A
Feminine Victory
Personal Stories From The First
Edition
A FEMININE VICTORY
TO MY lot falls the rather doubtful distinction
of being the only "lady" alcoholic in our particular
section. Perhaps it is because of a desire for a "supporting
cast" of my own sex that I am praying for inspiration to
tell my story in a manner that may give other women who have
this problem the courage to see it in its true light and seek
the help that has given me a new lease on life.
When the idea was first presented to me
that I was an alcoholic, my mind simply refused to accept it.
Horrors! How disgraceful! What humiliation! How preposterous!
Why, I loathed the taste of liquor-drinking was simply a means
of escape when my sorrows became too great for me to endure.
Even after it had been explained to me that alcoholism is a
disease, I could not realize that I had it. I was still ashamed,
still wanted to hide behind the screen of reasons made up of
"unjust treatment,""unhappiness," "tired
and dejected," and the dozens of other things that I thought
lay at the root of my search for oblivion by means of whiskey
or gin.
In any case, I felt quite sure that I
was not an alcoholic. However, since I have faced the fact,
and it surely is a fact, I have been able to use the help that
is so freely given when we learn how to be really truthful with
ourselves.
The path by which I have come to this
blessed help was long and devious. It led through the mazes
and perplexities of an unhappy marriage and divorce, and a dark
time of separation from my grown children, and a readjustment
of life at an age when most women feel pretty sure of a home
and security.
But I have reached the source of help.
I have learned to recognize and acknowledge the underlying cause
of my disease; selfishness, self-pity and resentment. A few
short months ago those three words applied to me would have
aroused as much indignation in my heart as the word alcoholic.
The ability to accept them as my own has been derived from trying,
with the unending help of God, to live with certain goals in
mind.
Coming to the grim fact of alcoholism,
I wish I could present the awful reality of its insidiousness
in such a way that no one could ever again fail to recognize
the comfortable, easy steps that lead down to the edge of the
precipice, and show how those steps suddenly disappeared when
the great gulf yawned before me. I couldn't possibly turn and
get back to solid earth again that way.
The first step is called-"The first
drink in the morning to pull you out of a hangover."
I remember so well when I got onto that
step-I had been drinking just like most of the young married
crowd I knew. For a couple of years it went on, at parties and
at "speakeasies," as they were then called, and with
cocktails after matinees. Just going the rounds and having a
good time.
Then came the morning when I had my first
case of jitters. Someone suggested a little of the "hair
of the dog that bit me." A half hour after that drink I
was sitting on top of the world, thinking how simple it was
to cure shaky nerves. How wonderful liquor was, in only a few
minutes my head had stopped aching, my spirits were back to
normal and all was well in this very fine world.
Unfortunately, there was a catch to it-I
was an alcoholic. As time went on the one drink in the morning
had to be taken a little earlier-it had to be followed by a
second one in an hour or so, before I really felt equal to getting
on with the business of living.
Gradually I found at parties the service
was a little slow; the rest of the crowd being pretty happy
and carefree after the second round. My reaction was inclined
to be just the opposite. Something had to be done about that
so I'd just help myself to a fast one, sometimes openly, but
as time went on and my need became more acute, I often did it
on the quiet.
In the meantime, the morning-after treatment
was developing into something quite stupendous. The eye-openers
were becoming earlier, bigger, more frequent, and suddenly,
it was lunch time! Perhaps there was a plan for the afternoon-a
bridge or tea, or just callers. My breath had to be accounted
for, so along came such alibis as a touch of grippe or some
other ailment for which I'd just taken a hot whiskey and lemon.
Or "someone" had been in for lunch and we had just
had a couple of cocktails. Then came the period of brazening
it out-going to social gatherings well fortified against the
jitters; next the phone call in the morning-"Terribly sorry
that I can't make it this afternoon, I have an awful headache";
then simply forgetting that there were engagements at all; spending
two or three days drinking, sleeping it off, and waking to start
all over again.
Of course, I had the well known excuses;
my husband was failing to come home for dinner or hadn't been
home for several days; he was spending money which was needed
to pay bills; he had always been a drinker; I had never known
anything about it until I was almost thirty years old and he
gave me my first drink. Oh, I had them all down, letter perfect-all
the excuses, reasons and justifications. What I did not know
was that I was being destroyed by selfishness, self-pity and
resentment.
There were the swearing-off periods and
the "goings on the wagon"-they would last anywhere
from two weeks to three or four months. Once, after a very severe
illness of six weeks' duration (caused by drinking), I didn't
touch anything of an alcoholic nature for almost a year. I thought
I had it licked that time, but all of a sudden things were worse
than ever. I found fear had no effect.
Next came the hospitalization, not a regular
sanitarium, but a local hospital where my doctor would ship
me when I'd get where I had to call him in. That poor man-I
wish he could read this for he would know then it was no fault
of his I wasn't cured.
When I was divorced, I thought the cause
had been removed. I felt that being away from what I had considered
injustice and ill-treatment would solve the problem of my unhappiness.
In a little. over a year I was in the alcoholic ward of a public
hospital!
It was there that L-- came to me. I had
known her very slightly ten years before. My ex-husband brought
her to me hoping that she could help. She did. From the hospital
I went home with her.
