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Recovery Fever |
by Melinda Blau
Baby-Boomers and Club Kids are Turning
Twelve Step Programs into a 90s Scene
(Note: The names of all those identified by their first names only have been
changed.)
"Tonight," Mary announces, "my topic is
what we mean by sharing our 'experience, strength, and hope.'"
There are groans. Mary isn't surprised. This Alcoholics Anonymous meeting--in a
church basement in East Hampton--is filled with vacationing Manhattanites,
tanned, youthful-looking, dressed in weekend chic. Mary, who's leading the
discussion, hadn't expected them to like to topic she'd chosen.
"What they really wanted to talk about was relationships," Mary laments after
the meeting. "And that's all they want to talk about. This isn't what AA used to
be!"
She should know: She's a 34-year veteran who joined AA in desperation in 1957,
after awakening one pitch-black night in her car, which was wrapped around a
fire hydrant. Mary had no idea how she'd got there.
And so--though she was convinced she was joining the "dregs of society"--she
ventured into an AA meeting. She was, at 35, by far the youngest person in the
room and one of the few women. "Some of the old-timers were skeptical about
whether I could really be an alcoholic," she says. 'They told me to take the
cotton out of my ears and stuff it in my mouth!" Mary thinks some of the newer
members she sees these days could do with a little of that old-time advice. She
finds it hard to tolerate the way many of them stroll nonchalantly into
meetings, acting as if they've just joined the latest social c1ub--as if they're
just there to meet people. "Today, we're getting that Me Generation in," she
says disdainfully. "A lot of them come in saying they're alcoholics--because the
rehabs tell them they are. They just want to belong to something! I wish they
would just listen and shut up. It's a chance for them to experience some kind of
recovery that isn't so self-centered."
There's no doubt that being "in the rooms" (attending meetings) bears far less
stigma than it did in the fifties. Mary is glad that people have lost their
sense of shame about getting help and are coming into "the program" younger than
they used to. (These days, almost half of the members are 21-to-40-year-olds,
and a third of the members are women.)
But there/s a downside. The baby-boomers and club kids flooding into the
meetings can seem awfully self-involved. Whenever somebody who's been called on
to
"share" (respond to the speaker's story of his recovery or the chosen topic)
launches into the dread phrase "I've been going through some changes" or "I'm in
a lot of pain today/" AA veterans get that sinking feeling. They know they're
probably in for a fuzzy monologue about the pills the speaker has popped, the
cocaine he's snorted, the food she's binged on, arguments he's had with his
lover, talk about her rotten childhood, his job anxieties, the Prozac she/s been
taking for depression, her co-everything but alcohol.
These maunderings can be plenty off-putting--and, to tentative first-timers,
bewildering. "I must have been sober twenty years before I even heard about pain
at an AA meeting/" Mary snaps. "We had to talk about sober experience, which
showed the strength of the program and gave the newcomer hope. Nowadays,
'experience' is whatever happened that day--from which I get neither strength
nor hope!" Erin--a fifteen-year AA member--agrees. "These people have this
incredible need to draw attention to themselves. They come up to a speaker
during the break and say, 'I need to share--please call on me: That was unheard
of years ago! Why can't they just talk to that person then and there? They need
the floor!"
One wonders if even the visionary Bill Wilson, who co-founded AA in the
thirties, could have foreseen the recovery fever that has led so many into the
program (membership has more than doubled in New York City since 1978)--and made
them so open about it. It's likely he'd find even more amazing the alphabet soup
of groups (see sidebar) that have spun off from AA--everything from Anorexic
Bulimics Anonymous, Batterers Anonymous, Dual Disorders Anonymous, Families of
Sex Offenders Anonymous, and Homosexuals Anonymous to Unwed Parents Anonymous,
Workaholics Anonymous, Victims Anonymous, and Youth Emotions Anonymous. Last,
and far from least, are the many "co-dependent" and "adult children of' groups
set up for people whose lives are entwined with one or another of these
sufferers.
