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Fired
Again
Personal Stories From The First
Edition
FIRED AGAIN
IT SEEMS to me that I
never did do things normally. When I learned to dance I had
to go dancing every night in the week if possible; when I worked
or studied I wanted no interruptions or distractions. Wherever
I worked I wanted to be the highest paid ma n in the place or
I was irritated; and of course when I drank I could never seem
to stop until I was saturated. I was usually hard to get along
with as a boy; if the others wouldn't play my way I'd go home.
The town we lived in when I was a child
was rather new and raw, peopled largely by immigrants who seemed
to be constantly getting married with free drinks and eats for
anybody who cared to come. We kids usually managed to get to
these celebrations, and a lthough supposed to have soda pop
we could get ourselves one or two beers. With this sort of background
and more money than was good for me, it was fairly easy to start
getting drunk before I was sixteen.
After I left home I earned rather decent
salaries but was never satisfied with my position, salary, or
the treatment accorded me by my employer. I very seldom stayed
on one job for more than six months until I was married at the
age of 28, at which time I had already begun to lose jobs because
of my drinking. Whenever things went wrong I knew that a few
drinks would make everything rosy, my fears, doubts and worries
would vanish and I would always promise myself that the next
time I would stop short of getting plastered. Somehow things
seldom worked out that way though.
I was irritated by the efforts of so many
doctors, ministers, lawyers, employers, relatives and friends
who remonstrated with me what I was up against. I'd fall down,
get up, work a while, get my debts paid (at least the most pressing
ones) drink moderat ely for a few days or weeks, but eventually
get myself so messed up in tanglefoot that I'd lose another
job. In one year (1916) I quit two jobs because I thought I'd
be discharged anyhow and was fired outright from five more,
which is more jobs than many men have in a lifetime. Had I remained
sober, any one of them would have led to advancement because
they were with growing companies and in my chosen field of engineering.
After begin discharged for the fifth time
that year, I drank more than ever, cadging drinks and meals
where I could, and running up a large rooming-house account.
My brother took me home and my folks talked me into going to
a sanitarium for thirty days. This place was operated by a physician
at the time. The doctor did his best, saw that I got into good
physical condition, tried to straighten out the mental quirks
he thought partly responsible for my drinking, and I left with
the firm resolve never to drink again.
Before I left the sanitarium I answered
an advertisement for an engineer in a small Ohio town and after
an interview, obtained the position. In three days after leaving
the sanitarium I had a job I liked at a satisfactory salary
in a small town with basi c living costs (board, room and laundry)
amounting only to about 15% of my salary. I was all set, sober,
working in a congenial atmosphere for a firm that had more profitable
business that they knew what to do with. I made some beautiful
plans. I could save enough in a few years to complete my formal
education and there were no saloons in the town to trip me up.
So what? So at the end of the week I was drunk again for no
particular reason at all that I could understand. In about three
months I was o ut of a job again, but in the meantime two things
of major importance had happened. I had fallen in love and war
had been declared.
I had learned my lesson. I knew definitely
that I couldn't take even one drink. I wanted to get married
so I planned very earnestly to get another job, stay sober,
and save some money. I went to Pittsburgh on Sunday, called
on a manufacturer of rolling -mill equipment and on Monday,
got a position and went to work. I was first paid at the end
of the second week, was drunk before the end of the day and
couldn't be bothered with going to work the next Monday.
Why did I take that first drink? I honestly
don't know. Anyhow I nearly went crazy that summer and really
developed some sort of mental disturbance. The night clerk of
the small hotel where I was staying saw me go about three in
the morning in pajamas and slippers and had a policeman take
me back into my room. I suppose he was used to screwy drunks
or he would have taken me to jail instead. I stayed there a
few days and sweated the alcohol out of my system, went to the
office to collect the balance o f my salary, paid my room rent,
and found I had just enough money to get home. So home I went,
sick, broke, discouraged and despairing of ever attaining a
normal, happy life.
