
Chapter
7
Practical experience shows that nothing
will so much
"insure immunity from drinking as intensive work
with other alcoholics.
It works when other activities fail.
This
is our twelfth suggestion: Carry this message to
other alcoholics!
You can help when no one else can. You can
secure their confidence
when other fail. Remember they are
very ill.
Life will take on new meaning. To watch
people recover,
to see them help others, to watch loneliness
vanish, to
see a fellowship grow up about you, to have a
host of friends -- this is an experience you must not miss.
We
know you will not want to miss it. Frequent contact with
newcomers and with each other is the bright spot of our
lives.
Perhaps you are not acquainted with any
drinkers who want to recover.
You can easily find some by
asking a
few doctors, ministers, priests or hospitals. They
will be only too glad to assist you. Don't start out as an
evangelist or reformer. Unfortunately a lot
of prejudice
exists. You will be handicapped if you arouse it. Ministers
and doctors are competent and you can learn much from them
if you wish, but
it happens that because of your own
drinking experience you can be uniquely useful to other
alcoholics. So cooperate; never criticize. To be helpful is
our only aim.
When you discover a prospect for
Alcoholics Anonymous, find out all
you can about him. If he
does not want to stop drinking, don't waste time trying to
persuade him. You may spoil a later opportunity. This advice
is given for his family also. They should be patient,
realizing they are
dealing
with a sick person.
If there is any indication that he wants
to stop, have a
good talk with the person most interested in
him--usually his wife. Get an idea of his behavior, his
problems, his background, the seriousness of his condition,
and his religious leanings. You need this information to put
yourself in his place, to see how you would like him to
approach you if the tables were turned.
Sometimes it is wise to wait till he goes
on a binge.
The family may object to this, but unless he is
in a dangerous physical condition, it is better to risk it.
Don't deal with him when he is very drunk, unless he is ugly
and the family needs your help. Wait for the end of the
spree, or at least
for a lucid interval. Then let his family
or a friend ask him if he wants to
quit for good and if he
would go to any extreme to do so. If he says yes,
then his
attention should be drawn to you as a person who has
recovered. You should be described to him as one of a
fellowship who, as part of their own recovery, try to help
others and who will be glad to talk to him if he cares to
see you.
If he does not want to see you, never
force yourself upon him. Neither should the family
hysterically plead with him to do anything, nor should
they
tell him much about you. They should wait for the end of his
next drinking bout.
You might place this book where he can
see it in the interval. Here no specific rule can be given.
The family must decide these things. But urge them not to be
over-anxious, for that might spoil matters.
Usually the family should not try to tell
your story.
When possible, avoid meeting a man through his
family. Approach through
a doctor or an institution is a
better bet. If your man needs hospitalization,
he should
have it,
but not forcibly unless he is violent. Let the
doctor,
if he will, tell him he has something in the way of
a solution.
When your man is better, the doctor might
suggest a visit from you.
Though you have talked with the
family, leave them out of the first discussion. Under these
conditions your prospect will see he is under not pressure.
He will
feel he can deal with you without being nagged by
his family. Call on him while he is still jittery. He may be
more receptive when depressed.
See your man alone, if possible. At first
engage in
general conversation. After a while, turn the talk
to some phase of drinking. Tell him enough about your
drinking habits, symptoms, and experiences to encourage him
to speak of himself. If he wishes to talk, let him do so.
You will thus get a better idea of how you ought to proceed.
If he is not communicative, give him a sketch or your
drinking career up to the time you quit. But say nothing,
for the moment, of how that was accomplished. If he is in a
serious mood dwell on the troubles liquor has caused you,
being careful not to moralize or lecture. If his mood is
light, tell him humorous stories of your escapades. Get him
to tell some of his.
When he sees you know all about the
drinking game, commence to describe yourself as an
alcoholic. Tell him how baffled you were, how you finally
learned that you were sick. Give him an account of the
struggles you made to stop. Show him the mental twist which
leads to the first drink of a spree. We suggest you do this
as we have done it in the chapter on alcoholism. If he is
alcoholic, he will understand you at once. He will match you
mental inconsistencies with some of his own.
If you are satisfied that he is a real
alcoholic, begin to
dwell on the hopeless feature of the
malady. Show him, from your own experience, how the queer
mental
condition surrounding that first drink prevents
normal functioning of the will power. Don't, at this stage,
refer to this book, unless he has seen it and wishes to
discuss it. And be careful not to brand him as an alcoholic.
Let him draw his own conclusion. If he sticks to the idea
that he
can still control his drinking, tell him that
possibly he can - if he is not too alcoholic. But insist
that if he is severely afflicted, there may be little chance
he can recover by himself.
Continue to speak of alcoholism as an
illness, a fatal malady.
