic, as our behavior patterns vary. But this
description should identify him roughly.
Why does he behave like this? If hundreds of experiences
have shown him that one drink means another debacle with
all its attendant suffering and humiliation, why is it
he takes that one drink? Why can't he stay on the water
wagon? What has become of the common sense and will
power that he still sometimes displays with respect to
other matters?
Perhaps there never will be a full answer to these
questions. Psychiatrists and medical men vary
considerably in their opinion as to why the alcoholic
reacts differently from normal people. No one is sure
why, once a certain point is reached, nothing can be
done for him. We cannot answer the riddle.
We know that while the alcoholic keeps away from drink
as he may do for months or years, he reacts much like
other men. We are equally positive that once he takes
any alcohol whatever into his system, something happens,
both in the bodily and mental sense, which makes it
virtually impossible for him to stop. The experience of
any alcoholic will abundantly confirm that.
These observations would be academic and pointless if
our friend never took the first drink thereby setting
the terrible cycle in motion. Therefore, the real
problem of the alcoholic centers in his mind, rather
than in his body. If you ask him why he started on that
last bender, the chances are he will offer you any one
of a hundred alibis. Sometimes these excuses have a
certain plausibility, but none of theme really make
sense in the light of the havoc an alcoholic's drinking
bout creates. They sound to you like the philosophy of
the man who, having a headache, beat him self on the
head with a hammer so that he couldn't feel the ache. If
you draw this fallacious reasoning to the attention of
an alcoholic, he will laugh it off, or become irritated
and refuse to talk.
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Page 11.
Once in a while he may tell you the truth. And the
truth, strange to say, is usually that he has no more
idea why he took that first drink than you have. Some
drinkers have excuses with which they are satisfied part
of the time. But in their hearts they really do not know
why they do it. Once this malady has a real hold, they
are a baffled lot. There is the obsession that somehow,
some day, they will beat the game. But they often
suspect they are down for the count.
How true this is, few realize. In a vague way their
families and friends sense that these drinkers are
abnormal, but everybody hopefully waits the day when the
sufferer will rouse himself from his lethargy and assert
his power of will.
The tragic truth is that if the man be a real alcoholic,
the happy day will seldom arrive. He has lost control.
At a certain point in the drinking of every alcoholic,
he passes into a state where the most powerful desire to
stop drinking is of absolutely no avail. This tragic
situation has already arrived in practically every case
long before it is suspected.
The fact is that most alcoholics, for reasons yet
obscure, have lost the power of choice in drink. Our
so-called will power becomes practically non-existent.
We are unable at certain times, no matter how well we
understand ourselves, to bring into our consciousness
with sufficient force the memory of the suffering and
humiliation of even a week or a month ago. We are
without defense against the first drink.
The almost certain consequences that follow taking even
a glass of beer do not crowd into the mind to deter us.
If these thoughts occur, they are hazy, and readily
supplanted with the old treadbare idea that this time we
shall handle ourselves like other people. There is a
complete failure of the kind of defense that keeps one
from putting his hand on a hot stove.
The alcoholic may say to himself in the most casual way,
"It won't burn me this time, so here's how!" Or perhaps
he doesn't think at all. How often have some of us begun
to drink in this nonchalent way, and after the third or
fourth, pounded on the bar and said to ourselves, "For
God's sake, how did I ever get started again?" Only to
have that thought supplanted by "Well, I'll stop with
the sixth drink. " Or "What's the use anyhow?"
When this sort of thinking is fully established in an
individual with alcoholic tendencies, he has probably
placed himself beyond all human aid, and unless locked
up, is certain to die, or go permanently insane. These
stark and ugly facts have been confirmed by legions of
alcoholics throughout history. But for the grace of God,
there would have been one hundred more convincing
demonstrations. So many want to stop, but cannot.
There is a solution. Almost none of us liked the
self-searching, the levelling of our pride, the
confession of shortcomings which the process requires
for its successful consummation. But we saw that it
really worked in others, and we had come to believe in
the hopelessness and futility of life as we had been
living it. When, therefore, we were approached by those
in whom the problem had been solved, there was nothing
left for us but to pick up the simple kit of spiritual
tools laid at our feet. We have found much of heaven and
we have been rocketed into a fourth dimension of
existence, of which we had not even dreamed.
The great fact is just this, and nothing less: that we
have had deep and effective spiritual experiences, which
have revolutionized our whole attitude toward life,
toward our fellows, and toward God's universe. The
central fact of our lives today is the absolute
certainty that our Creator has entered into our hearts
and lives in a way which is indeed miraculous. He has
commenced to accomplish those things for us which we
could never do by ourselves.
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If you are seriously alcoholic, we believe you have no
middle-of-the-road solution. You are in a position where
life is becoming impossible, and if you have passed into
the region from which there is no return through human
aid, you have but two alternatives: one is to go on to
the bitter end, blotting out the consciousness of your
intolerable situation as best you can; and the other, to
find what we have found. This you can do if you honestly
want to, and are willing to make the effort.
A certain American business man had ability, good sense,
and high character. For years he had floundered from one
sanitarium to another. He had consulted the best known
American psychiatrists. Then he had gone to Europe,
placing himself in the care of a celebrated physician
who prescribed for him. Though bitter experience had
made him skeptical, he finished his treatment with
unusual confidence. His physical and mental condition
were unusually good. Above all, he believed he had
acquired such a profound knowledge of the inner workings
of his mind and its hidden springs, that relapse was
unthinkable. Nevertheless, he was drunk in a short time.
More baffling still, he could give himself no
satisfactory explanation for his fall.
So he returned to this doctor, whom he admired, and
asked him point-blank why he could not recover. He
wished above all things to regain self-control. He
seemed quite rational and well-balanced with respect to
other problems. Yet he had no control whatever over
alcohol. Why was this?
He begged the doctor to tell him the whole truth, and he
got it. In the doctor's judgement he was utterly
hopeless; he could never regain his position in society
and he would have to place himself under lock and key,
or hire a bodyguard if he expected to live long. That
was a great physician's opinion.
But this man still lives, and is a free man. He does not
need a bodyguard, nor is he confined. He can go anywhere
on this earth where other free men may go with out
disaster, provided he remains willing to maintain a
certain simple attitude.
Some of our alcoholic readers may think they can do
without spiritual help. Let us tell you the rest of the
conversation our friend had with his doctor.
The doctor said: "You have the mind of a chronic
alcoholic. I have never seen one single case recover,
where that state of mind existed to the extent that it
does in you. " Our friend felt as though the gates of
hell had closed on him with a clang.
He said to the doctor, "Is there no exception?"
"Yes, " replied the doctor, "there is. Exceptions to
cases such as yours have been occurring since early
times. Here and there, once in a while, alcoholics have
had what are called vital spiritual experiences. To me
these occurrences are phenomena. They appear to be in
the nature of huge emotional displacements and
rearrangements. Ideas, emotions, and attitudes which
were once the guiding forces of the lives of these men
are suddenly cast to one side, and a completely new set
of conceptions and motives begin to dominate them. In
fact, I have been trying to produce some such emotional
rearrangement within you. With many individuals the
methods which I employed are successful, but I have
never been successful with an alcoholic of your
description. "
Upon hearing this, our friend was somewhat relieved, for
he reflected that, after all, he was a good church
member. This hope, however, was destroyed by the
doctor's telling him that his religious convictions were
very good, but that in his case they did not spell the
necessary vital spiritual experience.
Here was the terrible dilemma in which our friend found
himself when he had the
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Page 13.
extraordinary experience, which as we have already told
you, made him a free man.
We, in our turn, sought the same escape, will all the
desperation of drowning men. What seemed at first a
flimsy reed, has proved to be the loving and powerful
hand of God. A new life has been given us or, if you
prefer, "a design for living that really works.
