Below is a snippet from an e-mail I received from a contact from Johns
Hopkins' media relations department:
This is from a faculty member in our Psychiatry dept.
"The Johns Hopkins Twenty Questions: Are You An Alcoholic? was developed
in the 1930s by Dr. Robert Seliger, who at that time was a faculty
member in the Department of Psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. It
was intended for use as a self-assessment questionnaire to determine the
extent of one's alcohol use. It was not intended to be used by
professionals as a screening tool to help them formulate a diagnosis of
alcoholism in their patients. We do not use this questionnaire at any of
the Johns Hopkins substance abuse treatment programs. To the best of my
knowledge, there have never been any reliable or validated studies
conducted using the Hopkins Twenty Questions. I advise you to consider
using other instruments such as the Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test
or the CAGE -- both of which have proven reliability and validity as
reported in the scientific literature."
So, the questions should be attributed to Dr.Robert Seliger of Johns
Hopkins (in the 1930s), not to Johns Hopkins itself as they no longer
advocate their use. I note as well that the e-mail I sent to you all
earlier from the Literature Desk at GSO stated that the hospital had
requested that GSO not attribute those questions to their institution in
the pamphlet "Memo to an Inmate Who May Be an Alcoholic."
If you know anyone who would like permission to reprint this piece, I
have a contact at Johns Hopkins to whom I can refer them. I have been in
contact with the faculty member who knew the history of this document
and who recommended that we not use it. She was very adamant about
it--in a second e-mail to me, she said that she'd grant permission to
any AA group who wanted to use it, but that she really recommended that
we don't.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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++++Message 2007. . . . . . . . . . . . RE: 1940 AA/mexicanMemberCleveland
From: Bob McK . . . . . . . . . . . . 8/31/2004 6:24:00 AM
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10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy;">The March 1946 Cleveland _Central
Bulletin _had this article on pg. 4:
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy;">THE BOOK IS TRANSLATED
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy;"> Ricardo P. of the Mexican
Consullate[sic] in Cleveland,
and
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy;">tremendously impressed with the work of
AA, has trans-
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy;">lated the entire AA book in the Spanish
language, and it
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy;">will soon be printed in Mexico for the
benefit of its people.
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy;">Ric is to be commended for this fine
demonstration of
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy;">The 12th step.
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy;">
-----
*From:* Mel Barger
[mailto:melb@accesstoledo.com]
*Sent:* Monday, August 30, 2004 2:16 PM
*To:*
AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
*Subject:* Re: [AAHistoryLovers]
1940 AA/mexicanMemberCleveland
12.0pt;">
Hi Gilbert,
I called the Cleveland Central Office re your
request. The gentleman was Dick Perez and he and his wife both translated
materials into Spanish. Dick passed away in 1988, about seven years after
retiring from the Central Office. His wife is also deceased. My
source for this information is Elvira A., who has worked at the central office
in Cleveland
for 28 years. She is getting together information about Dick. You
may call her at (216) 241-7387.
I do recall talking by phone with Dick in 1980, a
short time before he retired. I was trying to interview Cleveland oldtimers
for "Pass It
On," and he gave me some leads.
Mel Barger
~~~~~~~~
Mel Barger
13.5pt;">melb@accesstoledo.com
----- Original Message -----
*From:* Gilbert Gamboa
*To:* AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
*Sent:* Sunday, August 29, 2004 10:04 PM
*Subject:* [AAHistoryLovers]
1940 AA/mexicanMemberCleveland
12.0pt;">
12.0pt;">This question is for anyone who can direct me in the direction of
info
on Dick P the
12.0pt;">mexican AA member who joined in 1940 in Cleveland I believe..Mel B
you might
12.0pt;">recall all this,but I believe him to be the key figure in the
translation of the Big Book into spanish words???..all info on this would be
greatly appreciated,and although the hard work has been done in translating
this book to spanish,there is yet a harder piece Ive encountered and that
is to pronounce the words correctly and put an exact definition to the
meaning
in spanish....
12.0pt;">
seek,Trust,and serve
12.0pt;"> Gilbert
G.-Dallas,TX.
12.0pt;">
_Mel Barger
_ wrote:
Since the 20 questions were used for years and
atrributed to Johns Hopkins, it's rather embarrassing to learnh that they
didn't really have backing from the Johns
Hopkins Hospital.
But we no longer need them. AA has 12
questions in the pamphlet "Is AA for You?" which should suffice very
well. Just walk a newcomer through those 12 questions and it should be
immediately clear whether there's a serious drinking problem there.
Mel Barger
~~~~~~~~
Mel Barger
13.5pt;">melb@accesstoledo.com
----- Original Message -----
*From:* Jim Blair
*To:* AA History Lovers
*Sent:* Friday, August 27, 2004 10:02 AM
*Subject:* [AAHistoryLovers]
20 Questions
12.0pt;">
Here is an email posted some time ago by an archivist in Northern CA.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------
12.0pt;">
Juliet from our local Intergroup has
come up with some interesting facts about the 20 questions.
Below is a snippet from an e-mail I received from a contact from Johns
Hopkins'
media relations department:
This is from a faculty member in our Psychiatry dept.
"The Johns Hopkins
Twenty Questions: Are You An Alcoholic? was developed in the 1930s by
Dr.
Robert Seliger, who at that time was a faculty member in the Department
of
Psychiatry at the Johns
Hopkins Hospital.
It was intended for use as a self-assessment questionnaire to determine
the
extent of one's alcohol use. It was not intended to be used by
professionals as
a screening tool to help them formulate a diagnosis of alcoholism in
their
patients. We do not use this questionnaire at any of the Johns
Hopkins substance abuse treatment programs. To the best of my knowledge,
there have never been any reliable or validated studies conducted using
the
Hopkins Twenty Questions. I advise you to consider using other
instruments such as the Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test or the CAGE
--
both of which have proven reliability and validity as reported in the
scientific
literature."
So, the questions should be attributed to Dr.Robert Seliger of Johns
Hopkins
(in the 1930s), not to Johns Hopkins itself as they no longer advocate
their
use. I note as well that the e-mail I sent to you all earlier from the
Literature Desk at GSO stated that the hospital had requested that GSO
not
attribute those questions to their institution in the pamphlet "Memo to
an
Inmate Who May Be an Alcoholic."
If you know anyone who would like permission to reprint this piece, I
have a
contact at Johns Hopkins to whom I can refer them. I have been in
contact
with the faculty member who knew the history of this document and who
recommended that we not use it. She was very adamant about it--in a
second e-mail to me, she said that she'd grant permission to any AA
group who
wanted to use it, but that she really recommended that we don't.
12.0pt;">
------------------------
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12.0pt;">
-----
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Win 1 of 4,000 free domain names from Yahoo! Enter
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12.0pt;">
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++++Message 2008. . . . . . . . . . . . How It Works.
From: WCompWdsUnl@aol.com . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/2/2004 2:30:00 AM
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Would anyone who has any information on the sequence of events that led to the
changing of the manuscript for How It Works, provide this information. I am
interested in knowing what sources of AA History, besides AA Comes of Age
provide information as to the actual events that led to the "flying back and
forth between New York and Akron consultation during the book writing process"
and decisions to revise the original submission by Bill Wilson. Why was the
edited version approved by the first 100, instead of the original submission?
I am mainly concerned with what the reasons were for the consultation and
editing? Why was the original submission edited during consultation?
Sincerely
Larry W.
Atlanta, Georgia
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++++Message 2009. . . . . . . . . . . . RE: How It Works.
From: Arthur . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/2/2004 10:41:00 AM
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Hi
Larry
The
progressive development of the Big Book is mapped out in a number of
historical
writings. The book 'Not God'' is a valuable companion reading to AA Comes of
Age.
However, when it comes to outlining many of the underlying reasons 'why'' the
Big Book developed as it did, AA Comes of Age is hard to beat in answering
those questions. Below is a timeline sequence extracted from the reference
sources noted. I'll also send you a separate e-mail that contains a transcript
of a 1954 talk in Fort Worth,
TX by Bill W on how the Big Book
was developed.
Cheers
Arthur
*Reference Sources:*
AACOA _AA Comes of Age_, AAWS
AGAA _The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics
Anonymous_, by Dick B (soft cover)
BW-RT _Bill W_ by Robert
Thompson (soft cover)
BW-FH _Bill W_ by Francis
Hartigan (hard cover)
DBGO _Dr Bob and the Good Old-timers_,
AAWS
GB _Getting Better Inside Alcoholics
Anonymous_ by Nan Robertson (soft cover)
GTBT _Grateful to Have Been There_by Nell Wing (soft cover)
LOH _The Language of the Heart_,
AA Grapevine Inc
LR _Lois Remembers_, by
Lois Wilson
NG _Not God_, by Ernest
Kurtz (expanded edition, soft cover)
PIO _Pass It On_, AAWS
SM _AA Service Manual and Twelve
Concepts for World Service__,_
AAWS
SW _Silkworth - the Little Doctor Who
Loved Drunks_, by Dale Mitchell (hard cover)
WPR _Women Pioneers in 12 Step Recovery_,
by Charlotte Hunter, Billye Jones and Joan Ziegler (soft cover)
www *Internet
Sources* (e.g. Google, Microsoft Encarta, US National Archives &
Records Administration NARA)
*1937*
Nov,
Bill W and Dr Bob met in Akron and compared notes. 40 cases were sober
(more than 20 for over a year). All once diagnosed as hopeless. In a meeting
at
T Henry Williams' home, Bill's ideas, for a book, hospitals and how to expand
the movement with paid missionaries, narrowly passed by 2 votes among 18
members.