Most of the spinoffs base their programs on the Twelve Steps that Wilson and his
early colleagues devised to guide AA members into recovery. Step One involves
admitting that you are powerless over alcohol. Members are told that their
"disease" renders them out of control. Recovery is a matter not of weakness or
lack of will but of willingness to "turn it over/" which is where Step
Two--accepting the notion that a Higher Power exists--comes in. Step Three asks
you to rely on that entity--be it a deity, a spiritual force, or the collective
power of the group--to guide you. ("Turning it over to a Higher Power" doesn't
mean abdicating responsibility: Your may have a disease, but you are now
responsible for your actions.) Steps Four through Nine encourage you to look at
yourself, take an honest "inventory" of your faults, and "make amends" to anyone
you've hurt. Finally, Steps Ten through Twelve are about continuing to be honest
and open and extending yourself, which includes carrying the message to other
alcoholics.
Has AA's popularity--and the development of all those spinoff groups--so watered
down the program that it's no longer effective? Many acknowledge that some
meetings have lost their focus. But, they say, AA still cleaves to Wilson's
original tenets. Alcoholics who have tired years of psychotherapy,
antidepressants, or simply trying to "will" themselves away from a drink still
find in AA something that finally works. When they walk into a roomful of people
like themselves, they find a supportive community that traditional one-on-one
psychotherapy can't replicate.
"These people are almost intractable by conventional methods," explains Dr.
Donald Nathanson, senior attending psychiatrist at Institute of Pennsylvania
Hospital in Philadelphia, "but if you group alcoholics together, they know each
other's tricks, they begin talking about them, and they begin to heal each
other."
Meetings also help people break through their isolation and learn how to trust
again. "They talk about feelings," notes Dr. Jonathan Lampert, a psychiatrist at
the Ackerman Institute for Family Therapy, who has had extensive clinical
experience with alcoholics and addicts and has observed "hundreds" of other
kinds of Twelve Step meetings. "It's very compelling to have someone begin
speaking what is unspeakable, know what is unknowable. And they have a protocol
to follow-the steps--and others with whom they can mitigate the shame. That's
very powerful."
Through AA, millions have recovered, and will continue to recover, from the
ravages of alcoholism. It boils down to support and identification--the idea of
one drunk helping another.
To find meetings they like, however, today's newcomers may need perseverance as
well as the patience to look beyond the confusing digression and egotistic
behavior of some members. Now that rehabs are pouring hundreds of newly sober
people into these programs each week and countless others are coming in on their
own, the balance between old-timers (who have stories of long-term recovery that
can encourage others) and newcomers (who do not) has become skewed. It's harder
than it used to be to find "powers of example"--people who have attained a sense
of what serenity is all about and who are willing to extend themselves.
"You don't see people reaching out the way we used to," observes Kelly, a lover
of Quaaludes and Jack Daniel's who joined AA ten years ago, when she was 28.
"The other night, I heard a woman tell someone that she couldn't pick her up to
take her to a meeting [this kind of help for a newcomer was once a common
practice]. The driver thought the newcomer lived too far out of her way. What
was the woman supposed to do--drink?"
AA's primary purpose, as stated in its preamble, has always been to "stay sober
and help other alcoholics to achieve sobriety." ("You learned how to not pick up
that first drink--a day at a time," Mary says. "Then you reached out to
others.") Though there are greeters at the door at some meetings, gone are the
days when most people routinely introduced themselves to whoever sat next to
them or made sure they approached a newcomer during a break. Maxi--a nice Jewish
girl from the Five Towns whose heroin addiction landed her in jail, in an
abandoned building on Ninth Avenue, and finally "in Times Square, turning
tricks"--came into AA eleven years ago, when she was 37. "In those days," she
says, "someone would announce, 'We're all going for coffee!' That's how I
learned to socialize when I came into the rooms. That happens a lot less now."