The distinguished American psychologist, William James,
in his book, "Varieties of Religious Experience, "
indicates a multitude of ways in which men have found
God. As a group, we have no desire to convince anyone
that there is only one way by which God can be
discovered. If what we have learned, and felt, and seen,
means anything at all, it means that all of us, whatever
our race, creed or color, are the children of a living
Creator with whom we may form a relationship upon simple
and understandable terms as soon as we are willing and
honest enough to try. Those having religious
affiliations will find here nothing disturbing to their
beliefs or ceremonies. There is no friction among us
over such matters.
We think it no concern of ours, as a group, what
religious bodies our members identify themselves with as
individuals. This should be an entirely personal affair
which each one decides for himself in the light of past
association, or his present choice. Not all of us have
joined religious bodies, but most of us favor such
memberships.
In the following chapter, there appears an explanation
of alcoholism as we understand it, then a chapter
addressed to the agnostic. Many who once were in this
class are now among our members; surprisingly enough, we
find such convictions no great obstacle to a spiritual
experience.
There is a group of personal narratives. Then clear-cut
directions are given showing how an alcoholic may
recover. These are followed by more than a score of
personal experiences.
Each individual, in the personal stories, describes in
his own language, and from his own point of view the way
he found or rediscovered God. These give a fair cross
section of our membership and a clear-cut idea of what
has actually happened in their lives.
We hope no one will consider these self-revealing
accounts in bad taste. Our hope is that many alcoholic
men and women, desperately in need, will see these
pages, and we believe that it is only by fully
disclosing ourselves and our problems that they will be
persuaded to say, "Yes, I am one of them too; I must
have this thing. "
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Chapter Three
MORE ABOUT ALCOHOLISM
Most of us have been unwilling to admit we were real
alcoholics. No person likes to think he is bodily and
mentally different from his fellows. Therefore, it is
not surprising that our drinking careers have been
characterized by countless vain attempts to prove we
could drink like other people. The idea that somehow,
someday he will control and enjoy his liquor drinking is
the great obsession of every abnormal drinker. The
persistance of this illusion is astonishing. Many pursue
it into the gates of insanity or death.
We learned that we had to fully concede to our innermost
selves that we were alcoholics. This is the first step
in recovery. The delusion that we are like other people,
or presently may be, had to be smashed.
We alcoholics are men and women who had lost the ability
to control our drinking. We know that no real alcoholic
ever recovered this control. All of us felt at times
that we were regaining control, but such intervals
usually brief were inevitably followed by still less
control, which led in time to pitiful and
incomprehensible demoralization. We are convinced to a
man that alcoholics of our type are in the grip of a
progressive illness. Over any considerable period we get
worse, never better.
We are like men who have lost their legs; they never
grow new ones. Neither does there appear to be any kind
of treatment which will make alcoholics of our kind like
other men. We have tried every imaginable remedy. In
some instances there has been brief recovery, followed
always by still worse relapse. Physicians who are
familiar with alcoholism agree there is no such thing as
making a normal drinker out of an alcoholic. Science may
one day accomplish this, but it evidently hasn't done so
yet.
Despite all we can say, many who are real alcoholics are
not going to believe they are in that class. By every
form of self-deception and experimentation, they will
try to prove themselves exceptions to the rule,
therefore non-alcoholic. If anyone, who is showing
inability to control his drinking, can do the
right-about-face and drink like a gentleman, our hats
are off to him. Heaven knows, we have tried hard enough
and long enough to drink like other people!
Here are some of the methods we have tried: drinking
beer only, limiting the number of drinks, never drinking
alone, never drinking in the morning, drinking only at
home, never having it in the house, never drinking
during business hours, drinking only at parties,
switching from scotch to brandy, drinking only natural
wines, agreeing to resign if ever drunk on the job,
taking a trip, not taking a trip, swearing off forever
(with and without a solemn oath), taking more physical
exercise, reading inspirational books, consulting
psychologists, going to health farms and sanitariums,
accepting voluntary commitment to asylums we could
increase the list ad infinitum.
We do not like to brand any individual as an alcoholic,
but you can quickly diagnose yourself. Step over to the
nearest barroom and try some controlled drinking. Try to
drink and stop abruptly. Try it more than once. It will
not take long for you to decide, if you are honest with
yourself about it. It will be worth a bad case of
jitters if you get thoroughly sold on the idea that you
are a candidate for Alcoholics Anonymous!
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Though there is no way of proving it, we believe that
early in our drinking careers most of us could have
stopped drinking. But the difficulty is that few
alcoholics have enough desire to stop while there is yet
time. We have heard of a few instances where people, who
showed definite signs of alcoholism, were able to stop
because of an overpowering desire to to so. Here is one.
A man of thirty was doing a great deal of spree
drinking. He was very nervous in the morning after these
bouts and quieted himself with more liquor. He was
ambitious to succeed in business, but saw that he would
get nowhere if he drank at all. Once he started, he had
no control whatever. He made up his mind that until he
had been successful in business and had retired, he
would not touch another drop. An exceptional man, he
remained bone dry for twenty-five years, and retired at
the age of fifty-five, after a successful and happy
business career. Then he fell victim to a belief which
practically every alcoholic has that his long period
of sobriety and self-discipline had qualified him to
drink as other men. Out came his carpet slippers and a
bottle. In two months he was in a hospital, puzzled and
humiliated. He tried to regulate his drinking for a
while, making several trips to the hospital meantime.
Then, gathering all his forces, he attempted to stop,
and found he could not. Every means of solving his
problem which money could buy was at his disposal. Every
attempt failed. Though a robust man at retirement, he
went to pieces quickly, and was dead within four years.
This case contains a powerful lesson. Most of us have
believed that if we remained sober for a long stretch,
we could thereafter drink normally. But here is a man
who at fifty-five years found he was just where he had
left off at thirty. We have seen the truth demonstrated
again and again; "once an alcoholic, always an
alcoholic. " Commencing to drink after a period of
sobriety, we are in a short time as bad as ever. If you
are planning to stop drinking, there must be no
reservation of any kind, nor any lurking notion that
someday you will be immune to alcohol.
Young people may be encouraged by this man's experience
to think that they can stop as he did, on their own will
power. We doubt if many of them can do it, because none
will really want to stop, and hardly one of them,
because of the peculiar mental twist already acquired,
will find he can win out. Several of our crowd, men of
thirty-five or less, had been drinking but a few years,
but they found themselves as helpless as those who had
been drinking twenty years.
To be gravely affected, one does not necessarily have to
drink a long time, nor take the quantities some of us
have. This is particularly true of women. Potential
feminine alcoholics often turn into the real thing and
are gone beyond recall in a few years. Certain drinkers,
who would be greatly insulted if called alcoholic, are
astonished at their inability to stop. We, who are
familiar with the symptoms, see large numbers of
potential alcoholics among young people everywhere. But
try and get them to see it!
As we look back, we feel we had gone on drinking many
years beyond the point where we could quit on our will
power. If anyone questions whether he has entered this
dangerous area, let him try leaving liquor alone for one
year. If he is a real alcoholic and very far advanced,
there is scant chance of success. In the early days of
our drinking we occasionally remained sober for a year
or more, becoming serious drinkers again later. Though
you may be able to stop for a considerable period, you
may yet be a potential alcoholic. We think few, to whom
this book will appeal, can stay dry anything like a
year. Some will be drunk the day after making their
resolutions; most of them within a few weeks.
For those who are unable to drink moderately the
question is how to stop altogether. We are assuming, of
course, that the reader desires to stop. Whether such a
person can quit upon a non-spiritual basis depends
somewhat upon the strength of
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Page 16.
his character, and how much he really wants to be done
with it. But even more will it depend upon the extent to
which he has already lost the power to choose whether he
will drink or not. Many of us felt that we had plenty of
character. There was a tremendous urge to cease forever.
