Forward
This is the Foreword as it appeared in the first
printing of the first edition in 1939.
We, of Alcoholics Anonymous, are more
than one hundred men and women who have recovered from a
seemingly hopeless state of mind and body. To show other
alcoholics precisely how we have recovered is the main
purpose of this book. For them, we hope these pages will
prove so convincing that no further authentication will
be necessary. We think this account of our experiences
will help everyone to better understand the alcoholic.
Many do not comprehend that the alcoholic is a very sick
person. And besides, we are sure that our way of living
has its advantages for all.
It is important that we remain
anonymous because we are too few, at present to handle
the overwhelming number of personal appeals which may
result from this publication. Being mostly business or
professional folk, we could not well carry on our
occupations in such an event. We would like it
understood that our alcoholic work is an avocation.
When writing or speaking publicly
about alcoholism, we urge each of our Fellowship to omit
his personal name, designating himself instead as "a
member of Alcoholics Anonymous."
Very earnestly we ask the press also,
to observe this request, for otherwise we shall be
greatly handicapped. We are not an organization in the
conventional sense of the word. There are no fees or
dues whatsoever. The only requirement for membership is
an honest desire to stop drinking. We are not allied
with any particular faith, sect or denomination, nor do
we oppose anyone. We simply wish to be helpful to those
who are afflicted.
We shall be interested to hear from
those who are getting results from this book,
particularly form those who have commenced work with
other alcoholics. We should like to be helpful to such
cases. Inquiry by scientific, medical, and religious
societies will be welcomed.
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
Forward to the Second Edition
Figures given in this foreword describe the
Fellowship as it was in 1955.
Since the original Foreword to this
book was written in 1939, a wholesale miracle has taken
place. Our earliest printing voiced the hope "that every
alcoholic who journeys will find the Fellowship of
Alcoholics Anonymous at his destination. Already,"
continues the early text, "twos and threes and fives of
us have sprung up in other communities."
Sixteen years have elapsed between our
first printing of this book and the presentation of 1955
of our second edition. In that brief space, Alcoholics
Anonymous has mushroomed into nearly 6,000 groups whose
membership is far above 150,000 recovered alcoholics.
Groups are to be found in each of the United States and
all of the provinces of Canada. A.A. has flourishing
communities in the British Isles, the Scandinavian
countries, South Africa, South America, Mexico, Alaska,
Australia and Hawaii. All told, promising beginnings
have been made in some 50 foreign countries and U.S.
possessions. Some are just now taking shape in Asia.
Many of our friends encourage us by saying that this is
but a beginning, only the augury of a much larger future
ahead.
The spark that was to flare into the
first A.A. group was struck at Akron, Ohio in June 1935,
during a talk between a New York stockbroker and an
Akron physician. Six months earlier, the broker had been
relieved of his drink obsession by a sudden spiritual
experience, following a meeting with an alcoholic friend
who had been in contact with the Oxford Groups of that
day. He had also been greatly helped by the late Dr.
William D. Silkworth, a New York specialist in
alcoholism who is now accounted no less than a medical
saint by A.A. members, and whose story of the early days
of our Society appears in the next pages. From this
doctor, the broker had learned the grave nature of
alcoholism. Though he could not accept all the tenets of
the Oxford Groups, he was convinced of the need for
moral inventory, confession of personality defects,
restitution to those harmed, helpfulness to others, and
the necessity of belief in and dependence upon God.
Prior to his journey to Akron, the
broker had worked hard with many alcoholics on the
theory that only an alcoholic could help an alcoholic,
but he had succeeded only in keeping sober himself. The
broker had gone to Akron on a business venture which had
collapsed, leaving him greatly in fear that he might
start drinking again. He suddenly realized that in order
to save himself he must carry his message to another
alcoholic. That alcoholic turned out to be the Akron
physician.
This physician had repeatedly tried
spiritual means to resolve his alcoholic dilemma but had
failed. But when the broker gave him Dr. Silkworth’s
description of alcoholism and its hopelessness, the
physician began to pursue the spiritual remedy for his
malady with a willingness he had never before been able
to muster. He sobered, never to drink again up to the
moment of his death in 1950. This seemed to prove that
one alcoholic could affect another as no nonalcoholic
could. It also indicated that strenuous work, one
alcoholic with another, was vital to permanent recovery.
Hence the two men set to work almost
frantically upon alcoholics arriving in the ward of the
Akron City Hospital. Their very first case, a desperate
one, recovered immediately and became A.A. number three.
He never had another drink. This work at Akron continued
through the summer of 1935. There were many failures,
but there was an occasional heartening success. When the
broker returned to New York in the fall of 1935, the
first A.A. group had actually been formed, though no one
realized it at the time.
A second small group promptly took
shape at New York, to be followed in 1937 with the start
of a third at Cleveland. Besides these, there were
scattered alcoholics who had picked up the basic ideas
in Akron or New York who were trying to form groups in
other cities. By late 1937, the number of members having
substantial sobriety time behind them was sufficient to
convince the membership that a new light had entered the
dark world of the alcoholic.
It was now time, the struggling groups
thought, to place their message and unique experience
before the world. This determination bore fruit in the
spring of 1939 by the publication of this volume. The
membership had then reached about 100 men and women. The
fledgling society, which had been nameless, now began to
be called Alcoholics Anonymous, from the title of its
own book. The flying-blind period ended and A.A. entered
a new phase of its pioneering time.
