A
Vision For You
Chapter 11
A Vision For You
For most normal folks, drinking means
conviviality, companionship and colorful imagination. It means
release from care, boredom and worry. It is joyous intimacy
with friends and a feeling that life is good. But not so with
us in those last days of heavy drinking. The old pleasures were
gone. They were but memories. Never could we recapture the great
moments of the past. There was an insistent yearning to enjoy
life as we once did and a heartbreaking obsession that some
new miracle of control would enable us to do it. There was always
one more attempt -- and one more failure.
The less people tolerated us, the more
we withdrew from society, from life itself. As we became subjects
of King Alcohol, shivering denizens of his mad realm, the chilling
vapor that is loneliness settled down. It thickened, ever becoming
blacker. Some of us sought out sordid places, hoping to find
understanding companionship and approval. Momentarily we did
-- then would come oblivion and the awful awakening to face
the hideous Four Horsemen -- Terror, Bewilderment, Frustration,
Despair. Unhappy drinkers who read this page will understand!
Now and then a serious drinker, being
dry at the moment says, "I don't miss it at all. Feel better.
Work better. Having a better time." As ex-problem drinkers,
we smile at such a sally. We know our friend is like a boy whistling
in the dark to keep up his spirits. He fools himself. Inwardly
he would give anything to take half a dozen drinks and get away
with them. He will presently try the old game again, for he
isn't happy about his sobriety. He cannot picture life without
alcohol. Some day he will be unable to imagine life either with
alcohol or without it. Then he will know loneliness such as
few do. He will be at the jumping-off place. He will wish for
the end.
We have shown how we got out from under.
You say, "Yes, I'm willing. But am I to be consigned to
a life where I shall be stupid, boring and glum, like some righteous
people I see? I know I must get along without liquor, but how
can I? Have you a sufficient substitute?"
Yes, there is a substitute and it is vastly
more than that. It is a fellowship in Alcoholics Anonymous.
There you will find release from care, boredom and worry. Your
imagination will be fired. Life will mean something at last.
The most satisfactory years of your existence lie ahead. Thus
we find the fellowship, and so will you.
"How is that to come about?"
you ask. "Where am I to find these people?"
You are going to meet these new friends
in your own community. Near you, alcoholics are dying helplessly
like people in a sinking ship. If you live in a large place,
there are hundreds. High and low, rich and poor, these are future
fellows of Alcoholics Anonymous. Among them you will make lifelong
friends. You will be bound to them with new and wonderful ties,
for you will escape disaster together and you will commence
shoulder to shoulder your common journey. Then you will know
what it means to give of yourself that others may survive and
rediscover life. You will learn the full meaning of "Love
thy neighbor as thyself."
It may seem incredible that these men
are to become happy, respected, and useful once more. How can
they rise out of such misery, bad repute and hopelessness? The
practical answer is that since these things have happened among
us, they can happen with you. Should you wish them above all
else, and be willing to make use of our experience, we are sure
they will come. The age of miracles is till with us. Our own
recovery proves that!
Our hope is that when this chip of a book
is launched on the world tide of alcoholism, defeated drinkers
will seize upon it, to follow its suggestions. Many, we are
sure, will rise to their feet and march on. They will approach
still other sick ones and fellowships of Alcoholics Anonymous
may spring up in each city and hamlet, havens for those who
must find a way out.
In the chapter "Working With Others"
you gathered an idea of how we approach and aid others to health.
Suppose now that through you several families have adopted this
way of life. You will want to know more of how to proceed from
that point. Perhaps the best way of treating you to a glimpse
of your future will be to describe the growth or the fellowship
among us. Here is a brief account:
Years ago, in 1935, one of our number
made a journey to a certain western city. From a business standpoint,
his trip came off badly. Had he been successful in his enterprise,
he would have been set on his feet financially which, at the
time, seemed vitally important. But his venture would up in
a law suit and bogged down completely. The proceeding was shot
through with much hard feeling and controversy.
