others.
"Growing up in Alabama, I was taught to hate myself," one gay member told an
A.A. meeting. "I was a nigger sissy. In A.A., I learned that God loves us all.
My business in A.A. is to stay sober and help you if you want it."
A.A. surveys do not inquire whether members attend religious services or if
they believe in God. There are no questions about ethnic or racial origins,
sexual preference or whether alcoholism runs in the family. But a family
predisposition to alcoholism is reflected strikingly within A.A. Often,
speakers at meetings begin: "My name is Mary, and I am an alcoholic...and my
father [or mother] was an alcoholic."
Longtime A.A. members believe that it is hopeless to drag another into
sobriety if the alcoholic is determined not to be helped or refuses to believe
he is ill. Even so, the courts in some states are sending thousands of
offenders to A.A. meetings instead of to jail. But the A.A. program sometimes
catches on even with unwilling alcoholics.
There are many things outsiders believe A.A. to be that it is not. It is not a
temperance organization or Prohibition society. A.A. does not want to save the
world from gin. Nobody invites you to join A.A. You are a member if you say
you are, or if you walk into an A.A. meeting with the thought that you have a
drinking problem and you want to stop. There are no papers to sign, no pledges
to take, no obligations to speak up, no arms twisted. The attitude of members
toward those outside who drink moderately is, "I wish I could drink as you do,
but I can't."
A.A. is not a religious cult. Some members are agnostics or atheists. Many
choose to believe that their "higher power" is their A.A. group. Most members
prefer to call A.A.'s program "spiritual." Yet God is mentioned directly or
indirectly in five of the Twelve Steps, which A.A. uses to help heal
individuals, and this sometimes repels outsiders who might otherwise be
attracted. (Boiled down to six instantly understandable principles, the Twelve
Step program might read: We admitted we are licked and cannot get well on our
own. We get honest with ourselves. We talk it out with somebody else. We try
to make amends to people we have harmed. We pray to whatever greater Power we
think there is. We try to give of ourselves for our own sake and without stint
to other alcoholics with no thought of reward.)
A.A. does not work for everybody. But then, nothing does. About 60 per cent of
those coming to A.A. for the first time remain in A.A. after going to meetings
and assiduously "working the program" for months or even years. Usually, they
stay sober for good. But about 40 percent drop out. These statistics refute a
widely held notion that A.A. is always successful or an "instant fix." Even
so, its success rate is phenomenally high.
Freudian analysis and religious faith, for example, may be two great ways to
heal the human spirit, but they do not work on their own for alcoholics. The
vast majority of doctors, psychologists and members of the clergy who are
familiar with A.A. as well as almost all experts in alcoholism, make A.A.
their No. 1 choice for a long-term program of recovery. A.A. precepts are
built into the programs of every respected intensive alcoholism treatment
center in the country, including those of Hazelden in Minnesota, Smithers in
New York and the Betty Ford Center. John Schwarzlose of the Betty Ford Center
expresses a typical opinion. "Patients ask how important it is that they go to
A.A. after they're through here. I say, 'I can give you a guarantee. When you
leave here, if you don't go to A.A., you won't make it.'"
A.A. has no ties with political parties, foundations, charities or causes, nor
does it sponsor research into alcoholism.
And unlike most tax-exempt organizations, A.A., whose current annual budget is
$11.5 million, does no fund raising. Nor does A.A. accept money from
outsiders. The funds supporting headquarters services come mainly from A.A.'s
huge publishing empire, which distributes authorized literature to members.
Each group is self-supporting, passing a basket at every meeting to help pay
for coffee, snacks, literature and rent for the meeting space. Those present
often give a dollar. Others may just drop a coin in the basket. Some cannot
give anything.
No member may donate more that $1,000 a year to A.A. Nor may a member bequeath
more than $1,000, or leave property to A.A., which has never owned any real
estate.
"The reason we discourage gifts and bequests," says Dennis Manders, a
nonalcoholic who served for 35 years as the controller at A.A. headquarters,
"is that we don't ever want some person dropping a million bucks in the A.A.
hopper and saying, 'Now, I'm going to call the tune.'"
About half of the groups contribute nothing at all for headquarters services.
Many members feel that carrying the expenses of their "home group" is enough.
This kind of autonomy and decentralization typifies Alcoholics Anonymous.
The average A.A. member, according to surveys, attends four meetings a week.
After about five years of regular attendance, some A.A.'s go to fewer and
fewer meetings. They may stop altogether when they feel they are able to
function comfortably without alcohol. However, some speakers at meetings are
full of cautionary tales about how they drifted away from A.A. and drank
again, sometimes disastrously and for long, periods of time, before returning
to the fold.