With the appearance of the new book a
great deal began to happen. Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick,
the noted clergyman, reviewed it with approval. In the
fall of 1939 Fulton Oursler, the editor of LIBERTY,
printed a piece in his magazine, called "Alcoholics and
God." This brought a rush of 800 frantic inquiries into
the little New York office which meanwhile had been
established. Each inquiry was painstakingly answered;
pamphlets and books were sent out. Businessmen,
traveling out of existing groups, were referred to these
prospective newcomers. New groups started up and it was
found, to the astonishment of everyone, that A.A.'s
message could be transmitted in the mail as well as by
word of mouth. By the end of 1939 it was estimated that
800 alcoholics were on their way to recovery.
In the spring of 1940, John D.
Rockefeller, Jr. gave a dinner for many of his friends
to which he invited A.A. members to tell their stories.
News of this got on the world wires; inquiries poured in
again and many people went to the bookstores to get the
book "Alcoholics Anonymous." By March 1941 the
membership had shot up to 2,000. Then Jack Alexander
wrote a feature article in the Saturday Evening Post and
placed such a compelling picture of A.A. before the
general public that alcoholics in need of help really
deluged us. By the close of 1941, A.A. numbered 8,000
members. The mushrooming process was in full swing, A.A.
had become a national institution.
Our Society then entered a fearsome
and exciting adolescent period. The test that it faced
was this: Could these large numbers of erstwhile erratic
alcoholics successfully meet and work together? Would
there be quarrels over membership, leadership and money?
Would there be strivings for power and prestige? Would
there be schisms which would split A.A. apart? Soon A.A.
was beset by these very problems on every side and in
every group. But out of this frightening and at first
disrupting experience the conviction grew that A.A.'s
had to hang together or die separately. We had to unify
our Fellowship or pass off the scene.
As we discovered the principles by
which the individual alcoholic could live, so we had to
evolve principles by which the A.A. groups and A.A. as a
whole could survive and function effectively. It was
thought that no alcoholic man or woman could be excluded
from our Society; that our leaders might serve but not
govern; that each group was to be autonomous and there
was to be no fees or dues; our expenses were to be met
by our own voluntary contributions. There was to be the
least possible organization, even in our service
centers. Our public relations were to be based upon
attraction rather than promotion. It was decided that
all members ought to be anonymous at the level of press,
radio, TV and films. And in no circumstances should we
give endorsements, make alliances, or enter public
controversies.
This was the substance of A.A.'s
Twelve Traditions, which are stated in full on page 564
of this book. Though none of these principles had the
force of rules or laws, they had become so widely
accepted by 1950 that they were confirmed by our first
International Conference held at Cleveland. Today the
remarkable unity of A.A. is one of the greatest assets
that our Society has.
While the internal difficulties of our
adolescent period were being ironed out, public
acceptance of A.A. grew by leaps and bounds. For this
there were two principal reasons: the large numbers of
recoveries, and reunited homes.
These made their impressions
everywhere. Of alcoholics who came to A.A. and really
tried, 50% got sober at once and remained that way; 25%
sobered up after some relapses, and among the remainder,
those who stayed on with A.A. showed improvement. Other
thousands came to a few A.A. meetings and at first
decided they didn't want the program. But great numbers
of these-about two out of three-began to return as time
passed.
Another reason for the wide acceptance
of A.A. was the ministration of friends -- friends in
medicine, religion, and the press, together with
innumerable others who became our able and persistent
advocates. Without such support, A.A. could have made
only the slowest progress. Some of the recommendations
of A.A.'s early medical and religious friends will be
found further on in this book.
Alcoholics Anonymous is not a
religious organization. Neither does A.A. take any
particular medical point of view, though we cooperate
widely with the men of medicine as well as with the men
of religion. Alcohol being no respecter of persons, we
are an accurate cross section of America, and in distant
lands, the same democratic evening-up process is now
going on. By personal religious affiliation, we include
Catholics, Protestants, Jews, Hindus, and a sprinkling
of Moslems and Buddhists. More than fifteen percent of
us are women.
At present, our membership is
pyramiding at the rate of about twenty percent a year.
So far, upon the total problem of actual potential
alcoholics in the world, we have made only a scratch. In
all probability, we shall never be able to touch more
than a fair fraction of the alcohol problem in all its
ramifications. Upon therapy for the alcoholic himself,
we surely have no monopoly. Yet it is our great hope
that all those who have as yet found no answer may begin
to find one in the pages of this book and will presently
join us on the highroad to a new freedom.
Forward to the Third Edition
By March 1976, when this edition went
to the printer, the total worldwide membership of
Alcoholics Anonymous was conservatively estimated at
more than 1,000,000, with almost 28,000 groups meeting
in over 90 countries.
Surveys of groups in the United States
and Canada indicate that A.A. is reaching out, not only
to more and more people, but to a wider and wider range.
Women now make up more than one-fourth of the
membership; among newer members, the proportion is
nearly one-third. Seven percent of the A.A.'s surveyed
are less than thirty years of age -- among them, many in
their teens.
The basic principles of the A.A.
program, it appears, hold good for individuals with many
different lifestyles, just as the program has brought
recovery to those of many different nationalities. The
Twelve Steps that summarize the program may be called
los Douze Etapes in another, but they trace exactly the
same path to recovery that was blazed by the earliest
members of Alcoholics Anonymous.
In spite of the great increase in the
size and the span of this Fellowship, at its core it
remains simple and personal. Each day, somewhere in the
world, recovery begins when one alcoholic talks with
another alcoholic, sharing experience, strength, and
hope. |