|
DANGERS OF SUCCESS |
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS -
by Jerome Ellison
Back in 1940, the late John D. Rockefeller, Jr., made headlines (John D. Dines
Tosspots) by asking 400 of his wealthy friends to dine at New York's Union
League Club and hear about a society of impoverished drunks called Alcoholics
Anonymous. At that time the fellowship had been struggling along for a little
more than four years and had about a hundred members.
John D. got sick at the last minute and his son Nelson presided. About
seventy-five people showed up. The former drunks gave impressive testimony of
their suffering, restitution and recovery. The assembled millionaires were
impressed, and the ex-boozers figured their society's financial troubles were
over. But, winding up the evening, the host expressed his father's belief that
money would not be a good thing for a movement based on selfless service - "it
needs only our good will." The millionaire went home without being asked to
contribute.
Now, twenty-four years older and with a membership of 300,000 A.A. is rich in
its own right. Despite bylaws prohibiting gifts larger than $100, money pours in
to national headquarters at the rate of more than $400,000 a year and A.A.
doesn't seem to know what to do with it all. Once a year it spends $20,000 or so
to bring 100 delegates in from the fifty states for a week-long, all expense
paid conference at a New York hotel. It has leased a floor in a midtown New York
office building, where a dozen recovered housewives and spinsters answer
letters, distribute pamphlets containing material on alcoholism purchased from
free- lance writers, circulate a monthly bulletin of member's stories, articles,
jokes and cartoons called the Grapevine, print and mail press releases, and go
to meetings.
These workers receive annual salaries of $7,000 to $9,000 and are backed by a
staff of stenographers and clerical employees - nonmembers. Herb M., a member
with experience as a press agent and convention manager is paid $18,000 a year
for part-time services (three and a third days a week). The rest of the money
goes into sinking funds, which have no specific purpose, but are nice to have,
since they produce, in the form of interest, more money for sinking funds. Bill
W., the movements surviving co-founder makes around $25,000 per year - a sum a
grateful membership does not begrudge - on royalties from three books:
Alcoholics Anonymous, which started it all, Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
and A.A. Comes of Age. For a movement that was born and grew to greatness in the
face of ridicule, adversity and bitter poverty, this is indeed wealth. Even if
Nelson Rockefeller's canny father had never suggested it, the question would now
arise whether the success will prove ruinous.
The prodigies of selfless service performed by members have had a stunning
impact on a basically me-first society. Press, clergy and the professions have
fallen all over one another to heap praise on the drunks who found a way out,
and for a long time it has been almost bad manners to speak of A.A. in any but
reverent terms.
Now, however, it is a public institution and subject to the same scrutiny
accorded other community volunteer services. There are A.A. groups in every
crossroads and neighborhood - 10,000 of them. They have become almost as much a
part of the community scene as the visiting nurse and the fire department, which
they somewhat resemble. In a population containing 80 million users of Alcohol
and 6 million cases of active alcoholism, they perform as necessary a
life-saving function as the Coast Guard. Alcoholism has pressed its way into
public attention as the nation's third deadliest disease, and A.A. has developed
the only method yet found that produces large numbers of enduring cures, It
suddenly finds that it has public responsibilities, that others besides its
members claim a legitimate interest in how it conducts its affairs.
Many find the fellowship of interest entirely apart from its practical work of
sobering up drunks. Though itself nonintellectual and sometimes
anti-intellectual! A.A. strikes both therapists and theorists as being an almost
classical demonstration of the psychotherapeutic theories of Carl Jung. Jung
believed in God and in "spirit." He devised another vocabulary for transactions
with agnostic professional colleagues, but firmly used these traditional terms
in his correspondence. A good part of his life work was directed towards
reconciling the insights of religion with those of the new psychiatry. Jung
approved Freud's work as far as it went, but felt that forces unsuspected by
Freud could be summoned to the aid of distressed humanity. This belief is also
at the base of A.A., commonly described by its members as a "spiritual program."
This resemblance is not entirely coincidental for, though he did not know it and
though his contribution was inadvertent, Jung had a hand in founding A.A. Early
in the 1930s, Jung took a patient named Rolland H., a rich American and chronic
alcoholic frantically seeking a cure. After an attempt at treatment, Jung told
Rolland H. that psychiatry couldn't help him. Then, asked the desperate patient,
what could? Perhaps a religious conversion of some kind, Jung said. Such an
experience could never be guaranteed, but one could seek the company of those
who had had them, and hope. Roland H. went to England, joined the Oxford
movement, got sober and returned to New York. There he continued his association
with the Oxford movement! taking particular interest in other inebriates. One of
these Edwin T., carried the news to Bill W., a Wall Street broker, then
prostrated by alcohol. After undergoing a shattering subjective experience of
religious enlightenment, Bill W got sober and began looking for other alcoholics
who were interested in drying out by the new method. He found one - again
through the Oxford movement - on a business trip to Akron, Ohio. His new friend
was a down-and-out alcoholic physician, Dr. Robert S. The two founded Alcoholics
Anonymous and led the movement jointly until Robert S. died, sober in 1950.