The NY group was more enthusiastic. (AACOA vii, 76-77, 144-146, BW-RT 239-243,
DBGO 123-124, NG 56-57, PIO 180, LOH 142)
*1938*
May
20, (PIO 193 and AACOA 153 say Mar/Apr) beginning of the writing of the Big
Book at Hank P's office (Honors Dealers, 17 William St in Newark, NJ).
Bill W wrote, edited and rewrote manuscripts at home on legal pads then
dictated chapters to Ruth Hock (nicknamed 'Dutch'' - short for 'Duchess'').
Most
of the early hand-written Big Book manuscript documents were lost during a
later
move from Newark
to NYC. (AACOA vii, 159, BW-RT 248-250, LR 197, BW-FH 115, PIO 193, 235, GB
55,
LOH 106-107, WPR 79)
Jun,
Bill W wrote to Dr Bob 'By the way, you might all be thinking up a good title.
Nearly everyone agrees that we should sign the volume _Alcoholics Anonymous_.
Titles such as _Haven, One Hundred Men, Comes the Dawn_,
etc. have been suggested.'' (NG 74-75, 333)
Jun
15, Lois' recollection of the first use of the term _
italic;">Alcoholics Anonymous_. (LR 197)
Jul
18, Dr Esther L Richards (of Johns Hopkins) stated in a letter that Bill W, at
that time, was using the name _Alcoholics
Anonymous_ both as the working title of the book and as the name of
the Fellowship. (PIO 202)
Jul
27, Dr William Duncan Silkworth wrote a letter of support for AA for use in
fundraising for the book. The letter was incorporated into the chapter _The
Doctor's Opinion_. (SW center-fold
photo exhibits, AACOA 168) Dr Esther L Richards of Baltimore had suggested to
Bill W to get a
'Number one physician'' in the alcoholism field to write an introduction. (NG
332)
Sep,
Board Trustee Frank Amos arranged a meeting between Bill W and Eugene Exman
(Religious Editor of Harper Brothers publishers). Exman offered Bill a $1,500
advance ($19,400 today) on the rights to the book. The Alcoholic Foundation
Board urged acceptance of the offer. Instead, Hank P and Bill formed Works
Publishing Co. and sold stock at $25 par value ($325 today). 600 shares were
issued: Hank and Bill received 200 shares each, 200 shares were sold to
others.
Later, 30 shares of preferred stock, at $100 par value ($1,300 today) were
sold
as well. To mollify the board, it was decided that the author's royalty (which
would ordinarily be Bill's) could go to the Alcoholic Foundation. (LR 197,
BW-FH 116-119, SM S6, PIO 193-195, AACOA 157, 188) Encouraged by Dr Silkworth,
Charles Towns loaned Hank and Bill $2,500 for
the book. It was later increased to $4,000. ($52,000 today). (PIO 196, SM S7,
LOH 176, AACOA 13-14, 153-159)
Oct,
Bill W's recollection of the first use of the term _
italic;">Alcoholics Anonymous_. (AACOA 165, PIO 202)
Dec,
the Twelve Steps were written at 182 Clinton St (in about 30 minutes).
Much argument (sometimes heated) ensued over their wording. (LOH 200, AACOA
vii, 160-163, BW-RT 253, PIO 197-199, GB 55-57, AGAA 260)
*1939*
Jan,
The draft book text and personal stories were completed. (AACOA 164, BW-RT
255)
Jan,
400 multilith copies of the book were distributed for evaluation. Each copy
was
stamped 'Loan Copy'' to protect the coming copyright. (AACOA 165, LR 197, NG
74,
319, PIO 200) NY member Jim B (_Vicious Cycle_)
suggested the phrases '_God as we understand
Him''_ and '_Power greater than
ourselves_'' be added to the Steps and basic text. Bill W later wrote
'Those expressions, as we so well know today, have proved lifesavers for many
an alcoholic.'' (LOH 201) Note: Jim B later moved to Philadelphia, PA
in Feb 1940 and started AA there. He also helped start AA in Baltimore, MD.
(AACOA 17, BW-FH 140, GTBT 137, WPR 81)
Feb/Mar
(?), The distributed multilith copies were returned, but reader's comments
produced few alterations in the final text. A major change did occur at the
suggestion of a Montclair, NJ psychiatrist, Dr Howard, who recommended
toning down the use of 'musts'' and changing them to 'we ought'' or 'we
should.''
Dr Silkworth and Dr Tiebout offered similar advice. (AACOA 167-168 NG 67-77)
Mar
(?), The much changed book manuscript was turned over to Tom Uzzell. He was a
friend of Hank P, an editor at _Collier's_
and a member of the NYU faculty. The manuscript was variously estimated as 600
to
1,200 pages (including personal stories). Uzzell reduced it to approximately
400 pages. Most cuts came from the personal stories, which had also been
edited
by Jim S (_The News Hawk_)a journalist from Akron, OH.
(AACOA 164, BW-FH 126, PIO 203)
Mar,
(?), Bill W, Hank P, Ruth Hock and Dorothy S (wife of Cleveland pioneer
Clarence S) drove to Cornwall, NY and presented a much altered manuscript to
the printing plant of Cornwall Press. When the plant manager saw the condition
of the manuscript, he almost sent them back to type a clean copy. Hank P
persuaded the manager to accept the manuscript on condition that the group
would examine and correct galley proofs as they came off the press. The group
checked in to a local hotel and spent the next several days proofreading
galleys. (AACOA 170-171, WPR 81-82)
Apr,
4,730 copies of the first Ed. of _Alcoholics Anonymous_ were published at a
selling price of $3.50 ($46 today). The printer, Edward Blackwell of Cornwall
Press, was told to use the thickest paper in his shop. The large, bulky volume
became known as the 'Big Book.'' The idea was to convince the alcoholic he was
getting his money's worth. (AACOA viii, 170, NG 76, PIO 204-205, GB 59) Ray
(_An Artist's Concept_) designed the 'circus
color'' dust jacket. The book had 8 roman and 400 Arabic numbered pages. _The
Doctor's Opinion_ started as page 1 and
the basic text ended at page 174. The manuscript story of an Akron member, _
italic;">Ace Full - Seven - Eleven,_ was dropped (reputedly, because
he was not too pleased with changes made to the first drafts of the Steps and
text). 29 stories were included (10 from the east coast, 18 from the mid-west
and 1 from the west coast - which was ghost written by Ruth Hock and later
removed from the book) (www)
-----
*From:*
WCompWdsUnl@aol.com [mailto:WCompWdsUnl@aol.com]
*Sent:* Thursday, September 02, 2004
6:31 AM
*To:* AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
*Subject:* [AAHistoryLovers] How It
Works.
12.0pt;">
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:black;">Would anyone who has any information on
the *sequence of
events* that led to the changing of the
manuscript for How It Works, provide this information. I am interested in
knowing what sources of AA History, besides *AA Comes of Age** *provide
information as to the actual events that led to the "flying back and
forth between New York and Akron consultation during the book writing process"
and decisions to revise the original submission by Bill Wilson. Why
was the edited version approved by the first 100, instead of the
original submission? I am mainly concerned with what the reasons
were for the consultation and editing? Why was the original submission
edited during consultation?
Sincerely
Larry W.
Atlanta, Georgia
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:black;">
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++++Message 2010. . . . . . . . . . . . Steps done quickly?
From: Robert Stonebraker . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/7/2004 3:08:00 PM
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Arial;">Dear History Lovers,
Arial;">
Arial;">There is an example of the "Six Step Process" being completed in
"three
or four hours" in Earl Treat's Story "He
sold Himself Short."
Arial;">(p.292 - 3rd edition of the Big Book). I believe this event took place
in the
summer of 1937. My question is this: Is there documentation of the Step
process
being done that quickly in later years after we had 12 Steps? I am referring
mostly to the years of the early
1940s.
Arial;">
Arial;">Thank you for documented response.
Arial;">
Arial;">Bob S., from Indiana
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++++Message 2011. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Steps done quickly?
From: recoveredbygrace . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/9/2004 4:12:00 PM
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Bob,One example I know of is Clarence S.`s story,Home Brewmiester.
If you can get a tape of his talk,he describes the process Dr. Bob
took him thru and how he did it untill he passed away.
Another example is to research the " Little Red Book`s " history and
you will see it came from beginners meetings from the 1940`s.The
beginners were put thru 4 one hour classes where they took the 12
steps ,if at all possible.Some people took a little longer.After
completing the classes and steps,they were invited to a official AA
meeting.
Hope this helps,Tom
--- In AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com, "Robert Stonebraker"
wrote:
> Dear History Lovers,
>
> There is an example of the "Six Step Process" being completed in
"three or
> four hours" in Earl Treat's Story "He sold Himself Short."
> (p.292 - 3rd edition of the Big Book). I believe this event took
place in
> the summer of 1937. My question is this: Is there documentation
of the
> Step process being done that quickly in later years after we had 12
Steps?
> I am referring mostly to the years of the early 1940s.
>
> Thank you for documented response.
>
> Bob S., from Indiana
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++++Message 2012. . . . . . . . . . . . RE: Re: Steps done quickly? and
history of the little red book
From: big book lover . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/10/2004 6:21:00 PM
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The Little Red Book comes out of Nicolette group and was published two years
prior to the book Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions.
It was edited by Dr. Bob.
