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Southern Friend
Personal Stories From The First
Edition
OUR SOUTHERN FRIEND
TWO rosy-cheeked children stand at the top of a long hill as
the glow of the winter sunset lights up the snow covered country-side.
"It's time to go home" says my sister. She is the
eldest. After one more exhilarating trip on the sled, we plod
homeward through the deep snow. The light from an oil lamp shines
from an upstairs window of our home. We stamp the snow from
our boots and rush in to the warmth of the coal stove which
is supposed to heat upstairs as well. "Hello dearies,"
calls Mother from above, "get your wet things off."
"Where's Father?" I ask, having
gotten a whiff of sausage cooking through the kitchen door and
thinking of supper.
"He went down to the swamp,"
replies Mother. "He should be home soon."
Father is an Episcopal minister and his
work takes him over long drives on bad roads. His parishioners
are limited in number, but his friends are many, for to him
race, creed, or social position make no difference. It is not
long before he drives up in the old buggy. Both he and old Maud
are glad to get home. The drive was long and cold but he was
thankful for the hot bricks which some thoughtful person had
given him for his feet. Soon supper is on the table. Father
says grace, which delays my attack on the buckwheat cakes and
sausage. What an appetite!
A big setter lies asleep near the stove.
He begins to make queer sounds and his feet twitch. What is
he after in his dreams? More cakes and sausage. At last I am
filled. Father goes to his study to write some letters. Mother
plays the piano and we sing. Father finishes his letters and
we all join in several exciting games of parchesi. Then Father
is persuaded to read aloud some more of "The Rose and the
Ring."
Bed-time comes. I climb to my room in
the attic. It is cold so there is no delay. I crawl under a
pile of blankets and blow out the candle. The wind is rising
and howls around the house. But I am safe and warm. I fall into
a dreamless sleep.
I am in church. Father is delivering his
sermon. A wasp is crawling up the back of the lady in front
of me. I wonder if it will reach her neck. Shucks! It has flown
away. Ho, hum, maybe the watermelons are ripe in Mr. Jones patch.
That's an idea! Benny will know, but Mr. Jones will not know
what happened to some of them, if they are. At last! The message
has been delivered.
"Let your light so shine before men
that they may see your good works-." I hunt for my nickel
to drop in the plate so that mine will be seen.
Father comes forward in the chancel of
the church. "The peace of God which passes all understanding,
keep your hearts and minds-." Hurray! Just a hymn and then
church will be over until next week!
I am in another fellow's room at college.
"Freshman," said he to me, "do you ever take
a drink?" I hesitated. Father had never directly spoken
to me about drinking and he never drank any, so far as I knew.
Mother hated liquor and feared a drunken man. Her brother had
been a drinker and had died in a state hospital for the insane.
But his life was unmentionable, so far as I was concerned. I
had never had a drink but I had seen enough merriment in the
boys who were drinking to be interested. I would never be like
the village drunkard at home. How a lot of people despised him!
Just a weakling!
"Well," said the older boy,
"Do you?"
"Once in a while," I lied. I
could not let him think I was a sissy.
He poured out two drinks. "Here's
looking at you," said he. I gulped it down and choked.
I didn't like it, but I would not say so. No, never! A mellow
glow stole over me. Say! This wasn't so bad after all. In fact,
it was darn good. Sure I'd have another. The glow increased.
Other boys came in. My tongue loosened. Everyone laughed loudly.
I was witty. I had no inferiorities. Why, I wasn't even ashamed
of my skinny legs! This was the real thing!
A haze filled the room. The electric light
began to move. Then two bulbs appeared. The faces of the other
boys grew dim. How sick I felt. I staggered to the bathroom-.
Shouldn't have drunk so much or so fast. But I knew how to handle
it now. I'd drink like a gentleman after this.
And so I met John Barleycorn. The grand
fellow who at my call made me "a hale fellow, well met,"
who gave me such a fine voice, as we sang "Hail, hail,
the gang's all here," and "Sweet Adeline," who
gave me freedom from fear and feelings of inferiority. Good
old John! He was my pal, all right.
Final exams of my senior year and I may
somehow graduate. I would never have tried, but Mother counts
on it so. A case of measles saved me from being kicked out during
my Sophomore year. Bells, bells, bells! Class, library, laboratory!
Am I tired!
But the end is in sight. My last exam
and an easy one. I gaze at the board with its questions. Can't
remember the answer to the first. I'll try the second. No soap
there. Say this is getting serious! I don't seem to remember
anything. I concentrate on one of the questions. I don't seem
to be able to keep my mind on what I am doing. I get uneasy.
If I don't get started soon, I won't have time to finish. No
use. I can't think.