A.A. was not completely without precedent. More than a century ago, a remarkable
similar organization, The Washington Temperance Society! sprang up in
Washington, D.C. and soon had branches in most big cities. Lincoln, concerned
about alcoholism through the suffering of his law partner, Herndon, encouraged
the members whenever he could! and even addressed them on one occasion. The
Washingtonians had all the main features of A.A. - alcoholics helping one
another, weekly alcoholics meetings, shared experience, readily available group
fellowship, reliance on "the Higher Power." Bill W. and Bob S., added a
spiritual regimen designed to produce personal improvement, a rule of anonymity,
the practice of exchanging speakers between groups, and a membership restricted
to those who confessed a problem with alcohol. The Twelve Steps of surrender,
confession, self-examination, restitution and service were taken with only
slight changes from the Oxford movement. The anonymity and alcoholics only rules
were innovations.
AA's great expansion began with the publication of an article by Jack Alexander
in the Saturday Evening Post of March 1, 1941. Ten years later the membership
was up to 150,000: in ten more years it doubled that. America was suffering from
the hangovers of a national binge begun with the repeal of Prohibition and not
yet ended. By aggressive lobbying, the liquor industry cleared away the
remaining restraints on the sale of booze. Saturation advertising disfigured the
approaches to the major cities with five story whiskey bottles and bombarded the
populace with reminders to drink. Consumption rose until it reached the present
figures of a billion quarts of spirits, 2 billion quarts of wine and 12 billion
quarts of beer a year. The industry employs a million people and pays them $5
billion a year-more than we spend on the combined crude oil, natural gas, coal
and ore-mining industries, and nearly twice what we spend on education.
Trouble arose along with sales figures. Those who drink consume, on the average,
a quart of whiskey, two quarts of wine and four gallons of beer a month. Some,
of course drink far less than this, others-especially the 6 million chronic
alcoholics-much more. Excessive drinking costs the nation $35 million annually
in medical care, $30 million in jail maintenance, $100 million in accidents,
$500 million in wage losses, according to estimates based on a Public Affairs
Committee pamphlet. About a million people a year are admitted to be treated for
alcoholism. One in twelve drinkers becomes an alcoholic: 14,000 deaths and
40,000 injuries a year result from the mixture of alcohol and traffic. 21,000
people die annually from cirrhosis, 6 million families are shadowed by alcohol
and 12 million children suffer from their parents excessive drinking.
In the light of such figures, it is not surprising that A.A. seemed an answer to
prayer in hundreds of thousands of families. A household devastated by booze is
an isolated unit, plagued by debt, ridden by internal strife, with little hope,
few friends, many enemies and a skeleton grown too big for the closet. AA
replaces despair with hope. The family has friends again, understanding friends,
people who have been through the mill, ready at any time for a cup of coffee and
a chat. The necessity of total abstinence, and the means for attaining it, are
made clear. The transformations are so impressive, and so often enduring, that
the word "miracle" is frequently and understandably employed. Even physicians
and psychiatrists, conditioned by occupation to disregard the claims of laymen,
sought to learn from AA's source of clinical information on the management of a
syndrome that had baffled their professions.
Alcoholics, even sober ones, are only human, and can tolerate only limited
amounts of adulation without becoming dizzy. Effective speakers were in great
demand to tell their "stories," not only at AA weekly meetings in distant
places, but at convocations of professional groups, civic associations and
service clubs. Big city groups stage annual banquets drawing up to a thousand
people and costing up to $10 a plate. Resort hotels are taken over for State and
regional conventions. All this has gone to the head of many a reformed booze
fighter, and a type of paragon known in the local groups as "Mr. AA" pushed
himself into key positions in the committee structure.
As AA became more prominent this tendency was noted outside the organization,
and drew comment. A group of letters addressed last year to the editor of
Harper's, was pointed: "Now that the myth of the Golden-Hearted prostitute has
been laid to rest, let's tackle the Omniscient Ex-Lush." "The fanatics who
prevail in some groups seem bent on making AA into a hostile, fundamentalist
religion." "The movement needs to recover some of the good spirit it had before
it became proud of its humility." These letters were occasioned by an article in
which Arthur Cain pointed out tendencies toward cultism and narrow orthodoxy
that limited the fellowship's therapeutic effectiveness.