Bitterly discouraged, he found himself
in a strange place, discredited and almost broke. Still physically
weak, and sober but a few months, he saw that his predicament
was dangerous. He wanted so much to talk with someone, but whom?
One dismal afternoon he paced a hotel
lobby wondering how his bill was to be paid. At the end of the
room stood a glass covered directory of local churches. Down
the lobby a door opened into an attractive bar. He could see
the gay crowd inside. In there he would find companionship and
release. Unless he took some drinks, he might not have the courage
to scrape an acquaintance and would have a lonely week-end.
Of course he couldn't drink, but why not
sit hopefully at a table, a bottle of ginger ale before him?
After all, had he not been sober six months now? Perhaps he
could handle, say, three drinks -- no more! Fear gripped him.
He was on thin ice. Again it was the old, insidious insanity
-- that first drink. With a shiver, he turned away and walked
down the lobby to the church directory. Music and gay chatter
still floated to him from the bar.
But what about his responsibilities --
his family and the men who would die because they would not
know how to get well, ah -- yes, those other alcoholics? There
must be many such in this town. He would phone a clergyman.
His sanity returned and he thanked God. Selecting a church at
random from the directory, he stepped into a booth and lifted
the receiver.
His call to the clergyman led him presently
to a certain resident of the town, who, though formerly able
and respected, was then nearing the nadir of alcoholic despair.
It was the usual situation; home in jeopardy, wife ill, children
distracted, bills in arrears and standing damaged. He had a
desperate desire to stop, but saw no way out, for he had earnestly
tried many avenues of escape. Painfully aware of being somehow
abnormal, the man did not fully realize what it meant to be
alcoholic. [NOTE: This refers to Bill's first visit with Dr.
Bob. These men later became co-founders of A.A. Bill's story
opens the text of this book; Dr. Bob's heads the Story Section.]
When our friend related his experience,
the man agreed that no amount of will power he might muster
could stop his drinking for long. A spiritual experience, he
conceded, was absolutely necessary, but the price seemed high
upon the basis suggested. He told how he lived in constant worry
about those who might find out about his alcoholism. He had,
of course, the familiar alcoholic obsession that few knew of
his drinking. Why, he argued, should he lose the remainder of
his business, only to bring still more suffering to his family
by foolishly admitting his plight to people from whom he made
his livelihood? He would do anything, he said, but that.
Being intrigued, however, he invited our
friend to his home. Some time later, and just as he thought
he was getting control of his liquor situation, he went on a
roaring bender. For him, this was the spree that ended all sprees.
He saw that he would have to face his problems squarely that
God might give him mastery.
One morning he took the bull by the horns
and set out to tell those he feared what his trouble had been.
He found himself surprisingly well received, and learned that
many knew of his drinking. Stepping into his car, he made the
rounds of people he had hurt. He trembled as he went about,
for this might mean ruin, particularly to a person in his line
of business.
At midnight he came home exhausted, but
very happy. He has not had a drink since. As we shall see, he
now means a great deal to his community, and the major liabilities
of thirty years of hard drinking have been repaired in four.
But life was not easy for the two friends.
Plenty of difficulties presented themselves. Both saw that they
must keep spiritually active. One day they called up the head
nurse of a local hospital. They explained their need and inquired
if she had a first class alcoholic prospect.
She replied, "Yes, we've got a corker.
He's just beaten up a couple of nurses. Goes off his head completely
when he's drinking. But he's a grand chap when he's sober, though
he's been in here eight times in the last six months. Understand
he was once a well-known lawyer in town, but just now we've
got him strapped down tight." [NOTE: This refers to Bill's
and Dr. Bob's first visit to A.A. Number Three. See the Pioneer
Section. This resulted in A.A. first group at Akron, Ohio, in
1935.]
