The
Unbeliever
Personal Stories From The First
Edition
THE UNBELIEVER
DULL . . . listless . . . semicomatose
. . . I lay on my bed in a famous hospital for alcoholics. Death
or worse had been my sentence.
What was the difference? What difference
did anything make? Why think of those things which were gone-why
worry about the results of my drunken escapades? What the hell
were the odds if my wife had discovered the mistress situation?
Two swell boys . . . sure . . . but what difference would a
corpse or an asylum imprisoned father make to them? . . . thoughts
stop whirling in my head . . . that's the worst of this sobering-up
process . . . the old think tank is geared in high-high . .
. what do I mean high-high . . . where did that come from .
. . oh yes, that first Cadillac I had, it had four speeds .
. . had a high-high gear . . . insane asylum . . . how that
bus could scamper . . . yes . . . even then liquor probably
poisoned me. What had the little doctor said this morning .
. . thoughts hesitate a moment . . . stop your mad turning .
. . what was I thinking about . . . oh yes, the doctor.
This morning I reminded Doc this was my
tenth visit. I had spent a couple of thousand dollars on these
trips and those I had financed for the plastered play girls
who also couldn't sober up. Jackie was a honey until she got
plastered and then she was a hellion. Wonder what gutter she's
in now. Where was I? Oh . . . I asked the doctor to tell me
the truth. He owed it to me for the amount of money I had spent.
He faltered. Said I'd been drunk that's all. God! Didn't I know
that?
But Doc, you're evading. Tell me honestly
what is the matter with me. I'll be all right did you say? But
Doc, you've said that before. You said once that if I stopped
for a year I would be over the habit and would never drink again.
I didn't drink for over a year, but I did start to drink again.
Tell me what is the matter with me. I'm
an alcoholic? Ha ha and ho ho! As if I didn't know that! But
aside from your fancy name for a plain drunk, tell me why I
drink. You say a true alcoholic is something different from
a plain drunk? What do you mean . . . let me have it cold .
. . brief and with no trimmings.
An alcoholic is a person who has an allergy
to alcohol? Is poisoned by it? One drink does something to the
chemical make-up of the body? That drink affects the nerves
and in a certain number of hours another drink is medically
demanded? And so the vicious cycle is started? An ever smaller
amount of time between drinks to stop those screaming, twitching,
invisible wires called nerves?
I know that history Doc . . . how the
spiral tightens . . . a drink . . . unconscious . . . awake
. . . drink . . . unconscious . . . poured into the hospital
. . . suffer the agonies of hell . . . the shakes . . . thoughts
running wild . . . brain unleashed . . . engine without a governor.
But hell Doc, I don't want to drink! I've got one of the stubbornest
will powers known in business. I stick at things. I get them
done. I've stuck on the wagon for months. And not been bothered
by it . . . and then suddenly, incomprehensibly, an empty glass
in my hand and another spiral started. How did the Doc explain
that one?
He couldn't. That was one of the mysteries
of true alcoholism. A famous medical foundation had spent a
fortune trying to segregate the reasons for the alcoholic as
compared to the plain hard, heavy drinker. Had tried to find
the cause. And all they had been able to determine as a fact
was that practically all of the alcohol in every drink taken
by the alcoholic went to the fluid in which the brain floated.
Why a man every started when he knew those things was one of
the things that could not be fathomed. Only the damn fool public
believed it a matter of weak will power. Fear . . . ostracism
. . . loss of family . . . loss of position . . . the gutter
. . . nothing stopped the alcoholic.
Doc! What do you mean-nothing! What! An
incurable disease? Doc, you' re kidding me! You're trying to
scare me into stopping! What's that you say? You wish you were?
What are those tears in your eyes Doc? What's that? Forty years
you've spent at this alcoholic business and you have yet to
see a true alcoholic cured? Your life defeated and wasted? Oh,
come, come Doc . . . what would some of us do without you? If
even to only sober up. But Doc . . . let's have it. What is
going to be my history from here on out? Some vital organ will
stop or the mad house with a wet brain? How soon? Within two
years? But, Doc, I've got to do something about it! I'll see
doctors . . . I'll go to sanitariums. Surely the medical profession
knows something about it. So little, you say? But why? Messy.