Today, members are also less willing to "do service"--run a meeting, make
coffee, stack chairs, put out program literature, or even be a sponsor (a person
who welcomes phone calls and guides newcomers through the steps). Worse, some
meetings are run by tightly knit c1iques--groups of friends who came into the
fellowship around the same time, got sober with one another, and socialize
outside meetings as well. As friends embrace in the doorway or shout at one
another across the room, a newcomer is likely to feel left out. Many members
admit that they don't ask strangers out for coffee as often; they don't use the
ten-minute break to talk to someone who seems distressed or lonely; they are
more clannish; they just don't take the time.
Georgeanne, in AA for the past ten years, admits she is overwhelmed by the new
faces and less willing to give of herself than she was when she first came in.
Her attitude sums up a pervasive thirtysomething mentality: "I don't really pay
attention to them until they've been coming to meetings for 90 days--to see if
they're serious. I've got a husband and a baby and a full-time job, and these
newcomers can go on for hours!"
Despite these problems, some veteran AA members are amazed and heartened by the
program's growth and the diversity of its membership. 'The Woodstock generation
has arrived--and I'm glad!" exclaims Steven, 65, who joined AA "when Eisenhower
was president." He is unconcerned about the criticism that there's not enough
talk of alcohol in AA rooms. "If they listen closely, they'll hear it," he says.
"They'll certainly hear about addiction and all the other problems that are
common in early sobriety." Moreover, he says, newcomers not only keep the
meetings going and growing, they add spice to his life. "I've learned more about
relationships in these last ten years," he says. "And remember, 1 came from a
closeted era. These young people say things to a roomful of 100 people that I
wouldn't say to my parish priest!"
Salvation or Self-Indulgence
The term recovery, once applied solely to
alcoholics and drug addicts, has expanded to include millions more who are
afflicted with the maladies of modern living: the people who eat, work, smoke,
shop, gamble, exercise, or love too much; the sufferers of certifiable
behavioral syndromes; the sex addicts, incest perpetrators, and pedophiles and
their -victims--the "survivors" of rape, child abuse, molestation.
Messies Anonymous? Emotions Anony- mous? Are these fellowships necessary? Don't
groups with names like these diminish the seriousness of a program like AA,
which was founded for people whose disease could cost them their lives?
"We seem to be turning everything into a pathology," complains Daryl, who has
been in AA for eleven years. She is puzzled by the proliferation of groups for
"co-dependents," the people who coddle the addicted and afflicted. (If you
believe the recovery gurus who are trying to sell their books, that's 95 percent
of the population.) Daryl points out that women have been socialized to put
others' feelings and needs above their own--and that's one of the hallmarks of
co-dependency as it is defined today. (The term is an outgrowth of
"co-alcoholic," someone who is dependent on the alcoholic. He has his arms
around the bottle; she has her arms around him.) "Caring is a wonderful thing,
even in a relationship with an addict, but when we care only about the other
person, we get into trouble," Daryl believes. "Nor are certain aspects of
humanness--like emotions--a "sickness.'"
"The Twelve Step principles are definitely being commodified," says Frank
Riessman, director of the National Self-Help Clearinghouse (25 West 43rd Street,
Room 620, 642-2944), which provides information on all kinds of self-help
groups. Between 1978 and 1984 alone, the aggressive marketing of recovery
treatment resulted in a 350 percent increase in private alcoholic-treatment
facilities plus the establishment of rehabs that take in not only alcoholics and
drug addicts but gamblers, overeaters, co-dependents, and adult children of any
type of dysfunctional family. These inpatient facilities have become the "spas"
of recovery.
Riessman reminds us not to forget why all these groups have sprung up. "Recovery
therapy arose primarily because other methods were failing to reach large
numbers of people," he says. Indeed, Jonathan Lampert maintains, many
mental-health practitioners still aren't knowledgeable about addiction, and
"they're often overwhelmed by the kinds of extreme behaviors addicts talk about
and bring into the office." He believes that for many types of problems, the
various Twelve Step offshoots can help people open up. "Many sophisticated
people can't stop overeating, but they do it with OA [Overeaters Anonymous]."