Talk about the conditions of body
and mind
which accompany it. Keep his attention focussed
mainly
on your personal experience. Explain that many are
doomed who never realize their predicament. Doctors are
rightly loath to tell alcoholic patients the whole story
unless it will serve some good purpose. But you may talk
to
him about the hopelessness of alcoholism because you offer a
solution. You will soon have you friend admitting
he has
many, if not all, of the traits of the alcoholic. If his own
doctor is willing to tell him that he is alcoholic, so much
the better. Even though your protege may not have entirely
admitted his condition, he has become very
curious to know
how you got well. Let him ask you that question, if he will.
Tell him exactly what happened to
you. Stress the
spiritual feature freely. If the man be agnostic or atheist,
make it emphatic that he does not
have to agree with your
conception of God. He can
choose any conception he
likes, provided it makes sense
to him. The main thing is
that he be willing to believe
in a Power greater than
himself and that he live by spiritual principles.
When dealing with such a person, you had
better use everyday language to describe spiritual
principles.
There is no use arousing any prejudice he may
have
against certain theological terms and conceptions about
which he may already be confused. Don't raise such issues,
no matter what your own convictions are.
Your prospect may belong to a religious
denomination.
His religious education and training may be
far superior
to yours. In that case he is going to wonder
how you can add anything to what he already knows. But he
well be curious to learn why his own convictions have not
worked and why yours seem to work so well. He may be an
example of the truth that faith alone is insufficient. To be
vital, faith must be accompanied by self sacrifice and
unselfish, constructive action.
Let him see that you are
not
there to instruct him in religion. Admit that he probably
knows more about it than you do, but call to his attention
the fact that however deep his faith and knowledge, he could
not have applied it or he would not drink, Perhaps your
story will help him see where he has failed to practice the
very precepts he knows so well. We represent no particular
faith or denomination. We are dealing only
with general
principles common to most denominations.
Outline the program of action, explaining
how you
made a self-appraisal, how you straightened out your
past and why you are now endeavoring to be helpful to him.
It is important for him to realize that your attempt to pass
this on to him plays a vital part in your recovery.
Actually, he may be helping you more than you are helping
him. Make it plain he is under no obligation to you, that
you hope only that he will try to help other alcoholics when
he escapes his own difficulties. Suggest how important it is
that he place the welfare of other people ahead of his own.
Make it clear that he is not under pressure, that he needn't
see you again if he doesn't want to. You should not be
offended if he wants to call it off, for he has helped you
more than you have helped him. If your talk has been sane,
quiet and full of human understanding, you have perhaps made
a friend. Maybe you have disturbed him about the question of
alcoholism. This is all to the good. The more hopeless he
feels, the better. He will be more likely to follow your
suggestions.
Your candidate may give reasons why he
need not
follow all of the program. He may rebel at the
thought
of a drastic housecleaning which requires discussion
with other people.
Do not contradict such views. Tell him
you once felt as he does, but you doubt whether you would
have made much progress had you not taken action. On your
first visit tell him about the Fellowship of Alcoholics
Anonymous. If he shows interest, lend him your copy of this
book.
Unless your friend wants to talk further
about himself, do not wear out
your welcome. Give him a
chance to think it over. If you do stay , let him steer the
conversation in any direction he like. Sometimes a new man
is anxious to proceed at once, and you may be tempted to let
him do so. This
is sometimes a mistake. If he has trouble
later, he is likely to say you rushed him. You will be most
successful with alcoholics if you do not exhibit any passion
for crusade or reform. Never talk down to an alcoholic from
any moral or spiritual hilltop; simply lay out the kit of
spiritual tools for his inspection. Show him how they worked
with you. Offer him friendship and fellowship.
Tell him that
if he wants to get well you will do anything
to help.
If he is not interested in your solution,
if he expects you
to act only as a banker for his financial
difficulties or a nurse for his
sprees, you may have to drop
him until he changes his mind. This he may
do after he gets
hurts some more.
If he is sincerely interested and wants to
see you again,
ask him to read this book in the interval.
After doing that, he must decide
for himself whether he
wants to go on. He should not be pushed or prodded by you,
his wife, or his friends. If he is to find God, the desire
must come from within.
If he thinks he can do the job in some
other way, or
prefers some other spiritual approach,
encourage him
to follow his own conscience. We have no
monopoly on God;
we merely have an approach that worked with
us.
But point out that we alcoholics have much in common
and
that you would like, in any case, to be friendly. Let it go
at that. Do not be discouraged if your prospect does
not
respond at once. Search out another alcoholic and try again.
You are sure to find someone desperate enough to accept with
eagerness what you offer. We find it a wasteof time to keep
chasing a man who cannot or will not
work with you. If you
leave such a person alone, he may soon become convinced that
he cannot recover by himself. To spend too much time on any
one situation is to deny some other alcoholic an opportunity
to live and be happy. One of our Fellowship failed entirely
with his first half dozen prospects. He often says that if
he had continued to work on them, he might have deprived
many others, who have since recovered, of their chance.
