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CHARMING IS THE WORD FOR ALCOHOLICS |
From Liberty Magazine©
BY FULTON OUSLER
Down at the very bottom of the social scale
of AA society are the pariahs, the untouchables, and the outcasts, all known by
one excoriating epithet-relatives.
I am a relative. I know my place. I am not complaining. But I hope no one
minds if I venture the plaintive confession that there are times, oh, many,
many, times when I wish I had been an alcoholic. By that I mean that I wish I
were an AA. The reason is that I consider the AA people the most charming in the
world.
Such is my considered opinion. As a
journalist it has been my fortune to meet many of the people who are considered
charming. I number among my friends stars, and lesser lights of stage and
cinema; writers are my daily diet. I know the ladies and gentleman of both
political parties; I have been entertained in the White House. I have broken
bread with kings and ministers and ambassadors and I say after that catalog,
which could be extended, that I would prefer an evening with my AA friends to
any person or group of persons I have indicated.
I ask myself why I consider so charming these alcoholic caterpillars who have
found their butterfly wings in Alcoholics Anonymous. There are more reasons than
one, but I can name a few.
They are imaginative, and that helps to make them alcoholics. Some of them drank
to flog their ambition on to greater efforts. Others guzzled only to black out
unendurable demons that rose in their imagination. But when they have found
their restoration, their imagination is responsive to new incantations, and
their talk abounds with color and light, and that makes them charming companions
too.
The AA people are what they are, and they were what they were, because they are
sensitive, imaginative, possessed of a sense of humor and awareness of universal
truth. They are sensitive, which means they are hurt easily, and that helped
them to become alcoholics. But when they have found their restoration, they are
still as sensitive as ever; responsive to beauty and to truth and eager about
the intangible glories of this life. That makes them charming companions.
They are possessed with a sense of humor. Even in their cups they have been
known to say damnable funny things. Often it was being forced to take seriously
the little and mean things of life that make them seek escape in a bottle. But
when they have found restoration, their sense of humor finds a blessed freedom,
and they are able to reach a godlike state where they can laugh at themselves,
the very height of self conquest. Go to the meetings and listen to the laughter.
At what are they laughing? At ghoulish memories over which weaker souls would
cringe in useless remorse. And that makes them wonderful people to be with by
candlelight.
And they are possessed of a sense of universal truth. That is often a new thing
in their hearts. The fact that this at-one-meant with God's universe had never
been awakened in them is sometimes the reason why they drank. The fact that it
was at last awakened is almost always the reason why they were restored to the
good and simple ways of life. Stand with them when the meeting is over, and
listen while they say the "Our Father." They have found a power greater than
themselves which they diligently serve. And that gives them a charm that never
was elsewhere on land or sea. It makes you know that God, Himself, is really
charming, because the AA people reflect His mercy and His forgiveness.
Liberty Magazine© - 1940
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