Since the newer, less stable programs are works in progress, many of the more
recent me-too programs do not have as much to offer as Twelve Step fellowships
established prior to 1970--and certainly not as much as AA. They may not be very
well defined; members often talk more about problems than about solutions. (When
Lindsey, an avid program goer, recently tried a meeting of Co-Dependents
Anonymous-CODA, one of the more popular new additions to the city's menu--she
says, "I didn't hear recovery; I heard weekly reports.") Some meetings in these
fellowships are not orderly; some are run by the more dominant people in the
room and susceptible to personal whims. (In AA, which is guided by its Twelve
Traditions and better organized, "group conscience" guides decision-making.)
Some groups, predictably, have already gone by the wayside, like Valium
Anonymous. And there's at least one fellowship whose members couldn't be located
for interviews-Isolators Anonymous.
That so many people are members of more than one program, even when they are
newly sober, makes many veteran AA members suspicious. Maxi maintains, "If
alcoholism is your primary disease, you have to get your foundation in AA. When
you go to a lot of different fellowships, you may not have to focus on your
problems--or on changing your behavior."
Longtime members of AI-Anon--AA's companion program and the oldest and most
stable of the "-Anons" (fellowships for families and friends of addicts)--are
also distressed. Spouses and other members of alcoholic families used to learn
at AI-Anon meetings that they "enabled" the alcoholic by denying, rationalizing,
or covering up his drinking, and the program taught them how to change their own
behavior. Now just about everybody is a "co-dependent" or worried about being
one--and all flock to AI-Anon. "We used to talk about the alcoholics in our
lives," says Lilly, an AI-Anon member whose mother is an alcoholic and who also
tends to get romantically involved with alcoholics. "Now people in our meetings
talk about relationships with their lovers whether they're alcoholic or not."
Twelve Steps for Everybody?
There are many who argue that we don't need
all the me-too programs out there. But it's important to resist the tendency to
trivialize. The pain one hears in those "other" Twelve Step rooms is no
different from the pain of an alcoholic resisting a drink. The woman who goes to
an Overeaters Anonymous meeting and admits she hides cookies under her bed to
feel safe but that nothing she eats ever makes her feel satisfied, or the man
who attends a Gamblers Anonymous meeting because he is afraid he's going to blow
a month's pay at Aqueduct, may be talking to someone about these problems and
fears for the first time.
Likewise, at a meeting of Sexaholics Anonymous, you're bound to hear the agony
of a man (males far outnumber females) who can't stop himself from going to the
porn shops on Broadway, from cheating on his wife, or from picking up a
prostitute--and that, these days, is as deadly as drug or alcohol addiction.
Dr. Robert DuPont, clinical professor of psychiatry at Georgetown University and
a former director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, applauds the fact
that Twelve Step programs have splintered into smaller, very specialized groups
whose "cultural specificity" allows people to identify with one another more
readily. Some meetings cover particular topics, like incest and being
HIV-positive, or serve certain groupssyoung people, homosexuals, handicapped
members.
But does the AA prescription work for behavioral problems--like compulsive
gambling or sex addiction? Can someone with a food disorder, for example, be
helped by a program originally designed around complete abstinence?
"I've watched people get well," Dr. DuPont insists. By affiliating themselves
with these programs, he says, "people are not only saying, 'That's me,' they're
finding better ways to live."
Donald Nathanson is more cautious, especially when it comes to programs like
Adult Children of Alcoholics and Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous, where the
tendency is to point a finger at someone else. "The major focus is not on a
person's responsibility for his own behavior but on the inevitability that he
behaves a certain way because others made him this way."
Still, Nathanson thinks these programs can work--if the person is willing to
expend some effort. "If you can think about your inner life once a day, you're
doing pretty well''' he says. "You reinforce the fact that you're an alcoholic
or that you resort to sex as an anodyne or do any of a number of types of
behavior that are a detour from facing your own feelings."
