To
Employers
Chapter 10
To Employers
Among many employers nowadays, we think
of one member who has spent much of his life in the world of
big business. He has hired and fired hundreds of men. He knows
the alcoholic as the employer sees him. His present views ought
to prove exceptionally useful to business men everywhere. But
let him tell you:
I was at one time assistant manager of
a corporation department employing sixty-six hundred men. One
day my secretary came in saying Mr. B -- insisted on speaking
with me. I told her to say that I was not interested. I had
warned him several times that he had but one more chance. Not
long afterward he had called me from Hartford on two successive
days, so drunk he could hardly speak. I told him he was through
-- finally and forever.
My secretary returned to say that it was
Mr. B-- on the phone; it was Mr. B--'s brother, and he wished
to give me a message. I still expected a plea for clemency,
but these words came through the receiver: "I just wanted
to tell you Paul jumped from a hotel window in Hartford last
Saturday. He left us a note saying you were the best boss he
ever had, and that you were not to blame in any way."
Another time, as I opened a letter which
lay on my desk, a newspaper clipping fell out. It was the obituary
of one of the best salesmen I ever had. After two weeks of drinking,
he had placed his toe on the trigger of a loaded shotgun --
the barrel was in his mouth. I had discharged him for drinking
six weeks before.
Still another experience: A woman's voice
came faintly over long distance from Virginia. She wanted to
know if her husband's company insurance was still in force.
Four days before he had hanged himself in his woodshed. I had
been obliged to discharge him for drinking, though he was brilliant,
alert, and one of the best organizers I have ever known.
Here were three exceptional men lost to
this world because I did not understand alcoholism as I do now.
What irony -- I became an alcoholic myself! And but for the
intervention of an understanding person, I might have followed
in their footsteps. My downfall cost the business community
unknown thousands of dollars, for it takes real money to train
a man for an executive position. This kind of waste goes on
unabated. We think the business fabric is shot through with
a situation which might be helped by better understanding all
around.
Nearly every modern employer feels a moral
responsibility for the well-being of his help, and he tries
to meet these responsibilities. That he has not always done
so for the alcoholic is easily understood. To him the alcoholic
has often seemed a fool of the first magnitude. Because of the
employee's special ability, or of his own strong personal attachment
to him, the employer has sometimes kept such a man at work long
beyond a reasonable period. Some employers have tried every
known remedy. In only a few instances has there been a lack
of patience and tolerance. And we, who have imposed on the best
of employers, can scarcely blame them if they have been short
with us.
Here, for instance, is a typical example:
An officer of one of the largest banking institutions in America
knows I no longer drink. One day he told me about an executive
of the same bank who, from his description, was undoubtedly
alcoholic. This seemed to me like an opportunity to be helpful,
so I spent two hours talking about alcoholism, the malady, and
described the symptoms and results as well as I could. His comment
was, "Very interesting. But I'm sure this man is done drinking.
He has just returned from a three months' leave of absence,
has taken a cure, looks fine, and to clinch the matter, the
board of directors told him this was his last chance."
The only answer I could make was that
if the man followed the usual pattern, he would go on a bigger
bust than ever. I felt this was inevitable and wondered if the
bank was doing the man an injustice. Why not bring him into
contact with some of our alcoholic crowd? He might have a chance.
I pointed out that I had had nothing to drink whatever for three
years, and this in the face of difficulties that would have
made nine out of ten men drink their heads off. Why not at least
afford him an opportunity to hear my story? "Oh no,"
said my friend, "this chap is either through with liquor,
or he is minus a job. If he has your will power and guts, he
will make the grade."
I wanted to throw up my hands in discouragement,
for I saw that I had failed to help my banker friend understand.
He simply could not believe that his brother-executive suffered
from a serious illness. There was nothing to do but wait.
Presently the man did slip and was fired.
Following his discharge, we contacted him. Without much ado,
he accepted the principles and procedure that had helped us.
To me, this incident illustrates lack of understanding as to
what really ails the alcoholic, and lack of knowledge as to
what part employers might profitably take in salvaging their
sick employees.
If you desire to help it might be well
to disregard your own drinking, or lack of it. Whether you are
a hard drinker, a moderate drinker or a teetotaler, you may
have some pretty strong opinions, perhaps prejudices. Those
who drink moderately may be more annoyed with an alcoholic than
a total abstainer would be. Drinking occasionally, and understanding
your own reactions, it is possible for you to become quite sure
of many things which, so far as the alcoholic is concerned,
are not always so. As a moderate drinker, you can take your
liquor or leave it alone. Whenever you want to, you control
your drinking. Of an evening, you can go on a mild bender, get
up in the morning, shake your head and go to business. To you,
liquor is no real problem. You cannot see why it should be to
anyone else, save the spineless and stupid.