My own experience with AA dates back more than 10 years. While writing a series
of articles for a national magazine, I attended hundreds of AA local meetings
and a number of state and regional affairs, and developed a wide
acquaintanceship in the movement. My articles aroused the interest of Bill W'I
and I was invited to evaluate, as a paid consultant, some of AA's publications
and activities.
This chore consumed a number of months in 1962 and 1963, and afforded an
intimate view of the organization's national headquarters and policy making
boards. Since my recommendations were not confidential-"AA has no secrets but
the names of its members" is a hallowed tenet-they can be disclosed. They
contained little more that had not been said before, some of it by Arthur Cain.
Anyone else undertaking a similar survey would, I think, have reached the same
conclusions.
At headquarters, I missed almost completely the bubbling good will, the creative
open-mindedness, the open and stimulating swapping of ideas that made so many of
the weekly neighborhood meetings memorable. Everybody was an expert, with a
cluster of ideas closed to amendment. Bill W., the movement's traditional leader
and a main source of the spiritual inspiration, had lost out in committee
maneuvering to a policy of "putting the thing on a business basis." Committee
politics took up half the working day; gossip was venomous. In quick succession
I was told that the cofounder (in my opinion still sharp-witted at seventy) was
senile, that a staff worker was a hypochondriac and a committeeman a homosexual.
The accused were at pains to assure me, separately and without encouragement,
that the accusers were a nymphomaniac, a schizophrenic and a megalomaniac, I
observed nothing to substantiate any of these charges. However, there was no
inclination toward the "fearless and searching moral inventory" recommended by
AA's Twelve Suggested Steps.
The non-alcoholic Board of Trustees responsible for national policy was
ultraconservative (one member, Archibald Roosevelt, had furnished literature for
distribution by the John Birch Society) and this, I reported, had served the
movement poorly. The board's rigid conservatism was reflected in a number of
unfortunate policies, the most odious of which was a tact endorsement of racial
segregation within the branches. When a member submitted an article for the
monthly bulletin pointing out that nearly all Southern AA groups and a great
many Northern ones were racially segregated, and that AA's Negro membership had
failed to keep pace with the growing problem of Negro alcoholism, the article
was turned down on the grounds that it "might disrupt AA unity." Local AA groups
are free from any national control other than moral suasion. That even this
influence should be withheld on so fundamental point seemed to me a serious
error. It is, however, in keeping with the fact that there are no Negroes on the
headquarters staff or on any of the numerous AA national boards and committees.
The policy on publications, I reported, is likely to cost AA its once
acknowledged leadership in its field. When Alcoholics Anonymous was first
published a quarter of a century ago, it won universal acknowledgement that AA
was well in advance of the field. But though the medical and psychiatric
professions have been remarkably slow in coming to terms with alcohol addiction,
much progress has lately been made, and the AA "Big Book" is beginning to have
an Out-of-date, early century, historical sound. The Board, however, has ruled
that no further word shall be spoken. Despite the fact that the rank and file
teems with exciting, relevant, informed and up-t0-the-minute experience, none of
it is permitted to appear in book form. To publish such literature, it is felt,
would be to risk heresy. As a result, AA's official books, unfertilized by fresh
documentation, tend to sound more archaic each year.
I concluded that AA's headquarters had been captured by an ultraconservative
clique that was doing the society appreciable harm. This finding, was, of
course, received by that clique without thanks and, despite the efforts of a
small free-speech party, was prevented from reaching the delegates of the rank
and file for whom it was intended. AA, at least in its national offices, bears
heavily the marks of its culture in its time, affluence and the shortsighted
conservatism that affluence begets.
Fortunately for future generations, the influence of headquarters on local
groups is not decisive. "Oh, those guys!", is a typical reaction from a local
group secretary. "We send 'em their three bucks a year per member and forget
about 'em." Many groups make no contributions to "the national." In the
neighborhoods and at the crossroads will surely be preserved in Jiving practice
those ideas that give mankind new hope whenever they achieve a
renaissance-candor, humility, friendliness, enlightened understanding, a
good-natured readiness to pitch in at any hour in any way to help a baffled
human being.
ŠThe Nation, March 2, 1964)
Return to the Newspapers, Magazines, etc. Page
Return to the A. A. History Page
Return to the West Baltimore Group Home Page