On
His Way
Personal Stories From The First
Edition
ON HIS WAY
IN EARLY youth I believe
I had some of the tendencies which lead to alcoholism. I refer
to attempted escapes from reality.
At fifteen and sixteen, although free
at home to drink small amounts of beer and wine, I drank considerable
quantities of stronger liquors at school and other places. Not
enough to cause serious worry, but enough apparently to give
me occasionally what I thought I wanted. Escape? A feeling of
superiority? I do not know.
I then decided I'd had enough of school,
which decision was probably shared by the schools. The next
few years were spent in civil engineering work, travel, sports,
and a little idleness, and I seem to have avoided alcoholic
difficulties of the more prono unced kind.
Immediately before marriage and in the
short time before sailing for France, alcohol began to take
a real part in my life. A year and a half in war time France
postponed the inevitable and the post war period of hopes and
plans brought me nearer and neare r to the point where I eventually
found myself to be an alcoholic. Not that I would have admitted
it then, having the alcoholic's usual facility for deception,
both to self and others.
Divorced, sometimes suspecting that drinking
was the basis for most of my troubles but never admitting it,
I had enough left in health, interests of various kinds, and
luck to carry on with considerable success.
About this time I stopped all social drinking.
I became a periodical drunkard, the sprees lasting from three
days to three weeks and the dry intervals lasting from three
weeks to four months.
During one of the best years, I made a
happy marriage and the age of thirty-five found me with the
following: a beautiful little home presided over by a kind,
understanding, and lovely wife; a partnership in a firm I had
helped to found years before; more than a comfortable income;
many luxuries and many friends; opportunity to follow my interests
and hobbies; a love of my work; pride in my success; great health;
optimism; and hope on the credit side. On the other hand, I
had a growing, gnawing fear of my recurring trouble.
I slipped by far too easy stages to the
bottom in less than eight years. Not a pleasant place, the bottom.
Sometimes I slept in a cheap hotel or rooming house, sometimes
a flop house, sometimes the back room of a police station and
once in a doorway; many times in the alcoholic ward at a hospital,
and once in a subway toilet. Sometimes decently fed, clothed,
and housed, I worked at my business on commission with a large
firm; sometimes I dared not appear there cold, hungry, with
torn clothes, shaking body and muddled brain advertising what
I had become. Helpless, hopeless, bitter.
Sometimes I was apparently on the way
back, and sometimes writhing in bed for days at a time, terrorized
by the fear of insanity and by the spectres of people without
faces, people with horrible faces, people grimacing and laughing
at me and my misery. To rtured by dreams from which I would
awake with a scream of agony and bathed in cold sweat. Tortured
by day dreams of what might have been, dreams of the kindness,
faith and love that had been heaped upon me.
Due to this last however, and to what
little remained of my former self and perhaps to some lingering
power of spiritual faith, I became somewhat better. Not well,
but better.
This helped me to take stock and to try
to do some clear thinking. I found my inventory somewhat mixed,
but as my thoughts became clearer, I grew much better and at
last arrived at that point where for the first time in several
years I could see some ligh t and hope ahead of me. Through
a haze of doubt and skepticism I began to realize, partly at
least, many things in myself which had greased the path I had
pursued, and some vague thoughts and ideas came to me that are
now crystallizing with the help of th e men I have been happy
to join.
What thoughts and ideas? The answer is
short, although the road to it is long and tedious.
My intelligence, instead of drawing me
further away from spiritual faith is bringing me closer to it.
I no longer react in quite the same way when my will and desires
are apparently frustrated.
The simple words "Thy Will Be Done"
and the simple ideas of honesty and of helping others are taking
on a new meaning for me. I should not be surprised to find myself
coming to the astounding conclusion that God, whoever or whatever
He may be, is eminentl y more capable of running this universe
than I am. At last I believe I am on my way. |