When dealing with an alcoholic, there
may be a natural annoyance that a man could be so weak, stupid
and irresponsible. Even when you understand the malady better,
you may feel this feeling rising.
A look at the alcoholic in your organization
is many times illuminating. Is he not usually brilliant, fast-thinking,
imaginative and likable? When sober, does he not work hard and
have a knack of getting things done? If he had these qualities
and did not drink would he be worth retaining? Should he have
the same consideration as other ailing employees? Is he worth
salvaging? If your decision is yes, whether the reason be humanitarian
or business or both, then the following suggestions may be helpful.
Can you discard the feeling that you are
dealing only with habit, with stubbornness, or a weak will?
If this presents difficulty, re-reading chapters two and three,
where alcoholic sickness is discussed at length might be worth
while. You, as a business man, want to know the necessities
before considering the result. If you concede that your employee
is ill, can he be forgiven for what he has done in the past?
Can his past absurdities be forgotten? Can it be appreciated
that he has been a victim of crooked thinking, directly caused
by the action of alcohol on his brain?
I well remember the shock I received when
a prominent doctor in Chicago told me of cases where pressure
of the spinal fluid actually ruptured the brain. No wonder an
alcoholic is strangely irrational. Who wouldn't be, with such
a fevered brain? Normal drinkers are not so affected, nor can
they understand the aberrations of the alcoholic.
Your man has probably been trying to conceal
a number of scrapes, perhaps pretty messy ones. They may be
disgusting. You may be at a loss to understand how such a seemingly
above- board chap could be so involved. But these scrapes can
generally be charged, no matter how bad, to the abnormal action
of alcohol on his mind. When drinking, or getting over a bout,
an alcoholic, sometimes the model of honesty when normal, will
do incredible things. Afterward, his revulsion will be terrible.
Nearly always, these antics indicate nothing more than temporary
conditions.
This is not to say that all alcoholics
are honest and upright when not drinking. Of course that isn't
so, and such people may often impose on you. Seeing your attempt
to understand and help, some men will try to take advantage
of your kindness. If you are sure your man does not want to
stop, he may as well be discharged, the sooner the better. You
are not doing him a favor by keeping him on. Firing such an
individual may prove a blessing to him. It may be just the jolt
he needs. I know, in my own particular case, that nothing my
company could have done would have stopped me for, so long as
I was able to hold my position, I could not possible realize
how serious my situation was. Had they fired me first, and had
they then taken steps to see that I was presented with the solution
contained in this book, I might have returned to them six months
later, a well man.
But there are many men who want to stop,
and with them you can go far. Your understanding treatment of
their cases will pay dividends.
Perhaps you have such a man in mind. He
wants to quit drinking and you want to help him, even if it
be only a matter of good business. You now know more about alcoholism.
You can see that he is mentally and physically sick. You are
willing to overlook his past performances. Suppose an approach
is made something like this:
State that you know about his drinking,
and that it must stop. You might say you appreciate his abilities,
would like to keep him, but cannot if he continues to drink.
A firm attitude at this point has helped many of us.
Next he can be assured that you do not
intend to lecture, moralize, or condemn; that if this was done
formerly, it was because of misunderstanding. If possible express
a lack of hard feeling toward him. At this point, it might be
well to explain alcoholism, the illness. Say that you believe
he is a gravely-ill person, with this qualification -- being
perhaps fatally ill, does he want to get well? You ask, because
many alcoholics, being warped and drugged, do not want to quit.
But does he? Will he take every necessary step, submit to anything
to get well, to stop drinking forever?
If he says yes, does he really mean it,
or down inside does he think he is fooling you, and that after
rest and treatment he will be able to get away with a few drinks
now and then? We believe a man should be thoroughly probed on
these points. Be satisfied he is not deceiving himself or you.
Whether you mention this book is a matter
for your discretion. If he temporizes and still thinks he can
ever drink again, even beer, he might as well be discharged
after the next bender which, if an alcoholic, he is almost certain
to have. He should understand that emphatically. Either you
are dealing with a man who can and will get well or you are
not. If not, why waste time with him? This may seem severe,
but it is usually the best course.
After satisfying yourself that your man
wants to recover and that he will go to any extreme to do so,
you may suggest a definite course of action. For most alcoholics
who are drinking, or who are just getting over a spree, a certain
amount of physical treatment is desirable, even imperative.
