A
Different Slant
Personal Stories From The First
Edition
A DIFFERENT SLANT
I PROBABLY have one of
the shortest stories in this whole volume and it is short because
there is one point I wish to get over to an occasional man who
may be in my position.
Partner in one of this country's nationally
known concerns, happily married with fine children, sufficient
income to indulge my whims and future security from the financial
standpoint should paint a picture in which there would be no
possibility of a man becoming an alcoholic from the psychological
standpoint. I had nothing to escape from and I am known as a
conservative, sound business man.
I had missed going to my office several
times while I tapered off and brought myself to sobriety. This
time, though, I found I could not taper off, I could not stop
and I had to be hospitalized. That was the greatest shock to
my pride I ever had. Such a blow that I made the firm resolve
to never again taste as much as one glass of beer. Careful thought
and analysis went into that decision.
The doctor at this hospital told me vaguely
of the work of men who called themselves Alcoholics Anonymous
and asked if I wanted one of them to call upon me. I was sure
I needed no outside help, but in order to be polite to the doctor
and hoping he would forget it, I assented.
I was embarrassed when a chap called at
my house one evening and told me about himself. He quickly sensed
my slight resentment and made it plain to me that none of the
crowd were missionaries, nor did they feel it their duty to
try to help anyone who did not want help. I think I closed the
talk by saying I was glad I was not an alcoholic and sorry he
had been bothered by me.
Within sixty days, after leaving the hospital
the second time, I was pounding at his door, willing to do anything
to conquer the vicious thing that had conquered me.
The point I hope I have made is-even a
man with everything from the material standpoint, a man with
tremendous pride and the will power to function in all ordinary
circumstances can become an alcoholic and find himself as hopeless
and helpless as the man who has a multitude of worries and troubles.
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