Oh! An idea! I leave the room, which the
honor system allows. I go to my room. I pour out half a tumbler
of grain alcohol and fill it with ginger ale. Oh, boy! Now back
to the exam. My pen moves rapidly. I know enough of the answers
to get by. Good old John Barleycorn! He can certainly be depended
on. What a wonderful power he has over the mind! He has given
me my diploma!
Underweight! How I hate that word. Three
attempts to enlist in the service, and three failures because
of being skinny. True, I have recently recovered from pneumonia
and have an alibi, but my friends are in the war, or going,
and I am not. To hell with it all! I visit a friend who is awaiting
orders. The atmosphere of "eat, drink, and be merry"
prevails and I absorb it. I drink a lot every night. I can hold
a lot now, more than the others.
I am examined for the draft and pass the
physical exam. What a dirty deal! Drafted! The shame of it.
I am to go to camp on November 13th. The Armistice is signed
on the 11th and the draft is called off. Never in the service!
The war leaves me with a pair of blankets, a toilet kit, a sweater
knit by my sister, and a still greater inferiority.
It is ten o'clock of a Saturday night.
I am working hard on the books of a subsidiary company of a
large corporation. I have had experience in selling, collecting,
and accounting, and am on my way up the ladder.
Then the crack-up. Cotton struck the skids
and collections went cold. A twenty three million dollar surplus
wiped out. Offices closed up and workers discharged. I, and
the books of my division have been transferred to the head office.
I have no assistance and am working nights, Saturdays and Sundays.
My salary has been cut. My wife and new baby are fortunately
staying with relatives, What a life! I feel exhausted. The doctor
has told me that if I don't give up inside work, I'll have tuberculosis.
But what am I to do? I have a family to support and have no
time to be looking for another job.
Oh, well. I reach for the bottle which
I just got from George, the elevator boy.
I am a traveling salesman. The day is
over and business has been not so good. I'll go to bed. I wish
I were home with the family and not in this dingy hotel.
Well-well-look who's here! Good old Charlie!
It's great to see him. How's the boy? A drink? You bet your
life! We buy a gallon of "corn" because it is so cheap.
Yet I am fairly steady when I go to bed.
Morning comes. I feel horribly. A little
drink will put me on my feet. But it takes others to keep me
there.
I see some prospects. I am too miserable
to care if they give me an order or not. My breath would knock
out a mule, I learn from a friend. Back at the hotel and more
to drink. I come to early in the morning. My mind is fairly
clear, but inwardly I am undergoing torture. My nerves are screaming
in agony. I go to the drug store and it is not open. I wait.
Minutes are interminable. Will the store never open? At last!
I hurry in. The druggist fixes me up a bromide. I go back to
the hotel and lie down. I wait. I am going crazy. The bromides
have no effect. I get a doctor. He gives me a hypodermic. Blessed
peace!
And I blame this experience on the quality
of the liquor.
I am a real estate salesman. "What
is the price of that house," I ask the head of the firm
I work for. He names me a price. Then he says, "That is
what the builders are asking, but we will add on $500.00 and
split it, if you can close the deal." The prospect signs
the contract for the full amount. My boss buys the property
and sells to the prospect. I get my commission and $250.00 extra
and everything is Jake. But is it? Something is sour. So let's
have a drink!
I become a teacher in a boy's school.
I am happy in my work. I like the boys and we have lots of fun,
in class and out.
An unhappy mother comes to me about her
boy, for she knows I am fond of him. They expected him to get
high marks and he has not the ability to do it. So he altered
his report card through fear of his father. And his dishonesty
has been discovered. Why are there so many foolish parents,
and why is there so much unhappiness in these homes?
The doctors bills are heavy and the bank
account is low. My wife's parents come to our assistance. I
am filled with hurt pride and self-pity. I seem to get no sympathy
for my illness and have no appreciation of the love behind the
gift.
I call the boot-legger and fill up my
charred keg. But I do not wait for the charred keg to work.
I get drunk. My wife is extremely unhappy. Her father comes
to sit with me. He never says an unkind word. He is a real friend
but I do not appreciate him.
We are staying with my wife's father.
Her mother is in critical condition at a hospital. The wind
is moaning in the pine trees. I cannot sleep. I must get myself
together. I sneak down stairs and get a bottle of whiskey from
the cellaret. I pour drinks down my throat. My father-in-law
appears. "Have a drink?" I ask. He makes no reply,
and hardly seems to see me. His wife dies that night.
Mother has been dying of cancer for a
long time. She is near the end and now in a hospital. I have
been drinking a lot, but never get drunk. Mother must never
know. I see her about to go.
I return to the hotel where I am staying
and get gin from the bell-boy. I drink and go to bed; I take
a few the next morning and go see my mother once more. I cannot
stand it. I go back to the hotel and get more gin. I drink steadily.
