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Lets Ask Bill |
The following is a talk Bill gave to the American Psychiatric Association in 1949.
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY© Vol. 106, 1949. THE SOCIETY OF ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS WILLIAM W., CO-FOUNDER
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Alcoholics Anonymous is grateful
for this invitation to appear before The American Psychiatric
Association. It is a most happy circumstance. Being laymen, we have naught but a story to tell, hence the quite personal and unscientific character of this narrative. Whatever their deeper implications the attitudes and events leading to the formation of Alcoholics Anonymous are easy to portray. Two alcoholics talk across a kitchen table. One is drinking, the other is not. Severe chronics, the threat of commitment hangs over both. The time is November 1934. The active drinker became, years later, the writer of this paper. |
My sober visitor was an old friend and
schoolmate, long catalogued by physicians and family as hopeless. I enjoyed the
same rating and well knew it. My friend had arrived to tell me how he had been
released from alcohol. In truth, the quality of his sobriety seemed different.
Having made contact with the Oxford Group, a nondenominational, evangelical
movement, my friend had been specially impressed by an alcoholic he had met, a
former patient of C. G. Jung.
Unsuccessfully treating this individual for a year, Dr. Jung had finally advised
him to try religious conversion as his last chance. While disagreeing with many
tenets of the Oxford Group, my former schoolmate did, however, ascribe his new
sobriety to certain ideas that this alcoholic and other Oxford people had given
him. The particular practices my friend had selected for himself were simple:
1. He admitted he was powerless to solve his own problem.
2. He got honest with himself as never before; made an examination of
conscience.
3. He made a rigorous confession of his personal defects.
4. He surveyed his distorted relations with people, visiting them to make
restitution.
5. He resolved to devote himself to helping others in need, without the usual
demand for personal prestige or material gain.
6. By meditation he sought God's direction for his life and help to practice
these principles at all times.
This sounded pretty naive to me. Nevertheless my friend stuck to the plain tale
of what had happened -- no evangelizing. He related how practicing these
precepts, his drinking had unaccountably stopped. Fear and isolation left and
he had received considerable peace of mind. With no hard disciplines nor any
great resolves, these attributes began to appear the moment he conformed. His
release was a byproduct. Though sober but months, he felt he had a basic
answer. Wisely avoiding any argument, he then took leave. The spark that was
to become Alcoholics Anonymous had been struck.
What then did happen at the kitchen table? Perhaps this speculation were better
left to medicine and religion. I confess I do not know. Possibly conversion
will never be fully understood.
Looking outward from such an experience, I can only say with fidelity what
seemed to happen. Yet something did happen that instantly changed the current
of my life. I haven't had a drink for over fourteen years. All else will be
mere personal opinion -- or just fancy.
My friend's story had generated mixed emotions; I was drawn and revolted by
turns. My solitary drinking went on, but I could not forget his visit. Several
themes coursed in my mind: First, that his evident state of release was
strangely and immensely convincing. Second, that he had been pronounced
hopeless by competent medicos. Third, that those age-old precepts, when
transmitted by him, had struck me with great power. Fourth, that I could not,
and would not, go along with any God concept. No conversion nonsense for me.
Thus did I ponder. Trying to divert my thoughts, I found it no use By cords of
understanding, suffering, and simple verity, another alcoholic had bound me to
him. I shall not break away.
One morning after my gin a realization welled up. Who are you, I asked, to
choose how you are going to get well? Beggars are not choosers. Suppose
medicine said carcinoma was your trouble. You would not turn to Pond's
extract. In abject haste you would beg a doctor to kill those hellish cancer
cells. If he didn't stop them, and you thought conversion could, your pride
would fly away. You would soon stand in public squares crying Amen along with
other victims.
What difference then, I reflected, between you and the cancer victim? His sick
body crumbles. Likewise your personality crumbles, your obsession consigns you
to madness or the undertaker. Are you going to try your friends formula -- or
not?
Of course I did try. In December, 1934, I appeared at Towns Hospital, New York.
My old friend, Dr. W. D. Silkworth, shook his head. Soon free of sedation and
alcohol, I felt horribly depressed. My alcoholic friend turned up. Though glad
to see him, I shrank a little. I feared evangelism. Nothing of the sort
happened. After small talk, I again asked him about the Oxford Groups.