Here was a prospect all right but, by
the description, none too promising. The use of spiritual principles
in such case was not so well understood as it is now. But one
of the friends said, "Put him in a private room. We'll
be down."
Two days later, a future fellow of Alcoholics
Anonymous stared glassily at the strangers beside his bed. "Who
are you fellows, and why this private room? I was always in
a ward before."
Said one of the visitors, "We're
giving you a treatment for alcoholism."
Hopelessness was written large on the
man's face as he replied, "Oh, but that's no use. Nothing
would fix me. I'm a goner. The last three times, I got drunk
on the way home from here. I'm afraid to go out the door. I
can't understand it."
For an hour, the two friends told him
about their drinking experiences. Over and over, he would say:
"That's me. That's me. I drink like that."
The man in the bed was told of the acute
poisoning from which he suffered, how it deteriorates the body
of an alcoholic and warps his mind. There was much talk about
the mental state preceding the first drink.
"Yes, that' me," said the sick
man, "the very image. You fellows know your stuff all right,
but I don't see what good it'll do. You fellows are somebody.
I was once, but I'm a nobody now. From what you tell me, I know
more than ever I can't stop." At this both the visitors
burst into a laugh. Said the future Fellow Anonymous: "Damn
little to laugh about that I can see."
The two friends spoke of their spiritual
experience and told him about the course of action they carried
out.
He interrupted: "I used to be strong
for the church, but that won't fix it. I've prayed to God on
hangover mornings and sworn that I'd never touch another drop
but by nine o'clock I'd be boiled as an owl."
Next day found the prospect more receptive.
He had been thinking it over. "Maybe you're right,"
he said. "God ought to be able to do anything." Then
he added, "He sure didn't do much for me when I was trying
to fight this booze racket alone."
On the third day the lawyer gave his life
to the care and direction of his Creator, and said he was perfectly
willing to do anything necessary. His wife came, scarcely daring
to be hopeful, though she thought she saw something different
about her husband already. He had begun to have a spiritual
experience.
That afternoon he put on his clothes and
walked from the hospital a free man. He entered a political
campaign, making speeches, frequenting men's gathering places
of all sorts, often staying up all night. He lost the race by
only a narrow margin. But he had found God -- and in finding
God had found himself.
That was in June, 1935. He never drank
again. He too, has become a respected and useful member of his
community. He has helped other men recover, and is a power in
the church from which he was long absent.
So, you see, there were three alcoholics
in that town, who now felt they had to give to others what they
had found, or be sunk. After several failures to find others,
a fourth turned up. He came through an acquaintance who had
heard the good news. He proved to be a devil-may-care young
fellow whose parents could not make out whether he wanted to
stop drinking or not. They were deeply religious people, much
shocked by their son's refusal to have anything to do with the
church. He suffered horribly from his sprees, but it seemed
as if nothing could be done for him. He consented, however,
to go to the hospital, where he occupied the very room recently
vacated by the lawyer.
He had three visitors. After a bit, he
said, "The way you fellows put this spiritual stuff makes
sense. I'm ready to do business. I guess the old folks were
right after all." So one more was added to the Fellowship.
All this time our friend of the hotel
lobby incident remained in that town. He was there three months.
He now returned home, leaving behind his first acquaintances,
the lawyer and the devil-may-care chap. These men had found
something brand new in life. Though they knew they must help
other alcoholics if they would remain sober, that motive became
secondary. It was transcended by the happiness they found in
giving themselves for others. They shared their homes, their
slender resources, and gladly devoted their spare hours to fellow-sufferers.
They were willing, by day or night, to place a new man in the
hospital and visit him afterward. They grew in numbers. They
experienced a few distressing failures, but in those cases they
made an effort to bring the man's family into a spiritual way
of living, thus relieving much worry and suffering.
A year and six months later these three
had succeeded with seven more. Seeing much of each other, scarce
an evening passed that someone's home did not shelter a little
gathering of men and women, happy in their release, and constantly
thinking how they might present their discovery to some newcomer.
