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What Happened to Those Who Left? |
By Bill W., General Service Conference, 1965
A.A. members can soberly ask themselves what became of the
600,000 alcoholics who approached the Fellowship during the past 30 years
but "who did not stay," Bill W., surviving co-founder, suggested in a moving
address to the Conference at its closing session.
"How much and how often did we fail all these?" Bill asked.
"When we remember that in the 30 years of A.A. existence we have reached
less than ten per cent of those who might of been willing to approach us, we
began to get an idea of the immensity of our task, and of the
responsibilities with which we will always be confronted."
In no circumstances should members feel that the Alcoholics
Anonymous is the know-all and do-all of alcoholism, Bill noted, citing the
"perhaps one hundred agencies" in the United States and Canada alone that
are engaged in "research, alcohol education and rehabilitation."
"We should very seriously ask ourselves how many alcoholics have
gone on drinking because we have failed to cooperate in good spirit with
these many agencies - whether they be good, bad or indifferent," the
co-founder remarked. "No alcoholic should go mad or die merely because he
did not come straight to A.A. at the beginning."
"All of the basic components of A.A. were supplied by others,
Bill pointed out, "although we drunks certainly did put A.A. together. Here,
especially, our maxim should be ‘Let’s be friendly with our friends."
Bill said that at certain great turning points in A.A. history,
members have backed away from what should have been "clearly visible
responsibilities." He cited the old-timers who almost prevented preparation
of the Big Book "because some avowed we did not need it," while others
shrank from the risks involved.
There was "a great outcry" against formation of the General
Service Conference, he recalled. "There was almost no belief that such a
linkage could be effectively forged; even an attempt at such a project would
ruin us, many thought." The spiritual assets of A.A. have "in God’s time"
invariably come to exceed even such large liabilities, Bill said, "A.A.
recovery goes forward on a large scale. Practice of A.A.’s Twelve Traditions
has amazingly cemented our unity. Our General Service Office and General
Service Conference have made possible a wide spreading of our message at
home and abroad. Our pains and our necessities first called us reluctantly
to responsibility. But in the latter years a joyous willingness and a
confident faith have more and more permeated all the affairs of our
Fellowship."
Fear of negative factors should not deceive members into absurd
rationalizations, Bill suggested. "In the fear of accumulated wealth and
bureaucracy, we should not discover an alibi for failure to pay A.A.‘s
legitimate service expenses. For fear of controversy, our leadership should
not go timid when lively debate and forthright action is a necessity. And
for fear of accumulating prestige and power, we should never fail to endow
our trusted leaders with proper authority to act for us."
"Let us never fear needed change," Bill urged. "Once a need
becomes clearly apparent in an individual, a Group, or in A.A. as a whole,
it has long since been found out that we cannot stand still and look the
other way."
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