Quietly, sanely enough, he told me, and then departed.
Lying there in conflict, I dropped into a black depression. Momentarily my
prideful obstinacy was crushed. I cried out: Now I’m ready to do anything -
anything to receive what my good friend has. Expecting naught, I made this
frantic appeal: If there be a God, will he show himself!
The result was instant, electric, beyond description. The place lit up,
blinding white. I knew only ecstasy and seemed on a mountain. A great wind
blew, enveloping and permeating me. It was not of air, but of Spirit. Blazing,
came the tremendous thought, You are a free man! Then ecstasy subsided. Still
on the bed I was now in another world of consciousness which was suffused by a
Presence. One with the Universe, a great peace stole over me and I thought, So
this is the God of the preachers; this is the Great Reality. But reason
returned, my modern education took over.
Obviously I had gone crazy. I became terribly frightened.
Dr. Silkworth came in to hear my trembling account of the phenomenon. He
assured me I was not mad; that I had perhaps undergone an experience which might
solve my problems. Skeptical man of science he then was; this was most kind and
astute. If he had said hallucination I might now be dead. To him I shall be
eternally grateful.
Good fortune pursued me. Somebody brought a book entitled Varieties of
Religious Experience and I devoured it. Written by James, the psychologist, it
suggests that conversion can have objective reality. Conversion does alter
motivation, and does semi-automatically enable a person to be and do the
formerly impossible. Significant it was, that marked conversion experiences
come mostly to individuals who know complete defeat in a controlling area. The
book certainly showed variety. But bright or dim, cataclysmic or gradual,
theological or intellectual in bearing, such conversions did have common
denominators, they did change utterly defeated people. And so declared William
James. The shoe fitted. 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 views of this
authoritative psychologist meant everything to me.
Armored now by utter conviction and fortified by my characteristic power drive,
I took off to cure alcoholics wholesale. It was twin jet propulsion;
difficulties meant nothing. The vast conceit of my project never occurred to
me. I pressed my assault for six months; my home was filled with alcoholics
Harangues with scores produced not the slightest result. None of them got it.
Disappointingly, my friend of the kitchen table, who was sicker than I realized,
took little interest in these other alcoholics. This fact may have caused his
endless backslides later on. For I had found that working with alcoholics had a
huge bearing on my own sobriety
.
But why wouldn’t any of my new prospects sober up?
Slowly the bugs came to light. Like a religious crank, I was obsessed with the
idea that everybody must have a spiritual experience just like mine. I’d
forgotten that there were many varieties. So my brother alcoholics just stared
incredulously or kidded me about my hot flash. This had spoiled the potent
identification so easy to get with them. I had turned evangelist. Clearly the
deal had to be streamlined. What came to me in six minutes might require six
months in others.
It was to be learned that words are things, that one must be prudent. It was
also certain that something ailed the deflationary technique. It definitely
lacked wallop.
Reasoning that the alcoholic's hex, or compulsion, must issue from some deep
level, it followed that ego deflation must also go deep or else there couldn’t
be any fundamental release. Apparently religious practice would not touch the
alcoholic until his underlying situation was made ready. Fortunately all the
tools were right at hand. You doctors supplied them.
The emphasis was straightway shifted from sin to sickness -- the fatal malady,
alcoholism. We quoted doctors that alcoholism was more lethal than cancer; that
it consisted of an obsession of the mind coupled to increasing body
sensitivity. These were our Twin Ogres of Madness and Death. We leaned heavily
on Dr. Jung's statement how hopeless the condition could be and then poured that
devastating dose into every drunk within range. To modern man science is
omnipotent; it is a god. Hence if science would pass a death sentence on the
drunk, and we placed that verdict on our alcoholic transmission belt, it might
shatter him completely. Perhaps he would then turn to the God of the
theologian, there being no place else to go. Whatever the truth in this device,
it certainly had practical merit. Immediately our whole atmosphere changed.
Things began to look up.
Bankrupt at the time, I stumbled into a business venture. It took me to Akron,
Ohio, where the deal quickly collapsed leaving me dispirited. Alone, I panicked
in fear of getting drunk. This was something new for I realized that I hadn’t
thought of drinking since the December 1934 experience. I could now see my
peril clearly and thus brush off the usual rationalizations. With relief, I
perceived that my new spiritual conditioning really meant something now that the
heat was on. But that didn’t stop the compulsive up rush of drinking desire. I
needed to talk to another alcoholic, and quickly.