Motivation is all--and, according to Nathanson, "some of the people in these
other programs haven't suffered as much as alcoholics or addicts. So they don't
have as much need and don't go to as many meetings. One has to ask about their
problem behavior, 'How long have they been doing it? How much of their world
have they lost because of it? And how desperately do they want to change?'"
Psychologist Stan J. Katz' co-author of The Codependency Conspiracy--a
thoughtful, albeit controversial, critique of the marketing of recovery--has
less confidence in using the Twelve Steps for behavior problems. "It's like
using penicillin for every disease. AA was developed specifically for alcohol.
It is a fairly good program for alcoholics, and the program has a decent
crossover for people addicted to drugs. But many people go to meetings for the
social life, or because they have other problems that they're trying to cure on
a free basis."
Katz maintains that you can't apply a program based on abstinence to food
disorders or relationship issues, because you can't completely abstain from
eating or being in relationships. Thus, he fears, "the people who need genuine
intervention are not getting it--they're going to Twelve Step meetings instead."
Critics of the recovery movement also challenge the widespread use of the
"disease model''' originally applied only to alcoholism. The theory holds that
alcoholics are not morally responsible for their behavior. They have an
"allergy" to liquor: The first drink triggers a craving, and then they can't
stop themselves any more than a diabetic can control the way his body reacts to
sugar.
Labeling all these difficulties "diseases," regardless of their degree of
severity, says Katz, is neither scientifically warranted nor helpful to the
patient--although it does tend to drum up business for the recovery movement.
Katz thinks these labels cause people to perceive themselves as victims, to use
the label to excuse their behavior, and to become dependent on the program
they're going to: They are eternally "recovering" if never "recovered."
Dr. Marc Galanter, professor of psychiatry and director of the Division of
Alcoholism and Drug Abuse at New York University Medical Center and director of
the alcohol-and-drug-abuse program at Bellevue Hospital Center, has studied
cults and religious groups as well as AA. He characterizes Twelve Step programs
as part of a "zealous social movement." He maintains that at stressful times,
some people are more susceptible to becoming dependent on the program: "The more
you are vulnerable, the more you glom on to something that seems to offer more
permanence."
You can usually spot the kind of people who "hide in the rooms." For them,
getting sober becomes an end unto itself. But Mary stresses that it's not AA
that causes thisit's the individual. "AA is a bridge back to life. It was never
meant to be your life." Jonathan Lampert notes that the program-shoppers who go
from room to room "use the therapists the same way!" While he concedes that
Twelve Step principles can sometimes be misinterpreted or even abused, he holds
that the best starting point for talking about your problems is still a Twelve
Step program.
Does It Work If You Work It?
A major stumbling block for some who try AA
and its spinoffs is swallowing the idea of a Higher Power. "People think of us
as a bunch of religious nuts/' admits Nan Robertson, an AA member for the past
sixteen years and the author of Getting Better:
Inside Alcoholics Anonymous. Many people have trouble with the "God part," she
says. The word God appears in four of the Twelve Steps and is mentioned 132
times in Alcoholics Anonymous (better known as The Big Book).
Meetings in this city are particularly "New York" in tone--intense, sharp-edged,
laced with psychological jargon. But! perhaps because of New York's diverse
population! some meetings here don't have the religious overtones one finds in
other parts of the country; closing with the Lord's Prayer makes many
non-Christian members uncomfortable. Instead! meetings often end with the
nonsectarian Serenity Prayer:
"God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to
change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference." Inevitably! that's
followed by a rousing "Keep comin' back--it works if you work it!"
But the "God part" keeps some people from "working it." For them, Rational
Recovery Systems (RR), a five-year-old organization that's close to 300 groups
strong! hopes to provide an alternative.
