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"Made
a searching and
fearless moral inventory of ourselves."
Creation
gave us instincts for a purpose. Without them we wouldn't be
complete human beings. If men and women didn't exert themselves to
be secure in their persons, made no effort to harvest food or
construct shelter, there would be no survival. If they didn't
reproduce, the earth wouldn't be populated. If there were no social
instinct, if men cared nothing for the society of one another, there
would be no society. So these desires--for the sex relation, for
material and emotional security, and for companionship--are
perfectly necessary and right, and surely
God-given.
Yet these
instincts, so necessary for our existence, often far exceed their
proper functions. Powerfully, blindly, many times subtly, they drive
us, dominate us, and insist upon ruling our lives. Our desires for
sex, for material and emotional security, and for an important place
in society often tyrannize us. When thus out of joint, man's natural
desires cause him great trouble, practically all the trouble there
is. No human being, however good, is exempt from these troubles.
Nearly every serious emotional problem can be seen as a case of
misdirected instinct. When that happens, our great natural assets,
the instincts, have turned into physical and mental liabilities.
Step Four
is our vigorous and painstaking effort to discover what these
liabilities in each of us have been, and are. We want to find
exactly how, when, and where our natural desires have warped us. We
wish to look squarely at the unhappiness this has caused others and
ourselves. By discovering what our emotional deformities are, we can
move toward their correction. Without a willing and persistent
effort to do this, there can be little sobriety or contentment for
us. Without a searching and
fearless
moral inventory, most of us have found that the faith which really
works in daily living is still out of reach.
Before
tackling the inventory problem in detail, let's have a closer look
at what the basic problem is. Simple examples like the following
take on a world of meaning when we think about them. Suppose a
person places sex desire ahead of everything else. In such a case,
this imperious urge can destroy his chances for material and
emotional security as well as his standing in the community. Another
may develop such an obsession for financial security that he wants
to do nothing but hoard money. Going to the extreme, he can become a
miser, or even a recluse who denies himself both family and friends.
Nor is the
quest for security always expressed in terms of money. How
frequently we see a frightened human being determined to depend
completely upon a stronger person for guidance and protection. This
weak one, failing to meet life's responsibilities with his own
resources, never grows up. Disillusionment and helplessness are his
lot. In time all his protectors either flee or die, and he is once
more left alone and afraid.
We have
also seen men and women who go power-mad, who devote themselves to
attempting to rule their fellows. These people often throw to the
winds every chance for legitimate security and a happy family life.
Whenever a human being becomes a battleground for the instincts,
there can be no peace.
But that
is not all of the danger. Every time a person imposes his instincts
unreasonably upon others, unhappiness follows. If the pursuit of
wealth tramples upon people who happen to be in the way, then anger,
jealousy, and revenge are likely to be aroused. If sex runs riot,
there is a similar uproar. Demands made upon other people for too
much attention, protection, and love can only invite domination or
revulsion in the protectors themselves--two emotions quite as
unhealthy as the demands which evoked them. When an individual's
desire for prestige becomes uncontrollable, whether in the sewing
circle or at the international conference table, other people suffer
and often revolt. This collision of instincts can produce anything
from a cold snub to a blazing revolution. In these ways we are set
in conflict not only with ourselves, but with other people who have
instincts, too.
Alcoholics
especially should be able to see that instinct run wild in
themselves is the underlying cause of their destructive drinking. We
have drunk to drown feelings of
fear,
frustration, and depression. We have drunk to escape the guilt of
passions, and then have drunk again to make more passions possible.
We have drunk for vain glory--that we might the more enjoy foolish
dreams of pomp and power. This perverse soul-sickness is not
pleasant to look upon. Instincts on rampage balk at investigation.
The minute we make a serious attempt to probe them, we are liable to
suffer severe reactions.
If
temperamentally we are on the depressive side, we are apt to be
swamped with guilt and self-loathing. We wallow in this messy bog,
often getting a misshapen and painful pleasure out of it. As we
morbidly pursue this melancholy activity, we may sink to such a
point of despair that nothing but oblivion looks possible as a
solution. Here, of course, we have lost all perspective, and
therefore all genuine
humility.