Further documentation of the Little Red Book is in a discontinued published
book by the same author called Our Devilish Alcoholic Personalities. I have
a Xeroxed copy of that book.
There are letters from Bill Wilson regarding the Little Red Book and his
opinion on it.
There are pictures of the primary author in Dr. Bob and the Good Old Timers.
The Little Red Book was originally published by ? Merriam Cobb in
Minneapolis in 1948.
Hope this is of assistance.
Stephanie Burgess
Caledonia, Michigan
-----Original Message-----
From: recoveredbygrace [mailto:recoveredbygrace@yahoo.com]
Sent: Thursday, September 09, 2004 5:12 PM
To: AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [AAHistoryLovers] Re: Steps done quickly?
Bob,One example I know of is Clarence S.`s story,Home Brewmiester.
If you can get a tape of his talk,he describes the process Dr. Bob
took him thru and how he did it untill he passed away.
Another example is to research the " Little Red Book`s " history and
you will see it came from beginners meetings from the 1940`s.The
beginners were put thru 4 one hour classes where they took the 12
steps ,if at all possible.Some people took a little longer.After
completing the classes and steps,they were invited to a official AA
meeting.
Hope this helps,Tom
---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.759 / Virus Database: 508 - Release Date: 9/9/2004
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++++Message 2013. . . . . . . . . . . . Sister Ignatia and St. Thomas
Hospital, Akron
From: caseyosh . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/17/2004 8:39:00 AM
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Dear History Lovers,
Some time in the past I saw, in an unremembered text, a picture
of a medallion or article that Sister Ignatia is reported as having
given to alcoholics who passed through St. Thomas Hospital, Akron,
during her activities thereat.
I'd appreciate any information you could provide that would
reconnect me with the source of that picture and the text wherein it
is contained.
Thanks much,
Casey (7/19/75)
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++++Message 2014. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Sister Ignatia and St. Thomas
Hospital, Akron
From: James Bliss . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/18/2004 11:03:00 PM
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I am not certain this is what you are looking for, but there is a picture
of Sister Ignatia on page 186 of _DR. Bob and the Good Oldtimers_ and on
page 195 it states:
'Sister Ignatia gave each of her newly released patients a Sacred Heart
medallion, which she asked them to return before they took the first
drink. She would occasionally give out St. Christopher medals as well,
but she would tell the recipient not to drive too fast. "He gets out
after 50 miles an hour," she warned'
Hope that helps.
Jim
On Friday 17 September 2004 8:39 am, caseyosh wrote:
> Dear History Lovers,
> Some time in the past I saw, in an unremembered text, a picture
> of a medallion or article that Sister Ignatia is reported as having
> given to alcoholics who passed through St. Thomas Hospital, Akron,
> during her activities thereat.
> I'd appreciate any information you could provide that would
> reconnect me with the source of that picture and the text wherein it
> is contained.
> Thanks much,
> Casey (7/19/75)
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
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++++Message 2015. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Steps done quickly?
From: unclebearboy@yahoo.com . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/19/2004 8:38:00 AM
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This is how Sister Ignatia did it:
Day 1 - Admit to hospital, Detox
2 - Day of Recognition (Steps 1-3)
3 - Day of Moral Inventory
4 - Day of Resolution
5 - Plans for the future
________________________________
The article is copied here, but better to view
here ==> http://www.midlandaa.org/AAhistory/care_of_alcoholics.html
________________________________
THE CARE OF ALCOHOLICS
St. Thomas Hospital And A.A. Started
A Movement Which Swept The Country
By Sister M. Ignatia, C.S.A. St. Thomas Hospital, Akron, Ohio
From the October 1951 issue of "Hospital Progress" (the official
journal of the Catholic Hospital)
Nearly 12 years ago, one of the co-founders of Alcoholics Anonymous
(Dr. Bob) was on our staff. He was a skilled proctologist, and was
on our staff five years before we knew that he had a drinking
problem. We would not have known it then had he not volunteered the
information.
Dr. Bob often discussed the problem of alcoholism with us, with
regard to auto accidents and other tragedies caused by excessive
drinking. Many of these cases had to be admitted to the hospital
even though they were intoxicated. After talking with members of the
families of these compulsive drinkers and realizing the suffering
brought into the homes of these afflicted people because of drink, we
became deeply interested in the plan which Dr. Bob unfolded to use.
This was in 1939, just about the time we were trying to pull out of
the depression. Hospital beds were at a premium, without any
prospect of adding to our bed capacity. There was very little
enthusiasm around the hospital about admitting who were imbibing too
freely in those days.
However, prompted by the grace of God, we very cautiously admitted
one patient, with the diagnosis of acute gastritis, under the care of
Dr. Bob. The patient was placed in a two-bed room. The next morning
Dr Bob came to the admitting office and very timidly requested that
the patient be moved to a spot where the men who came to visit him
might talk with him privately. The only available space we could
think of was a small room across the hall called the "flower room",
where patients' flowers were changed and arranged. We pushed the
alcoholic's bed into this room. It was there that he received his
first A.A. visitors. The men who came to visit him were such
respectable, dignified-appearing men that we could hardly believe
they had ever been addicted to alcohol.
We then set aside a two-bed room, then a four and later a six-bed
room ward. Today our A.A. ward has eight beds, adjourning a corridor
which serves as a lounge. The corridor opens the gallery of our
chapel.
Our alcoholic ward is not a great problem. It is simply a large room
with accommodations in one end for eight beds. The other end of the
room is a small lounge with comfortable chairs, a davenport, a "bar",
a coffee urn, and an ice-box. To the rear of this ward-lounge is a
room with a lavatory and shower into which the new man is brought for
admission to the ward.
An important point is that he is helped out of his street clothes and
into hospital attire BY OTHER PATIENTS IN THE WARD. The advantage
for the new patient is that, from the first, he is in the care of
understanding friends. The advantage for the older patients who
perform this duty is that they are thus able to see themselves again
as they were upon admission. Administratively, an economy is
effected by thus eliminating the need for hard-to-get employees.
Directly across the hall from our ward-lounge is the choir-loft of
our chapel, which permits A.A. patients to hear Mass every day if
they wish and to make visits in hospital attire when they so desire -
all in complete seclusion. Bearing in mind always that the alcoholic
is a person who is sick spiritually as well as physically. The ready
access he is thus given to the source of spiritual healing is a
powerful factor in his recovery.
To return to the mechanical operation of the ward, it can be stated
that it is almost wholly self-operating. A nurses' aide comes in to
make beds and an A.A. employee does the heavier cleaning. The
cleaning of ashtrays, the making of coffee - the coffee urn is in
operation 24 hours each day - the washing of coffee cups, all of this
is done by the patients themselves. Usually they welcome these small
opportunities to busy themselves and thus keep their minds off their
problems. Activity eliminates brooding, and the volume of such work
is never great at any time.
The function of the lounge is to provide a place where the patient
can chat with A.A. visitors and listen to informal talks. A
secondary value, but a most important one to the former patient is
that by visiting current A.A. patients the former patient helps to
perpetuate his own sobriety. It is axiomatic that the alcoholic is
never "cured"; his ailment is simply arrested but it is positively
arrested if he perseveres in the program. The visitors' lounge
(which is supplemented by chairs in the hallway that divides the ward
from the choir-loft) helps not only to aid the current patient to
sobriety but also to preserve and perpetuate the sobriety of former
patients.
The ice-box is kept stocked with food and particularly with milk and
citrus juice, for the alcoholic is frequently an undernourished
person. The patients are encouraged to eat at will. The coffee urn
and bar are the A.A. equivalent for the brass rail and bottles of the
drinking days.
The A.A. visitors perform a multitude of chores for the current
patients. Sometimes they secure a job or effect a family
reconciliation or pacify a creditor pressing for payment of a bill.
These and other services are done by A.A.'s for the dual purpose of
showing true Christian brotherhood and as a means of perpetuating and
insuring their own sobriety.
HOSPITAL PROCEDURE
We begin where reality begins for the alcoholic. Reality for the
alcoholic is drinking. It is most important that the approach be
made through another alcoholic - a sponsor. The sponsor speaks the
language of the alcoholic. He knows "all the tricks of the trade",
because of personal experience.
Those of us who have anything to do with admitting these patients
would do well to have the humility to rely upon the judgment of the
sponsor. Let him decide when the patient is ready for the program.
We do not accept repeaters! Sponsors know this, hence they are very
careful to qualify the person before bringing him into the hospital.
Above all, he must have a sincere desire to stop drinking. Wives,
relatives, friends, and well-meaning employers may try to high-
pressure the alcoholic into accepting the program. Someone may even
persuade the family doctor to use his influence with the hospital, so
that the prospect may be admitted into the alcoholic ward.
The role of the sponsor is not an easy one. He leaves nothing undone
to clear away all the ill felling , indignation, and resentment that
have accumulated in the path of his patient. The sponsor acts as a
catalytic agent in combating all adverse forces. He tries to appease
an exasperated wife, talks with the employer, landlord, creditors,
and others. He explains the program, tells them that this is not
simply another "sobering up process". This time he is being treated
not only physically but morally and mentally as well. The sponsor
assures them that with God's grace, their cooperation and the help of
his fellow A.A.'s, his charge will be given a real opportunity to
make a complete recovery.
THE PATIENT ADMITTED TO THE HOSPITAL
After registration the sponsor escorts his patient to the A.A. ward.
