The
European Drinker
Personal Stories From The First
Edition
THE EUROPEAN DRINKER
I WAS born in Europe, in Alsace to be
exact, shortly after it had become German and practically grew
up with "good Rhine wine" of song and story. My parents
had some vague ideas of making a priest out of me and for some
years I attended the Franciscan sch ool at Basle, Switzerland,
just across the border, about six miles from my home. But, although
I was a good Catholic, the monastic life had little appeal for
me.
Very early I became apprenticed to harness-making
and acquired considerable knowledge of upholstering. My daily
consumption of wine was about a quart, but that was common where
I lived. Everybody drank wine. And it is true that there was
no great amount o f drunkenness. But I can remember, in my teens,
that there were a few characters who caused the village heads
to nod pityingly and sometimes in anger as they paused to say,
"That sot, Henri" and "Ce pauvre Jules,"
who drank too much. They were undoubtedly the alcoholics of
our village.
Military service was compulsory and I
did my stretch with the class of my age, goose-stepping in German
barracks and taking part in the Boxer Rebellion in China, my
first time at any great distance from home. In foreign parts
many a soldier who has been a bstemious at home learns to use
new and potent drinks. So I indulged with my comrades in everything
the Far East had to offer. I cannot say, however, that I acquired
any craving for hard liquor as a result. When I got back to
Germany I settled down to fin ish my apprenticeship, drinking
the wine of the country as usual.
Many friends of my family had emigrated
to America, so at 24 1 decided that the United States offered
me the opportunity I was never likely to find in my native land.
I came directly to a growing industrial city in the middle west,
where I have lived prac tically ever since. I was warmly welcomed
by friends of my youth who had preceded me. For weeks after
my arrival I was feted and entertained in the already large
colony of Alsatians in the city, among the Germans in their
saloons and clubs. I early decide d that the wine of America
was very inferior stuff and took up beer instead.
I soon found work at my trade in harness-making.
It was still an age of horses. But I discovered that harness
and saddle-making in America was different from anything I had
known. Every man in the shop was a specialist and instead of
having a variety of j obs to do every day, I was compelled to
sit all day long at a bench doing the same thing endlessly.
I found it very monotonous and, wanting a change, I found it
when I got work as an upholsterer in a large furniture store.
Fond of singing, I joined a German singing
society which had good club headquarters. There I sat in the
evenings, enjoying with my friends our memories of the "old
country," singing the old songs we all knew, playing simple
card games for drinks and consu ming great quantities of beer.
At that time I could go into any saloon,
have one or two beers, walk out and forget about it. I had no
desire whatever to sit down at a table and stay a whole morning
or afternoon drinking. Certainly at that time I was one of those
who "can take it or lea ve it alone." There had never
been any drunkards in my family. I came of good stock, of men
and women who drank wine all their lives as a beverage, and
while they occasionally got drunk at special celebrations, they
were up and about their business the ne xt day.
Prohibition came. Having regard for the
law of the land, I resigned myself to the will of the national
legislators and quit drinking altogether, not because I had
found it harmful, but because I couldn't get what I was accustomed
to drink. You can all rem ember that in the first few months
after the change, a great many men, who had formerly been used
to a few beers every day or an occasional drink of whiskey,
simply quit all alcoholic drinks. For the great majority of
us, however, that condition didn't la st. We saw very early
that prohibition wasn't going to work. It wasn't very long before
home-brewing was an institution and men began to search ferverishly
for old recipe books on wine-making.
But I hardly tasted anything for two years
and started in business for myself, founding a mattress factory
which is today an important industrial enterprise in our city.
I was doing very well with that and general upholstering work,
and there was every in dication that I would be financially
independent by the time I reached middle age. By this time I
was married and was paying for a home. Like most immigrants
I Wanted to be somebody and have something and I was very happy
and contented as I felt success c rown my efforts. I missed
the old social times, of course, but had no definite craving
even for beer.
Successful home-brewers among my friends
began to invite me to their homes. I decided that if these fellows
could make it I would try it myself and so I did. It wasn't
very long until I had developed a pretty good brew with uniformity
and plenty of author ity. I knew the stuff I was making was
a lot stronger than I had been used to, but never suspected
that steady drinking of it might develop a taste for something
even stronger.