For this is
pride in reverse.
This is not a moral inventory at all; it is the very process by
which the depressive has so often been led to the bottle and
extinction.
If,
however, our natural disposition is inclined to self righteousness
or grandiosity, our reaction will be just the opposite. We will be
offended at A.A.'s suggested inventory. No doubt we shall point with
pride to the good lives we
thought we led before the bottle cut us down. We shall claim that
our serious character defects, if we think we have any at all, have
been caused chiefly by excessive drinking. This being so, we think
it logically follows that sobriety-- first, last, and all the
time--is the only thing we need to work for. We believe that our
one-time good characters will be revived the moment we quit alcohol.
If we were pretty nice people all along, except for our drinking,
what need is there for a moral inventory now that we are sober?
We also
clutch at another wonderful excuse for avoiding an inventory. Our
present anxieties and troubles, we cry, are caused by the behavior
of other people--people who really need a moral inventory. We firmly
believe that if only they'd treat us better, we'd be all right.
Therefore we think our indignation is justified and reasonable--that
our resentments are the "right kind." We aren't the guilty ones.
They are!
At this
stage of the inventory proceedings, our sponsors come to the rescue.
They can do this, for they are the carriers of A.A.'s tested
experience with Step Four. They comfort the melancholy one by first
showing him that his case is not strange or different, that his
character defects are probably not more numerous or worse than those
of anyone else in A.A. This the sponsor promptly proves by talking
freely and easily, and without exhibitionism, about his own defects,
past and present. This calm, yet realistic, stocktaking is immensely
reassuring. The sponsor probably points out that the newcomer has
some assets which can be noted along with his liabilities. This
tends to clear away morbidity and encourage balance. As soon as he
begins to be more objective, the newcomer can
fearlessly, rather than
fearfully, look at his own
defects.
The
sponsors of those who feel they need no inventory are confronted
with quite another problem. This is because people who are driven by
pride of self unconsciously
blind themselves to their liabilities. These newcomers scarcely need
comforting. The problem is to help them discover a chink in the
walls their
ego has built,
through which the light of reason can shine.
First off,
they can be told that the majority of A.A. members have suffered
severely from self-justification during their drinking days. For
most of us, self-justification was the maker of excuses; excuses, of
course, for drinking, and for all kinds of crazy and damaging
conduct. We had made the invention of alibis a fine art. We had to
drink because times were hard or times were good. We had to drink
because at home we were smothered with love or got none at all. We
had to drink because at work we were great successes or dismal
failures. We had to drink because our nation had won a war or lost a
peace. And so it went, ad infinitum.
We thought
"conditions" drove us to drink, and when we tried to correct these
conditions and found that we couldn't to our entire satisfaction,
our drinking went out of hand and we became alcoholics. It never
occurred to us that we needed to change ourselves to meet
conditions, whatever they were.
But in
A.A. we slowly learned that something had to be done about our
vengeful resentments, self-pity, and unwarranted
pride. We had to see that
every time we played the big shot, we turned people against us. We
had to see that when we harbored grudges and planned revenge for
such defeats, we were really beating ourselves with the club of
anger we had intended to use on others. We learned that if we were
seriously disturbed, our first need was to quiet that disturbance,
regardless of who or what we thought caused it.
To see how
erratic emotions victimized us often took a long time. We could
perceive them quickly in others, but only slowly in ourselves. First
of all, we had to admit that we had many of these defects, even
though such disclosures were painful and humiliating. Where other
people were concerned, we had to drop the word "blame" from our
speech and thought. This required great willingness even to begin.
But once over the first two or three high hurdles, the course ahead
began to look easier. For we had started to get perspective on
ourselves, which is another way of saying that we were gaining in
humility.
Of course
the depressive and the power-driver are personality extremes, types
with which A.A. and the whole world abound. Often these
personalities are just as sharply defined as the examples given. But
just as often some of us will fit more or less into both
classifications. Human beings are never quite alike, so each of us,
when making an inventory, will need to determine what his individual
character defects are. Having found the shoes that fit, he ought to
step into them and walk with new confidence that he is at last on
the right track.