Yet we found it impossible. This is the baffling feature
of alcoholism as we know it this utter inability to
leave it alone, no matter how great the necessity or the
wish.
How then shall we help our readers determine, to their
own satisfaction, whether they are one of us? The
experiment of quitting for a period of time will be
helpful, but we think we can render an even greater
service to alcoholic sufferers, and perhaps to the
medical fraternity. So we shall describe some of the
mental states that precede a relapse into drinking, for
obviously this is the crux of the problem.
What sort of thinking dominates an alcoholic who repeats
time after time the desperate experiment of the first
drink? Friends, who have reasoned with him after a spree
which has brought him to the point of divorce or
bankruptcy, are mystified when he walks directly into a
saloon. Why does he? Of what is he thinking?
Our first example is a friend we shall call Jim. This
man has a charming wife and family. He inherited a
lucrative automobile agency. He had a commendable world
war record. He is a good salesman. Everybody likes him.
He is an intelligent man, normal so far as we can see,
except for a nervous disposition. He did no drinking
until he was thirty-five. In a few years he became so
violent when intoxicated that he had to be committed. On
leaving the asylum, he came into contact with us.
We told him what we know of alcoholism and the answer we
had found. He made a beginning. His family was
re-assembled, and he began to work as a salesman for the
business he had lost through drinking. All went well for
a time, but he failed to enlarge his spiritual life. To
his consternation, he found himself drunk half a dozen
times in rapid succession. On each of these occasions we
worked with him, reviewing carefully what had happened.
He agreed he was a real alcoholic and in serious
condition. He knew he faced another trip to the asylum
if he kept on. Moreover, he would lose his family, for
whom he had deep affection.
Yet he got drunk again. We asked him to tell us exactly
how it happened. This is his story: "I came to work on
Tuesday morning. I remember I felt irritated that I had
to be a salesman for a concern I once owned. I had a few
words with the boss, but nothing serious. Then I decided
to drive into the country and see one of my prospects
for a car. On the way I felt hungry so I stopped at a
roadside place where they have a bar. I had no intention
of drinking. I just thought I would get a sandwich. I
also had the notion that I might find a customer for a
car at this place, which was familiar, for I had been
going to it for years. I had eaten there many times
during the months I was sober. I sat down at a table and
ordered a sandwich and a glass of milk. Still no thought
of drinking. I ordered another sandwich and decided to
have another glass of milk.
"Suddenly the thought crossed my mind that if I were to
put an ounce of whiskey in my milk, it couldn't hurt me
on a full stomach. I ordered a whiskey and poured it
into the milk. I vaguely sensed I was not being any too
smart, but felt reassured, as I was taking the whiskey
on a full stomach. The experiment went so well that I
ordered another whiskey and poured it into more milk.
That didn't seem to bother me so I tried another. "
Thus started on more journey to the asylum for Jim. Here
was the threat of commitment, the loss of family and
position, to say nothing of that intense mental and
physical suffering which drinking always caused him. He
had much knowledge about himself as an alcoholic. Yet
all reasons for not drinking were easily pushed aside in
favor of the foolish idea he could take whiskey if only
he mixed it with milk!
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Page 17.
Whatever the precise medical definition of the word may
be, we call this plain insanity. How can such a lack of
proportion, of the ability to think straight, be called
anything else?
You may think this an extreme case. To us it is not-far
fetched. for this kind of thinking has been
characteristic of every single one of our group. Some of
us have sometimes reflected more than Jim did, upon the
consequences. But there was always the curious mental
phenomenon, that parallel with our sound reasoning there
inevitably ran some insanely trivial excuse for taking
the first drink. Our sound reasoning failed to hold us
in check. The insane idea won out. Next day we would ask
ourselves, in all earnestness and sincerity, how it
could have happened.
In some circumstances we have gone out deliberately to
get drunk, feeling ourselves justified by nervousness,
anger, worry, depression, jealousy or the like. But even
in this type of beginning we are obliged to admit that
our justification for a spree was insanely insufficient
in the light of what always happened. We now see that
when we began to drink deliberately, instead of
casually, there was little serious or effective thought
during the period of premeditation, of what the terrific
consequences might be.
Our behavior is as absurd and incomprehensible with
respect to the first drink as that of an individual with
a passion, say, for jay-walking. He gets a thrill out of
skipping in front of fast-moving vehicles. He enjoys
himself a few years in spite of friendly warnings. Up to
this point you would label him as a foolish chap, having
queer ideas of fun. Luck then deserts him and he is
slightly injured several times in succession. You would
expect him, if he were normal, to cut it out. Presently
he is hit again and this time has a fractured skull.
Within a week after leaving the hospital, a fast-moving
trolley car breaks his arm. He tells you he has decided
to stop jay-walking for good, but in a few weeks he
breaks both legs.
On through the years this conduct continues, accompanied
by his continual promises to be careful or to keep off
the streets altogether. Finally, he can no longer work,
his wife gets a divorce, he is held up to ridicule. He
tries every known means to get the jay-walking idea out
of his head. He shuts himself up in an asylum, hoping to
mend his ways. But the day he comes out he races in
front of a fire engine, which breaks his back. Such a
man would be crazy, wouldn't he?
You may think our illustration is too ridiculous. But is
it? We, who have been through the wringer, have to admit
if we substituted alcoholism for jay-walking, the
illustration would fit us exactly. However intelligent
we may have been in other respects, where alcohol has
been involved, we have been strangely insane. It's
strong language but isn't it true?
Some of you are thinking: "Yes, what you tell us is
true, but it doesn't fully apply. We admit we have some
of these symptoms, but we have not gone to the extremes
you fellows did, nor are we likely to, for we understand
ourselves so well after what you have told us that such
things cannot happen again. We have not lost everything
in life through drinking and we certainly do not intend
to. Thanks for the information. "
That may be true of certain non-alcoholic people who,
though drinking foolishly and heavily at the present
time, are able to stop or moderate, because their brains
and bodies have not been warped and degenerated as ours
were. But the actual or potential alcoholic, with hardly
an exception, will be absolutely unable to stop drinking
on the basis of self-knowledge. This is a point we wish
to emphasize and reemphasize, to smash home upon our
alcoholic readers as it has been revealed to us out of
bitter experience. Let us take another illustration.
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Page 18.
Fred is partner in a well known accounting firm. His
income is good, he has a fine home, is happily married
and the father of promising children of college age. He
is so attractive a personality that he makes friends
with everyone. If ever there was a successful business
man, it is Fred. To all appearances he is a stable, well
balanced individual. Yet, he is alcoholic. We first saw
Fred about a year ago in a hospital where he had gone to
recover from a bad case of jitters. It was his first
experience of this kind, and he was much ashamed of it.
Far from admitting he was an alcoholic, he told himself
he came to the hospital to rest his nerves. The doctor
intimated strongly that he might be worse than he
realized. For a few days he was depressed about his
condition. He made up his mind to quit drinking
altogether. It never occurred to him that perhaps he
could not do so, in spite of his character and standing.
Fred would not believe himself an alcoholic, much less
accept a spiritual remedy for his problem. We told him
about alcoholism. He was interested and conceded that he
had some of the symptoms, but he was a long way from
admitting that he could do nothing about it himself. He
was positive that this humiliating experience, plus the
knowledge he had acquired, would keep him sober the rest
of his life. Self-knowledge would fix it.
We heard no more of Fred for a while. One day we were
told that he was back in the hospital. This time he was
quite shaky. He soon indicated he was anxious to see us.
The story he told is most instructive for here was a
chap absolutely convinced he had to stop drinking, who
had no excuse for drinking, who exhibited splendid
judgment and determination in all his other concerns,
yet was flat on his back nevertheless.