It wasn't long before the bootlegger was
an established institution in this, as in other towns. I was
doing well in business and in going around town I was frequently
invited to have a drink in a speakeasy. I condoned my domestic
brewing and the bootlegge rs and their business. More and more
I formed the habit of doing some of my business in the speakeasy
and after a time did not need that as an excuse. The "speaks"
usually sold whiskey. Beer was too bulky and it couldn't be
kept in a jug under the counter ready to be dumped when John
Law would come around. I was now forming an entirely new drinking
technique. Before long I had a definite taste for hard liquor,
knew nausea and headaches I had never known before, but as in
the old days, I suffered them out. Gradually, however, I'd suffer
so much that I simply had to have the morning-after drink.
I became what is called a periodical drinker.
I was eased out of the business I had rounded and was reduced
to doing general upholstery in a small shop at the back of my
house. My wife upbraided me often and plenty when she saw that
my "periodicals" were gradually losing me what business
I could get. I began to bring bottles in. I had them hidden
away in the house and all over my shop in careful concealment.
I had all the usual experiences of the alcoholic for I was certainly
one by this time. Sometimes, after sobering up after a bout
of several weeks, I would righteously resolve to quit. With
a great deal of determination, I would throw out full pints-pour
them out and smash .the bottles-firmly resolved never to take
another drink of the stuff. I was goi ng to straighten up.
In four or five days I would be hunting
all over the place, at home and in my workshop for the bottles
I had destroyed, cursing myself for being a damned fool. My
"periodicals" became more frequent until I reached
the point where I wanted to devote all my time to drinking,
working as little as possible and then only when the necessity
of my family demanded it. As soon as I had satisfied that, what
I earned as an upholsterer went for liquor. I would promise
to have jobs done and never do them. My customers lost confidence
in me to the point where I retained what business I had only
because I was a well-trained and reputedly fine craftsman. "Best
in the business, when he's sober," my customers would say
and I still had a following who would give me work tho ugh they
deplored my habits because they knew the job would be well done
when they eventually got it.
I had always been a good Catholic, possibly
not so devoted as I should have been, but fairly regular in
my attendance at services. I had never doubted the existence
of the Supreme Being but now I began to absent myself from my
church where I had formerly been a member of the choir. Unfortunately,
I had no desire to consult my priest about my drinking. In fact
I was scared to talk to him about it, for I feared the kind
of talk he would give me. Unlike many other Catholics who frequently
take pledges for de finite periods-a year, two years or for
good, I never had any desire to "take a pledge" before
the priest. And yet, realizing at last that liquor really had
me, I wanted to quit. My wife wrote away for advertised cures
for the liquor habit and gave them t o me in coffee. I even
got them myself and tried them. None of the various cures of
this kind were any good.
My experiences differ very little from
the experiences of other alcoholics but if ever a man was firmly
in the grip of a power that could lead only to ruin and disgrace,
I was that man.
I had the usual array of friends who tried
to stop me in my drinking career. I can hear them yet. Kindly
for the most part, yet blind and almost wholly without understanding,
they had the approach that every alcoholic knows:
"Can't you be a man?" "You
can cut it out."
"You've got a good wife; you could
have the best business in town. What's the matter with you anyway?"
Every alcoholic has heard those familiar
phrases from well-meaning friends. And they were my friends,
too. In their way they did what they could, helped me at different
times to get on my feet after a particularly bad time, aided
me in unraveling my tangl ed business affairs, suggested this
and suggested that. They all wanted to help me. But none of
them knew how. Not one of them had the answer I wanted.
My wife got talking to a local merchant
one day. He was known as a deeply religious man. He was undoubtedly
a fundamentalist with strong leanings toward evangelistic preaching.
He knew me and something of my reputation. My wife asked him
to help her if he could. So he came to see me, bringing a friend
along. He found me drunk and in bed. This man had never been
an alcoholic and his approach to me was the familiar one of
the emotional seeker after souls. Well, there I was, lying in
an alcoholic stupor with occasional flashes of emotional self-pity,
in pretty much the same condition as the drunk who plunges to
the sawdust at the appeal of a religious orator.
Good, honest and sincere man, he prayed
at my bedside and I promised to go to church with him to hear
an evangelist. He didn't wait for me to come to his office,
he came after me. I heard the evangelist but was not impressed.
The service was entirely fore ign to what I had been accustomed
to in my religious observance since childhood. I have no doubt
of the preacher's sincerity and seek not at all to belittle
his work, but I was unaffected. So I got no answer.
There are alcoholics who have been without
any consciousness of God all their lives; there are some who
are actual haters of the idea of a Supreme Being; there are
others, like myself, who have never given up a belief in the
Almighty, but who have always felt that God is far off. And
that's the way I felt. I had a closer sense of God during the
mass at church, a feeling of His presence, but in everyday life
He seemed to be at a distance from me and more as a righteous
judge, than an all-wise, pitying Fath er to the human race.