Now let's
ponder the need for a list of the more glaring personality defects
all of us have in varying degrees. To those having religious
training, such a list would set forth serious violations of moral
principles. Some others will think of this list as defects of
character. Still others will call it an index of maladjustments.
Some will become quite annoyed if there is talk about immorality,
let alone sin. But all who are in the least reasonable will agree
upon one point: that there is plenty wrong with us alcoholics about
which plenty will have to be done if we are to expect sobriety,
progress, and any real ability to cope with life.
To avoid
falling into confusion over the names these defects should be
called, let's take a universally recognized list of major human
failings--the Seven Deadly Sins of
pride, greed, lust, anger, gluttony, envy, and sloth. It is
not by accident that
pride
heads the procession. For
pride,
leading to self-justification, and always spurred by conscious or
unconscious
fears, is the
basic breeder of most human difficulties, the chief block to true
progress.
Pride lures us into
making demands upon ourselves or upon others which cannot be met
without perverting or misusing our
God-given
instincts. When the satisfaction of our instincts for sex, security,
and society becomes the sole object of our lives, then
pride steps in to justify our
excesses.
All these
failings generate
fear, a
soul-sickness in its own right. Then
fear, in turn, generates more character defects. Unreasonable
fear that our instincts will
not be satisfied drives us to covet the possessions of others, to
lust for sex and power, to become angry when our instinctive demands
are threatened, to be envious when the ambitions of others seem to
be realized while ours are not. We eat, drink, and grab for more of
everything than we need,
fearing
we shall never have enough. And with genuine alarm at the prospect
of work, we stay lazy. We loaf and procrastinate, or at best work
grudgingly and under half steam. These
fears are the termites that
ceaselessly devour the foundations of whatever sort of life we try
to build.
So when
A.A. suggests a
fearless moral
inventory, it must seem to every newcomer that more is being asked
of him than he can do. Both his
pride
and his
fear beat him back
every time he tries to look within himself.
Pride says, "You need not pass
this way," and
Fear says, "You
dare not look!" But the testimony of A.A.'s who have really tried a
moral inventory is that
pride
and
fear of this sort turn out
to be bogeymen, nothing else. Once we have a complete willingness to
take inventory, and exert ourselves to do the job thoroughly, a
wonderful light falls upon this foggy scene. As we persist, a
brand-new kind of confidence is born, and the sense of relief at
finally facing ourselves is indescribable. These are the first
fruits of Step Four.
By now the
newcomer has probably arrived at the following conclusions: that his
character defects, representing instincts gone astray, have been the
primary cause of his drinking and his failure at life; that unless
he is now willing to work hard at the elimination of the worst of
these defects, both sobriety and peace of mind will still elude him;
that all the faulty foundation of his life will have to be torn out
and built anew on bedrock. Now willing to commence the search for
his own defects, he will ask, "Just how do I go about this? how do I
take inventory of myself?"
Since Step
Four is but the beginning of a lifetime practice, it can be
suggested that he first have a look at those personal flaws which
are acutely troublesome and fairly obvious. Using his best judgment
of what has been right and what has been wrong, he might make a
rough survey of his conduct with respect to his primary instincts
for sex, security, and society. Looking back over his life, he can
readily get under way by consideration of questions such as these:
When, and
how, and in just what instances did my selfish pursuit of the sex
relation damage other people and me? What people were hurt, and how
badly? Did I spoil my marriage and injure my children? Did I
jeopardize my standing in the community? Just how did I react to
these situations at the time? Did I burn with a guilt that nothing
could extinguish? Or did I insist that I was the pursued and not the
pursuer, and thus absolve myself? How have I reacted to frustration
in sexual matters? When denied, did I become vengeful or depressed?
Did I take it out on other people? If there was rejection or
coldness at home, did I use this as a reason for promiscuity?