Let him tell you about it: "I was much impressed with
what you fellows said about alcoholism, but I frankly
did not believe it would be possible for me to drink
again. I somewhat appreciated your ideas about the
subtle insanity which precedes the first drink, but I
was confident it could not happen to me after what I had
learned. I reasoned I was not so far advanced as most of
you fellows, that I had been usually successful in
licking my other personal and problems, that I would
therefore be successful where you men failed. I felt I
had every right to be self-confident, that it would be
only a matter of exercising my will power and keeping on
guard.
"In this frame of mind, I went about my business and for
a time all was well. I had no trouble refusing drinks,
and began to wonder if I had not been making too hard
work of a simple matter. One day I went to Washington to
present some accounting evidence to a government bureau.
I had been out of town before during this particular dry
spell, so there was nothing new about that. Physically,
I felt fine. Neither did I have any pressing problems or
worries. My business came off well, I was pleased and
knew my partners would be too. It was the end of a
perfect day, not a cloud on the horizon.
"I went to my hotel and leisurely dressed for dinner. As
I crossed the threshold of the dining room, the thought
came to mind it would be nice to have a couple of
cocktails with dinner. That was all. Nothing more. I
ordered a cocktail and my meal. Then I ordered another
cocktail. After dinner I decided to take a walk. When I
returned to the hotel it struck me a highball would be
fine before going to bed, so I stepped into the bar and
had one. I remember having several more that night and
plenty next morning. I have a shadowy recollection of
being in an airplane bound for New York, of finding a
friendly taxicab driver at the landing field instead of
my wife. The driver escorted me about for several days.
I know little of where I went, or what I said and did.
Then came the hospital with its unbearable mental and
physical suffering.
"As soon as I regained my ability to think, I went
carefully over that evening in Washington. Not only had
I been off guard, I had made no fight whatever against
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Page 19.
that first drink. This time I had not thought of the
consequences at all. I had commenced to drink as
carelessly as though the cocktails were ginger ale. I
now remembered what my alcoholic friends had told me,
how they phophesied that if I had an alcoholic mind, the
time and place would come I would drink again. They
had said that though I did raise a defense, it would one
day give way before some trivial reason for having a
drink. Well, just that did happen and more, for what I
had learned of alcoholism did not occur to me at all. I
knew from that moment that I had an alcoholic mind. I
saw that will power and self-knowledge would not help in
those strange mental blank spots. I had never been able
to understand people who said that a problem had them
hopelessly defeated. I knew then. It was a crushing
blow.
"Two of the members of Alcoholics Anonymous came to see
me. They grinned, which I didn't like so much, and then
asked me if I thought myself alcoholic and if I were
really licked this time. I had to concede both
propositions. They piled on me heaps of medical evidence
to the effect that an alcoholic mentality, such as I had
exhibited in Washington, was a hopeless condition. They
cited cases out of their own experience by the dozen.
This process snuffed out the last flicker of conviction
that I could do the job myself.
"Then they outlined the spiritual answer and program of
action which a hundred of them had followed
successfully. Though I had been only a nominal
churchman, their proposals were not, intellectually,
hard to swallow. But the program of action, though
entirely sensible, was pretty drastic. It meant I would
have to throw several lifelong conceptions out of the
window. That was not easy. But the moment I made up my
mind to go through with the process, I had the curious
feeling that my alcoholic condition was relieved, as in
fact it proved to be.
"Quite as important was the discovery that spiritual
principles would solve all my problems. I have since
been brought into a way of living infinitely more
satisfying and, I hope, more useful than the life I
lived before. My old manner of life was by no means a
bad one, but I would not exchange its best moments for
the worst I have now. I would not go back to it even if
I could. "
Fred's story speaks for itself. We hope it strikes home
to thousands like him. He had felt only the first nip of
the wringer. Most alcoholics have to be pretty badly
mangled before they really commence to solve their
problems.
Most doctors and psychiatrists agree with our
conclusions. One of these men, staff member of a
world-renowned hospital, recently made this statement to
some of us: "What you say about the general hopelessness
of the average alcoholic's plight is, in my opinion,
correct. As to two of you men, whose stories I have
heard, there is no doubt in my mind that you were 100%
hopeless, apart from Divine help. Had you offered
yourselves as patients at this hospital, I would not
have taken you, if I had been able to avoid it. People
like you are too heartbreaking. Though not a religious
person, I have profound respect for the spiritual
approach in such cases as yours. For most cases, there
is virtually no other solution. "
Once more: the alcoholic at certain times has no
effective mental defense against the first drink. Except
in a few rare cases, neither he nor any other human
being can provide such a defense. His defense must come
from a higher Power.
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Chapter Four
WE AGNOSTICS
In the preceding chapters, you have learned something of
alcoholism. We hope we have made clear the distinction
between the alcoholic and the non-alcoholic. If, when
you honestly want to, you find you cannot quit entirely,
or if, when drinking, you have little control over the
amount you take, you are probably alcoholic. If that be
the case, you may be suffering from an illness which
only a spiritual experience will conquer.
To one who feels he is an atheist or agnostic such an
experience seems impossible, but to continue as he is
means disaster especially if he is an alcoholic of the
hopeless variety. To be doomed to an alcoholic hell or
be "saved" not easy alternatives to face.
But it isn't so difficult. About half our fellowship
were of exactly that type. At first some of us tried to
avoid the issue, hoping against hope we were not true
alcoholics. But after a while we had to face the fact
that we must find a spiritual basis of life or else.
Perhaps it is going to be that way with you. But cheer
up, something like fifty of us thought we were atheists
or agnostics. Our experience shows that you need not
disconcerted.
If a mere code of morals, or a better philosophy of life
were sufficient to overcome alcoholism, many of us would
have recovered long ago. But we found that such codes
and philosophies did not save us, no matter how much we
tried. We could wish to be moral, we could wish to be
philosophically comforted, in fact, we could will these
things with all our might, but the needed power wasn't
there. Our human resources, as marshalled by the will,
were not sufficient; they failed utterly.
Lack of power, that was our dilemma. We had to find a
power by which we could live, and it had to be A Power
Greater Than Ourselves. Obviously. But where and how
were we to find this Power?
Well, that's exactly what this book is about. Its main
object is to enable you to find a Power greater than
yourself, which will solve your problem. That means we
have written a book which we believe to be spiritual as
well as moral. And it means, of course, that we are
going to talk about God. Here difficulty arises with
agnostics. Many times we talk to a new man and watch his
hope rise as we discuss his alcoholic problems and
explain our fellowship. But his face falls when we speak
of spiritual matters, especially when we mention God,
for we have re-opened a subject which our man thought he
had neatly evaded or entirely ignored.
We know how he feels. We have shared his honest doubt
and prejudice. Some of us have been violently
anti-religious. To others, the word "God" brought up a
particular idea of Him with which someone had tried to
impress us during childhood. Perhaps we rejected this
particular conception because it seemed inadequate. With
that rejection we imagined we had abandoned the God idea
entirely. We were bothered with the thought that faith
and dependence upon a Power beyond ourselves was
somewhat weak, even cowardly. We looked upon this world
of warring individuals, warring theological systems,
inexplicable calamity, with deep skepticism. We looked
askance at many individuals who claimed to be godly. How
could a Supreme Being have anything to do with it all?
And who could comprehend a Supreme Being anyhow? Yet, in
other moments, we found ourselves thinking, when
enchanted by the starlit night,
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Page 21.
"Who, then, made all this?" There was a feeling of awe
and wonder, but it was fleeting and soon lost.
Yes, we of agnostic temperament have had these thoughts
and experiences. Let us make haste to reassure you. We
found that as soon as we were able to lay aside
prejudice and express even a willingness to believe in a
Power greater that ourselves, we commenced to get
results, even though it was impossible for any of us to
fully define or comprehend that Power, which is God.