RR, which is based on psychologist Albert Ellis's rational-emotive therapy,
appeals to thinkers, not believers, according to RR's Small Book In RR, the
alcoholic's or addict's will and intelligence are called upon to help change his
behavior. RR doesnt believe an alcoholic is powerless! nor must he be forever
recovering. Alcoholics! RR says, can look within themselves for strength and use
"reason to light the way."
Every RR meeting has a professional "adviser," a counselor, therapist, M.D.,
minister or nurse who donates time and allegedly has a minor role. An adviser
can "spot a problem--like symptoms of suicide'" explains Vincent Fox, a member
who also sits on the board of directors of RR. For the most part! however, the
adviser takes a backseat to the "coordinator' an experienced member who
"manages" the meetings. Twelve Step meetings allow no "cross talkl, (no advising
or answering one another during the meeting); RR is run more like group therapy.
Predictably, there is some AA-bashing at RR meetings, 90 percent of whose
members are AA dropouts. And because the organization is so young, it seems to
be suffering some of the same growing pains that also beleaguer younger AA
offshoots--.instability and a lack of long-term sobriety. "We/re not at the
final stage of our evolution/I Fox admits. "Ten years from now, we'll evolve
into something more polished, more mature.
A few inpatient institutions now offer RR in addition to the usual Twelve Step
fare, to the newly recovering. To help shore up its c1aimsl RR is submitting to
efficacy studies. For now, the jury is out on new groups like RR and Secular
Organizations for Sobriety another non-spiritual alternative.
But then, the flow of bodies into Twelve Step programs has not been inspired by
evidence. The truth is, there's very little scientific proof that AA
works. The "anonymous" nature of the program, a safeguard incorporated to
protect people from the shame of declaring themselves alcoholics (that's a bit
of an irony these days) as well as AA's tradition of resisting professional
involvement, has made it difficult to monitor.
Dr. Galanterls 1990 study is a noteworthy exception. Galanter and his team
surveyed a group of 100 recovering alcoholic or dually addicted doctors who had
received inpatient treatment in which AA affiliation was part of the program.
They had been clean and sober an average of 33 months at the time of the study.
"After all was said and done" Galanter reports, "they rated their AA experiences
as the most influential aspect of their recovery.'1 Though Galanter allows that
this was a select and highly committed population, he believes that the findings
can be generalized. 'There are more than 1 million members nationwide. They
wouldn't be going if they didn't think it helped. Certainly, in my experience
with the patients I've treated, that's the case.
Robert DuPont adds that many program-bashers, especially his peers in the
medical profession, are skeptical about AA and other Twelve Step programs
because "it's a language that's alien to professionals. The Establishment sees
it as a fringe approach-small, quirky, nonintellectual, cult-oriented,
religious--that's the dominant view. They don't understand it.
Clearly, Twelve Step programs don't work for everyone--nor does one type of
treatment. Lampert and others call for an integrated approach, combining
self-help with a thoughtful psychological assessment that factors in
personality, family history, and the person's context today--his relationships,
work situation, socioeconomic status, among other things.
As the AA saying goes, "Some are sicker than others." Some people need only the
support of a fellowship and the education and guidance that a Twelve Step
program provides. Others may want--or need--what Donald Nathanson calls "thicker
soup" something that allows them to deal with their own personal feelings more
on a one-to-one basis.
Many of the criticisms of Twelve Step programs are well taken. People going to
these meetings might want to ponder whether they have isolated themselves there,
doing only Twelve Step activities with Twelve Step friends. If they feel "stuck"
or like victims, or if their conversations repeatedly center on the past or on
other people's behavior, it may mean they are dealing with issues that warrant
professional treatment. People who are members of more than one fellowship
should think about whether they're really getting something different from each
one--or whether program-hopping helps them avoid taking responsibility for their
lives.
To prospective and neophyte Twelve Steppers, Ed Madara, director of the American
Self-Help Clearinghouse (see sidebar), which publishes The Self-Help Sourcebook,
says, "Twelve Step programs constitute the majority of all self-help programs.