Yes, I'll admit there is nothing messier than an alcoholic drunk.
What's that Doc? You know a couple of
fellows that were steady customers here that haven't been drunk
for about ten months? You say they claim they are cured? And
they make an avocation of passing it on to others? What have
they got? You don't know . . . and you don't believe they are
cured . . . well why tell me about it? A fine fellow you say,
plenty of money, and you're sure it isn't a racket . . . just
wants to be helpful . . . call him up for me will you, Doc?
How Doc had hated to tell me. Thoughts
stop knocking at my door. Why can't I get drunk like other people,
get up next morning, toss my head a couple of times and go to
work? Why do I have to shake so I can't hold the razor? Why
does every little muscle inside me have to feel like a crawling
worm? Why do even my vocal cords quiver so words are gibberish
until I've had a big drink? Poison! Of course! But how could
anyone understand such a necessity for a drink that it has to
be loaded with pepper to keep it from bouncing? Can any mortal
understand such secret shame in having to have a drink as to
make a person keep the bottles hidden all over the house. The
morning drink . . . shame and necessity . . . weakness . . .
remorse. But what do the family know about it? What do doctors
know about it? Little Doc was right, they know nothing. They
just say "Be strong"-"Don't take that drink"-"Suffer
it through."
What the hell do they know about suffering?
Not sickness. Not a belly ache-oh yes, your guts get so sore
that you cannot place your hands on them . . . oh sure, every
time you go you twist and writhe in pain. What the hell does
any non-alcoholic know about suffering? Thoughts . . . stop
this mad merry-go-round. And worst of all this mental suffering-the
hating yourself-the feeling of absurd, irrational weakness-the
unworthiness. Out that window! Use the gun in the drawer! What
about poison? Go out in a garage and start the car. Yeah, that's
the way out . . . but then people'll say "He was plastered."
I can't leave that story behind. That's worse than cowardly.
Isn't there some one who understands?
Thoughts . . . please, oh please, stop . . . I'm going nuts
. . . or am I nuts now? Never . . . never again will I take
another drink, not even a glass of beer . . . even that starts
it. Never . . . never . . . never again . . . and yet I've said
that a dozen times and inexplicably I've found an empty glass
in my hand and the whole story repeated.
My Lord, the tragedy that sprang out of
her eyes when I came home with a breath on me . . . and fear.
The smiles wiped off the kids' faces. Terror stalking through
the house. Yes . . . that changed it from a home into a house.
Not drunk yet, but they knew what was coming. Mr. Hyde was moving
in.
And so I'm going to die. Or a wet brain.
What was it that fellow said who was here this afternoon? Damn
fool thought . . . get out of my mind. Now I know I'm going
nuts. And science knows nothing about it. And psychiatrists.
I've spent plenty on them. Thoughts, go away! No . . . I don't
want to think about what that fellow said this afternoon.
He's trying . . . idealistic as hell .
. . nice fellow, too. Oh, why do I have to suffer with this
revolving brain? Why can't I sleep? What was it he said? Oh
yes, came in and told about his terrific drunks, his trips up
here, this same thing I'm going through. Yes, he's an alcoholic
all right. And then he told me he knew he was cured. Told me
he was peaceful . . . (I'll never know peace again) . . . that
he didn't carry constant fear around with him. Happy because
he felt free. But it's screwy. He said so himself. But he did
get my confidence when he started to tell what he had gone through.
It was so exactly like my case. He knows what this torture is.
He raised my hopes so high; it looked as though he had something.
I don't know, I guess I was so sold that I expected him to spring
some kind of a pill and I asked him desperately what it was.
And he said "God."
And I laughed.