The movement works in quiet and simple ways. Members usually give of
themselves without reservation; exchange telephone numbers with newcomers;
come to help at any hour when a fellow member is in crisis; are free with tips
on how to avoid that first drink. Most people in A.A. are flexible, tolerant
of eccentrics, suspicious of "rules" and "musts." The lack of ritual can be a
surprise to beginners. So is the absence of confrontation, finger-pointing,
blame-laying, angry debate and chronic whining.
The essence of A.A. can only be guessed at in big, showy gatherings, such as
its international conventions every five years. It is in the intimacy of the
neighborhood meetings that the truth, the flavor and the inkling of the
reasons for A.A.'s success can be grasped. The members may meet in groups as
small as 2 or 3, or as large as 200, but the usual attendance is somewhere
between a dozen and 40 people. In New York City, the most active single A.A.
spot anywhere, there is a choice of 1,826 listed meetings held by 724 groups
every week.
As A.A. grew and diversified, the stigma of alcoholism gradually faded. There
were many stages along A.A.'s road to respectability, beginning in the 1940's,
that gradually transformed the public's perception of the society of recovered
drunks from a butt of disbelief and even ridicule to that of an accepted and
admired organization. None was more significant than the action taken by the
American Medical Association. In 1956, the AMA's trustees and its House of
Delegates declared that alcoholism was a disease, thereby validating a central
belief of A.A., from its co-founders on, that it is a sickness, not a sin.
Now the Supreme Court of the United States is debating the legality of the
issue. Last Dec. 7, the court heard a challenge by two Vietnam War Veterans
against the Veterans Administration for excluding "primary alcoholism" (in
which drinking itself is the root disorder) from the list of illnesses and
disabilities that allow veterans more time to claim education benefits.
Extensions can be granted to veterans hindered by physical or mental problems
"not the result of their own willful misconduct." The justices are expected to
hand down an opinion before the Court's term ends in June.
The structure of A.A. is a little harder to grasp than the disease theory of
alcoholism. It is close to the truth to say that A.A. consists of a million
Indians and no chiefs. And that it is less an organization than an organism
that keeps splitting amoeba like, into ever more groups. If a member doesn't
like how things are run in his group, he can start another one with people he
finds more compatible. This has given rise to an A.A. saying: "All you need to
start a new group is two drunks, a coffee pot and some resentment."
There is a structure in Alcoholics Anonymous, but it would set any
conventional notion of how to run a business on its head. Basically, the local
groups are boss and the board of trustees and the staff at the General Service
Office are supposed to carry out their orders. The board of trustees is made
up of 14 A.A. members and 7 non-alcoholics.
Although alcoholics hold all the top administrative jobs, they never handle
money. A.A.'s financial operation is run by non-alcoholics. The reason is that
Bill Wilson and the early A.A.'s were afraid that if anybody running A.A. fell
off the wagon, that would be bad enough, but if he were handling finances as
well, the results could be disastrous. The philosophy has endured.
The manner in which A.A. directs its collective affairs and sets policy can be
seen most clearly - or in all its democratic confusion - at its yearly General
Service Conference, the closest approximation to a governing body of A.A.
About 135 people attend, including 91 delegates elected at regional A.A.
assemblies in the United States and Canada. Also on hand are the trustees of
the board and representatives of the head-quarter's staff.
The day-to-day business of Alcoholics Anonymous has been carried on since 1970
in a brick building at 468 Park Avenue South, in midtown Manhattan. Whatever
policies are decided at the conference are carried out by the headquarters
staff. Their jobs are divided into specialties such as literature, treatment
centers, prisons, public information and cooperation with professionals -
doctors, counselors, social workers and teachers, for example - in the
alcoholism field. And just in case somebody should become overly fond of a
specialty, all the top staff members, except the general manager and the
Hispanic coordinator, regularly rotate jobs every two years. The same frequent
rotation occurs at every level in A.A. Officers in local groups usually step
down every six months.
The seven nonalcoholic trustees, who are often experts in some profession,
such as medicine, law, banking or social work, serve a special need. Joan K.
Jackson, a sociologist with long experience among alcoholics, explains: "We
can use our full names in public. We are not perceived by outsiders as having
any vested interest. Privately within A.A., our greatest function is as
gadflies and questioners."
What makes A.A. headquarters run is the A.A. World Service publishing empire.