And people are getting help." But look out, he says. Not all "anonymous"
programs are necessarily built on the Twelve Steps. In fact, some groups
masquerade as self-help, and some are commercial enterprises. (One doctor, for
instance, wrote a book on pathological jealousy and called Madara to network a
group called Jealousy Anonymous.)
In the past, it was suggested that you try six meetings of the fellowship you're
interested in joining. Most veterans suggest doubling that figure, because
nowadays it may take a while to feel comfortable at a meeting and find a group
you like. Find a "home group," Mary advises. "If you don't belong to a group/
you don't become part of the structure of the program."
A newcomer would be wise to adopt an attitude of cautious optimism. At some
meetings--certainly not all--there is considerable whining; some sponsors are
controlling; and there are "thirteen-steppers" out there: members who try to get
vulnerable newcomers into bed. The point is, one can't assume that all people in
Twelve Step programs are virtuous. As one member put it, "We're sick people
getting better, not bad people getting good."
At the same time, the ever-increasing acceptance of the Twelve Step philosophy,
which places a premium on "honesty, openness, and willingness/" offers suffering
people a place to turn. The AA program (and its copies) urges people to be
tolerant and to give to others-in essence, to get out of themselves. This is
precisely the kind of "moral jogging"--a way to practice selflessness--that
psychologist Martin Seligman, author of Learned Optimism, prescribes to combat
the depression that comes from "overcommitment to the self and undercommitment
to the common good." Unfortunately, as Seligman puts it, "giving to others and
spending serious time, money, and effort enhancing the common good does not come
naturally to the present generation."
Sidebar: The Twelve Step Hit Parade
Although not all "anonymous" or -anon
groups are guided by AA's Twelve Steps, nearly 100 self-help groups are. Below
is a partial listing of the more popular clone groups for various types of
addicts and people affected by their behavior. The information comes from the
1990 edition of The Self-Help Sourcebook ($10)/ available from the American
Self-Help Clearinghouse, St. Clares-Riverside Medical Center, Denville, New
Jersey 07834 (201-625-7101).
1935 Alcoholics Anonymous-alcoholics
1951 AI-Anon-families and friends of alcoholics 1953 Narcotics Anonymous-addicts
1957 Alateen--twelve to eighteen year-olds who have alcoholics in their lives
1957 Gamblers Anonymous-compulsive gamblers
1960 Gam-Anon--families and friends of compulsive gamblers
1960 Overeaters Anonymous-people with compulsive-eating disorders 1967 Nar-Anon---families
and friends of addicts
1970 Emotional Health Anonymous- people with mental-health problems
1971 Emotions Anonymous-people who want to gain better emotional health 1971
Families Anonymous--relatives and friends of drug or alcohol abusers or of
people with behavioral problems
1975 O-Anon---friends and relatives of people with compulsive-eating disorders
1976 Debtors Anonymous-credit-card abusers, under-earners, and overspenders 1976
Augustine Fellowship, Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous-people with obsessive/
compulsive sexual behavior or emotional attachment
1977 Sex Addicts Anonymous-compulsive-sex addicts
1978 Drugs Anonymous (formerly Pills Anonymous)--chemical addicts 1979 Pill
Addicts Anonymous- addicted to mood-changing pills and drugs
1979 Sexaholics Anonymous-people with sexually destructive thinking and behavior
1980 Incest Survivors Anonymous-incest survivors
1982 Cocaine Anonymous-cocaine addicts
1982 Survivors of Incest Anonymous- victims of childhood sexual abuse 1984 Adult
Children of Alcoholics-now interpreted to include adult children of people with
other problems
1984 S-Anon-relatives and friends of sex addicts
1985 Nicotine Anonymous-(formerly Smokers Anonymous)--nicotine addicts 1986
Co-Dependents Anonymous- (CODA)-people who grew up in dysfunctional families and
have trouble with relationships
İNew York, September 1991)
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