A ball bat across my face would have been
no greater shock. I was so high with hope and expectation. How
can a man be so heartless? He said that it sounded screwy but
it worked, at least it had with him . . . said he was not a
religionist . . . in fact didn't go to church much . . . my
ears came up at that . . . his unconventionality attracted me
. . . said that some approaches to religion were screwy . .
. talked about how the simplest truth in the world had been
often all balled up by complicating it . . . that attracted
me . . . get out of my mind . . . what a fine religious bird
I'd be . . . imagine the glee of the gang at me getting religion
. . . phooey . . . thoughts, please slow down . . . why don't
they give me something to go to sleep . . . lie down in green
pastures . . . the guy's nuts . . . forget him.
And so it's the mad house for me . . .
glad mother is dead, she won't have to suffer that . . . if
I'm going nuts maybe it'd be better to be crazy the way he is
. . . at least the kids wouldn't have the insane father whisper
to carry through life . . . life's cruel . . . the puny-minded,
curtain hiding gossips . . . "didn't you know his father
was committed for insanity?" What a sly label that would
be to hang on those boys . . . damn the gossiping, reputation-shredding,
busybodies who put their noses into other people's business.
He'd laid in this same dump . . . suffered
. . . gone through hell . . . made up his mind to get well .
. . studied alcoholism . . . Jung . . . Blank Medical Foundation
. . . asylums . . . Hopkins . . . many said incurable disease
. . . impossible . . . nearly all known cures had been through
religion . . . revolted him . . . made a study of religion .
. . more he studied the more it was bunk to him . . . not understandable
. . . self-hypnotism . . . and then the thought hit him that
people had it all twisted up. They were trying to pour everyone
into moulds, put a tag on them, tell them what they had to do
and how they had to do it, for the salvation of their own souls.
When as a matter of fact people were through worrying about
their souls, they wanted action right here and now. A lot of
tripe was usually built up around the simplest and most beautiful
ideas in the world.
And how did he put the idea . . . bunk
. . . bunk . . . why in hell am I still thinking about him .
. . in hell . . . that's good . . . I am in hell. He said: "I
came to the conclusion that there is SOMETHING. I know not what
It is, but It is bigger than I. If I will acknowledge It, if
I will humble myself, if I will give in and bow in submission
to that SOMETHING and then try to lead a life as fully in accord
with my idea of good as possible, I will be in tune." And
later the word good contracted in his mind to God.
But mister, I can't see any guy with long
white whiskers up there just waiting for me to make a plea .
. . and what did he answer . . . said I was trying to complicate
it . . . why did I insist on making It human . . . all I had
to do was believe in some power greater than myself and knuckle
down to It . . . and I said maybe, but tell me mister why are
you wasting your time up here? Don't hand me any bunk about
it being more blessed to give than to receive . . . asked him
what this thing cost and he laughed. He said it wasn't a waste
of time . . . in doping it out he had thought of something somebody
had said. A person never knew a lesson until he tried to pass
it on to someone else. And that he had found out every time
he tried to pass this on It became more vivid to him. So if
we wanted to get hard boiled about it, he owed me, I didn't
owe him. That's a new slant . . . the guy's crazy as a loon
. . . get away from him brain . . . picture me going around
telling other people how to run their lives . . . if I could
only go to sleep . . . that sedative doesn't seem to take hold.
He could visualize a great fellowship
of us . . . quietly passing this from alcoholic to alcoholic
. . . nothing organized . . . not ministers . . . not missionaries
. . . what a story . . . thought we'd have to do it to get well
. . . some kind of a miracle had happened in his life . . .
common sense guy at that . . . his plan does fire the imagination.
Told him it sounded like self hypnotism
to me and he said what of it . . . didn't care if it was yogi-sim,
self-hypnotism, or anything else . . . four of them were well.