Much to our relief, we discovered we did not need to
consider another's conception of God. Our own
conception, however inadequate, was sufficient to make
the approach and to effect a contact with Him. As soon
as we admitted the possible existence of a Creative
Intelligence, A Spirit of the Universe underlying the
totality of things, we began to be possessed of a new
sense of power and direction, provided we took other
simple steps. We found that God does not make hard terms
with those who seek Him. To us, the Realm of Spirit is
broad, roomy, all inclusive; never exclusive or
forbidding. It is open, we believe, to all men.
When, therefore, we speak to you of God, we mean your
own conception of God. This applies, too, to other
spiritual expressions which you find in this book. Do
not let any prejudice you may have against spiritual
terms deter you from honestly asking yourself what they
mean to you. At the start, this is all you will need to
commence spiritual growth, to effect your first
conscious relation with God, as you understand Him.
Afterward, you will find yourself accepting many things
which now seem entirely out of reach. That is growth,
but if you are going to grow, you have to begin
somewhere. So use your own conception, however limited
it may be.
You need ask yourself but one short question. "Do I now
believe, or am I even willing to believe, that there is
a Power greater than myself?" As soon as a man can say
that he does believe, or is willing to believe, we
emphatically assure him that he is on his way. It has
been repeatedly proven among us that upon this simple
cornerstone a wonderfully effective spiritual structure
can be built.
That was great news to us, for we had assumed we could
not make use of spiritual principles unless we accepted
many things on faith which seemed difficult to believe.
When people presented us with spiritual approaches, how
frequently did we all say: "I wish I had what that man
has. I'm sure it would work if I could only believe as
he believes. But I cannot accept as surely true the many
articles of faith which are so plain to him. " So it was
comforting to learn that we could commence at a simpler
level.
Besides a seeming inability to accept much on faith, we
often found ourselves handicapped by obstinacy,
sensitiveness, and unreasoning prejudice. Many of us
have been so touchy that even casual reference to
spiritual things made us bristle with antagonism. This
sort of thinking had to be abandoned. Though some of us
resisted, we founds no great difficulty in casting aside
such feelings. Faced with alcoholic destruction, we soon
became as open minded on spiritual matters as we had
tried to be on other questions. In this respect alcohol
was a great persuader. It finally beat us into a state
of reasonableness. Sometimes this was a tedious process;
we hope no one will be prejudiced as long as some of us
were.
The reader may still ask why he should believe in a
Power greater than himself. We think there are good
reasons. Let us have a look at some of them.
The practical individual of today is a stickler for
facts and results. Nevertheless, the twentieth century
readily accepts theories of all kinds, provided they are
firmly grounded in fact. We have numerous theories, for
example, about electricity. Everybody believes them
without a murmur of doubt. Why this ready acceptance?
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Simply because it is impossible to explain what we see,
feel, direct, and use, without a reasonable assumption
as a starting point.
Everybody nowadays, believes in scores of assumptions
for which there is good evidence, but no perfect visual
proof. And does not science demonstrate that visual
proof is the weakest proof? It is being constantly
revealed, as mankind studies the material world, that
outward appearances are not inward reality at all. To
illustrate:
The prosaic steel girder is a mass of electrons whirling
around each other at incredible speed. These tiny bodies
are governed by precise laws, and these laws hold true
throughout the material world. Science tells us so. We
have no reason to doubt it. When, however, the perfectly
logical assumption is suggested that underneath the
material world, and life as we see it, there is an All
Powerful, Guiding, Creative Intelligence, right there
our perverse streak comes to the surface and we
laboriously set out to convince ourselves it isn't so.
We read wordy books and indulge in windy arguments,
thinking we believe this universe needs no God to
explain it. Were our contentions true, it would follow
that life originated out of nothing, means nothing, and
proceeds nowhere.
Instead of regarding ourselves as intelligent agents,
spearheads of God's ever advancing Creation, we
agnostics and atheists chose to believe that our human
intelligence was the last word, the alpha and the omega,
the beginning and end of all. Rather vain of us, wasn't
it?
We, who have traveled this dubious path, beg you to lay
aside prejudice, even against organized religion. We
have learned that whatever the human frailties of
various faiths may be, those faiths have given purpose
and direction to millions. People of faith have a
logical idea of what life is all about. Actually, we
used to have no reasonable conception whatever. We used
to amuse ourselves as we cynically dissected spiritual
beliefs and practices; we might have observed that many
spiritually-minded persons of all races, colors, and
creeds were demonstrating a degree of stability,
happiness and usefulness which we should have sought
ourselves.
Instead, we looked at the human defects of these people,
and sometimes used their shortcomings as a basis of
wholesale condemnation. We talked of intolerance, while
we were intolerant ourselves. We missed the reality and
the beauty of the forest because we were diverted by the
ugliness of some of its trees. We never gave the
spiritual side of life a fair hearing.
In the stories which follow you will find wide variation
in the way each teller approaches and conceives of the
Power which is greater than himself. Whether you agree
with a particular approach or conception seems to make
little difference. Experience has taught that these are
matters about which, for our purpose, we need not be
worried. They are questions for each individual to
settle for himself.
On one proposition, however, these men and women are
strikingly agreed. Everyone of them has gained access
to, and believes in a Power greater than himself. This
Power has in each case accomplished the miraculous, the
humanly impossible. As a celebrated American statesman
puts it, "Let's look at the record. "
Here are one hundred men and women, worldly and
sophisticated indeed. They flatly declare to you that
since they have come to believe in a Power greater than
themselves, to take a certain attitude toward that
Power, and to do certain simple things, there has been a
revolutionary change in their way of living and
thinking. They tell you that in the face of collapse and
despair, in the face of the total failure of their human
resources, that a new Power, peace, happiness, and sense
of direction has flowed into them. This happened soon
after they whole-heartedly met
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a few simple requirements. Once confused and baffled by
the seeming futility of existence they will show you the
underlying reasons why they were making heavy going of
life. Leaving aside the drink question, they tell why
living was so unsatisfactory. They will show you how the
change came over them. When one hundred people, much
like you, are able to say that consciousness of The
Presence of God is today the most important fact of
their lives, they present a powerful reason why you too
should have faith.
This world of ours has made more material progress in
the last century than in all the milleniums which sent
before. Almost everyone knows the reason. Students of
ancient history tell us that the intellect of men in
those days was equal to the best of today. Yet in
ancient times material progress was painfully slow. The
spirit of modern scientific inquiry, research and
invention was almost unknown. In the realm of the
material, men's minds were fettered by superstition,
tradition, and all sorts of fixed ideas. The
contemporaries of Columbus thought a round earth
preposterous. Others like them came near putting Galileo
to death for his astronomical heresies.
But ask yourself this: are not some of us just as biased
and unreasonable about the realm of the spirit as were
the ancients about the realm of the material? Even in
the present century, American newspapers were afraid to
print an account of the Wright Brothers first successful
flight at Kittyhawk. Had not all efforts at flight
failed before? Did not Professor Langley's absurd flying
machine go to the bottom of the Potomac river? Was it
not true that the best mathematical minds had proved man
could never fly? Had not people said God had reserved
this privilege to the birds? Only thirty years later the
conquest of the air was almost an old story and airplane
travel was in full swing.
But in most fields our generation has witnessed complete
liberation of our thinking. Show any longshoreman a
Sunday supplement describing a proposal to explore the
moon by means of a rocket and he will say, "I bet they
do it maybe not so long either. " Is not our age
characterized by the ease with which we discard old
ideas for new, by the complete readiness with which we
throw away the theory or gadget which does not work for
something new which does?
We had to ask ourselves why we shouldn't apply to our
human problems this same readiness to change the point
of view. We were having trouble with personal
relationships, we couldn't control our emotional
natures, we were a prey to misery and depression, we
couldn't make a living, we had a feeling of uselessness,
we were full of fear, we were unhappy, we couldn't seem
to be of real help to other people was not a basic
solution of this bedevilment more important than whether
we should see newsreels of lunar flight? Of course it
was.