The ward is virtually self-governing. Two or three of the senior
patients in the ward take over and welcome the new patient. They
check his clothes and prepare him for bed. (Many of these patients
are in such good condition that they sit in the lounge and join in
the conversation). Nothing is left undone to make the new man feel
at home. This reception inspires hope in his heart. It also gives
the A.A. patients a splendid opportunity of doing twelfth-step work,
namely, helping others.
The alcoholic is ill, in body, mind, and soul; hence we begin with
the physical care.
SECOND DAY - THE DAY OF RECOGNITION
The physical condition of the patient is usually much improved on the
second day. His mind is beginning to clear. He feels encouraged
because everyone seems interested in him. Visitors call on him,
telling him "This is how I made it". Some of the visitors may be men
with whom he used to drink. The power of example is a great
incentive to the patient. He begins to say to himself, "If he can do
it - so can I. But how am I going to make it?" At this point he
generally has a "heart to heart talk" with his sponsor. He
acknowledges his utter powerlessness over alcohol. He honestly
admits that he has tried innumerable times to drink normally and has
always failed. He is finally ready, honestly and humbly, to admit
defeat. His sponsor is delighted to know that his patient is really
honest about his drinking. The sponsor says, "Good! We can help you
since you are humble and honest".
This is the grace of God at work in the soul of the patient - to
admit helplessness and to seek help outside of self. This may be the
first time the patient has admitted the fact that he is powerless to
help himself.
The next step is humbly to turn to God: "Ask and you shall receive."
Patients have often said that is the first time they sincerely
prayed. The "Our Father" takes on a new meaning at this point. They
feel that they really belong.
THE DAY OF MORAL INVENTORY
The patient makes a searching and fearless moral inventory. He faces
the past and honestly admits to God, to himself, and to another human
being the exact nature of his wrongs. He is finished with alibis and
reservations. "I am an alcoholic, what a joy to be honest! The
truth will make me free." Now he is sincerely asking God's help and
the help of his fellow man.
FOURTH DAY - THE DAY OF RESOLUTION
"Give us this day our daily bread." This is interpreted by the
alcoholics to mean, "I surely can stay sober today." This is usually
followed by an act of complete surrender to God. The past is
finished. "I am heartily sorry." "I'll try to make amends." This
means confession, repentance and firm purpose of amendment. Many
Catholics return to the Sacraments after years of negligence.
Scripture says, "There is more joy in heaven over one sinner doing
penance than 99 just who need not penance." He used to drink because
he felt like it. He permitted his emotions to run away with him.
Now, with God's help and the help of his fellow A.A.'s, with his
clear thinking, he can control his feelings and emotions. Reason now
governs his life. Strong convictions are given him as to why he
cannot take that first drink. He has learned from his fellow
alcoholics that it is more blessed to give than to receive, and that
it is a privilege to help others. What a joy, too! He is kept so
busy helping others that he does not have time to even think about a
drink. What a transformation takes place in the lives of these men
and women!
FIFTH DAY - PLANS FOR THE FUTURE
As he leaves the hospital he must now face him problems. The way has
been paved by the sponsor. The future is in God's hands. He has
learned to say, "O God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I
cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know
the difference." He is urged to guard against pride, self-pity,
resentment, intolerance, and criticism; to attend meetings, to do
twelfth-step work, and to visit the hospital. Before leaving the
hospital the patient is given a FOLLOWING OF CHRIST by Thomas A.
Kempis. During his stay in the hospital he learns the significance
of the Little Sacred Heart Badge. He requests one, with a thorough
understanding of conditions implied: that it must be returned before
he takes the first drink.
PATIENTS FROM ALL OVER THE NATION
We have hospitalized well over 4,000 A.A. patients at St. Thomas
Hospital. They have come to Akron from Alabama, South Carolina,
Michigan, Maryland, Texas, and many other distant parts. They would
not have had to travel so far if their local hospitals made it
possible for them to receive the program nearer home.
Time and finances prohibit many from making such a long trip. Many
may be forced to accept treatment under less favorable
circumstances. Our Policy is not to accept alcoholics for re-
hospitalization. We've learned from experience that in institutions
where the majority of the inmates are repeaters the program is
defeated for the new man, because it creates an atmosphere of
pessimism and discouragement. The patient often gives up in
despair. It might have been quite different had he been given the
proper exposure to the program in a spiritual atmosphere as provided
in a local Catholic hospital.
Alcoholics Anonymous is a tremendous movement. According to figures
from the New York office, new members are registered at the rate of
about 1,500 per month. At present there are about 112,000 active
members and some 4,000 chapters scattered throughout the United
States, Canada, Latin America, and 36 other countries.
A priest once told me that the AA program is the most fruitful source
of conversions. It is perhaps the best means by which the work of
the hospital can be interpreted to the community. It gives the
hospital a good name not only with the reformed drunkard, his family,
friends and neighbors; but the whole community can point to something
constructive which the hospital has done. These people are seeking
truth, in other words, they are thirsting for God.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON ALCOHOLICS CARE IN ST. THOMAS HOSPITAL
QUESTION: Does admission of inebriated patients cause interference
with hospital routine?
ANSWER: While patients are admitted under the influence of alcohol,
they must be clear enough to acknowledge the fact that alcohol has
become a problem in their lives which they cannot solve without
help. Patients may be noisy for a short time but they usually
respond to treatment and therapy; A.A. patients are frequently less
disturbing than the average patient admitted to the hospital.
QUESTION: How is medical and nursing service provided for the patient?
ANSWER: Patients are taken care of by one of the staff men who
formerly worked with Doctor Bob and took over during the doctor's
illness. He continued the work after Doctor Bob died. The ward is
so located that the general duty nurse on the floor takes care of
patients and carries out the doctor's orders. The nurses' aide stays
about an hour each morning making beds. A member of A.A. is employed
in the ward eight hours a day, where his services are invaluable.
QUESTION: How is psychiatric care provided for these patients?
ANSWER: If a patient requires the services of a psychiatrist the
family and sponsor are notified and are asked to call a psychiatrist
of their own choice or one on the hospital staff. The patient is
moved from the A.A. ward and placed according to the advice of the
psychiatrist.
QUESTION: What are the charges to the patient for hospitalization?
ANSWER: The approximate charge for a period of five days is $75. All
hospital plans accept A.A.'s since we admit them but once for
treatment.
QUESTION: What does the medical treatment consist of?
ANSWER: There is no absolute routine treatment. Each patient is
evaluated according to his needs. An attempt is made to obtain from
the family or sponsor a medical and personal history concerning the
patient. Ideally, it is best for a patient to be admitted after
abstinence from alcohol for several days so that he may be given five
days of the A.A. program. Most of the time it is necessary to give
some medical treatment so that the patient may regain all his
faculties and be responsive to the A.A. treatment.
The following methods, here briefly summarized, have been used and
have been found successful, almost routinely:
1. Spirits of frumenti two ounces; Chloral Hydrate two drams -
every four hours for 24 hours if necessary. A definite attempt is
made to withdraw alcohol completely within 48 hours.
2. Fluids - intravenously.
3. Vitamin B complex - 2 cc daily.
4. Sedation: Sodium Luminol grains two may be given every six
hours the first day and sometimes on the second day. It is given hypo-
dermically so that the patient does not know that he is receiving a
barbiturate. N.B. Barbiturates Are Dangerous to the Alcoholic.
A. HMC No. 1 - We have used HMC several times when the patient
becomes quite unruly and craves alcohol constantly. Usually one
administration is sufficient.
5. Tolserol: Tolserol is used mostly when there are severe
nervous symptoms and the patient complains of inward tension
following adequate fluid intake, abstinence from alcohol and adequate
diet.
6. Adrenal Cordex: We have had some degree of success with
adrenal cortex. We have used the lipotropic cortex - 1 cc every
eight hours - first and second day; once daily thereafter during the
hospital stay, Cortalex in tablet form may be used after leaving the
hospital - two tablets three times daily. The patients state that
they have a sense of well-being, following administration of the
above, but the cost prohibits routine use when the patient responds
to other forms of treatment.
--- In AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com, "Robert Stonebraker"
wrote:
> Dear History Lovers,
>
> There is an example of the "Six Step Process" being completed
in "three or
> four hours" in Earl Treat's Story "He sold Himself Short."
> (p.292 - 3rd edition of the Big Book). I believe this event took
place in
> the summer of 1937. My question is this: Is there documentation
of the
> Step process being done that quickly in later years after we had 12
Steps?
> I am referring mostly to the years of the early 1940s.
>
> Thank you for documented response.
>
> Bob S., from Indiana
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
++++Message 2016. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Steps done quickly? WHAT''S THE
HURRY? lol!
From: unclebearboy@yahoo.com . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/19/2004 8:37:00 AM
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
This is how Sister Ignatia did it:
Day 1 - Admit to hospital, Detox
2 - Day of Recognition (Steps 1-3)
3 - Day of Moral Inventory
4 - Day of Resolution
5 - Plans for the future
________________________________
The article is copied here, but better to view
here ==> http://www.midlandaa.org/AAhistory/care_of_alcoholics.html
________________________________
THE CARE OF ALCOHOLICS
St. Thomas Hospital And A.A. Started
A Movement Which Swept The Country
By Sister M. Ignatia, C.S.A. St. Thomas Hospital, Akron, Ohio
From the October 1951 issue of "Hospital Progress" (the official
journal of the Catholic Hospital)
Nearly 12 years ago, one of the co-founders of Alcoholics Anonymous
(Dr. Bob) was on our staff. He was a skilled proctologist, and was
on our staff five years before we knew that he had a drinking
problem. We would not have known it then had he not volunteered the
information.