Then occurred the event that saved me.
An alcoholic came to see me who is a doctor. He didn't talk
like a preacher at all. In fact his language was perfectly suited
to my understanding. He had no desire to know anything except
whether I was definite about my desire to quit drinking. I told
him with all the sincerity at my command that I did. Even then
he went into no great detail about how he and a crowd of alcoholics,
with whom he associated, had mastered their difficulty. Instead
he told me that some of them wanted to talk to me and would
be over to see me.
This doctor had imparted his knowledge
to just a few other men at that time-not more than four or five-they
now number more than seventy persons. And, because as I have
discovered since, it is part of the "treatment" that
these men be sent to see and talk with alcoholics who want to
quit, he kept them busy. He had already imbued them with his
own spirit until they were ready and willing at all times to
go where sent, and as a doctor he well knew that this mission
and duty would strengthen them as it later helped me. The visits
from these men impressed me at once. Where preaching and prayers
had touched me very little, I was immediately impressed with
desire for further knowledge of these men.
"There must be something to it,"
I said to myself. "Why would these busy men take the time
to come to see me? They understand my problem. Like me, they've
tried this remedy and that remedy but never found one that worked.
But whatever it is they are using now, it seems to keep them
sober."
Certainly I could see they were sober.
The third man who came to see me had been one of the greatest
business-getters his company had ever employed. From the top
of the heap in a few years he had skidded to becoming a shuffling
customer, still entering th e better barrooms but welcomed by
neither mine host nor his patrons. His own business was practically
gone, he told me, when he discovered the answer.
"You've been trying man's ways and
they always fail," he told me. "You can't win unless
you try God's way."
I had never heard of the remedy expressed
in just this language. In a few sentences he made God seem personal
to me, explained Him as a being who was interested in me, the
alcoholic, and that all I needed to do was to be willing to
follow His way for me; that as long as I followed it I would
be able to overcome my desire for liquor.
Well, there I was, willing to try it,
but I didn't know how, except in a vague way. I knew somehow
that it meant more than just going to church and living a moral
life. If that was all, then I was a little doubtful that it
was the answer I was looking for .
He went on talking and told me that he
had found the plan has a basis of love and the practice of Christ's
injunction, "Love thy neighbor as thyself." Taking
that as a foundation, he reasoned that if a man followed that
rule he could not be selfish. I cou ld see that. And he further
said that God could not accept me as a sincere follower of His
Divine Law unless I was ready to be thoroughly honest about
it.
That was perfectly logical. My church
taught that. I had always known that in theory. We talked, too,
about personal morals. Every man has his problem of this kind
but we didn't discuss it very much. My visitor well knew, that
as I tried to follow God I w ould get to studying these things
out for myself.
We talked things over a long time. I saw
readily that I couldn't afford to quibble. I already believed
in God, had always done so. Was ready to give my will to Him.
That's what it came to.
That day I gave my will to God and asked
to be directed. But I have never thought of that as something
to do and then forget about. I very early came to see that there
had to be a continual renewal of that simple deal with God;
that I had perpetually to k eep the bargain. So f began to pray;
to place my problems in God's hands.
For a long time I kept on trying, in a
pretty dumb way at first, I know, but very earnestly. I didn't
want to be a fake. And I began putting in practice what I was
learning every day. It wasn't very long until my doctor friend
sent me to tell another alco holic what my experience had been.
This duty together with my weekly meetings with my fellow alcoholics
and my daily renewal of the contract I originally made with
God have kept me sober when nothing else ever did.
I have been sober for many years now.
The first few months were hard. Many things happened; business
trials, little worries, and feelings of general despondency
came near driving me to the bottle, but I made progress. As
I go along I seem to get strength daily to be able to resist
more easily. And when I get upset, cross-grained and out of
tune with my fellow man I know that I am out of tune with God.
Searching where I have been at fault, it is not hard to discover
and get right again, for I have proven t o myself and to many
others who know me that God can keep a man sober if he will
let Him.
Being a Catholic, it is natural that I
should attend my own church which I do regularly. I partake
of its sacraments which have a new and deeper meaning to me
now. I realize what it is to be in the presence of God right
in my own home and I realize it dee ply when I am at church.
For when a man is truly trying to do God's will, instead of
his own, he is very conscious of being in the presence of God
always, wherever he may be. |