Shortly I was introduced to Dr. Robert S., a surgeon. He was an alcoholic in a
bad way. This time there was no preachment from me. I told him my experience
and what I thought I knew about alcoholism. Needing him as much as he did me,
there was a genuine mutuality for the first time and, as we now say in A.A., he
soon clicked never to drink again. That was June 1935. We began to spend long
hours on drunks at a local hospital. One of them is sober yet, no relapse.
Though nameless, the first A.A. Group had actually started. Dr. S. has since
hospitalized some 4,000 cases at Akron. The bulk have recovered. All this too
without a cent of monetary return to him. Thus he became co-founder of
Alcoholics Anonymous. As I left Akron in September 1935 three alcoholics were
staying sober.
Arrived at New York, I set to work and another A.A. group took shape. But
nothing was very sure; we still flew blind.
It was soon necessary to retire from the Oxford Group. The good people there
had disapproved of us. For our purpose, the Oxford Group atmosphere wasn’t
entirely right. Their demands for absolute moral rectitude encouraged guilt and
rebellion. Either will get alcoholics drunk, and did. As nonalcoholic
evangelists, they couldn’t understand that. Good friends these, we owed them
much. From them we had learned what, and what not, to do.
Then commenced a 3 year season of trial and error eventuating in our textbook
Alcoholics Anonymous, published in 1939. That book, now backbone of our A.A.
society, opens with a typical story of drinking and recovery. Next comes a
chapter of hope, entitled There Is A Solution. In A.A. vernacular two chapters
describe alcoholism and the alcoholic, their object being of course to first
identify and then deflate. A chapter is devoted to softening up the agnostic.
This leads to the Twelve Steps of present-day Alcoholics Anonymous. The heart
of our therapy, and a practical way of life, these Steps are little but an
amplified and streamlined version of the principles enumerated by my friend of
the kitchen table.
The balance of the text is mostly devoted to practical application of these
Twelve Steps, and to reducing the inner resistance of the reader. Working with
other alcoholics is very heavily emphasized. Chapters are devoted to wives,
family relations, and employers. The final chapter pictures the new society and
begs the recovered alcoholic to form a group himself. This ideology is then
shored up by 30 case histories, or rather stories, written by A.A. members.
These complete the identification and stir hope. The 400 pages of Alcoholics
Anonymous contain no theory; they narrate experience only.
When the book appeared in April 1939, we had about 100 members. One-third of
these had impressive sobriety records. The movement had spread to Cleveland and
drifted toward Chicago and Detroit. In the East it inclined to Philadelphia and
Washington. There was an extraordinary event at Cleveland. The Plain Dealer
published strong pieces about us backed by editorials. A barrage of telephone
calls descended on 20 A.A. members, mostly new people. A.A. book in hand, they
took on all comers. New members worked with the still newer. Two years later,
Cleveland had garnered by this chain reaction hundreds of new members.
The batting average was excellent. It was our first evidence that we might
digest huge numbers rapidly.
Then came great national publicity. The Saturday Evening Post piece (March
1941) shot thousands of frantic inquiries into our tiny New York office. This
gave us lists of alcoholics in hundreds of cities. Business men traveling out
of established A.A. centers used these names to start new groups. By sending
literature and writing often, A.A. groups sprung up by mail. With no personal
contact whatever, this was astounding. Clergy and medical men began to give
their approval. I wish to say that Dr. Harry Tiebout, chairman of our
discussion today, was the first psychiatrist ever to observe and befriend us.
Alcoholics Anonymous mushroomed. The pioneering had ended. We were on the U.S.
map.
As of 1949 our quantity results are these. The 14-year-old society of
Alcoholics Anonymous has 80,000 members in about 3,000 groups. We have entered
into 30 foreign countries and U.S. possessions; translations are going forward.
By occupation we are an accurate cross section of America. By religious
affiliation we are about 40% Catholic; nominal and active Protestants, also many
former agnostics, and a sprinkling of Jews comprise the remainder. Ten to 15%
are women. Some Negroes are recovering without undue difficulty. Top medical
and religious endorsements are almost universal. A.A. membership is pyramiding,
chain style, at the rate of about 30% a year. During 1949, we expect 20,000
permanent recoveries, at least. Half of these will be medium or mild cases
(average age about 36) a fairly recent development.