Dr. Bob often discussed the problem of alcoholism with us, with
regard to auto accidents and other tragedies caused by excessive
drinking. Many of these cases had to be admitted to the hospital
even though they were intoxicated. After talking with members of the
families of these compulsive drinkers and realizing the suffering
brought into the homes of these afflicted people because of drink, we
became deeply interested in the plan which Dr. Bob unfolded to use.
This was in 1939, just about the time we were trying to pull out of
the depression. Hospital beds were at a premium, without any
prospect of adding to our bed capacity. There was very little
enthusiasm around the hospital about admitting who were imbibing too
freely in those days.
However, prompted by the grace of God, we very cautiously admitted
one patient, with the diagnosis of acute gastritis, under the care of
Dr. Bob. The patient was placed in a two-bed room. The next morning
Dr Bob came to the admitting office and very timidly requested that
the patient be moved to a spot where the men who came to visit him
might talk with him privately. The only available space we could
think of was a small room across the hall called the "flower room",
where patients' flowers were changed and arranged. We pushed the
alcoholic's bed into this room. It was there that he received his
first A.A. visitors. The men who came to visit him were such
respectable, dignified-appearing men that we could hardly believe
they had ever been addicted to alcohol.
We then set aside a two-bed room, then a four and later a six-bed
room ward. Today our A.A. ward has eight beds, adjourning a corridor
which serves as a lounge. The corridor opens the gallery of our
chapel.
Our alcoholic ward is not a great problem. It is simply a large room
with accommodations in one end for eight beds. The other end of the
room is a small lounge with comfortable chairs, a davenport, a "bar",
a coffee urn, and an ice-box. To the rear of this ward-lounge is a
room with a lavatory and shower into which the new man is brought for
admission to the ward.
An important point is that he is helped out of his street clothes and
into hospital attire BY OTHER PATIENTS IN THE WARD. The advantage
for the new patient is that, from the first, he is in the care of
understanding friends. The advantage for the older patients who
perform this duty is that they are thus able to see themselves again
as they were upon admission. Administratively, an economy is
effected by thus eliminating the need for hard-to-get employees.
Directly across the hall from our ward-lounge is the choir-loft of
our chapel, which permits A.A. patients to hear Mass every day if
they wish and to make visits in hospital attire when they so desire -
all in complete seclusion. Bearing in mind always that the alcoholic
is a person who is sick spiritually as well as physically. The ready
access he is thus given to the source of spiritual healing is a
powerful factor in his recovery.
To return to the mechanical operation of the ward, it can be stated
that it is almost wholly self-operating. A nurses' aide comes in to
make beds and an A.A. employee does the heavier cleaning. The
cleaning of ashtrays, the making of coffee - the coffee urn is in
operation 24 hours each day - the washing of coffee cups, all of this
is done by the patients themselves. Usually they welcome these small
opportunities to busy themselves and thus keep their minds off their
problems. Activity eliminates brooding, and the volume of such work
is never great at any time.
The function of the lounge is to provide a place where the patient
can chat with A.A. visitors and listen to informal talks. A
secondary value, but a most important one to the former patient is
that by visiting current A.A. patients the former patient helps to
perpetuate his own sobriety. It is axiomatic that the alcoholic is
never "cured"; his ailment is simply arrested but it is positively
arrested if he perseveres in the program. The visitors' lounge
(which is supplemented by chairs in the hallway that divides the ward
from the choir-loft) helps not only to aid the current patient to
sobriety but also to preserve and perpetuate the sobriety of former
patients.
The ice-box is kept stocked with food and particularly with milk and
citrus juice, for the alcoholic is frequently an undernourished
person. The patients are encouraged to eat at will. The coffee urn
and bar are the A.A. equivalent for the brass rail and bottles of the
drinking days.
The A.A. visitors perform a multitude of chores for the current
patients. Sometimes they secure a job or effect a family
reconciliation or pacify a creditor pressing for payment of a bill.
These and other services are done by A.A.'s for the dual purpose of
showing true Christian brotherhood and as a means of perpetuating and
insuring their own sobriety.
HOSPITAL PROCEDURE
We begin where reality begins for the alcoholic. Reality for the
alcoholic is drinking. It is most important that the approach be
made through another alcoholic - a sponsor. The sponsor speaks the
language of the alcoholic. He knows "all the tricks of the trade",
because of personal experience.
Those of us who have anything to do with admitting these patients
would do well to have the humility to rely upon the judgment of the
sponsor. Let him decide when the patient is ready for the program.
We do not accept repeaters! Sponsors know this, hence they are very
careful to qualify the person before bringing him into the hospital.
Above all, he must have a sincere desire to stop drinking. Wives,
relatives, friends, and well-meaning employers may try to high-
pressure the alcoholic into accepting the program. Someone may even
persuade the family doctor to use his influence with the hospital, so
that the prospect may be admitted into the alcoholic ward.
The role of the sponsor is not an easy one. He leaves nothing undone
to clear away all the ill felling , indignation, and resentment that
have accumulated in the path of his patient. The sponsor acts as a
catalytic agent in combating all adverse forces. He tries to appease
an exasperated wife, talks with the employer, landlord, creditors,
and others. He explains the program, tells them that this is not
simply another "sobering up process". This time he is being treated
not only physically but morally and mentally as well. The sponsor
assures them that with God's grace, their cooperation and the help of
his fellow A.A.'s, his charge will be given a real opportunity to
make a complete recovery.
THE PATIENT ADMITTED TO THE HOSPITAL
After registration the sponsor escorts his patient to the A.A. ward.
The ward is virtually self-governing. Two or three of the senior
patients in the ward take over and welcome the new patient. They
check his clothes and prepare him for bed. (Many of these patients
are in such good condition that they sit in the lounge and join in
the conversation). Nothing is left undone to make the new man feel
at home. This reception inspires hope in his heart. It also gives
the A.A. patients a splendid opportunity of doing twelfth-step work,
namely, helping others.
The alcoholic is ill, in body, mind, and soul; hence we begin with
the physical care.
SECOND DAY - THE DAY OF RECOGNITION
The physical condition of the patient is usually much improved on the
second day. His mind is beginning to clear. He feels encouraged
because everyone seems interested in him. Visitors call on him,
telling him "This is how I made it". Some of the visitors may be men
with whom he used to drink. The power of example is a great
incentive to the patient. He begins to say to himself, "If he can do
it - so can I. But how am I going to make it?" At this point he
generally has a "heart to heart talk" with his sponsor. He
acknowledges his utter powerlessness over alcohol. He honestly
admits that he has tried innumerable times to drink normally and has
always failed. He is finally ready, honestly and humbly, to admit
defeat. His sponsor is delighted to know that his patient is really
honest about his drinking. The sponsor says, "Good! We can help you
since you are humble and honest".
This is the grace of God at work in the soul of the patient - to
admit helplessness and to seek help outside of self. This may be the
first time the patient has admitted the fact that he is powerless to
help himself.
The next step is humbly to turn to God: "Ask and you shall receive."
Patients have often said that is the first time they sincerely
prayed. The "Our Father" takes on a new meaning at this point. They
feel that they really belong.
THE DAY OF MORAL INVENTORY
The patient makes a searching and fearless moral inventory. He faces
the past and honestly admits to God, to himself, and to another human
being the exact nature of his wrongs. He is finished with alibis and
reservations. "I am an alcoholic, what a joy to be honest! The
truth will make me free." Now he is sincerely asking God's help and
the help of his fellow man.
FOURTH DAY - THE DAY OF RESOLUTION
"Give us this day our daily bread." This is interpreted by the
alcoholics to mean, "I surely can stay sober today." This is usually
followed by an act of complete surrender to God. The past is
finished. "I am heartily sorry." "I'll try to make amends." This
means confession, repentance and firm purpose of amendment. Many
Catholics return to the Sacraments after years of negligence.
Scripture says, "There is more joy in heaven over one sinner doing
penance than 99 just who need not penance." He used to drink because
he felt like it. He permitted his emotions to run away with him.
Now, with God's help and the help of his fellow A.A.'s, with his
clear thinking, he can control his feelings and emotions. Reason now
governs his life. Strong convictions are given him as to why he
cannot take that first drink. He has learned from his fellow
alcoholics that it is more blessed to give than to receive, and that
it is a privilege to help others. What a joy, too! He is kept so
busy helping others that he does not have time to even think about a
drink. What a transformation takes place in the lives of these men
and women!
FIFTH DAY - PLANS FOR THE FUTURE
As he leaves the hospital he must now face him problems. The way has
been paved by the sponsor. The future is in God's hands. He has
learned to say, "O God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I
cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know
the difference." He is urged to guard against pride, self-pity,
resentment, intolerance, and criticism; to attend meetings, to do
twelfth-step work, and to visit the hospital. Before leaving the
hospital the patient is given a FOLLOWING OF CHRIST by Thomas A.
Kempis. During his stay in the hospital he learns the significance
of the Little Sacred Heart Badge. He requests one, with a thorough
understanding of conditions implied: that it must be returned before
he takes the first drink.
PATIENTS FROM ALL OVER THE NATION
We have hospitalized well over 4,000 A.A. patients at St. Thomas
Hospital. They have come to Akron from Alabama, South Carolina,
Michigan, Maryland, Texas, and many other distant parts. They would
not have had to travel so far if their local hospitals made it
possible for them to receive the program nearer home.