It now brings in $8.8 million annually or 76 per cent of A.A.'s yearly
corporate revenues. It is the cause of some trepidation among those who have
taken what amounts to a vow of poverty. Each year, A.A. distributes 7 million
copies of more than 40 pamphlets (mostly gratis for members), and almost a
million and a half copies of 6 books and two booklets. Seven million copies of
the Big Book (A.A.'s central text, published in 1939, whose formal title is
"Alcoholics Anonymous") have been sold. Last year alone, about a million Big
Books were purchased, virtually all of them at A.A. meetings, alcoholic
rehabilitation centers or through mail orders.
At the time of his death, early in 1971, Bill Wilson was earning about $65,000
a year in royalties from the Big Book and three other books he wrote for A.A.
Last year, his widow, Lois, received $912,000 in royalties. Under the terms of
the agreement Bill concluded with A.A. headquarters in 1963, she was allocated
13.5 per cent of Wilson's royalties. Another 1.5 percent went to his last
mistress, who died a few years after Bill.
There has been almost no negative publicity about Alcoholics Anonymous over
the five decades of its history. Extensive research turns up only a handful of
critical views in the press. Writing in The Nation in 1964, Jerome Ellison
charged that A.A.'s conservative top councils had lost touch with the ever
more diverse rank-and-file. The same year, Arthur H. Cain, a New York
psychologist, in a book and articles for various magazines, called A.A. a
"cult" that enslaved its members to self-righteous sobriety. Bill Wilson's
reaction was typical of the man's tolerance. The co-founder trying to calm the
ensuing fuss at headquarters, said: "In all the years, this is the first
thorough- going criticism our fellowship ever had. So the practicing of
absorbing stuff like that in good humor should be of value." It was the first
public criticism, and it proved to be one of the last.
Privately within A.A., there has been a growing dissatisfaction with
headquarters. Some members say staff members are becoming frozen in
bureaucracy and are overly sensitive to pressure from the most rigid and
narrow-minded members, particularly old-timers, who regard the Big Book and
other authorized literature almost as Holy Writ.
"If anything is going to destroy A.A.," says Dr. John Norris, a nonalcoholic
physician, friend of Bill Wilson's and for many years chairman of A.A.'s board
of trustees, "It will be what I call the 'tradition lawyers.' They find it
easier to live with black and white than they do with gray. These 'bleeding
deacons' * these fundamentalists are afraid of and fight any change."
Source: The New York Times Magazine©, February 21, 1988
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++++Message 1782. . . . . . . . . . . . Significant May Dates in AA History
From: NMOlson@aol.com . . . . . . . . . . . . 5/1/2004 3:25:00 AM
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May 1
1941 - First Wisconsin AA meeting was held in a Milwaukee hotel.
May 2
1941 - Jacksonville, FL, newspaper reported start of a new AA group.
1941 - First meeting was held in San Bernardino, California.
May 3
1941 - First AA group formed in New Orleans, Louisiana.
1943 - Democrat Chronicle in Rochester, NY, reported first annual AA dinner at
Seneca Hotel with 60 attending.
May 4
1946 - Marty Mann explained Alcoholics Anonymous and the National Committee
for Education on Alcoholism on the "We the People" radio show.
May 5
1940 - Washington, DC, Sunday Star reported formation of first AA group in the
District of Columbia.
May 7
1956 - The first English AA Convention was held in Cheltenham, England.
May 8
1943 - Akron AA group had its 8th anniversary celebration with 500 present and
sober.
1971 - Bill Wilson was buried in private ceremony.
May 10
1946 - Searcy W. had his last drink. (Searcy died September 30, 2003.)
May 11
1935 - From the Mayflower Hotel, Bill Wilson called Walter Tunks who referred
him to Henrietta Seiberling who introduced Bill to Dr. Bob.
May 12
1935 - Mothers' Day - Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith met for the first time in
Akron, Ohio, at the home of Henrietta Seiberling.
May 14
1948 - Long Beach, California. Central Office was opened.
1998 - Sybil C., first woman to enter A.A. west of the Mississippi, died. Her
date of sobriety was March 23, 1941. Her name at the time was Sybil Maxwell,
though she later opened her talks by saying, "My name is Sybil Doris Adams
Stratton Hart Maxwell Willis C., and I'm an alcoholic."
May 15
1961 - Bill Wilson's mother, Emiliy Strobell, died.
May 16
1941 - Ruth Hock learned that Joe W. (credited with coming up with the name
Alcoholics Anonymous) had a "wet brain."