There, her husband told me the secret
of his rebirth. It is not really a secret at all, but something
free and open to all of us. He asked me if I believed in God
or some power greater than myself. Well, I did believe in God,
but at that time I hadn't any idea what He is. As a child I
had been taught my "Now I lay me's" and "Our
Father which art in Heaven." I had been sent to Sunday
School and taken to church. I had been baptized and confirmed.
I had been taught to realize there is a God and to "love"
him. But though I had been taught all these things, I had never
learned them.
When B-- (L's husband) began to talk about
God, I felt pretty low in my mind. I thought God was something
that I, and lots of other people like me, had to worry along
without. Yet I had always had the "prayer habit."
In fact I used to say in my mind "Now, if God answers this
prayer, I'll know there is a God." It was a great system,
only somehow it didn't seem to work!
Finally B-- put it to me this way: "You
admit you've made a mess of things trying to run them your way,
are you willing to give up? Are you willing to say: "Here
it is God, all mixed up. I don't know how to un-mix it, I'll
leave it to you." Well, I couldn't quite do that. I wasn't
feeling very well, and I was afraid that later when the fog
wore off, I'd want to back out. So we let it rest a few days.
L and B sent me to stay with some friends of theirs out of town-I'd
never seen them before. The man of that house, P-- had given
up drinking three months before. After I had been there a few
days, I saw that P-- and his wife had something that made them
mighty hopeful and happy. But I got a little uneasy going into
a perfect stranger's home and staying day after day. I said
this to P-- and his reply was: "Why, you don't know how
much it is helping me to have you here." Was that a surprise!
Always before that when I was recovering from a tailspin I'd
been just a pain in the neck to everyone. So, I began to sense
in a small way just what these spiritual principles were all
about.
Finally I very self-consciously and briefly
asked God to show me how to do what He wanted me to do. My prayer
was just about as weak and helpless a thing as one could imagine,
but it taught me how to open my mouth and pray earnestly and
sincerely. However, I had not quite made the grade. I was full
of fears, shames, and other "bug-a-boos" and two weeks
later an incident occurred that put me on the toboggan again.
I seemed to feel that the hurt of that incident was too great
to endure without some "release." So I forsook Spirit
in favor of "spirits" and that evening I was well
on the way to a long session with my old enemy "liquor."
I begged the person in whose home I was living not to let anyone
know, but she, having good sense, got in touch right away with
those who had helped me before and very shortly they had rallied
round.
I was eased out of the mess and in a day
or two I had a long talk with one of the crowd. I dragged out
all my sins of commission and ommission, I told everything I
could think of that might be the cause of creating a fear situation,
a remorse situation, or a shame situation. It was pretty terrible,
I thought then, to lay myself bare that way, but I know now
that such is the first step away from the edge of the precipice.
Things went very well for quite a while,
then came a dull rainy day. I was alone. The weather and my
self-pity began to cook up a nice dish of the blues for me.
There was liquor in the house and I found myself suggesting
to myself "Just one drink will make me feel so much more
cheerful." Well, I got the Bible and "Victorious Living"
and sitting down in full view of the bottle of whiskey, I commenced
to read. I also prayed. But I didn't say "I must not take
that drink because I owe it to so and so not to." I didn't
say "I won't take that drink because I'm strong enough
to resist temptation." I didn't say "I must not"
or "I will not" at all. I simply prayed and read and
in half an hour I got up and was absolutely free of the urge
for a drink.
It might be very grand to be able to say
"Finis" right here, but I see now I hadn't gone all
the way I was intended to go. I was still coddling and nursing
my two pets, self-pity and resentment. Naturally, I came a cropper
once more. This time I went to the telephone (after I had taken
about two drinks) and called L to tell her what I had done.
She asked me to promise that I would not take another drink
before someone came to me. Well, I had learned enough about
truthfulness to refuse to give that promise. Had I been living
after the old pattern, I would have been ashamed to call for
help. In fact I should not have wanted help. I should have tried
to hide the fact that I was drinking and continued until I again
wound up behind the "eight ball." I was taken back
to B's home where I stayed for three weeks. The drinking ended
the morning after I got there, but the suffering continued for
some time. I felt desperate and I questioned my ability to really
avail myself of the help that the others had received and applied
so successfully. Gradually, however, God began to clear my channels
so that real understanding began to come. Then was the time
when full realization and acknowledgement came to me. It was
realization and acknowledgement of the fact that I was full
of self-pity and resentment, realization of the fact that I
had not fully given my problems to God. I was still trying to
do my own fixing.
That was several years ago. Since then,
although circumstances are no different, for there are still
trials and hardships and hurts and disappointments and disillusionments,
self-pity and resentment are being eliminated. In this past
year I haven't been tempted once. I have no more idea of taking
a drink to aid me through a difficult period than I would if
I had never drank. But I know absolutely that the minute I close
my channels with sorrow for myself, or being hurt by, or resentful
toward anyone, I am in horrible danger.
I know that my victory is none of my human
doing. I know that I must keep myself worthy of Divine help.
And the glorious thing is this: I am free, I am happy, and perhaps
I am going to have the blessed opportunity of "passing
it on." I say in all reverence-Amen. |