I come to at three in the morning. The indescribable torture
has me again. I turn on the light. I must get out of the room
or I shall jump out of the window. I walk miles. No use. I go
to the hospital, where I have made friends with the night superintendent.
She puts me to bed and gives me a hypodermic. Oh, wonderful
peace!
Mother and Father die the same year. What
is life all about anyway? The world is crazy. Read the newspapers.
Everything is a racket. Education is a racket. Medicine is a
racket. Religion is a racket. How could there be a loving God
who would allow so much suffering and sorrow? Bah! Don't talk
to me about religion. For what were my children ever born? I
wish I were dead!
I am at the hospital to see my wife. We
have another child. But she is not glad to see me. I have been
drinking while the baby was arriving. Her father stays with
her.
My parents estates are settled at last.
I have some money. I'll try farming. It will be a good life.
I'll farm on a large scale and make a good thing of it. But
the deluge descends. Lack of judgment, bad management, a hurricane,
and the depression create debts in ever-increasing number. But
the stills are' operating throughout the country-side.
It is a cold, bleak day in November. I
have fought hard to stop drinking. Each battle has ended in
defeat. I tell my wife I cannot stop drinking. She begs me to
go to a hospital for alcoholics which has been recommended.
I say I will go. She makes the arrangements, but I will not
go. I'll do it all myself. This time I'm off of it for good.
I'll just take a few beers now and then.
It is the last day of the following October,
a dark, rainy morning. I come to in a pile of hay in a barn.
I look for liquor and can't find any. I wander to a stable and
drink five bottles of beer. I must get some liquor. Suddenly
I feel hopeless, unable to go on. I go home. My wife is in the
living room. She had looked for me last evening after I left
the car and wandered off into the night. She had looked for
me this morning. She has reached the end of her rope. There
is no use trying any more, for there is nothing to try. "Don't
say anything," I say to her. "I am going to do something."
I am in the hospital for alcoholics. I
am an alcoholic. The insane asylum lies ahead. Could I have
myself locked up at home? One more foolish idea. I might go
out West on a ranch where I couldn't get anything to drink.
I might do that. Another foolish idea. I wish I were dead, as
I have often wished before. I am too yellow to kill myself.
But maybe-. The thought stays in my mind.
Four alcoholics play bridge in a smoke-filled
room. Anything to get my mind from myself. The game is over
and the other three leave. I start to clean up the debris. One
man comes back, closing the door behind him.
He looks at me. "You think you are
hopeless, don't you?" he asks.
"I know it," I reply.
"Well, you're not," says the
man. "There are men on the streets of New York today who
were worse than you, and they don't drink anymore."
"What are you doing here then?"
I ask.
"I went out of here nine days ago
saying that I was going to be honest, and I wasn't," he
answers.
A fanatic, I thought to myself, but I
was polite. "What is it?" I enquire.
Then he asks me if I believe in a power
greater than myself, whether I call that power God, Allah, Confucius,
Prime Cause, Divine Mind, or any other name. I told him that
I believe in electricity and other forces of nature, but as
for a God, if there is one, He has never done anything for me.
Then he asks me if I am willing to right all the wrongs I have
ever done to anyone, no matter how wrong I thought they were.
Am I willing to be honest with myself about myself and tell
someone about myself, and am I willing to think of other people.
and of their needs instead of myself; to get rid of the drink
problem?
"I'll do anything," I reply.
"Then all of your troubles are over"
says the man and leaves the room. The man is in bad mental shape
certainly. I pick up a book and try to read, but cannot concentrate.
I get in bed and turn out the light. But I cannot sleep. Suddenly
a thought comes. Can all the worthwhile people I have known
be wrong about God? Then I find myself thinking about myself,
and a few things that I had wanted to forget. I begin to see
I am not the person I had thought myself, that I had judged
myself by comparing myself to others, and always to my own advantage.
It is a shock.
Then comes a thought that is like A Voice.
"Who are you to say there is no God?" It rings in
my head, I can't get rid of it.
I get out of bed and go to the man's room.
He is reading. "I must ask you a question," I say
to the man. "How does prayer fit into this thing?"
"Well," he answers, "you've
probably tried praying like I have. When you've been in a jam
you've said, 'God, please do this or that' and if it turned
out your way that was the last of it and if it didn't you've
said 'There isn't any God' or 'He doesn't do anything for me'.
Is that right?"
"Yes" I reply.
"That isn't the way" he continued.
"The thing I do is to say 'God here I am and here are all
my troubles. I've made a mess of things and can't do anything
about it. You take me, and all my troubles, and do anything
you want with me.' Does that answer your question?"
"Yes, it does" I answer. I return
to bed. It doesn't make sense. Suddenly I feel a wave of utter
hopelessness sweep over me. I am in the bottom of hell. And
there a tremendous hope is born. It might be true.