May 17
1942 - The Journal-Herald in Dayton, Ohio, ran a story on A.A. with photos of
members in Halloween masks to protect their anonymity.
May 18
1950 - Dr. Bob told Bill "I reckon we ought to be buried like other folks"
after hearing that local A.A.'s wanted a huge memorial.
May 19
2000 - Dr. Paul Ohliger died at the age of 83. His story, "Doctor, Alcoholic,
Addict," was retitled "Acceptance Was the Answer," in the 4th edition.
May 22
1948 - Atlantic City Group celebrated its second anniversary with Dr. C.
Nelson Davis of St. Luke's Hospital, Philadelphia, and other A.A.s speaking.
May 28
1974 - The first World Service meeting of AA outside of America was held in
London.
May 29
1980 - "Dr. Bob and the Good Oldtimers," AAWS biography of AA co-founder and a
history of early Mid-
west AA, was published.
May 31
1938 - Bill and other AA's began writing the Big Book.
__________
Other May events for which we have no specific date:
1939 - Clarence Snyder told Dr. Bob, his sponsor, he would not be back to the
Oxford Group meetings in Akron and would start an "A.A." meeting in Cleveland.
1942 - Richmond Walker, author of "Twenty-Four Hours a Day," had his last
drink.
1946 - Long Form of Twelve Traditions was published in the AA Grapevine.
1946 - The AA Grapevine announced: "AA has 6,000 members in 180 groups."
1947 - Avalon, California (Catalina Island Group) was formed.
1948 - The AA Grapevine reported $2.00 was sent to the General Service
headquarters of AA in New York, asking for a bottle of Alcoholics Anonymous.
1951 - Al-Anon was founded by Lois Wilson and Anne B.
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++++Message 1783. . . . . . . . . . . . A MINOR HISTORY OF AA IN KANKAKEE,
ILLINOIS
From: kankakeebern . . . . . . . . . . . . 5/2/2004 10:27:00 PM
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(Kankakee is about 60 miles south of Chicago)
According to an article published in the Kankakee Journal in
December, 1958, A.A. here had endured 10 years in October of 1958. In
1948 a man named Doc Mills went up to Evanston to the Georgian Hotel
to hear Bill W. speak. He wanted to try the program here so he and
three others met at the courthouse the first time. As others joined,
they met once a week at different homes or wherever they could do it.
This first group was listed with G.S.O. in 1949 as the Kankakee Kounty
Kourthouse Group with 5 members. They tried to get churches to meet
in, but the churches would have no part of it. They met at the St.
Rose School in one corner of the gym while the basketball team
practiced at the other end. They met at a roller rink that used to be
where the old Radeke Brewery was. They met in a tavern storeroom on
south Washington. They met at the Salvation Army. They met in DeSelm
at a fellow's house who had a farm spraying business.
Whoever was elected chairman got the Book and coffee pot and was in
charge. It was an honor that they thought that much of you. They
didn't have a lot of meetings but they spent a lot of time with one
another. They were a close knit group. At the time, if one was in
trouble, the other ones were there. By 1950 there were 12 members.
Uncle Billie came in later for a while and he was sober for about a
year, but he went back out. He came back and stayed straight. Uncle
Billie was chairing a meeting at the Salvation Army with four others.
They were paying the Salvation Army five dollars for the meeting.
They passed the basket and there were only four dollars in it. He
said, "Well, we don't have enough." The other members said there would
be if he had put his dollar in. He had forgotten to put his money in.
Uncle Billy kept it going, because he was home during the day.
If they had a Twelfth Step call they ended up over at Uncle Billie's
kitchen with coffee. It grew slowly in the beginning, from six to nine
to 12 members.
Every once in a while they would take a big trip. One time they got
together to go to Indianapolis to hear Father John Doe talk. Three or
four of them would get together and go to Danville or Chicago or
another place for an out-of-town meeting. (This was before the
Interstate Highways we take for granted now.)
It was in 1972 they thought they had enough members to rent space on
Durham St. in Bradley for a meeting place and Alano Club. They ended
up with the space next to it being donated bcause the landlord didn't
have any luck renting it.
The late John Hefner came here from Chicago in 1960 to start an
alcohol rehab unit at Kankakee State Hospital. In 1984 They purchased
a building on East River Street for an Alano Club for meetings. As a
postscript, Doc Mills never did stay sober. Besides Kankakee, Bradley
and DeSelm, there were members from Momence and Bonfield.
(from interviews with Spike V. and John H.)