After two weeks of idleness at home, I
obtained a subordinate position with a former employer, doing
the lowest grade of drafting work for several months, went to
see my fiancee one or two weekends, was advanced rapidly in
salary and responsibility, had a date set for the wedding and
then inadvertently learned that one of the men working under
my direction was receiving about forty dollars more per month
than I was, which burnt me up to such an extent I quit after
an argument, took my money, packed my per sonal effect, left
them at the corner drug store, and went downtown and got plastered.
Knowing that I would be greeted with tears, sorrowful sympathy
and more grief when I got home, I stayed away until I was again
destitute.
I was really worried sick about my drinking
so father again advanced the money for treatment. This time
I took a three-day cure and left with the firm resolve never
to drink again, got a better position then I'd had before and
actually did keep sober for several months, saved some money,
paid my debts and again made plans to get married. But the desire
for a drink was with me constantly after the first week or two,
and the memory of how sick I had been from liquor and the agonies
of the treatment I had undergone faded into the background.
I had only begun to restore the confidence of my associates,
family, friends and myself before I was off again, without any
excuse this time. The wedding was again postponed and it looked
very much as though it would never take place. My employer did
not turn me loose but I was in another nice jam nevertheless.
After considerable fumbling around mentally as to what to do
I went back to the three-day cure for the second time.
After this treatment I got along a little
better, was married in the spring of 1919 and did very little
drinking for several years. I got along very well with my work,
had a happy home life, but when away from home with little likelihood
of being caught at it, I'd go on a mild binge. The thought of
what would happen if my wife caught me drinking served to keep
me reasonably straight for several years. My work became increasingly
more important. I had many outside interests and drinking became
less of a factor in my life, but I did continue to tipple some
during out-of-town trips and it was because of this tendency
that things finally became all snarled up at home.
I was sent to New York on business and
later stopped at a night club where I had been drunk before.
I certainly must have been very tight and it is quite likely
that I was "Mickey Finned" for I woke up about noon
the next day in my hotel without a cent. I had to borrow money
to get home on but didn't start to bother to start back till
several days later. When I got there I found a sick child, a
distracted wife and had lost another job paying $7,000 a year.
This, however, was not the worst of it. I mu st have given my
business card to one of the girls at the night club for she
started to send me announcements of another clip-joint where
she was employed and writing me long hand "come on"
notes, one of which fell into my wife's hands. I'll leave what
h appened after that to the reader's imagination.
I went back into the business of getting
and losing jobs and eventually got to the point where I didn't
seem to have any sense of responsibility to myself or to my
family. I'd miss important family anniversaries, forget to come
home for Christmas and in general wouldn't go home until I was
exhausted physically and flat broke. About four years ago I
didn't come home on Christmas Eve but arrived there about six
o'clock on Christmas morning, minus the tree I had promised
to get, but with an enormous packag e of liquor on board. I
took the three-day cure again with the usual results but about
three weeks later I went to a party and decided a few beers
wouldn't hurt me; however I didn't get back to work for three
days and a short while later had lost my job and was again at
the bottom of things. My wife obtained employment on a relief
basis and I finally got straightened out with my employer who
placed me in another position in a nearby city which I also
lost by the end of the year.
So it went until about a year ago when
a neighbor happened to hear me trying to get into the house
and asked my wife whether I had been having some drinking difficulties.
This, of course, disturbed my wife but out neighbor was not
just inquisitive. She had heard of the work of a non-drinking
doctor who was busily engaged in passing on the benefits he
had received from another who had found the answer to his difficulties
with liquor. As a result of this my wife saw the doctor. Then
I talked with him, s pent a few days in a local hospital and
haven't had a drink since.
While in the hospital about twenty men
called on me and told me of their experiences and the help they
had received. Of the twenty I happened to know five, three of
whom I had never seen completely sober. I became convinced then
and there that if these men had learned something that could
keep them sober, I also could profit from the same knowledge.
Before leaving the hospital, two of these men, convinced of
my sincerity of purpose, imparted to me the necessary knowledge
and mental tools which have res ulted in my complete sobriety
for these many years, and an assurance that I need never, so
long as I live, drink anything of an alcoholic nature if I kept
on the right track.
My health is better, I enjoy a fellowship
which gives me a happier life than I have ever known, and my
family joins me in a daily expression of gratitude. |
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