In addition to these casual get-togethers, it became customary
to set apart one night a week for a meeting to be attended by
anyone or everyone interested in a spiritual way of life. Aside
from fellowship and sociability, the prime object was to provide
a time and place where new people might bring their problems.
Outsiders became interested. One man and
his wife placed their large home at the disposal of this strangely
assorted crowd. This couple has since become so fascinated that
they have dedicated their home to the work. Many a distracted
wife has visited this house to find loving and understanding
companionship among women who knew her problem, to hear from
the lips of their husbands what had happened to them, to be
advised how her own wayward mate might be hospitalized and approached
when next he stumbled.
Many a man, yet dazed from his hospital
experience, has stepped over the threshold of that home into
freedom. Many an alcoholic who entered there came away with
an answer. He succumbed to that gay crowd inside, who laughed
at their own misfortunes and understood his. Impressed by those
who visited him at the hospital, he capitulated entirely when,
later, in an upper room of this house, he heard the story of
some man whose experience closely tallied with his own. The
expression on the faces of the women, that indefinable something
in the eyes of the men, the stimulating and electric atmosphere
of the place, conspired to let him know that here was haven
at last.
The very practical approach to his problems,
the absence of intolerance of any kind, the informality, the
genuine democracy, the uncanny understanding which these people
had were irresistible. He and his wife would leave elated by
the thought of what they could now do for some stricken acquaintance
and his family. They knew they had a host of new friends; it
seemed they had known these strangers always. They had seen
miracles, and one was to come to them. They had visioned the
Great Reality -- their loving and All Powerful Creator.
Now, this house will hardly accommodate
its weekly visitors, for they number sixty or eighty as a rule.
Alcoholics are being attracted from far and near. From surrounding
towns, families drive long distances to be present. A community
thirty miles away has fifteen fellows of Alcoholics Anonymous.
Being a large place, we think that some day its Fellowship will
number many hundreds. [NOTE: Written in 1939.]
But life among Alcoholics Anonymous is
more than attending gatherings and visiting hospitals. Cleaning
up old scrapes, helping to settle family differences, explaining
the disinherited son to his irate parents, lending money and
securing jobs for each other, when justified -- these are everyday
occurrences. No one is too discredited or has sunk too low to
be welcomed cordially -- if he means business. Social distinctions,
petty rivalries and jealousies -- these are laughed out of countenance.
Being wrecked in the same vessel, being restored and united
under one God, with hearts and minds attuned to the welfare
of others, the things which matter so much to some people no
longer signify much to them. How could they?
Under only slightly different conditions,
the same thing is taking place in many eastern cities. In one
of these there is a well-know hospital for the treatment of
alcoholic and drug addiction. Six years ago one of our number
was a patient there. Many of us have felt, for the first time,
the Presence and Power of God within its walls. We are greatly
indebted to the doctor in attendance there, for he, although
it might prejudice his own work, has told us of his belief in
ours.
Every few days this doctor suggests our
approach to one of his patients. Understanding our work, he
can do this with an eye to selecting those who are willing and
able to recover on a spiritual basis. Many of us, former patients,
go there to help. Then, in this eastern city, there are informal
meetings such as we have described to you, where you may now
see scores of members. There are the same fast friendships,
there is the same helpfulness to one another as you find among
our western friends. There is a good bit or travel between East
and West and we foresee a great increase in this helpful interchange.
Some day we hope that every alcoholic
who journeys will find a Fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous
at his destination. To some extent this is already true. Some
of us are salesmen and go about. Little clusters of twos and
threes and fives of us have sprung up in other communities,
through contact with our two larger centers. Those of us who
travel drop in as often as we can. This practice enables us
to lend a hand, at the same time avoiding certain alluring distractions
of the road, about which any travelling man can inform you.