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++++Message 1784. . . . . . . . . . . . One Page At A Time (2004)
From: Lash, William (Bill) . . . . . . . . . . . . 5/4/2004 5:25:00 PM
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One Page At a Time
Susan Cheever's Chilling Glimpse of AA's Tormented 'Saint'
By David Von Drehle
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, May 3, 2004; Page C01
During her research for a biography of Alcoholics Anonymous co-founder Bill
Wilson, author Susan Cheever dug through the just-opened archives at Stepping
Stones, Wilson's longtime home outside New York City. Alongside an archivist,
she sifted reams of material that had not been looked at in decades.
One day, the archivist handed her a sheaf of wide, green-lined pages -- hourly
logs kept by the nurses who tended Wilson on his deathbed.
Cheever glanced at them. They seemed mundane.
"Keep reading," the archivist urged her.
Cheever came to the pages covering Christmas 1970. On the eve of the holiday,
Bill Wilson passed a fitful night. A lifelong smoker, he had been fighting
emphysema for years, and now he was losing the battle. Nurse James Dannenberg
was on duty in the last hour before dawn. At 6:10 a.m. on Christmas morning,
according to Dannenberg's notes, the man who sobered up millions "asked for
three shots of whiskey."
He was quite upset when he didn't get them, Cheever writes.
Wilson asked for booze again about a week later, on Jan. 2, 1971.
And on Jan. 8.
And on Jan. 14.
"My blood ran cold," Cheever said recently of the discovery. "I was shocked
and
horrified." With time to ponder, though, she found herself thinking, "Of
course
he wanted a drink. He was the one who talked about sobriety being 'a daily
remission.' I realized that this was a story about the power of alcohol: that
even Bill Wilson, the man who invented sobriety, who had 30-plus years sober,
still wanted a drink."
In the Big Book, as AA's foundation text is known, Wilson recalled the time in
1934 when doctors concluded that he was a hopeless drunk and told his wife
that
there was no cure, apart from the asylum or the grave. "They did not need to
tell me," he added. "I knew, and almost welcomed the idea."
On Jan. 24, 1971, the man known modestly to legions of alcoholics as "Bill W."
was finally cured.
Powerless Over Alcohol
Cheever's discovery, reported in her book "My Name Is Bill," doesn't really
change what little we know about alcoholism, a cruel, confounding and
mysterious
disease. It doesn't really change what we know about Wilson, a rough-hewn and
unorthodox American saint sketched by Cheever in all his chain-smoking,
womanizing, Ouija-board-reading, acid-tripping holiness.
But it might change, at least a bit, the way some of us think about miracles
--
the shelf life of miracles, the limited warranty they carry, and how
high-maintenance they are. Miracles come in Bill Wilson's story, but always
with
strings attached. They are a bequest -- but not like an annuity that pays out
endlessly and effortlessly. More like an old mansion, precious and beautiful,
but demanding endless, unglamorous upkeep.
The miracle of Wilson's sobriety -- and the birth of AA -- arrived like
something out of the Old Testament. It was 1934, late in the year, when the
doctors had given up on Bill. Booze, which once put its arm around his
shoulder,
now had its jaws around his throat. A smart, handsome, charming man, Wilson
had
become the kind of drunk who could set off one morning to play golf and awaken
a
day later outside his house, unsure how he got there, with his head bleeding
mysteriously and his unused clubs still at his side. "The more he decided not
to
drink," Cheever writes, "the more irresistible drink seemed to become."
So for the third time, Wilson checked himself into a private hospital in New
York that specialized in drying out "rum hounds," as he called himself. He
knew
what to expect: doses of barbiturates, assorted bitter herbs, castor oil and
other purgatives, vomiting, tremors and depression. He also knew it probably
would not work, that just about every hard case like him went back to drinking
after being discharged.
The prospect was so dismal that Wilson picked up a few bottles of beer for the
cab ride.
Wilson had a friend named Ebby Thatcher, another alcoholic, who had a friend
named Roland Hazard, yet another drunk, who was wealthy enough to seek help
from
the eminent psychiatrist Carl Jung in Switzerland. When Jung realized how
serious Hazard's drinking problem was, he told his patient that the only hope
was a religious conversion -- in Jung's experience, nothing else worked. The
American psychologist William James had arrived at a similar conclusion,
declaring in "The Varieties of Religious Experience" that "the only cure for
dipsomania is religiomania."
Well, by God, Hazard got religion and sobered up, for a while. He preached
this
approach to Thatcher, and Thatcher in turn proselytized Wilson.
