Another
Prodigal Story
Personal Stories From The First
Edition
ANOTHER PRODIGAL STORY
"HELLO, Pal."
"Hello, Buddy!"
"Have a drink?"
"Got one!"
"Come over on the next stool I'm
lonesome. Hell of a world."
"You said it, brother,-hell of a
world."
"You taking rye? Mine's gin. God,
I'm up against it now!"
"How's 'at?"
"Oh, same old hell-hell-hell. She's
going to leave me now!"
"Your wife?"
"Yeah. How am I going to live? Can't
go home like this; too damn drunk to stay out. Can't land in
jail-will if I stay out-ruin my business-business going anyway-break
her heart. Where is she you ask? She's at the store, working
I guess, probably eating he r heart out waiting for me. What
time is it? Seven o'clock? Store's been closed an hour. She's
gone home by now. Well, what the hell. Have one more-then I'll
go."
That is a hazy recollection of my last
debauch. Several years ago now. By the time my new "bar
fly friend" and I had soaked up several more, I was shedding
tears and he, in the tender throes of drunken sympathy, was
working out a guaranteed plan whereby m y wife would greet me
with great joy and out-spread arms as soon as "we"
got home.
Yes "we" were going to my home.
He was the finest fixer in the world. He knew all about how
to handle wives. He admitted that!
So, two drunks, now lifetime buddies,
stumbled out arm in arm headed up the hill towards home.
A draft of cool air cleared some of the
fog away from my befuddled brain. "Wait a minute, what's
this so-and-so-plan of yours? I got to know about it,"
I said. "I got to know what you're going to say and what
I say."
The plan was a honey! All he had to do
was to lead me up to the apartment, ring the bell, ask my wife
if I was her husband, and then tell her he had found me down
at the river about to jump from the bridge and had saved my
life.
"That's all there is to it,"
he kept mumbling over and over, "works every time-never
fails."
On up the hill we staggered, then my "life
saver" got a better idea that would clinch the deal. He'd
have to go home first and put on clean linen. Couldn't let the
nice lady see a dirty shirt.
That sounded all right. Maybe he'd have
a bottle at his home. So we stumbled up to his place, a dreary
third floor back room, on a third rate street.
I have a hazy recollection of that place,
but have never been able to find it since. There was a photograph
of a quite pretty girl on his dresser. He told me it was a picture
of his wife and that she had kicked him out because he was drunk.
"You know how women are," he said.
Some fixer!
He did put on a clean shirt all right
and then reached into a drawer and pulled out a .38 calibre
revolver. That gave me quite a sobering shock. I reached for
the gun realizing in a hazy way that here was trouble.
He began to pull the trigger and every
moment I expected to hear an explosion, but the gun was empty.
He proved it!
Then he got a new idea. To reconcile my
wife and make her happy, he would tell her the gun was mine,
that I stood on the bridge, with the gun at my head and that
he snatched it away just in time to save my life.
God Almighty must have, at that moment,
granted me a flash of sanity. I quickly excused myself while
he was completing his toilet and, on the pretext of phoning
my wife, rushed noisily down the stairs and ran down the street
with all my might.
Some blocks away I came to a drug store,
bought a pint of gin, and drank half it in several large gulps,
staggered on up to my apartment, and tumbled into bed, fully
dressed and dead drunk.
This wasn't any new terror for my wife.
This sort of thing had been going on for several years, only
I was getting worse and worse with each drunken spree and more
difficult to handle.
Only the previous day I had been in an
accident. A Good Samaritan saw my condition and got me away
quickly, before the police came, and drove me back to my home.
I was dreadfully drunk that day and my
wife consulted a lawyer as preliminary to entering divorce action.
I swore to her that I wouldn't drink again and within 24 hours,
here I was in bed dead drunk.
Several months previously I had spent
a week in a New York hospital for alcoholics and came out feeling
that everything would be all right. Then I began to think that
I had the thing licked. I could practice a little controlled
drinking. I knew I couldn't take much but just one drink before
dinner. That went all right, too. Sure I had it licked now!
The next step was to take one quick one at noon and cover it
up with a milk shake. To make it doubly sure, I'd have ice cream
put into the milk shake, and the n, so help me, I don't know
what the next step down was, but I surely landed at the bottom
with an awful, heartbreaking thud.
The next morning was June 7th. I recall
the date so well because the sixth is my daughter's birthday.
And that, by the grace of God, was my last spree.
That morning I was afraid to open my eyes,
surely my wife would have kept her promise and left me. I loved
my wife. It is a paradox I know, but I did and do.
When I did stir, there she was sitting
at my bedside.
"Come on," she said, "get
up, bathe, shave and dress. We're going to New York this morning."
"New York!" I said, "To
the hospital?"
"Yes."
"I haven't any money to pay a hospital."
"I know you haven't," she said,
"but I arranged it all last night over long distance and
I'm going to give you that one chance, once again. If you let
me down this time, that's all there is."
Well, I went into that hospital again
feeling like a whipped cur. My wife pleaded with the doctor
to please do something to save her husband, to save her home,
to save our business, and our self-respect.
The doctor assured us that he really had
something for me this time that would work and with that faint
hope, we separated; she to hurry back home, 150 miles away,
and carry on the work of two people and I to sit trembling and
fearful there in what seemed to me, a shameful place.
Four days later a man called on me and
seemed interested to know how I was coming along. He told me
that he, too, had been there several times but had now found
relief.
That night another man came. He, too,
had suffered the same trouble and told how he and the other
fellow and several more had been released from alcohol.
Then the next day a fine fellow came,
and in a halting but effective way, told how he had placed himself
in God's hand and keeping. Almost before I knew it, I was asking
God to clean me up.
I suppose there are many who feel a strong
resentment against such a spiritual approach. Some of Alcoholics
Anonymous whom I have met since that day tell me they had difficulty
in accepting a simple, day to day, plan of faith. In my case
I was ripe for su ch an opportunity, perhaps because of early
religious training. I have always, it seems, had a keen sense
of the fact and presence of God.
That, too, like loving my wife and at
the same time hurting her so dreadfully, is paradoxical, but
it's a fact. I knew that God, was there with infinite love and
yet, somehow, I kept on drifting further and further away. But
now I do feel that my heart an d mind are "tuned in"
and by His grace there will be no more alcoholic "static."
After making this final agreement (not
iust another resolution) to let God to be first in my life,
the whole outlook and horizon brightened up in a manner which
I am unable to describe except to say that it was "glorious."
The following day was Monday and my non-drinking
friend insisted that I check out from the hospital and come
over to his home in 'Jersey. I did that and there I found a
lovely wife and children all so "happy about the whole
thing."
The next night I was taken to a meeting,
at the home of an ex-problem drinker in Brooklyn, where to my
surprise, there were more than 30 men like myself, telling of
a liberty of living unmatched by anything I had ever seen.
Since returning to my home, life has been
so different. I have paid off the old debts, have money enough
now for decent clothes and some to use in helping others, a
thing which I enjoy doing but didn't do when I had to contribute
so generously to alcohol.
I am trying to help other alcoholics.
At this writing there are four of us working, all of whom have
been kicked around dreadfully.
There is no "cocky" feeling
about this for me. I know I am an alcoholic and while I used
to call on God to help me, my conclusion is that I was simply
asking God to help me drink alcohol without its hurting me which
is a far different thing than asking hi m to help me not to
drink at all.
So here I stand, living day to day, in
His presence, and it is wonderful-This prodigal came home. |