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Lets Ask Bill |
Q - Could you describe your spiritual
experience for us and your understanding of what happened?
A - In December 1934, I appeared at Towns Hospital, New York. My old
friend, Dr. William Silkworth shook his head. Soon free of my sedation and
alcohol I felt horribly depressed. My friend Ebby turned up and although glad to
see him, I shrank a little as I feared evangelism, but nothing of the sort
happened. After some small talk, I again asked him for his neat little formula
for recovery. Quietly and sanely and without the slightest pressure he told me
and then he left.
Lying there in conflict, I dropped into the blackest depression I had ever
known. Momentarily my prideful depression was crushed. I cried out, "Now I am
ready to do anything - anything to receive what my friend Ebby has." Though I
certainly didn't expect anything, I did make this frantic appeal, "If there be a
God, will He show Himself!" The result was instant, electric beyond description.
The place seemed to light up, blinding white. I knew only ecstasy and seemed on
a mountain. A great wind blew, enveloping and penetrating me. To me, it was not
of air but of Spirit. Blazing, there came the tremendous thought, "you are a
free man." Then the ecstasy subsided. Still on the bed, I now found myself in a
new world of consciousness which was suffused by a Presence. One with the
Universe, a great peace came over me. I thought, "So this is the God of the
preachers, this is the great Reality." But soon my so-called reason returned, my
modern education took over and I thought I must be crazy and I became terribly
frightened.
Dr. Silkworth, a medical saint if ever there was one, came in to hear my
trembling account of this phenomenon. After questioning me carefully, he assured
me that I was not mad and that perhaps I had undergone a psychic experience
which might solve my problem. Skeptical man of science though he then was, this
was most kind and astute. If he had of said, "hallucination," I might now be
dead. To him I shall ever be eternally grateful.
Good fortune pursued me. Ebby brought me a book entitled "Varieties of Religious
Experience" and I devoured it. Written by William James, the psychologist, it
suggests that the conversion experience can have objective reality. Conversion
does alter motivation and it does semi-automatically enable a person to be and
to do the formerly impossible. Significant it was, that marked conversion
experience came mostly to individuals who knew complete defeat in a controlling
area of life. The book certainly showed variety but whether these experiences
were bright or dim, cataclysmic or gradual, theological or intellectual in
bearing, such conversions did have a common denominator - they did change
utterly defeated people. So declared William James, the father of modern
psychology. The shoe fitted and I have tried to wear it ever since.
For drunks, the obvious answer was deflation at depth, and more of it. That
seemed plain as a pikestaff. I had been trained as an engineer, so the news of
this authoritative psychologist meant everything to me. This eminent scientist
of the mind had confirmed everything that Dr. Jung had said, and had extensively
documented all he claimed. Thus William James firmed up the foundation on which
I and many others had stood all these years. I haven't had a drink of alcohol
since 1934. © (N.Y. Med. So©.
Alcsm., April 28,1958)
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