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Behavior: Anonymous Ally |
The more money he made in the 19205 bull market, the
more Wall Street Analyst William Griffith Wilson hit the bottle. "Men of
genius," he assured his worried wife, "conceive their best projects when drunk."
He was right, though hardly in the sense he meant. When Wilson died last week at
75, he left one of the finest projects that a drunk has ever conceived. He was
the famous "Bill W.," who sobered up and in 1935 co-founded Alcoholics
Anonymous.
A gawky Vermonter, Wilson grew up with a crushing sense of inferiority.
Alcoholism ran in his family; he was physically weak and a target for bullies.
By sheer persistence, he became captain of his school baseball team, played the
violin well, and led the school orchestra. But his feelings of inadequacy
remained until as a World War I artillery officer, he gulped his first drink.
Inspirational Teachings. As Wilson used to relate, "Down went that strange
barrier that had always stood between me and the people around me. Here was the
missing link." After the 1929 crash, Wilson tried to forget his losses with
numbing doses of bathtub gin and bootleg whisky. His wife went to work to
support him, and, as Wilson recalled, his mental disintegration "proceeded
rapidly and implacably." Injured after an Armistice Day bender in 1934, he tried
to heed the inspirational teachings of the First Century Christian Fellowship
(precursor of Moral Re-Armament), but soon went on a three-day drunk that left
him shattered.
At a Manhattan hospital, Wilson grimly prayed for help. "Suddenly," he related,
"the room lit up with a great white light. I was caught up into an ecstasy which
there are no words to describe." After leaving the hospital, Wilson tried to
help other drunks achieve similar religious experiences, but found that he also
needed medical facts to crack their tough egos. In 1935 he got the help he
needed when he met "Dr. Bob," Akron Surgeon Robert H. Smith, a fellow Vermonter
who had vainly tried to control his own compulsive drinking. Together they
founded Alcoholics Anonymous.
For a time, Wilson had grandiose visions: "Chains of A.A. hospitals and tons of
free literature for suffering alkies. II But when he sought millions from John
D. Rockefeller Jr., the philanthropist astutely replied: "I think money will
spoil this." As a result, A.A. was financed by its own members. In dealing with
each other or the public, they use only their first names and initials.
"Identification leads to power drives," Wilson explained. "The thought of power
is one reason we were drunks in the first place."
A.A. shunned moralizing in favor of viewing alcoholism as an emotional crutch
combined with a physical allergy to liquor. Thus, A.A.'s methods leaned more
heavily on psychology than physiology. Recognizing that alcoholics must not
merely control their consumption but curb it entirely/ A.A. members listened to
each other's stories and helped one another resist the temptation to drink. But
they never forgot that the major effort to abstain must be made by the drinker
himself. 'The only requirement for A.A. membership/' according to an
organization tradition, "is a sincere desire to stop drinking."
Wilson was A.A. 's most active member. Even after his retirement in 1962 he
remained in touch/ addressing the organization's banquet each fall and, despite
illness/ struggling from a wheelchair to speak to its convention in Miami last
July. He took immense pride in his accomplishment, and with good reason. A.A.
now has 475,000 members in 16,000 groups in the u.s. as well as 90 foreign
countries. A.A. strategy has been copied by organizations like Synanon and
others working on group therapy for all kinds of troubled people, including
ex-convicts. It obviously works. Today 60% of A.A. members get on the wagon and
stay on it.
ŠTime, February 1971
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