Also of
importance for most alcoholics are the questions they must ask about
their behavior respecting financial and emotional security. In these
areas
fear, greed,
possessiveness, and
pride have
too often done their worst. Surveying his business or employment
record, almost any alcoholic can ask questions like these: In
addition to my drinking problem, what character defects contributed
to my financial instability? Did
fear
and inferiority about my fitness for my job destroy my confidence
and fill me with conflict? Did I try to cover up those feelings of
inadequacy by bluffing, cheating, lying, or evading responsibility?
Or by griping that others failed to recognize my truly exceptional
abilities? Did I overvalue myself and play the big shot? Did I have
such unprincipled ambition that I double-crossed and undercut my
associates? Was I extravagant? Did I recklessly borrow money, caring
little whether it was repaid or not? Was I a pinch penny, refusing
to support my family properly? Did I cut corners financially? What
about the "quick money" deals, the stock market, and the races?
Businesswomen in A.A. will naturally find that many of these
questions apply to them, too. But the alcoholic housewife can also
make the family financially insecure. She can juggle charge
accounts, manipulate the food budget, spend her afternoons gambling,
and run her husband into debt by irresponsibility, waste, and
extravagance.
But all
alcoholics who have drunk themselves out of jobs, family, and
friends will need to cross-examine themselves ruthlessly to
determine how their own personality defects have thus demolished
their security.
The most
common symptoms of emotional insecurity are worry, anger, self-pity,
and depression. These stem from causes which sometimes seem to be
within us, and at other times to come from without. To take
inventory in this respect we ought to consider carefully all
personal relationships which bring continuous or recurring trouble.
It should be remembered that this kind of insecurity may arise in
any area where instincts are threatened. Questioning directed to
this end might run like this: Looking at both past and present, what
sex situations have caused me
anxiety,
bitterness, frustration, or depression? Appraising each situation
fairly, can I see where I have been at fault? Did these perplexities
beset me because of selfishness or unreasonable demands? Or, if my
disturbance was seemingly caused by the behavior of others, why do I
lack the ability to accept conditions I cannot change? These are the
sort of fundamental inquiries that can disclose the source of my
discomfort and indicate whether I may be able to alter my own
conduct and so adjust myself serenely to self-discipline.
Suppose
that financial insecurity constantly arouses these same feelings. I
can ask myself to what extent have my own mistakes fed my gnawing
anxieties. And if the actions of others are part of the cause, what
can I do about that? If I am unable to change the present state of
affairs, am I willing to take the measures necessary to shape my
life to conditions as they are? Questions like these, more of which
will come to mind easily in each individual case, will help turn up
the root causes.
But it is
from our twisted relations with family, friends, and society at
large that many of us have suffered the most. We have been
especially stupid and stubborn about them. The primary fact that we
fail to recognize is our total inability to form a true partnership
with another human being. Our
egomania
digs two disastrous pitfalls. Either we insist upon dominating the
people we know, or we depend upon them far too much. If we lean too
heavily on people, they will sooner or later fail us, for they are
human, too, and cannot possibly meet our incessant demands. In this
way our insecurity grows and festers. When we habitually try to
manipulate others to our own willful desires, they revolt, and
resist us heavily. Then we develop hurt feelings, a sense of
persecution, and a desire to retaliate. As we redouble our efforts
at control, and continue to fail, our suffering becomes acute and
constant. We have not once sought to be one in a family, to be a
friend among friends, to be a worker among workers, to be a useful
member of society. Always we tried to struggle to the top of the
heap, or to hide underneath it. This self-centered behavior blocked
a partnership relation with any one of those about us. Of true
brotherhood we had small comprehension.
Some will
object to many of the questions posed, because they think their own
character defects have not been so glaring. To these it can be
suggested that a conscientious examination is likely to reveal the
very defects the objectionable questions are concerned with. Because
our surface record hasn't looked too bad, we have frequently been
abashed to find that this is so simply because we have buried these
self same defects deep down in us under thick layers of
self-justification. Whatever the defects, they have finally ambushed
us into alcoholism and misery.
Therefore,
thoroughness ought to be the watchword when taking inventory. In
this connection, it is wise to write out our questions and answers.
It will be an aid to clear thinking and honest appraisal. It will be
the first tangible evidence of our complete willingness to move
forward.
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