[NOTE: Written in 1939. As of 1976, there are almost 28,000
groups in over 90 countries with an estimated membership of
over 1,000,000.]
Thus we grow. And so can you, though you
be but one man with this book in your hand. We believe and hope
it contains all you will need to begin.
We know what you are thinking. You are
saying to yourself: "I'm jittery and alone. I couldn't
do that." But you can. You forget that you have just now
tapped a source of power much greater than yourself. To duplicate,
with such backing, what we have accomplished is only a matter
of willingness, patience and labor.
We know of an A.A. member who was living
in a large community. He had lived there but a few weeks when
he found that the place probably contained more alcoholics per
square mile than any city in the country. This was only a few
days ago at this writing. (1939) The authorities were much concerned.
He got in touch with a prominent psychiatrist who had undertaken
certain responsibilities for the mental health of the community.
The doctor proved to be able and exceedingly anxious to adopt
any workable method of handling the situation. So he inquired,
what did our friend have on the ball?
Our friend proceeded to tell him. And
with such good effect that the doctor agreed to a test among
his patients and certain other alcoholics from a clinic which
he attends. Arrangements were also made with the chief psychiatrist
of a large public hospital to select still others from the stream
of misery which flows through that institution.
So our fellow worker will soon have friends
galore. Some of them may sink and perhaps never get up, but
if our experience is a criterion, more than half of those approached
will become fellows of Alcoholics Anonymous. When a few men
in this city have found themselves, and have discovered the
joy of helping others to face life again, there will be no stopping
until everyone in that town has had his opportunity to recover
-- if he can and will.
Still you may say: "But I will not
have the benefit of contact with you who wrote this book."
We cannot be sure. God will determine that, so you must remember
that your real reliance is always upon Him. He will show you
how to create the fellowship you crave. [NOTE: Alcoholics Anonymous
will be glad to hear from you. Address P.O. Box 459, Grand Central
Station, New York, N.Y. 10017]
Our book is meant to be suggestive only.
We realize we know only a little. God will constantly disclose
more to you and to us. Ask Him in your morning meditation what
you can do each day for the man who is still sick. The answers
will come, if your own house is in order. But obviously you
cannot transmit something you haven't got. See to it that your
relationship with Him is right, and great events will come to
pass for you and countless others. This is the Great Fact for
us.
Abandon yourself to God as you understand
God. Admit your faults to Him and to your fellows. Clear away
the wreckage of your past. Give freely of what you find and
join us. We shall be with you in the Fellowship of the Spirit,
and you will surely meet some of us as you trudge the Road of
Happy Destiny.
May God bless you and keep you -- until
then.
In 1992, with over 96,000 groups, with
A.A. activity in 134 countries.
In 1992, one-third are women; about one-fifth,
30 and under.
* In 1992, A.A. is composed of approximately
96,000 groups.
* Fully explained in Appendix II of the
complete Big Book
* For amplification -- see Appendix II
* Please be sure to read Appendix II on
"Spiritual Experience", in the complete Big Book.
* Written in 1939, when there were few
women in A.A., this chapter assumes that the alcoholic in the
home is likely to be the husband. But many of the suggestions
given here may be adapted to help the person who lives with
a woman alcoholic -- whether she is still drinking or is recovering
in A.A. A further source of help is noted on page 121.
The fellowship of Al-Anon Family Groups
was formed about thirteen years after this chapter was written.
Though it is entirely separate from Alcoholics Anonymous, it
uses the general principles of the A.A. program as a guide for
husbands, wives, relatives, friends, and others close to alcoholics.
The foregoing pages (though addressed only to wives) indicate
the problems such people may face. Alateen, for teen-aged children
of alcoholics, is a part of Al-Anon. If there is no Al-Anon
listing in your local telephone book, you may obtain further
information on Al- Anon Family Groups by writing to its World
Service Office: Box 862, Midtown Station, New York, NY 10018-0862
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