When we saw others solve their problems by simple
reliance upon the Spirit of this universe, we had to
stop doubting the power of God. Our ideas did not work.
But the God idea did.
The Wright Brothers' almost childish faith that they
could build a machine which would fly was the mainspring
of their accomplishment. Without that, nothing could
have happened. We agnostics and atheists were sticking
to the idea that self-sufficiency would solve our
problems. When others showed us that "God-sufficiency"
worked with them, we began to feel like those who had
insisted the Wrights would never fly.
Logic is great stuff. We liked it. We still like it. It
is not by chance we were given the power to reason, to
examine the evidence of our senses, and to draw
conclusions. That is one of man's magnificent
attributes. We agnostically inclined would not feel
satisfied with a proposal which does not lend itself to
reasonable
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approach and interpretation. Hence we are at pains to
tell why we think our present faith is reasonable, why
we think it more sane and logical to believe than not to
believe, why we say our former thinking was soft and
mushy when we threw up our hands in doubt and said, "We
don't know. "
When we became alcoholics, crushed by a self-imposed
crisis we could not postpone or evade, we had to
fearlessly face the proposition that either God is
everything or else He is nothing. God either is, or He
isn't. What was our choice to be?
Arrived at this point, we were squarely confronted with
the question of faith. We couldn't duck the issue. Some
of us had already walked far over the Bridge of Reason
toward the desired shore of faith. The outlines and the
promise of the New Land had brought lustre to tired eyes
and fresh courage to flagging spirits. Friendly hands
had stretched out in welcome. We were grateful that
Reason had brought us so far. But somehow, we couldn't
quite step ashore. Perhaps we had been leaning too
heavily on Reason that last mile and we did not like to
lose our support.
That was natural, but let us think a little more
closely. Without knowing it, had we not been brought to
where we stood by a certain kind of faith? For did we
not believe in our own reasoning? Did we not have
confidence in our ability to think? What was that but a
sort of faith? Yes, we had been faithful, abjectly
faithful to the God of Reason. So, in one way or
another, we discovered that faith had been involved all
the time!
We found too, that we had been worshippers. What a state
of mental gooseflesh that used to bring on! Had we not
variously worshipped people, sentiment, things, money,
and ourselves? And then, with a better motive, had we
not worshipfully beheld the sunset, the sea, or a
flower? Who of us had not loved something or somebody?
How much did these feelings, these loves, these worships
have to do with pure reason? Little or nothing, we saw
at last. Were not these things the tissue out of which
our lives were constructed? Did not these feelings,
after all, determine the course of our existence? It was
impossible to say we had no capacity for faith, or love,
or worship. In one form or another we had been living by
faith and little else.
Imagine life without faith! Were nothing left but pure
reason, it wouldn't be life. But we believed in life
of course we did. We could not prove life in the sense
that you can prove a straight line is the shortest
distance between two points: yet, there it was. Could we
still say the whole thing was nothing but a mass of
electrons, created out of nothing, meaning nothing,
whirling on to a destiny of nothingness? Of course we
couldn't. The electrons themselves seemed more
intelligent than that. At least, so the chemist said.
Hence, we saw that reason isn't everything. Neither is
reason, as most of us used it, entirely dependable,
though it emanate from our best minds. What about people
who proved that man could never fly?
Yet we had been seeing another kind of flight, a
spiritual liberation from this world, people who rose
above their problems. They said God made these things
possible, and we only smiled. We had seen spiritual
release, but liked to tell ourselves it wasn't true.
Actually we were fooling ourselves, for deep down in
every man, woman, and child, is the fundamental idea of
God. It may be obscured by calamity, by pomp, by worship
of other things, but in some form or other it is there.
For faith in a Power greater than ourselves, and
miraculous demonstrations of that power in human lives,
are facts as old as man himself.
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We finally saw that faith in some kind of God was a part
of our make-up, just as much as the feeling we have for
a friend. Sometimes we had to search fearlessly, but He
was there. He was as much a fact as we were. And we are
sure you will find the Great Reality deep down within
you. In the last analysis it is only there that He may
be found. It was so with us; why not with you?
We can only clear the ground a bit for you. If our
testimony helps sweep away prejudice, enables you to
think honestly, encourages you to search diligently
within yourself, then you will have joined us on the
Broad Highway. With this attitude you cannot fail. The
consciousness that you do believe is sure to come to
you.
In this book you will read the experience of a man who
thought he was an atheist. His story is so interesting
that some of it should be told now. His change of heart
was dramatic, convincing, and moving.
Our friend was a minister's son. He attended church
school, where he became rebellious at what he thought an
overdose of religious education. For years thereafter he
was dogged by trouble and frustration. Business failure,
insanity, fatal illness, suicide these calamities in
his immediate family embittered and depressed him.
Post-war disillusionment, ever more serious alcoholism,
impending mental and physical collapse, brought him to
the point of self-destruction.
One night when confined in a hospital, he was approached
by an alcoholic who had known a spiritual experience.
Our friend's gorge rose as he bitterly cried out: "If
there is a God, He certainly hasn't done anything for
me. " But later, alone in his room, he asked himself
this question: "Is it possible that all the religious
people I have known are wrong?" While pondering the
answer, he felt as though he lived in hell. Then, like a
thunderbolt, a great thought came. It crowded out all
else:
"WHO ARE YOU TO SAY THERE IS NO GOD?"
This man recounts that he tumbled out of bed to his
knees. In a few seconds he was overwhelmed by a
conviction of the Presence of God. It poured over and
through him with the certainty and majesty of a great
tide at flood. The barriers he had built through the
years were swept away. He stood in the Presence of
Infinite Power and Love. He had stepped from bridge to
shore. For the first time, he lived in conscious
companionship with his Creator.
Thus was our friend's cornerstone fixed in place. No
later vicissitude has shaken it. His alcoholic problem
was taken away. That very night three years ago it
disappeared. Save for a few brief moments of temptation,
the thought of drink has never returned; and at such
times a great revulsion has risen up in him. Seemingly
he could not drink even if he would. God had restored
his sanity.
What is this but a miracle of healing? Yet its elements
are simple. Circumstances made him willing to believe.
He humbly offered himself to his Maker then he knew.
Even so has God restored us all to our right minds. To
this man, the Revelation was sudden. Some of us grow
into it more slowly. But He has come too all who have
honestly sought Him.
Draw near to Him and He will disclose Himself to you!
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Chapter Five
HOW IT WORKS
Rarely have we see person fail who has thoroughly
followed our directions. Those who do not recover are
people who cannot or will not completely give themselves
to this simple program, usually men and women who are
constitutionally incapable of being honest with
themselves. There are such unfortunates. They are not at
fault; they seem to have been born that way. They are
naturally incapable of grasping and developing a way of
life which demands rigorous honesty. Their chances are
less than average. There are those, too, who suffer from
grave emotional and mental disorders, but many of them
do recover if they have the capacity to be honest.
Our stories disclose in a general way what we used to be
like, what happened, and what we are like now. If you
have decided you want what we have and are willing to go
to any length to get it then you are ready to follow
directions.
At some of these you may balk. You may think you can
find an easier, softer way. We doubt if you can. With
all the earnestness at our command, we beg of you to be
fearless and thorough from the very start. Some of us
have tried to hold on to our old ideas and the result
was nil until we let go absolutely.
Remember that you are dealing with alcohol cunning,
baffling, powerful! Without help it is too much for you.
But there is One who has all power That One is God.
You must find Him now!
Half measures will avail you nothing. You stand at the
turning point. Throw yourself under His protection and
care with complete abandon.
Now we think you can take it! Here are the steps we
took, which are suggested as your Program of Recovery:
1. Admitted we were powerless over alcohol that our
lives had become unmanageable.
2. Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves
could restore us to sanity.
3. Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over
to the care and direction of God as we understood Him.
4. Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of
ourselves.
5. Admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human
being the exact nature of our wrongs.
6. Were entirely willing that God remove all these
defects of character.
7. Humbly, on our knees, asked Him to remove our
shortcomings holding nothing back.
8. Made a list of all persons we had harmed, and became
willing to make complete amends to them all.
9. Made direct amends to such people wherever possible,
except when to do so would injure them or others.
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10. Continued to take personal inventory and when we
were wrong promptly admitted it.
11. Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our
contact with God, praying only for knowledge of His will
for us and the power to carry that out.
12. Having had a spiritual experience as the result of
this course of action, we tried to carry this message to
others, especially alcoholics, and to practice these
principles in all our affairs.
You may exclaim, "What an order! I can't go through with
it. " Do not be discouraged. No one among us has been
able to maintain anything like perfect adherence to
these principles. We are not saints. The point is, that
we are willing to grow along spiritual lines. The
principles we have set down are guides to progress. We
claim spiritual progress rather than spiritual
perfection.
Our description of the alcoholic, the chapter to the
agnostic, and our personal adventures before and after,
have been designed to sell you three pertinent ideas:
(a) That you are alcoholic and cannot manage your own
life.
(b) That probably no human power can relieve your
alcoholism.
(c) That God can and will.
If you are not convinced on these vital issues, you
ought to re-read the book to this point or else throw it
away!
If you are convinced, you are now at step three, which
is that you make a decision to turn your will and your
life over to God as you understand Him. Just what do we
mean by that, and just what do we do?
The first requirement is that you see that any life run
on self-will can hardly be a success. On that basis we
are almost always in collission with something or
somebody, even though our motives may be good. Most
people try to live by self-propulsion. Each person is
like an actor who wants to run the whole show: is
forever trying to arrange the lights, the ballet, the
scenery and the rest of the players in his own way. If
his arrangements would only stay put, if only people
would do as he wishes, the show would be great.
Everybody, including himself, would be pleased. Life
would be wonderful. In trying to make these arrangements
our actor may sometimes be quite virtuous. He may be
kind, considerate, patient, generous; even modest and
self-sacrificing. On the other hand, he may be mean,
egotistical, selfish and dishonest. But, as with most
humans, he is more likely to have varied traits.
What usually happens? The show doesn't come off very
well. He begins to think life doesn't treat him right.
He decides to exert himself some more. He becomes, on
the next occasion, still more demanding or gracious, as
the case may be. Still the play does not suit him.
Admitting he may be somewhat at fault, he is sure that
other people are more to blame. He becomes angry,
indignant, self-pitying. What is his basic trouble? Is
he not really a self-seeker even when trying to be kind?
Is he not a victim of the delusion that he can wrest
satisfaction and happiness out of this world if he only
manages well? Is it not evident to all the rest of the
players that these are the things he wants? And do not
his actions make each of them wish to retaliate,
snatching all they can get out of the show? Is he not,
even in his best moments, a producer of confusion rather
than harmony?
Our actor is self-centered ego-centric, as people like
to call it nowadays. He is like the retired business man
who lolls in the Florida sunshine in the winter
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complaining of the sad state of the nation; the preacher
who sighs over the sins of the twentieth century;
politicians and reformers who are sure all would be
Utopia if the rest of the world would only behave; the
outlaw safe cracker who thinks society has wronged him;
and the alcoholic who has lost all and is locked up.
Whatever their protestations, are not these people
mostly concerned with themselves, their resentments, or
their self-pity?
Selfishness self-centeredness! That, we think, is the
root of our troubles. Driven by a hundred forms of fear,
self-delusion, self-seeking, and self-pity, we step on
the toes of our fellows and they retaliate. Sometimes
they hurt us, seemingly, without provocation, but we
invariably find that at some time in the past we have
made decisions based on self, which later placed us in a
position to be hurt.
So our troubles, we think, are basically of our own
making. They arise out of ourselves, and the alcoholic
is almost the most extreme example that could be found
of self-will run riot, though he usually doesn't think
so. Above everything, we alcoholics must be rid of this
selfishness. We must, or it kills us! God makes that
possible. And there is no way of entirely getting rid of
self without Him. You may have moral and philosophical
convictions galore, but you can't live up to them even
though you would like to. Neither can you reduce your
self-centeredness much by wishing or trying on your own
power. You must have God's help.
This is the how and why of it. First of all, quit
playing God yourself. It doesn't work. Next, decide that
hereafter in this drama of life, God is going to by your
Director. He is the Principal; you are to be His agent.
He is the Father, and you are His child. Get that simple
relationship straight. Most good ideas are simple and
this concept is to be the keystone of the new and
triumphant arch through which you will pass to freedom.
When you sincerely take such a position, all sorts of
remarkable things follow. You have a new Employer. Being
all powerful, He must necessarily provide what you need,
if you keep close to Him and perform His work well.
Established on such a footing you become less and less
interested in yourself, your little plans and designs.
More and more you become interested in seeing what you
can contribute to life. As you feel new power flow in,
as you enjoy peace of mind, as you discover you can face
life successfully, as you become conscious of His
presence, you begin to lose your fear of today,
tomorrow, or the hereafter. You will have been reborn.
Get down upon your knees and say to your Maker, as you
understand Him: "God, I offer myself to Thee to build
with me and to do with me as Thou wilt. Relieve me of
the bondage of self, that I may better do Thy will. Take
away my difficulties, that victory over them may bear
witness to those I would help of Thy Power, Thy Love,
and Thy Way of life. May I do Thy will always!" Think
well before taking this step. Be sure you are ready;
that you can at last abandon yourself utterly to Him.
It is very desirable that you make your decision with an
understanding person. It may be your wife, your best
friend, your spiritual adviser, but remember it is
better to meet God alone that with one who might
misunderstand. You must decide this for yourself. The
wording of your decision is, of course, quite optional
so long as you express the idea, voicing it without
reservation. This decision is only a beginning, though
if honestly and humbly made, an effect, sometimes a very
great one, will be felt at once.
Next we launch out on a course of vigorous action, the
first step of which is a personal housecleaning, which
you have never in all probability attempted. Though your
decision is a vital and crucial step, it can have little
permanent effect unless at once followed by a strenuous
effort to face, and to be rid of, the things
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in yourself which have been blocking you. Your liquor is
but a symptom. Let's now get down to basic causes and
conditions.
Therefore, you start upon a personal inventory. This is
step four. A business which takes no regular inventory
usually goes broke. Taking a commercial inventory is a
fact-finding and a fact-facing process. It is an effort
to discover the truth about the stock-in-trade. Its
object is to disclose damaged or unsalable goods, to get
rid of them promptly and without regret. If the owner of
the business is to be successful, he cannot fool himself
about values.
We do exactly the same thing with our lives. We take
stock honestly. First, we search out the flaws in our
make-up which have caused our failure. Being convinced
that self, manifested in various ways, is what has
defeated us, we consider its common manifestations.
Resentment is the "number one" offender. It destroys
more alcoholics than anything else. From it stem all
forms of spiritual disease, for we have been not only
mentally and physically ill, we have been spiritually
sick. When the spiritual malady is overcome, we
straighten out mentally and physically. In dealing with
resentments, we set them on paper. List people,
institutions or principles with whom you are angry. Ask
yourself why you are angry. In most cases it will be
found that your self-esteem, your pocketbook, your
ambitions, your personal relationships, (including sex)
are hurt or threatened. So you are sore. You are "burned
up. "
On your grudge list set opposite each name your
injuries. Is it your self-esteem, your security, your
ambitions, your personal, or your sex relations, which
have been interfered with?