The matter of physical treatment should, of course, be referred
to your own doctor. Whatever the method, its object is to thoroughly
clear mind and body of the effects of alcohol. In competent
hands, this seldom takes long nor is it very expensive. Your
man will fare better if placed in such physical condition that
he can think straight and no longer craves liquor. If you propose
such a procedure to him, it may be necessary to advance the
cost of the treatment, but we believe it should be made plain
that any expense will later be deducted from his pay. It is
better for him to feel fully responsible.
If your man accepts your offer, it should
be pointed out that physical treatment is but a small part of
the picture. Though you are providing him with the best possible
medical attention, he should understand that he must undergo
a change of heart. To get over drinking will require a transformation
of thought and attitude. We all had to place recovery above
everything, for without recovery we would have lost both home
and business.
Can you have every confidence in his ability
to recover? While on the subject of confidence, can you adopt
the attitude that so far as you are concerned this will be a
strictly personal matter, that his alcoholic derelictions, the
treatment about to be undertaken, will never be discussed without
his consent? It might be well to have a long chat with him on
his return.
To return to the subject matter of this
book: It contains full suggestions by which the employee may
solve his problem. To you, some of the ideas which it contains
are novel. Perhaps you are not quite in sympathy with the approach
we suggest. By no means do we offer it as the last word on this
subject, but so far as we are concerned, it has worked with
us. After all, are you not looking for results rather than methods?
Whether your employee likes it or not, he will learn the grim
truth about alcoholism. That won't hurt him a bit, even though
he does not go for this remedy.
We suggest you draw the book to the attention
of the doctor who is to attend your patient during treatment.
If the book is read the moment the patient is able, while acutely
depressed, realization of his condition may come to him.
We hope the doctor will tell the patient
the truth about his condition, whatever that happens to be.
When the man is presented with this volume it is best that no
one tell him he must abide by its suggestions. The man must
decide for himself.
You are betting, or course, that your
changed attitude plus the contents of this book will turn the
trick. In some case it will, and in others it may not. But we
think that if you persevere, the percentage of successes will
gratify you. As our work spreads and our numbers increase, we
hope your employees may be put in personal contact with some
of us. Meanwhile, we are sure a great deal can be accomplished
by the use of the book alone.
On your employee's return, talk with him.
Ask him if he thinks he has the answer. If he feels free to
discuss his problems with you, if he knows you under- stand
and will not be upset by anything he wishes to say, he will
probably be off to a fast start.
In this connection, can you remain undisturbed
if the man proceeds to tell you shocking things? He may, for
example, reveal that he has padded his expense account or that
he has planned to take your best customers away from you. In
fact, he may say almost anything if he has accepted our solution
which, as you know, demands rigorous honesty. Can you charge
this off as you would a bad account and start fresh with him?
If he owes you money you may wish to make terms.
If he speaks of his home situation, you
can undoubtedly make helpful suggestions. Can he talk frankly
with you so long as he does not bear business tales or criticize
his associate? With this kind of employee such an attitude will
command undying loyalty.
The greatest enemies of us alcoholics
are resentment, jealousy, envy, frustration, and fear. Wherever
men are gathered together in business there will be rivalries
and, arising out of these, a certain amount of office politics.
Sometimes we alcoholics have an idea that people are trying
to pull us down. Often this is not so at all. But sometimes
our drinking will be used politically.
One instance comes to mind in which a
malicious individual was always making friendly little jokes
about an alcoholic's drinking exploits. In this way he was slyly
carrying tales. In another case, an alcoholic was sent to a
hospital for treatment. Only a few knew of it at first but,
within a short time, it was billboarded throughout the entire
company. Naturally this sort of thing decreased the man's chance
of recovery. The employer can many times protect the victim
from this kind of talk. The employer cannot play favorites,
but he can always defend a man from needless provocation and
unfair criticism.
As a class, alcoholics are energetic people.
They work hard and they play hard. Your man should be on his
mettle to make good. Being somewhat weakened, and faced with
physical and mental readjustment to a life which knows no alcohol,
he may overdo. You may have to curb his desire to work sixteen
hours a day. You may need to encourage him to play once in a
while. He may wish to do a lot for other alcoholics and something
of the sort may come up during business hours. A reasonable
amount of latitude will be helpful. This work is necessary to
maintain his sobriety.