"I was in favor of practically everything he had to say except one thing,"
Wilson later recalled of his conversations with Thatcher. "I was not in favor
of
God."
After a couple of days at Towns Hospital, Bill Wilson was past the d.t.'s and
feeling really low. Science could do nothing for him. He now realized that he
couldn't kick the booze by himself. Yet he was unable to believe in the only
power experts knew of to save a drunk.
Then:
"Like a child crying out in the dark, I said, 'If there is a Father, if there
is
a God, will he show himself?' And the place lit up in a great glare, a
wondrous
white light. Then I began to have images, in the mind's eyes, so to speak, and
one came in which I seemed to see myself standing on a mountain and a great
clean wind was blowing, and this blowing at first went around and then it
seemed
to go through me. And then the ecstasy redoubled and I found myself
exclaiming,
'I am a free man! So this is the God of the preachers!' And little by little
the
ecstasy subsided and I found myself in a new world of consciousness."
Wilson never had another drink.
Carry This Message
Brimming with vision and new consciousness, Wilson blew back into the familiar
world as if everything had changed -- not just for him, but for all of
creation.
He bragged that he was going to save every drunk in the world. He went
scavenging for men to preach to, finding them in missions and hospitals and
jails and among his own drinking buddies. Some of his targets thought he
sounded
an awful lot like the Bible-brandishing temperance ladies he had rebelled
against as a young man. He discovered that many alcoholics were "not in favor
of
God" -- God was an authority figure and drunks don't deal well with authority.
"This doesn't work," he despaired to his wife, Lois. She reminded him that he
was keeping at least one drunk sober -- himself.
But within months, even that project was at risk. Having been blinded like
Saul
on the road to Damascus, he now had his sight back and -- as often happens to
the miraculously enlightened -- was discovering little by little that he was
much the same as before.
Tempted while on a business trip in Akron, Ohio, Wilson fought off the bottle
by
cold-calling churches from the hotel directory in search of a drunk to help.
One
call led him to an alcoholic surgeon named Bob Smith. Initially, Smith
objected
to being saved -- this was after one of those sad-but-hilarious tales that
give
a sort of rosy glow to a truly savage disease: Wilson's first scheduled
encounter with Smith was called off after the doctor staggered home blotto
carrying an enormous potted plant for no discernible reason. He deposited the
non sequitur before his bewildered wife, then passed out.
The next day, when they finally met, Wilson answered Smith's reluctance by
saying that he wasn't there for Smith, he was there for Bill Wilson. This was
a
key insight in the development of AA -- the realization that helping another
drunk is key to staying sober oneself. It reflected Wilson's new humility
about
his wondrous white light and great clean wind. Before, he was trying to work
miracles in the lives of others. Now, he was just trying to maintain the
miracle
in his own.
And it worked. After one relapse, Smith, who had been drinking even longer and
harder than Wilson, got sober. Bill W. and Dr. Bob shared the story of their
recoveries with more drunks in this same spirit. Some of those men and women
got
sober themselves, and reached out to still others. And so on, down through the
years and out around the planet to the largely anonymous millions of today,
who
range from celebrities to legislators to schoolteachers to busboys, from a
former first lady to the businessman striding down the sidewalk to the
desperate
soul working on a second sober sunrise. AA is now so widespread and well known
that creators of the children's movie "Finding Nemo" could playfully include a
12-step meeting for fish-addicted sharks, confident that every parent in the
global reach of Disney would get the joke.
It's impossible to know exactly how many people have tried AA, how many stayed
sober, how many attend meetings and how often. The group is not only
anonymous,
it is non-hierarchical, nondenominational, non-centralized, nonpartisan.
According to the Twelve Traditions that govern AA, there is no requirement for
membership except a desire to stop drinking, and the group endorses no cause
apart from that one. All it takes to convene an AA meeting is two alcoholics
who
feel like talking, and the tone of the meetings is as varied as the people who
choose to attend. Group consensus rules in all things, so in any good-size
city
there are smoking meetings and nonsmoking meetings, meetings for early risers
and for night owls, meetings mostly populated by long-timers and meetings more
oriented to the newly sober.
The 12 Steps and decentralized structure have proved so effective and popular
that other groups have copied the template for dealing with other problems:
Narcotics Anonymous, Gamblers Anonymous, Overeaters Anonymous and so forth.
But
AA has never branched out. Getting and staying sober has been labor enough.