Of alcoholics who stay with us and really try, 50% get sober at once and stay
that way, 25% do so after some relapses and the remainder usually show
improvement. But many problem drinkers do quit A.A. after a brief contact,
maybe three or four out of five. Some are too psychopathic or damaged. But the
majority have powerful rationalizations yet to be broken down. Eventually this
does happen providing they get what A.A. calls a good exposure, on first
contact. Alcohol then builds such a hot fire that they are finally driven back
to us, often years later.
They tell us that they had to return; it was A.A, or else. They had learned
about alcoholism from alcoholics; they were hit harder than they had known.
Such cases leave us the agreeable impression that half our original exposures
will eventually return, most of them to recover. So we just indoctrinate the
newcomer.
We never evangelize; Barleycorn will look after that. The clergy declare we
have capitalized the Devil. These claims are considerable but we think them
conservative. The ultimate recovery rate will certainly be larger than once
supposed.
Such is a glimpse of our origin, central therapeutic idea, and quantity result.
The qualitative result is assuredly too large a subject for this paper.
Alcoholics Anonymous is not a religious organization; there is no dogma. The
one theological proposition is a Power greater than one's self. Even this
concept is forced on no one. The newcomer merely immerses himself in our
society and tries the program as best he can. Left alone, he will surely report
the gradual onset of a transforming experience, call it what he may. Observers
once thought A.A. could appeal only to the religiously susceptible. Yet our
membership includes a former member of the American Atheist Society and about
20,000 others almost as tough. The dying can become remarkably open minded. Of
course we speak little of conversion nowadays because so many people really
dread being God-bitten. But conversion, as broadly described by James, does
seem to be our basic process; all other devices are but the foundation. When
one alcoholic works with another, he but consolidates and sustains that
essential experience.
The forces of anarchy, democracy, and dictatorship play impressive roles in the
structure and containment of our society; Barleycorn the Tyrant Dictator is
quite impersonal. But Hitler never did have a Gestapo half so effective. When
the anarchy of the alcoholic faces his tyrant, that alcoholic must become a
social animal or perish. Perforce, our society has settled for the purest kind
of democracy.
Naturally, the explosive potential of our rather neurotic fellowship is
enormous. As elsewhere, it gathers closely around those eternal provocateurs:
power, money and sex. Throughout A.A. these subterranean volcanoes erupt at
least a thousand times daily; explosions we now view with some humor,
considerable magnanimity, and little fear at all. We think them valuable object
lessons for development. Our deep kinship, the urgency of our mission, the need
to abate our neurosis for contented survival; all these, together with love for
God and man, have contained us in surprising unity. There seems safety in
numbers. Enough sand bags muffle any amount of dynamite. We think we are a
pretty secure, happy family. Drop by any A.A. meeting for a look.
But, there isn’t the slightest evidence that violent neurosis, drunkenness, or
lunacy is to be the destiny of Alcoholics Anonymous. Such dark forecasts have
not materialized.
Many an alcoholic is now sent to A.A. by his own psychiatrist. Relieved of his
drinking, he returns to the doctor a far easier subject. Practically every
alcoholic’s wife has become, to a degree, his possessive mother. Most alcoholic
women, if they still have a husband, live with a baffled father. This
sometimes spells trouble aplenty. We A.A.’s certainly ought to know! So,
gentlemen, here is a big problem right up your alley.
Now to conclude: We of A.A. try to be aware that we may never touch but a
segment of the total alcohol problem. We try to remember that our growing
success may prove a heady wine; that our own resources will always be limited.
So then, will you men and women of medicine be our
partners; physicians wielding well your invisible scalpels; workers all, in our
common cause? We like to think Alcoholics Anonymous a middle ground between
medicine and religion, the missing catalyst of a new synthesis. This to the end
that the millions who still suffer may presently issue from their darkness into
the light of day!
I am sure that none, attending this great Hall of Medicine will feel it untoward
if I leave the last word to our silent partner, Religion:
God grant us the serenity to accept the things we cannot change, courage to
change the things we can, and wisdom to know the difference.
## Read at the 105th Annual Meeting of the American Psychiatric Association©,
Montreal, Quebec, May 23-27, 1949. ©
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