Time and finances prohibit many from making such a long trip. Many
may be forced to accept treatment under less favorable
circumstances. Our Policy is not to accept alcoholics for re-
hospitalization. We've learned from experience that in institutions
where the majority of the inmates are repeaters the program is
defeated for the new man, because it creates an atmosphere of
pessimism and discouragement. The patient often gives up in
despair. It might have been quite different had he been given the
proper exposure to the program in a spiritual atmosphere as provided
in a local Catholic hospital.
Alcoholics Anonymous is a tremendous movement. According to figures
from the New York office, new members are registered at the rate of
about 1,500 per month. At present there are about 112,000 active
members and some 4,000 chapters scattered throughout the United
States, Canada, Latin America, and 36 other countries.
A priest once told me that the AA program is the most fruitful source
of conversions. It is perhaps the best means by which the work of
the hospital can be interpreted to the community. It gives the
hospital a good name not only with the reformed drunkard, his family,
friends and neighbors; but the whole community can point to something
constructive which the hospital has done. These people are seeking
truth, in other words, they are thirsting for God.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON ALCOHOLICS CARE IN ST. THOMAS HOSPITAL
QUESTION: Does admission of inebriated patients cause interference
with hospital routine?
ANSWER: While patients are admitted under the influence of alcohol,
they must be clear enough to acknowledge the fact that alcohol has
become a problem in their lives which they cannot solve without
help. Patients may be noisy for a short time but they usually
respond to treatment and therapy; A.A. patients are frequently less
disturbing than the average patient admitted to the hospital.
QUESTION: How is medical and nursing service provided for the patient?
ANSWER: Patients are taken care of by one of the staff men who
formerly worked with Doctor Bob and took over during the doctor's
illness. He continued the work after Doctor Bob died. The ward is
so located that the general duty nurse on the floor takes care of
patients and carries out the doctor's orders. The nurses' aide stays
about an hour each morning making beds. A member of A.A. is employed
in the ward eight hours a day, where his services are invaluable.
QUESTION: How is psychiatric care provided for these patients?
ANSWER: If a patient requires the services of a psychiatrist the
family and sponsor are notified and are asked to call a psychiatrist
of their own choice or one on the hospital staff. The patient is
moved from the A.A. ward and placed according to the advice of the
psychiatrist.
QUESTION: What are the charges to the patient for hospitalization?
ANSWER: The approximate charge for a period of five days is $75. All
hospital plans accept A.A.'s since we admit them but once for
treatment.
QUESTION: What does the medical treatment consist of?
ANSWER: There is no absolute routine treatment. Each patient is
evaluated according to his needs. An attempt is made to obtain from
the family or sponsor a medical and personal history concerning the
patient. Ideally, it is best for a patient to be admitted after
abstinence from alcohol for several days so that he may be given five
days of the A.A. program. Most of the time it is necessary to give
some medical treatment so that the patient may regain all his
faculties and be responsive to the A.A. treatment.
The following methods, here briefly summarized, have been used and
have been found successful, almost routinely:
1. Spirits of frumenti two ounces; Chloral Hydrate two drams -
every four hours for 24 hours if necessary. A definite attempt is
made to withdraw alcohol completely within 48 hours.
2. Fluids - intravenously.
3. Vitamin B complex - 2 cc daily.
4. Sedation: Sodium Luminol grains two may be given every six
hours the first day and sometimes on the second day. It is given hypo-
dermically so that the patient does not know that he is receiving a
barbiturate. N.B. Barbiturates Are Dangerous to the Alcoholic.
A. HMC No. 1 - We have used HMC several times when the patient
becomes quite unruly and craves alcohol constantly. Usually one
administration is sufficient.
5. Tolserol: Tolserol is used mostly when there are severe
nervous symptoms and the patient complains of inward tension
following adequate fluid intake, abstinence from alcohol and adequate
diet.
6. Adrenal Cordex: We have had some degree of success with
adrenal cortex. We have used the lipotropic cortex - 1 cc every
eight hours - first and second day; once daily thereafter during the
hospital stay, Cortalex in tablet form may be used after leaving the
hospital - two tablets three times daily. The patients state that
they have a sense of well-being, following administration of the
above, but the cost prohibits routine use when the patient responds
to other forms of treatment.
--- In AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com, "Robert Stonebraker"
wrote:
> Dear History Lovers,
>
> There is an example of the "Six Step Process" being completed
in "three or
> four hours" in Earl Treat's Story "He sold Himself Short."
> (p.292 - 3rd edition of the Big Book). I believe this event took
place in
> the summer of 1937. My question is this: Is there documentation
of the
> Step process being done that quickly in later years after we had 12
Steps?
> I am referring mostly to the years of the early 1940s.
>
> Thank you for documented response.
>
> Bob S., from Indiana
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++++Message 2017. . . . . . . . . . . . Traditions match with Steps?
From: unclebearboy@yahoo.com . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/20/2004 3:08:00 AM
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Is it true that Bill put each of the Traditions in specific sequence
in order to match-up with its corresponding step?
For example, consider Step Two & Tradition Two: "God," "Ultimate
Authority ... or Step 12 & Trad. 12: "spiritual, principles,
practice."
If so, did Bill speak/write about his intention?
Thanks in advance!
~ bill
ps: I just took over moderation of the href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AA12n12/">
Yahoo! AA12n12 Group. <== Click here if interested
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AA12n12/
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++++Message 2018. . . . . . . . . . . . 2nd Edition Forward
From: Joanna Whitney . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/20/2004 7:49:00 PM
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Hello:
I have been talking with archivists at GSO re: the changes made to the 2nd
Edition
Forward, first the typographical changes regarding the switching around of
paragraphs and later the actual changes made to the wording describing the
growth
rate of AA and then the change back to the original printing in 1955. Can
anyone
shed some light on who would have made such decisions to change an historical
document in this manner and why?
GSO was helpful in letting me know when the changes were made and what the
changes were but were very unhelpful in helping me to understand why the
changes
were made and by whom.
Thanks,
Joanna W.
Saugerties, NY
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++++Message 2019. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Traditions match with Steps?
From: Diz Titcher . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/20/2004 9:44:00 AM
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Bill had a unique way of writing and others have expressed it. The first
Step, Tradition and Concept spells out the problem and the 2nd one of each
gives us the solution, 3-11 we work for a spiritual event as stated in each
twelfth one.
Diz
----- Original Message -----
From:
To:
Sent: Monday, September 20, 2004 4:08 AM
Subject: [AAHistoryLovers] Traditions match with Steps?
> Is it true that Bill put each of the Traditions in specific sequence
> in order to match-up with its corresponding step?
>
> For example, consider Step Two & Tradition Two: "God," "Ultimate
> Authority ... or Step 12 & Trad. 12: "spiritual, principles,
> practice."
>
> If so, did Bill speak/write about his intention?
>
> Thanks in advance!
> ~ bill
>
>
> ps: I just took over moderation of the
> href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AA12n12/">
> Yahoo! AA12n12 Group. <== Click here if interested
>
>
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AA12n12/
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
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++++Message 2020. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Traditions match with Steps?
From: Arthur Sheehan . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/21/2004 12:53:00 PM
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Hi Bill
You'll find many of the basic principles that were carried into the Twelve
Traditions in the foreword to the first edition Big Book.
Bill later wrote a series of articles in the AA Grapevine regarding the
Traditions starting with an August 1945 article titled "Modesty One Plank for
Good Public Relations." In an April 1946 Grapevine article titled "Twelve
Suggested Points for AA Tradition" Bill defined what would later come to be
called the "long form" of the Traditions.
In 1947, a pamphlet titled "AA Tradition" was distributed throughout the
Fellowship and members were advised that they each could get one copy free
from the NY office. Much of the material, I believe, can be found in the
contemporary pamphlet titled "AA Tradition How it Developed by Bill W."
Bill continued to write Grapevine articles on the Traditions (or subject
matter related to the Traditions) up to November 1949 when the entire edition
of the Grapevine was devoted to the Traditions for the coming 1st
International Convention held in 1950 in Cleveland, OH. The November 1949
Grapevine contained the first publication of the short form of the Twelve
Traditions (2 wording changes were subsequently made to version published).
The Traditions were approved unanimously by attendees at the 1950
International Convention.
Much of the of the Grapevine material that Bill wrote on the Traditions from
1945 to 1949 was used in the books "Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions" and
"AA Comes of Age." The Grapevine Traditions essays are preserved in the book
"Language of the Heart." "AA Comes of Age" gives a very nice history (straight
from the original author) of how the Steps and Traditions came to be.
I can find no suggestion in AA literature that Bill had any kind of strategic
intention for the ordinal construction of the Steps and Traditions to somehow
correspond based on content. So I believe your basic premise does not stand
under scrutiny. Simple examination of the Steps and Traditions, on their face,
challenges one to come up with either a formula for correspondence or some
matching criteria without making a real reach into the esoteric. You may find
the same words here and there but I believe context should take precedence.
Your example dissolves in substance when trying to find contextual equivalency
in Steps 3 through 11 and their correspondingly numbered Tradition.
There is a great deal of imaginative thinking in our beloved AA Fellowship.
Unfortunately it can stimulate a revisionist historical perspective on matters
that really should be fairly straightforward and shaped by common sense. For
example I've attended Step meetings where members would go into long,
elaborate dissertations on why the term "defects of character" was used in
Step 6 and the word "shortcomings" was used in Step 7 and what the presumed
significant differences were in their meaning. It was very entertaining
discussion but hardly factual. When Bill W was questioned on the matter of the
choice of words in the two Steps he stated that he simply did not want to use
the same words in succession.