But it's so damn hypocritical . . . I get beat every other way
and then I turn around and lay it in God's lap . . . damned
if I ever would turn to God . . . what a low-down, cowardly,
despicable trick that would be . . . don't believe in God anyway
. . . just a lot of hooey to keep the masses in subjugation
. . . world's worst inquisitions have been practiced in His
name . . . and he said . . . do I have to turn into an inquisitionist
. . . if I don't knuckle down, I die . . . why the low-down
missionary . . . what a bastardly screw to put on a person .
. . a witch burner, that's what he is . . . the hell with him
and all his damn theories . . . witch burner.
Sleep, please come to my door . . . that
last was the eight hundred and eighty-fifth sheep over the fence
. . . guess I'll put in some black ones . . . sheep . . . shepherds
. . . wise men . . . what was that story . . . hell there I
go back on that same line . . . told him I couldn't understand
and I couldn't believe anything I couldn't understand. He said
he supposed then that I didn't use electricity. No one actually
understood where it came from or what it was. Nuts to him. He's
got too many answers. What did he think the nub of the whole
thing was? Subjugate self to some power above . . . ask for
help . . . mean it . . . try to pass it on. Asked him what he
was going to name this? Said it would be fatal to give it any
kind of a tag . . . to have any sort of formality.
I'm going nuts . . . tried to get him
into an argument about miracles . . . about Immaculate Conception
. . . about stars leading three wise men . . . Jonah and the
whale. He wanted to know what difference those things made .
. . he didn't even bother his head about them . . . if he did,
he would get tight again. So I asked him what he thought about
the Bible. Said he read it, and used those things he understood.
He didn't take the Bible literally as an instruction book, for
there was no nonsense you could not make out of it that way.
Thought I had him when I asked about the
past sins I had committed. Guess I've done everything in the
book . . . I supposed I would have to adopt the attitude that
all was forgiven . . . here I am pure and clean as the driven
snow . . . or else I was to go through life flogging myself
mentally . . . bah. But he had the answer for that one too.
Said he couldn't call back the hellish things he had done, but
he figured life might be a ledger page. If he did a little good
here and there, maybe the score would be evened up some day.
On the other hand, if he continued as he had been going there
would be nothing but debit items on the sheet. Kind of common
sense.
This is ridiculous . . . have I lost all
power of logic . . . would I fall for all that religious line
. . . let's see if I can't get to thinking straight . . . that's
it . . . I'm trying to do too much thinking . . . just calm
myself . . . quietly . . . quiet now . . . relax every muscle
. . . start at the toes and move up . . . insane . . . wet brain
. . . those boys . . . what a mess my life is . . . mistress
. . . how I hate her . . . ah . . . I know what's the matter
. . . that fellow gave me an emotional upset . . . I'll list
every reason I couldn't accept his way of thinking. After laughing
at this religious stuff all these years I'd be a hypocrite.
That's one. Second, if there was a God, why all this suffering?
Wait a minute, he said that was one of the troubles, we tried
to give God some form. Make It just a Power that will help.
Third, it sounds like the Salvation Army. Told him that and
he said he was not going around singing on any street corners
but nevertheless the Salvation Army did a great work. Simply,
if he heard of a guy suffering the torments, he told him his
story and belief.
There I go thinking again . . . just started
to get calmed down . . . sleep . . . boys . . . insane . . .
death . . . mistress . . . life all messed up . . . business.
Now listen, take hold . . . what am I going to do? NEVER . .
. that's final and in caps. Never . . . that's net no discount.
Never . . . never . . . and my mind is made up. NEVER am I going
to be such a cowardly low down dog as to acknowledge God. The
two faced, gossiping Babbitts can go around with their sanctimonious
mouthings, their miserable worshipping, their Bible quotations,
their holier-than-thou attitudes, their nicey-nice, Sunday-worshipping,
Monday-robbing actions, but never will they find me acknowledging
God. Let me laugh . . . I'd like to shriek with insane glee
. . . my mind's made up . . . insane, there it is again.
Brrr, this floor is cold on my knees .
. . why are the tears running like a river down my cheeks .
. . God, have mercy on my soul! |