Unlike many spiritual visionaries, Wilson came to understand "that when he
heard
the voice of God, it was often just the voice of Bill Wilson," as Cheever puts
it. And so, in the now-famous catechism that he created, AA members are
pledged
simply to turn their will and lives over to "the care of God as we understood
him," with italics right there in the Big Book. Prospective converts are often
assured that they may take as their God the nearest radiator if that's what
works for them. Almighty God with the white beard, or a gentle breeze in the
treetops, or the sublime engineering of a molecule, or the vastness of space,
or
the love of friends, or the power of the AA meeting itself: Choose your own
Infinite.
Whatever works.
In the can-do land of the bottom line, even our spirituality tends to be
results-oriented.
But the language of AA plays provocatively with a simple word: "work." In one
sense, sobriety is something that just happens, much like Wilson's great clean
wind. It is a gift from the Higher Power to the alcoholic. At the same time,
"work" means work, as in tangible, sometimes even grudging, effort. In the
early
days, Bill W. and Dr. Bob would sit in the Smith parlor refining their
drunk-saving techniques, and often Smith's wife, Anne, read aloud from the
Bible. They were partial to the Epistle of James, which reminded them that
"faith without works is dead." AA members speak of "working the steps," and
many
meetings end with the affirmation that "it works if you work it."
This means returning again and again to the state of mind and the exercises
that
constitute the upkeep on each miracle of sobriety. Beginning with the
admission
that they are powerless over alcohol and continuing through labors of
humility,
repentance, meditation and service, AA members maintain the dam that holds
back
the obliterating tide of booze from their lives.
A Friend of Bill W.
Cheever is a forthright woman with a big laugh and no immediately obvious
illusions, a hard-working writer who publishes books like clockwork, pens a
column for Newsday and teaches at Bennington College. She decided to write
about
Wilson because "I loved him. I loved how he changed the world without knowing
it, just as a way to stop drinking himself. I loved his Yankeeness," by which
she seems to mean a range of qualities, from the Emersonian flinty optimism,
to
the unsentimental practicality, to the hovering dark clouds and the weirdo
seances, which she calls his "table-tapping after dark."
No doubt she also loved Wilson for the fact that his miracle, worked and
reworked through the long chain of drunks, touched her own family, late in the
life of her father, the short-story artist John Cheever. Booze was the
lubricant
of Cheever's masterpieces. He was the poet laureate of postwar suburbia, in
which hope, striving, lust and angst were all refracted through the bottom of
a
cocktail glass.
But what was symbol and atmosphere in his stories was toxic in John Cheever's
life, as his daughter explained in her acclaimed memoirs "Home Before Dark,"
and
booze washed into Susan Cheever's life as well. In her book "Note Found in a
Bottle," she recalls learning to mix a martini by the age of 6, and doing
plenty
of drinking as an adult. Susan Cheever now speaks of her father's AA years as
an
amazing gift to the whole family, not a gift of bliss so much as a gift of
simple reality. When a drunk enters the unreal world of his illness, he takes
his family and friends with him.
Her homage to the family benefactor is pro-Wilson but not hagiographic. "I
like
to take saints and make them into people," she explains. She touches the
spiritual bases in her portrait of Wilson, but seems more moved by the
concrete
elements. Over lunch at a Manhattan bistro, she recalls her first visit to
Wilson's boyhood home in East Dorset, Vt., not far from the Bennington campus.
Cheever noticed the low ceiling of the stairway leading to Wilson's room, and
caught a glimpse in her mind's eyes, so to speak, of the gangly boy having to
duck his head each time he passed.
"And I was him," for that moment, she says. "I understood what it was to be a
depressed 10-year-old boy trapped in that house" after his parents had
abandoned
him to his remote and austere grandparents.
It's not easy making a spiritual figure compelling and real without slipping
into iconoclasm. Cheever's approach is to apply a writerly version of Wilson's
humility. She gets the goods on his serial adultery, for instance, but
declines
to make too much of it. "He was engaged to Lois when he was 18 -- hello!"
Cheever says. "They were married 53 years. All we really know is that they
were
friends through an amazing life. He was a good-enough husband."
Likewise, she can look into Wilson's LSD experiment with proto-hippie Aldous
Huxley without getting mired in a puritanical inquisition into whether this
constituted a "slip" in his sobriety or hypocrisy in his creed.
This attitude allows Cheever to see that Wilson's inconsistencies and quirks
weren't blemishes on his record -- they were the essence of a flawed man who
was
endlessly seeking what works. "Again and again, his intuitions were wrong,"
Cheever says. "But he wasn't interested in problems. He was interested in
solutions." Most of the key traditions of AA operations, including its
independence, anonymity and governance-by-consensus, ran counter to Wilson's
personal disposition. "He wanted fame and fortune, but somehow was able to
figure out that AA would have to be a group in which nobody represents it,
nobody speaks for it and nobody's in charge of it."