Be as definite as this example:
I'm resentful at: The Cause Affects my:
Mr. Brown His attention to my wife. Sex relations.
Self-esteem (fear)
Told my wife of my mistress. Sex relations.
Self-esteem (fear)
Brown may get my job at the office. Security.
Self-esteem (fear)
Mrs. Jones She's a nut she snubbed me.
She committed her husband for Personal relation-
drinking. He's my friend. She's ship. Self-esteem
a gossip. (fear)
My employer Unreasonable Unjust Over-
bearing Threatens to fire me for Self-esteem (fear)
drinking and padding my expense Security
account.
My wife Misunderstands and nags. Likes Pride Personal
Brown. Wants house put in her name. and sex relations-
Security (fear)
Go on through the list back through your lifetime.
Nothing counts but thoroughness and honesty. When you
are finished consider it carefully. The first thing
apparent to you is that this world and its people are
quite wrong. To conclude
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that others are wrong is as far as most of us ever get.
The usual outcome is that people continue to wrong you
and you stay sore. Sometimes it is remorse and then you
are sore at yourself. But the more you fight and try to
have your way, the worse matters get. Isn't that so? As
in war, victors only seem to win. Your moments of
triumph are short-lived.
It is plain that a way of life which includes deep
resentment leads only to futility and unhappiness. To
the precise extent that we permit these, do we squander
the hours that might have been worth while. But with the
alcoholic whose only hope is the maintenance and growth
of a spiritual experience, this business of resentment
is infinitely grave. We find that it is fatal. For when
harboring such feelings we shut ourselves off from the
sunlight of the Spirit. The insanity of alcohol returns
and we drink again. And with us, to drink is to die.
If we are to live, we must be free of anger. The grouch
and the brainstorm are not for us. They may be the
dubious luxury of normal men, but for alcoholics these
things are poison.
Turn back to your list, for it holds the key to your
future. You must be prepared to look at it from an
entirely different angle. You will begin to see that the
world and its people really dominate you. In your
present state, the wrongdoing of others, fancied or
real, has power to actually kill you. How shall you
escape? You see that these resentments must be mastered,
but how? You cannot wish them away any more than
alcohol.
This is our course: realize at once that the people who
wrong you are spiritually sick. Though you don't like
their symptoms and the way these disturb you, they, like
yourself, are sick, too. Ask God to help you show them
the same tolerance, pity, and patience that you would
cheerfully grant a friend who has cancer. When a person
next offends, say to yourself "This is a sick man. How
can I be helpful to him? God save me from being angry.
Thy will be done. "
Never argue. Never retaliate. You wouldn't treat sick
people that way. If you do, you destroy your chance of
being helpful. You cannot be helpful to all people, but
at least God will show you how to take a kindly and
tolerant view of each and every one.
Take up your list again. Putting out of your mind the
wrongs others have done, resolutely look for your own
mistakes. Where have you been selfish, dishonest,
self-seeking and frightened? Though a situation may not
be entirely your fault, disregard the other person
involved entirely. See where you have been to blame.
This is your inventory, not the other man's. When you
see your fault write it down on the list. See it before
you in black and white. Admit your wrongs honestly and
be willing to set these matters straight.
You will notice that the word fear is bracketed
alongside the difficulties with Mr. Brown, Mrs. Jones,
your employer, and your wife. This short word somehow
touches about every aspect of our lives. It is an evil
and corroding thread; the fabric of our existence is
shot through with it. It sets in motion trains of
circumstances which bring us misfortune we feel we don't
deserve. But did not we, ourselves, set the ball
rolling? Sometimes we think fear ought to be classed
with stealing as a sin. It seems to cause more trouble.
Review your fears thoroughly. Put them on paper, even
though you have no resentment in connection with them.
Ask yourself why you have them. Isn't it because
self-reliance has failed you? Self-reliance was good as
far as it went, but it didn't go far enough. Some of us
once had great self-confidence, but it didn't fully
solve the fear problem, or any other. When it made us
cocky, it was worse.
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Perhaps there is a better way we think so. For you are
now to go on a different basis; the basis of trusting
and relying upon God. You are to trust infinite God
rather than your finite self. You are in the world to
play the role he assigns. Just to the extent that you do
as you think He would have you, and humbly rely on Him,
does He enable you to match calamity with serenity.
You must never apologize to anyone for depending upon
your Creator. You can laugh at those who think
spirituality the way of weakness, Paradoxically, it is
the way of strength. The verdict of the ages is that
faith means courage. All men of faith have courage. They
trust their God. Never apologize for God. Instead let
Him demonstrate, through you, what He can do. Ask Him to
remove your fear and direct your attention to what He
would have you be. At once, you will commence to outgrow
fear.
Now about sex. You can probably stand an overhauling
there. We needed it. But above all, let's be sensible on
this question. It's so easy to get way off the track.
Here we find human opinions running to extremes absurd
extremes, perhaps. One set of voices cry that sex is a
lust of our lower nature, a base necessity of
procreation. Then we have the voices who cry for sex and
more sex; who bewail the institution of marriage; who
think that most of the troubles of the race are
traceable to sex causes. They think we do not have
enough of it, or that it isn't the right kind. They see
its significance everywhere. One school would allow man
no flavor for his fare and the other would have us all
on a straight pepper diet. We want to stay out of this
controversy. We do not want to be the arbiter of
anyone's sex conduct. We all have sex problems. We'd
hardly be human if we didn't. What can we do about them?
Review your own conduct over the years past. Where have
you been selfish, dishonest, or inconsiderate? Whom did
you hurt? Did you unjustifiably arouse jealousy,
suspicion or bitterness? Where you were at fault, what
should you have done instead? Get this all down on paper
and look at it.
In this way you can shape a sane and sound ideal for
your future sex life. Subject each relation to this test
is it selfish or not? Ask God to mould your ideals and
help you to live up to them. Remember always that your
sex powers are God-given, and therefore good, neither to
be used lightly or selfishly nor to be despised and
loathed.
Whatever your ideal may be, you must be willing to grow
toward it. You must be willing to make amends where you
have done harm, provided that you will not bring about
still more harm in so doing. In other words, treat sex
as you would any other problem. In meditation, ask God
what you should do about each specific matter. The right
answer will come, if you want it.
God alone can judge your sex situation. Counsel with
persons is often desirable, but let God be the final
judge. Remember that some people are as fanatical about
sex as others are loose. Avoid hysterical thinking or
advice.
Suppose you fall short of the chosen ideal and stumble.
Does this mean you are going to get drunk? Some people
will tell you so. If they do, it will be only a
half-truth. It depends on you and your motive. If you
are sorry for what you have done, and have the honest
desire to let God take you to better things, you will be
forgiven and will have learned your lesson. If you are
not sorry, and your conduct continues to harm others,
you are quite sure to drink. We are not theorizing.
These are facts out of our experience.
To sum up about sex: earnestly pray for the right ideal,
for guidance in each questionable situation, for sanity,
and for the strength to do the right thing. If
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sex is very troublesome, throw yourself the harder into
helping others. Think of their needs and work for them.
This will take you out of yourself. It will quiet the
imperious urge, when to yield would mean heartache.
If you have been thorough about your personal inventory,
you have written down a lot by this time. You have
listed and analyzed your resentments. You have begun to
comprehend their futility and their fatality. You have
commenced to see their terrible destructiveness. You
have begun to learn tolerance, patience and good will
toward all men, even your enemies, for you know them to
be sick people. You have listed the people you have hurt
by your conduct, and you are willing to straighten out
the past if you can.
In this book you read again and again that God did for
us what we could not do for ourselves. We hope you are
convinced now that He can remove the self-will that has
blocked you off from Him. You have made your decision.
You have made an inventory of the grosser handicaps you
have. You have made a good beginning, for you have
swallowed and digested some big chunks of truth about
yourself. Are you willing to go on?
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