Suppose now you are making your second
visit to a man. He has read this volume and says he is
prepared to go through with the Twelve Steps of the program
of recovery. Having had the experience yourself, you can
give him much practical advice. Let him know you are
available if he wishes to make a decision and tell his
story, but do not insist upon it if he prefers to consult
someone else.
He may be broke and homeless. If he is,
you might try to help him about getting a job, or give him a
little financial assistance. But you should not deprive your
family or creditors of money they should have. Perhaps you
will
want to take the man into your home for a few days. But
be sure you use discretion. Be certain he will be
welcomed
by your family, and that he is not trying to impose upon you
for money, connections, or shelter.
Permit that and you only
harm him. You will be making
it possible for him to be
insincere. You may be aiding in
his destruction rather than
his recovery.
Never avoid these responsibilities, but be
sure you are doing the right thing if you assume them.
Helping othersis the foundation stone of your recovery. A
kindly act
once in a while isn't enough. You have to act the
Good Samaritan every day, if need be. It may mean the loss
of many nights' sleep, great interference with your
pleasures, interruptions to your business. It may mean
sharing your money and your home, counseling frantic wives
and relatives, innumerable trips to police courts,
sanitariums, hospitals, jails and asylums. Your telephone
may jangle at any time of the day or night. Your wife may
sometimes say she is neglected. A drunk may smash the
furniture in your home, or burn a mattress. You may have to
fight with him
if he is violent. Sometimes you will have to
call a doctor and administer sedatives under his direction.
Another time you may have to send for the police or an
ambulance. Occasionally you will have to meet such
conditions.
We seldom allow an alcoholic to live in
our homes for long at a time. It is not good for him, and it
sometimes creates serious complications in a family.
Though an alcoholic does not respond,
there is no reason why you should neglect his family. You
should continue
to be friendly to them. The family should be
offered your way of life. Should they accept and practice
spiritual principles, there is a much better change that the
head of the family will recover. And even though he
continues to drink, the family will find life more bearable.
For the type of alcoholic who is able and
willing to get well, little charity, in the ordinary sense
of the word, is need or wanted. The men who cry for money
and shelter before conquering alcohol, are on the wrong
track. Yet we do go to great extremes to provide each other
with these very things, when such action is warranted. This
may seem inconsistent, but we think it is not.
It is not the matter of giving that is in
question, but when and how to give. That often makes the
difference between failure and success. The minute we put
our work on a service plane, the alcoholic commences to rely
upon our assistance rather than upon God. He clamors for
this or that, claiming he cannot master alcohol until his
material needs are cared for. Nonsense. Some of us have
taken very hard knocks to learn this truth: Job or no
job -- wife or no wife -- we simply do
not stop drinking so long as we place dependence upon other
people ahead of dependence on God.
Burn the idea into the consciousness of
every man that
he can get well regardless of anyone. The
only condition
is that he trust in God and clean house.
Now, the domestic problem: There may be
divorce, separation, or just strained relations. When your
prospect has made such reparation as he can to his family,
and has thoroughly explained to them the new principles by
which he is living, he should proceed to put those
principles into action at home. That is, if he is lucky
enough to have a home. Though his family be at fault in many
respects, he should not be concerned about that. He should
concentrate on his own spiritual demonstration. Argument and
fault-finding are to be avoided like the plague. In many
homes this is a difficult thing to do, but it must be done
if any results are to be expected. If persisted in for a few
months, the effect on a man's family is sure to be great.
The most incompatible people discover they have a basis upon
which they can meet. Little by little the family may see
their own defects and admit them. These can then be
discussed in an atmosphere of helpfulness and friendliness.
After they have seen tangible results, the
family will perhaps want to go along. These things will come
to pass naturally and in good time provided, however, the
alcoholic continues to demonstrate that he can be sober,
considerate, and helpful, regardless of what anyone says
or
does. Of course, we all fall much below this standard many
times. But we must try to repair the damage immediately lest
we pay the penalty by a spree.
If there be divorce or separation, there
should be no
undue haste for the couple to get together. The
man
should be sure of his recovery. The wife should fully
understand his new way of life. If their old relationship
is
to be resumed it must be on a better basis, since the former
did not work. This means a new attitude and
spirit all
around. Sometimes it is to the best interests
of all
concerned that a couple remain apart. Obviously,
no rule can
be laid down. Let the alcoholic continue his program day by
day. When the time for living together
has come, it will be
apparent to both parties.
Let no alcoholic say he cannot recover
unless he has his family back. This just isn't so. In some
cases the wife will never come back for one reason or
another. Remind the prospect that his recovery is not
dependent upon people.It is dependent upon his relationship
with God. We have seen men get well whose families have not
returned at all. We have seen others slip when the family
came back too soon.