After your man has gone along without
drinking for a few months, you may be able to make use of his
services with other employees who are giving you the alcoholic
run-around -- provided, of course, they are willing to have
a third party in the picture. An alcoholic who has recovered,
but holds a relatively unimportant job, can talk to a man with
a better position. Being on a radically different basis of life,
he will never take advantage of the situation.
Your man may be trusted. Long experience
with alcoholic excuses naturally arouses suspicion. When his
wife next calls saying he is sick, you may jump to the conclusion
he is drunk. If he is, and is still trying to recover, he will
tell you about it even if it means the loss of his job. For
he knows he must be honest if he would live at all. He will
appreciated knowing you are not bothering your head about him,
that you are not suspicious nor are you trying to run his life
so he will be shielded from temptation to drink. If he is conscientiously
following the program of recovery he can go anywhere your business
may call him.
In case he does stumble, even once, you
will have to decide whether to let him go. If you are sure he
doesn't mean business, there is not doubt you should discharge
him. If, on the contrary, you are sure he is doing his utmost,
you may wish to give him another chance. But you should feel
under no obligation to keep him on, for your obligation has
been well discharged already.
There is another thing you might wish
to do. If your organization is a large one, your junior executives
might be provided with this book. You might let them know you
have no quarrel with alcoholics of your organization. These
juniors are often in a difficult position. Men under them are
frequently their friends. So, for one reason or another, they
cover these men, hoping matters will take a turn for the better.
They often jeopardize their own positions by trying to help
serious drinkers who should have been fired long ago, or else
given an opportunity to get well.
After reading this book, a junior executive
can go to such a man and say approximately this, "Look
here, Ed. Do you want to stop drinking or not? You put me on
the spot every time you get drunk. It isn't fair to me or the
firm. I have been learning something about alcoholism. If you
are an alcoholic, you are a mighty sick man. You act like one.
The firm wants to help you get over it, and if you are interested,
there is a way out. If you take it, your past will be forgotten
and the fact that you went away for treatment will not be mentioned.
But if you cannot or will not stop drinking, I think you ought
to resign."
Your junior executive may not agree with
the contents of our book. He need not, and often should not
show it to his alcoholic prospect. But at least he will understand
the problem and will no longer be misled by ordinary promises.
He will be able to take a position with such a man which is
eminently fair and square. He will have no further reason for
covering up an alcoholic employee.
It boils right down to this: No man should
be fired just because he is alcoholic. If he wants to stop,
he should be afforded a real chance. If he cannot or does not
want to stop, he should be discharged. The exceptions are few.
We think this method of approach will
accomplish several things. It will permit the rehabilitation
of good men. At the same time you will feel no reluctance to
rid yourself of those who cannot or will not stop. Alcoholism
may be causing your organization considerable damage in its
waste of time, men and reputation. We hope our suggestions will
help you plug up this sometimes serious leak. We think we are
sensible when we urge that you stop this waste and give your
worthwhile man a chance.
The other day an approach was made to
the vice president of a large industrial concern. He remarked:
"I'm glad you fellows got over your drinking. But the policy
of this company is not to interfere with the habits of our employees.
If a man drinks so much that his job suffers, we fire him. I
don't see how you can be of any help to us for, as you see,
we don't have any alcoholic problem." This same company
spends millions for research every year. Their cost of production
is figured to a fine decimal point. They have recreational facilities.
There is company insurance. There is a real interest, both humanitarian
and business, in the well-being of employees. But alcoholism
-- well, they just don't believe they have it.
Perhaps this is a typical attitude. We,
who have collectively seen a great deal of business life, at
least from the alcoholic angle, had to smile at this gentleman's
sincere opinion. He might be shocked if he knew how much alcoholism
is costing his organization a year. That company may harbor
many actual or potential alcoholics. We believe that managers
of large enterprises often have little idea how prevalent this
problem is. Even if you feel your organization has no alcoholic
problem, it may pay to take another look down the line. You
may make some interesting discoveries.
Of course, this chapter refers to alcoholics,
sick people, deranged men. What our friend, the vice president,
had in mind was the habitual or whoopee drinker. As to them,
his policy is undoubtedly sound, but he did not distinguish
between such people and the alcoholic.
It is not to be expected that an alcoholic
employee will receive a disproportionate amount of time and
attention. He should not be made a favorite. The right kind
of man, the kind who recovers, will not want this sort of thing.
He will not impose. Far from it. He will work like the devil
and thank you to his dying day.
Today I own a little company. There are
two alcoholic employees, who produce as much as five normal
salesmen. But why not? They have a new attitude, and they have
been saved from a living death. I have enjoyed every moment
spent in getting them straightened out. * |