All too often "information" is ignored and "imagination" dominates. From my
studies, the primary matching quality I can discern between the Steps and
Traditions is that they both were shaped by trial and error experience as
opposed to some mystical design. One set of principles was designed for
recovery, the other was designed for unity.
As an aside, I am NOT from the school that asserts that "the Traditions are to
the group what the Steps are to the individual" if that is what is driving
your search. Groups are made up of members and if the members wish to be
unifiers instead of dividers they should learn and practice the Traditions. If
members want to get sober and stay sober, they should learn and practice the
Steps.
Cheers
Arthur
----- Original Message -----
From: unclebearboy@yahoo.com
To: AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, September 20, 2004 3:08 AM
Subject: [AAHistoryLovers] Traditions match with Steps?
Is it true that Bill put each of the Traditions in specific sequence
in order to match-up with its corresponding step?
For example, consider Step Two & Tradition Two: "God," "Ultimate
Authority ... or Step 12 & Trad. 12: "spiritual, principles,
practice."
If so, did Bill speak/write about his intention?
Thanks in advance!
~ bill
ps: I just took over moderation of the href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AA12n12/">
Yahoo! AA12n12 Group. <== Click here if interested
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AA12n12/
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++++Message 2021. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Sister Ignatia and St. Thomas
Hospital, Akron
From: caseyosh . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/22/2004 10:00:00 AM
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AAHistoryLovers,
Re my previous post regarding Sr. Ignatia, to which James
responded as below... I have rediscovered the text wherein I saw a
picture of the Sacred Heart medallion that the good Sister gave to
alcoholic patients at St. Thomas Hospital, Akron, when they left the
facility.
It is in the book "Slaying the Dragon" by William L. White, in the
picture section following page 224.
Happy 24's, friends...
Casey O
--- In AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com, James Bliss
wrote:
> I am not certain this is what you are looking for, but there is a
picture of Sister Ignatia on page 186 of _DR. Bob and the Good
Oldtimers_ and on page 195 it states:
> 'Sister Ignatia gave each of her newly released patients a Sacred
Heart medallion, which she asked them to return before they took the
first drink. She would occasionally give out St. Christopher medals
as well, but she would tell the recipient not to drive too
fast. "He gets out after 50 miles an hour," she warned'
Hope that helps.
Jim
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++++Message 2022. . . . . . . . . . . . Big Book Printed
From: Tom Hickcox . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/21/2004 9:46:00 AM
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I am interested in the number of Big Books in each of the printings of the
First, Second, Third, and Fourth Editions.
Could someone point me towards the data?
Tommy in Baton Rouge
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++++Message 2023. . . . . . . . . . . . James Houck Article
From: Lash, William \(Bill\) . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/24/2004 6:00:00 AM
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So close yet so far. This James Houck article made the online issue of Time
magazine, but not the circulation copy in magazine stores. It can be found at
www.time.com:
TIME BONUS SECTION OCTOBER 2004: GENERATIONS
Living Recovery
A man who knew the founder of A.A. has had a 70year quest to help other
problem drinkers
By Melissa August/Towson
-From the Sep. 27, 2004 issue of TIME magazine
It was on a cold day in 1934 that James Houck hit bottom. Newly wedded and
living in Frederick, Md., he was getting drunk every weekend -- and sometimes
even during the week -- on home brew. He had recently been in a
drunken-driving accident in his employer's car, and his drinking had estranged
him from his wife Betty. "We were not married a month," Houck says, "before I
told her I was sorry I ever saw her." Houck had begun drinking early, at age
5, when he would sneak sips from his mother's bottle of dandelion wine, then
make up the difference with water. Although he grew up in the middle of
Prohibition, his drinking problem only got worse as the years passed.
On Dec. 11, a friend who thought Houck needed to make some changes took him to
a meeting at the local YMCA of the Oxford Group, an evangelical society
founded in Britain by Frank Buchman that was prominent in the 1920s. Houck was
immediately drawn to the group's teachings, which were based on four
principles: honesty, purity, unselfishness and love. He was especially moved
by the concept of "two-way" prayer: the group taught that if you spent quiet
time every day listening to God, he would provide guidance. You were also
encouraged to make restitution, to "put right what's wrong in your life," says
Houck.
It was at those Oxford Group meetings that Houck befriended Bill Wilson,
a.k.a. Bill W., a chronic drinker who would go on to co-found Alcoholics
Anonymous (A.A.) in 1939. Houck joined the Oxford Group and became sober on
Dec. 12, one day after Wilson did. Today, at 98, Houck is the only living
person to have attended Oxford Group meetings with Wilson, who died in 1971.
Houck remembers Wilson well, and after a 40-year career as an electrical
engineer and salesman, he has made it his mission to bring the Oxford Group's
teachings to a new generation of recovering alcoholics. In the early 1970s, he
started working with longshoremen on the Baltimore docks, and until recently,
he traveled every six weeks or so, giving talks to members of 12-step
programs, including A.A., around the country. Houck continues to provide
counsel to recovering addicts who telephone from around the world. He still
appears at meetings held within driving distance of his home in Towson, Md.,
and shares the inspirational story of his recovery and the early days of the
Oxford Group with out-of-town gatherings via teleconferencing.
Houck wants to restore the old methods the Oxford Group used, in particular
its spiritual aspects, which he believes are stronger and more effective than
the ones currently practiced in A.A. The principles of the group live on in
the Back to Basics organization, which follows a 12-step program similar to
that originally used by A.A. Houck has been trying to apply Back to Basics
techniques in federal and state prisons and is working directly with 300
prisoners in the Henrico County Jail East, in Richmond, Va.
Houck knows how much a group like this can mean to someone. After he decided
on Dec. 12, 1934, that he would never drink alcohol again, he made restitution
with his wife and others he had harmed. "I started telling my wife what kind
of a fellow I was," he says. "I did this for three nights to get all of the
garbage out. I wanted to be honest about everything in my life." He says his
wife was grateful for the talk and then understood his behavior. "Now we could
start our family and raise the children with the same guidelines. We had
family quiet time every day. That's the way we raised the whole family." Houck
lost his wife to cancer in 1988, but believes the lessons learned from the
Oxford Group gave him a life he had not been sure was possible. "A marriage
that wasn't supposed to last one year lasted 57 years."
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++++Message 2024. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Big Book Printed
From: Arthur Sheehan . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/24/2004 9:42:00 AM
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Hi Tommy
I gleaned the following from the final report of the 2002 General Service
Conference (pg 15).
Big Book distribution
1st edition - 300,000 copies were distributed from 1939 to 1955
2nd edition - 1,150,000 copies were distributed from 1955 to 1976
3rd edition - 19,550,000 copies were distributed from 1976 to 2002
In 2002, the Conference approved publication of the 4th edition Big Book.
More than 2,000,000 copies of the 4th edition have been distributed so far.
The price of the 4th edition was initially set at $5.00 as a special
introductory price.
It returned to its regular price this year.
Cheers
Arthur
----- Original Message -----
From: Tom Hickcox
To: AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, September 21, 2004 9:46 AM
Subject: [AAHistoryLovers] Big Book Printed
I am interested in the number of Big Books in each of the printings of the
First, Second, Third, and Fourth Editions.
Could someone point me towards the data?
Tommy in Baton Rouge
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++++Message 2025. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: James Houck Article
From: johnpine@comcast.net . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/24/2004 10:09:00 AM
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Has Houck ever been a member of A.A. or identified himself as a recovering
alcoholic in his talks? Thanks. John Pine, Richmond, VA
-------------- Original message --------------
So close yet so far. This James Houck article made the online issue of Time
magazine, but not the circulation copy in magazine stores. It can be found
at www.time.com:
TIME BONUS SECTION OCTOBER 2004: GENERATIONS
Living Recovery
A man who knew the founder of A.A. has had a 70year quest to help other
problem drinkers
By Melissa August/Towson
-From the Sep. 27, 2004 issue of TIME magazine
It was on a cold day in 1934 that James Houck hit bottom. Newly wedded and
living in Frederick, Md., he was getting drunk every weekend -- and
sometimes even during the week -- on home brew. He had recently been in a
drunken-driving accident in his employer's car, and his drinking had
estranged him from his wife Betty. "We were not married a month," Houck
says, "before I told her I was sorry I ever saw her." Houck had begun
drinking early, at age 5, when he would sneak sips from his mother's bottle
of dandelion wine, then make up the difference with water. Although he grew
up in the middle of Prohibition, his drinking problem only got worse as the
years passed.
On Dec. 11, a friend who thought Houck needed to make some changes took him
to a meeting at the local YMCA of the Oxford Group, an evangelical society
founded in Britain by Frank Buchman that was prominent in the 1920s. Houck
was immediately drawn to the group's teachings, which were based on four
principles: honesty, purity, unselfishness and love. He was especially moved
by the concept of "two-way" prayer: the group taught that if you spent quiet
time every day listening to God, he would provide guidance. You were also
encouraged to make restitution, to "put right what's wrong in your life,"
says Houck.
It was at those Oxford Group meetings that Houck befriended Bill Wilson,
a.k.a. Bill W., a chronic drinker who would go on to co-found Alcoholics
Anonymous (A.A.) in 1939. Houck joined the Oxford Group and became sober on
Dec. 12, one day after Wilson did. Today, at 98, Houck is the only living
person to have attended Oxford Group meetings with Wilson, who died in 1971.