Sobering Reality
The striking thing about Wilson's story -- which only settles in upon
reflection
-- is how hard his life was even after he sobered up.
What, really, had that bright light and clean wind changed? He and Lois
remained
penniless, even homeless, for years. Sometimes it seemed that AA was
determined
to keep him poor forever. He had a chance to cash in by allying his message
with
a particular hospital, but his fledgling flock forbade him to do it. He
harbored
hope that John D. Rockefeller Jr. would lavish money on him, but instead
Rockefeller came through with a tiny stipend. Alcoholics Anonymous struggled
for
six long and underwhelming years before catching its crucial break: a glowing
article in the Saturday Evening Post.
Then, as the group flourished, Wilson was attacked by jealous colleagues and
abandoned by old friends. He sank into a crushing depression, and "often just
sat for hours with his head on the desk or with his head in his hands,"
Cheever
writes. "When he raised his head, he was sometimes weeping." Wilson liked
children but was childless. Cigarettes were killing him but he couldn't stop
smoking.
He wrote of "being swamped with guilt and self-loathing . . . often getting a
misshapen and painful pleasure out of it."
It was enough to drive a man to drink.
Yet for 36-plus years of this troubled and very human life, he was able to
resist that next drink. Perhaps the most efficacious miracles are the small
ones. And because "his mind was the right lens" and his will was "the right
machine," in Cheever's words, for mass-producing that limited but crucial
victory, Bill Wilson's miracle keeps working, one person and one day at a
time.
© 2004 The Washington Post Company
Of Alcoholics Anonymous founder Bill Wilson, Cheever says, "He changed the
world
without knowing it, just as a way to stop drinking himself." (Helayne Seidman
For The Washington Post)
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++++Message 1785. . . . . . . . . . . . One Solitary Voice by Jack B...any
info.?
From: wbmscm . . . . . . . . . . . . 5/4/2004 6:43:00 PM
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Does anyone have any information on a gentlemen by the name of Jack
B. who wrote a publication called "One Solitary Voice"?
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++++Message 1786. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: One Page At A Time (2004)
From: Arthur Sheehan . . . . . . . . . . . . 5/6/2004 10:40:00 AM
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I found Cheever's book to be a big disappointment - not based its so-called
"revelations" but from numerous factual errors in the material. Having read
most of the books cited in its bibliography, I don't get the sense Cheever
studied them very thoroughly. The book is acclaimed to be well researched but
I don't get a sense that it measures up to those claims. I'm somewhat tempted
to develop an itemized list of its errors (they are not trivial).
Outside of revealing a letter from Bill that his first drink was a beer (a few
weeks or so before drinking a Bronx cocktail) I didn't see anything that
hadn't appeared elsewhere. In regards to Bill asking for whiskey on his death
bed, the delirious comments of a dying man should not be projected as being
representative of anything other than the delirious comments of a dying man.
Regrettably there are those who persist in wanting to elevate Bill to demigod
status and deprive him of his human fallibility. All things considered,
despite his infidelities, séances, LSD, niacin, smoking himself to death,
etc., etc., Bill's shortcomings do not need to be either rationalized or
vilified. Bill left a priceless legacy of recovery, unity and service that has
saved the lives of countless millions since 1935. That legacy gets obscured by
what seems to be a disturbing and ever-increasing trend these days to churn
out titillating exposés and editorials masquerading as well-researched
biographies.
Arthur
----- Original Message -----
From: Lash, William (Bill)
Sent: Tuesday, May 04, 2004 5:25 PM
Subject: [AAHistoryLovers] One Page At A Time (2004)
One Page At a Time
Susan Cheever's Chilling Glimpse of AA's Tormented 'Saint'
By David Von Drehle
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, May 3, 2004; Page C01
During her research for a biography of Alcoholics Anonymous co-founder Bill
Wilson, author Susan Cheever dug through the just-opened archives at
Stepping
Stones, Wilson's longtime home outside New York City. Alongside an
archivist,
she sifted reams of material that had not been looked at in decades.
One day, the archivist handed her a sheaf of wide, green-lined pages --
hourly
logs kept by the nurses who tended Wilson on his deathbed.
Cheever glanced at them. They seemed mundane.
"Keep reading," the archivist urged her.
Cheever came to the pages covering Christmas 1970. On the eve of the
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