Both you and the new man must walk day by
day in the path of spiritual progress. If you persist,
remarkable
things will happen. When we look back, we realize
that
the things which came to us when we put ourselves in
God's hands were better than anything we could have planned.
Follow the dictates of a Higher Power and you will presently
live in a new and wonderful world, no
matter what your present circumstances!
When working with a man and his family,
you should
take care not to participate in their quarrels.
You may
spoil your chance of being helpful if you do. But
urge
upon a man's family that he has been a very sick person
and should be treated accordingly. You should warn
against
arousing resentment or jealousy. You should point out that
his defects of character are not going to disappear over
night. Show them that he has entered upon a period
of
growth. Ask them to remember, when they are
impatient, the
blessed fact of his sobriety.
If you have been successful in solving
your own
domestic problems, tell the newcomer's family how
that was accomplished. In this way you can set them on the
right track without becoming critical of them. The story
of
how you and your wife settled your difficulties is worth any
amount of criticism.
Assuming we are spiritually fit, we can do
all sorts of
things alcoholics are not supposed to do.
People have
said we must not go where liquor is served; we
must not have it in our homes; we must shun friends who
drink;
we must avoid moving pictures which show drinking
scenes; we must not go into bars; our friends must hide
their bottles if we go to their houses; we mustn't think or
be reminded about alcohol at all.
We meet these conditions every day. An
alcoholic who cannot meet them, still has an alcoholic mind;
there is something the matter with his spiritual status. His
only chance for sobriety would be some place like the
Greenland Ice Cap, and even there an Eskimo might turn up
with a bottle of scotch and ruin everything! Ask
any woman
who has sent her husband to distant places on the theory he
would escape the alcohol problem.
In our belief any scheme of combating
alcoholism
which proposes to shield the sick man from
temptation is
doomed to failure. If the alcoholic tries to
shield himself
he may succeed for a time, but usually winds
up with a bigger
explosion than ever. We have tried these
methods. These attempts to
do the impossible have always
failed.
So our rule is not to avoid a place where
there is drinking,
if we have a legitimate reason for
being there. That includes bars, nightclubs, dances,
receptions, weddings, even plain ordinary whoopee parties.
To a person who
has had experience with an alcoholic, this
may seem like tempting Providence, but it isn't.
You will note that we made and important
qualification. Therefore, ask yourself on each occasion,
"Have I any
good social, business, or personal reason for
going to this place? Or am I expecting to steal a little
vicarious pleasure from the atmosphere of such places?" If
you answer these questions satisfactorily, you need have no
apprehension. Go or stay away, whichever seems best. But be
sure you are on solid spiritual ground before you start and
that your motive in going is thoroughly good. Do not think
of what you will get out of the occasion. Think of what you
can bring to it. But if you are shaky, you had better work
with another alcoholic instead!
Why sit with a long face in places where
there is
drinking, sighing about the good old days. If it is
a
happy occasion, try to increase the pleasure of those
there; if a business occasion, go and attend to your
business enthusiastically. If you are with a person who
wants to eat in a bar, by all means go along. Let your
friends know they are not to change their habits on your
account. At a proper time and place explain to all your
friends why alcohol disagrees with you. If you do this
thoroughly, few people will ask you to drink. While you were
drinking, you were withdrawing from life little by little.
Now you are getting back into the social life of this world.
Don't start to withdraw again just because your friends
drink liquor.
Your job now is to be at the place where
you may be of maximum helpfulness to others, so never
hesitate to go anywhere if you can be helpful. You should
not hesitate to visit the most sordid spot on earth on such
an errand. Keep on the firing line of life with these
motives and God will keep you unharmed.
Many of us keep liquor in our homes. We
often need it
to carry green recruits through a severe
hangover. Some
of us still serve it to our friends provided
they are not alcoholic. But some of us think we should not
serve
liquor to anyone. We never argue this question. We
feel that each family, in the light of their own
circumstances, ought to decide for themselves.
We are careful never to show intolerance
or hatred of drinking as an institution. Experience shows
that such an attitude is not helpful to anyone. Every new
alcoholic
looks for this spirit among us and is immensely
relieved when he finds we are not witchburners. A spirit of
intolerance might repel alcoholics whose lives could have
been saved, had it not been for such stupidity. We would not
even do the cause of temperate drinking any good, for not
one drinker in a thousand likes to be told anything about
alcohol by one who hates it.
Some day we hope that Alcoholics Anonymous
will help the public to a better realization of the gravity
of the alcoholic problem, but we shall be of little use if
our attitude is one of bitterness or hostility. Drinkers
will not stand for it.
After all, our problems were of our own
making.
Bottles were only a symbol. Besides, we have stopped
fighting anybody or anything. We have to!
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