I tumble out of bed onto my knees. I know
not what I say. But slowly a great peace comes to me. I feel
lifted up. I believe in God. I crawl back into bed and sleep
like a child.
Some men and women come to visit my friend
of the night before. He invites me to meet them. They are a
joyous crowd. I have never seen people that joyous before. We
talk. I tell them of the Peace, and that I believe in God. I
think of my wife. I must write her. One girl suggests that I
phone her. What a wonderful idea.
My wife hears my voice and knows I have
found the answer to life. She comes to New York. I get out of
the hospital and we visit some of these new-found friends. What
a glorious time we have!
I am home again. I have lost the fellowship.
Those that understand me are far away. The same old problems
and worries surround me. Members of my family annoy me. Nothing
seems to be working out right. I am blue and unhappy. Maybe
a drink-I put on my hat and dash off in the car.
Get into the lives of other people, is
one thing the fellows in New York had said. I go to see a man
I had been asked to visit and tell him my story. I feel much
better! I have forgotten about a drink.
I am on a train, headed for a city. I
have left my wife at home, sick, and I have been unkind to her
in leaving. I am very unhappy. Maybe a few drinks when I get
to the city will help. A great fear seizes me. I talk to the
stranger in the seat with me. The fear and the insane idea is
taken away.
Things are not going so well at home.
I am learning that I cannot have my own way as I used to. I
blame my wife and children. Anger possesses me, anger such as
I have never felt before. I will not stand for it. I pack my
bag and leave. I stay with understanding friends.
I see where I have been wrong in some
respects. I do not feel angry any more. I return home and say
I am sorry for my wrong. I am quiet again. But I have not seen
yet that I should do some constructive acts of love without
expecting any return. I shall learn this after some more explosions.
I am blue again. I want to sell the place
and move away. I want to get where I can find some alcoholics
to help, and where I can have some fellowship. A man calls me
on the phone. Will I take a young fellow who has been drinking
for two weeks to live with me? Soon I have others who are alcoholics
and some who have other problems.
I begin to play God. I feel that I can
fix them all. I do not fix anyone, but I am getting part of
a tremendous education and I have made some new friends.
Nothing is right. Finances are in bad
shape. I must find a way to make some money. The family seems
to think of nothing but spending. People annoy me. I try to
read. I try to pray. Gloom surrounds me. Why has God left me?
I mope around the house. I will not go out and I will not enter
into anything. What is the matter? I cannot understand. I will
not be that way.
I'll get drunk! It is a cold-blooded idea.
It is premeditated. I fix up a little apartment over the garage
with books and drinking water. I am going to town to get some
liquor and food. I shall not drink until I get back to the apartment.
Then I shall lock myself in and read. And as I read, I shall
take little drinks at long intervals. I shall get myself "mellow"
and stay that way.
I get in the car and drive off. Halfway
down the driveway a thought strikes me. I'll be honest anyway.
I'll tell my wife what I am going to do. I back up to the door
and go into the house. I call my wife into a room where we can
talk privately. I tell her quietly what I intend to do. She
says nothing. She does not get excited. She maintains a perfect
calm.
When I am through speaking, the whole
idea has become absurd. Not a trace of fear is in me. I laugh
at the insanity of it. We talk of other things. Strength has
come from weakness.
I cannot see the cause of this temptation
now. But I am to learn later that it began with the desire for
my own material success becoming greater than the interest in
the welfare of my fellow man. I learn more of that foundation
stone of character, which is honesty. I learn that when we act
upon the highest conception of honesty which is given us, our
sense of honesty becomes more acute.
I learn that honesty is truth, and the
truth shall make us free!
Sensuality, drunkenness, and worldliness
satisfy a man for a time, but their power is a decreasing one.
God produces harmony in those who receive His Spirit and follow
Its dictates.
Today as I become more harmonized within,
I become more in tune with all of God's wonderful creation.
The singing of the birds, the sighing of the wind, the patter
of raindrops, the roll of thunder, the laughter of happy children,
add to the symphony with which I am in tune. The heaving ocean,
the driving rain, autumn leaves, the stars of heaven, the perfume
of flowers, music, a smile, and a host of other things tell
me of the glory of God.
There are periods of darkness, but the
stars are shining, no matter how black the night. There are
disturbances, but I have learned that if I seek patience and
open-mindedness, understanding will come. And with it, direction
by the Spirit of God. The dawn comes and with it more understanding,
the peace that passes understanding, and the joy of living that
is not disturbed by the wildness of circumstances or people
around me. Fears, resentments, pride, worldly desires, worry,
and self-pity no longer possess me. Ever-increasing are the
number of true friends, ever-growing is the capacity for love,
ever-widening is the horizon of understanding. And above all
else comes a greater thankfulness to, and a greater love for
Our Father in heaven. |