Houck remembers Wilson well, and after a 40-year career as an electrical
engineer and salesman, he has made it his mission to bring the Oxford
Group's teachings to a new generation of recovering alcoholics. In the early
1970s, he started working with longshoremen on the Baltimore docks, and
until recently, he traveled every six weeks or so, giving talks to members
of 12-step programs, including A.A., around the country. Houck continues to
provide counsel to recovering addicts who telephone from around the world.
He still appears at meetings held within driving distance of his home in
Towson, Md., and shares the inspirational story of his recovery and the
early days of the Oxford Group with out-of-town gatherings via
teleconferencing.
Houck wants to restore the old methods the Oxford Group used, in particular
its spiritual aspects, which he believes are stronger and more effective
than the ones currently practiced in A.A. The principles of the group live
on in the Back to Basics organization, which follows a 12-step program
similar to that originally used by A.A. Houck has been trying to apply Back
to Basics techniques in federal and state prisons and is working directly
with 300 prisoners in the Henrico County Jail East, in Richmond, Va.
Houck knows how much a group like this can mean to someone. After he decided
on Dec. 12, 1934, that he would never drink alcohol again, he made
restitution with his wife and others he had harmed. "I started telling my
wife what kind of a fellow I was," he says. "I did this for three nights to
get all of the garbage out. I wanted to be honest about everything in my
life." He says his wife was grateful for the talk and then understood his
behavior. "Now we could start our family and raise the children with the
same guidelines. We had family quiet time every day. That's the way we
raised the whole family." Houck lost his wife to cancer in 1988, but
believes the lessons learned from the Oxford Group gave him a life he had
not been sure was possible. "A marriage that wasn't supposed to last one
year lasted 57 years."
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++++Message 2026. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Big Book Printed
From: wilfried antheunis . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/25/2004 3:30:00 PM
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Hi Tommy, I should have sent this earlier, was looking for more information
and someplace on my computer (or maybe on another one that crashed!) it is
there - printings and number of copies printed. But this relates to the first
and second edition. If I find more, I will post it.
ciao
wil
Printing History of the First Edition
*************************************
First Printing, April, 1939
Second Printing, March, 1941
Third Printing, June, 1942
Fourth Printing, March, 1943
Fifth Printing, January, 1944
Sixth Printing, June, 1944
Seventh Printing, January, 1945
Eighth Printing, February, 1945
Ninth Printing, January, 1946
Tenth Printing, August, 1946
Eleventh Printing, June 1947
Twelfth Printing, October, 1948
Thirteenth Printing, February, 1950
Fourteenth Printing, July, 1951
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Editions
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, First Printing 1955, (28,000 Printed)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Second Printing 1956, (23,000 Printed)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Third Printing 1957, (21,000 Printed)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Fourth Printing 1960, (20,000 Printed)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Fifth Printing 1962, (Quantity printed
is unknown)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Sixth Printing 1963, (Quantity printed
is unknown)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Seventh Printing 1965, (Quantity
printed is unknown)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Eighth Printing 1966, (Quantity printed
is unknown)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Ninth Printing 1967, (Quantity printed
is unknown)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Tenth Printing 1969, (Quantity printed
is unknown)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Eleventh Printing 1970, (Quantity
printed is unknown)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Thirteenth Printing 1972, (Quantity
printed is unknown)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Fourteenth Printing 1973, (Total 1973
Printings 1,000,000)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Fifteenth Printing 1973, (Total 1973
Printings 1,000,000)
Alcoholics Anonymous Second Edition, Sixteenth Printing 1974
----- Original Message -----
From: Arthur Sheehan
To: AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, September 24, 2004 10:42 AM
Subject: Re: [AAHistoryLovers] Big Book Printed
Hi Tommy
I gleaned the following from the final report of the 2002 General Service
Conference (pg 15).
Big Book distribution
1st edition - 300,000 copies were distributed from 1939 to 1955
2nd edition - 1,150,000 copies were distributed from 1955 to 1976
3rd edition - 19,550,000 copies were distributed from 1976 to 2002
In 2002, the Conference approved publication of the 4th edition Big Book.
More than 2,000,000 copies of the 4th edition have been distributed so far.
The price of the 4th edition was initially set at $5.00 as a special
introductory price.
It returned to its regular price this year.
Cheers
Arthur
----- Original Message -----
From: Tom Hickcox
To: AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, September 21, 2004 9:46 AM
Subject: [AAHistoryLovers] Big Book Printed
I am interested in the number of Big Books in each of the printings of the
First, Second, Third, and Fourth Editions.
Could someone point me towards the data?
Tommy in Baton Rouge
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++++Message 2027. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: James Houck Article
From: billherold1017@aol.com . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/25/2004 12:05:00 PM
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This is Bill H from Baltimore. I have been in the program 21 years and am
currently chairperson for Archives for Maryland General Service Archives.
I interviewed Mr. Houck about 2 months ago and he is quite a gentleman. He is
indeed sober however, it was not through AA nor has hever considered himself a
member of AA.
The purpose of the interview was to gain a better perspective on the
atmosphere that was present when AA was started. He met Bill and Fitz Mayo
(our southern friend) when they used to attend Oxford group meetings in
Frederick Md. Bill used to come down occasionally and visit Fits May and his
wife on the weekend at Fits's house just sout of annapolis.
Bill used to come into the meeting and ask if there were any drunks there.
Bill took the concepts from the oxford group and with the help of the original
members molded them into the 12 steps and the foundation of this program.
Fits Mayo was the son of a minister and along with his best friend Jim Burwell
helped start AA in Baltimore Philadelphia , Washington DC and Northern
Virginia. Fits and Jim were also in the middle of the big debate over God in
AA with Fitz leaning to chritisnity influence and jim leaning to no God
(Aetheist).
From my interview with Mr. Houck, he was never in AA nor a firm believer so
much as an admirer of the program. Hisa thouhgts and belief lie strictly in
the christian foundation of the Oxford movement.
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++++Message 2028. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: James Houck Article
From: Bernadette MacLeod . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/25/2004 5:47:00 PM
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I met James Houck at the Wilson House in East Dorset, Vermont at a seminar he
participated in and he told me he was never a member of AA.
Bernadette
----- Original Message -----
From: johnpine@comcast.net
To: AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, September 24, 2004 11:09 AM
Subject: Re: [AAHistoryLovers] James Houck Article
Has Houck ever been a member of A.A. or identified himself as a recovering
alcoholic in his talks? Thanks. John Pine, Richmond, VA
-------------- Original message --------------
So close yet so far. This James Houck article made the online issue of
Time magazine, but not the circulation copy in magazine stores. It can be
found at www.time.com:
TIME BONUS SECTION OCTOBER 2004: GENERATIONS
Living Recovery
A man who knew the founder of A.A. has had a 70year quest to help other
problem drinkers
By Melissa August/Towson
-From the Sep. 27, 2004 issue of TIME magazine
It was on a cold day in 1934 that James Houck hit bottom. Newly wedded and
living in Frederick, Md., he was getting drunk every weekend -- and
sometimes even during the week -- on home brew. He had recently been in a
drunken-driving accident in his employer's car, and his drinking had
estranged him from his wife Betty. "We were not married a month," Houck
says, "before I told her I was sorry I ever saw her." Houck had begun
drinking early, at age 5, when he would sneak sips from his mother's
bottle of dandelion wine, then make up the difference with water. Although
he grew up in the middle of Prohibition, his drinking problem only got
worse as the years passed.
On Dec. 11, a friend who thought Houck needed to make some changes took
him to a meeting at the local YMCA of the Oxford Group, an evangelical
society founded in Britain by Frank Buchman that was prominent in the
1920s. Houck was immediately drawn to the group's teachings, which were
based on four principles: honesty, purity, unselfishness and love. He was
especially moved by the concept of "two-way" prayer: the group taught that
if you spent quiet time every day listening to God, he would provide
guidance. You were also encouraged to make restitution, to "put right
what's wrong in your life," says Houck.
It was at those Oxford Group meetings that Houck befriended Bill Wilson,
a.k.a. Bill W., a chronic drinker who would go on to co-found Alcoholics
Anonymous (A.A.) in 1939. Houck joined the Oxford Group and became sober
on Dec. 12, one day after Wilson did. Today, at 98, Houck is the only
living person to have attended Oxford Group meetings with Wilson, who died
in 1971.
Houck remembers Wilson well, and after a 40-year career as an electrical
engineer and salesman, he has made it his mission to bring the Oxford
Group's teachings to a new generation of recovering alcoholics. In the
early 1970s, he started working with longshoremen on the Baltimore docks,
and until recently, he traveled every six weeks or so, giving talks to
members of 12-step programs, including A.A., around the country. Houck
continues to provide counsel to recovering addicts who telephone from
around the world. He still appears at meetings held within driving
distance of his home in Towson, Md., and shares the inspirational story of
his recovery and the early days of the Oxford Group with out-of-town
gatherings via teleconferencing.
Houck wants to restore the old methods the Oxford Group used, in
particular its spiritual aspects, which he believes are stronger and more
effective than the ones currently practiced in A.A. The principles of the
group live on in the Back to Basics organization, which follows a 12-step
program similar to that originally used by A.A. Houck has been trying to
apply Back to Basics techniques in federal and state prisons and is
working directly with 300 prisoners in the Henrico County Jail East, in
Richmond, Va.
Houck knows how much a group like this can mean to someone. After he
decided on Dec. 12, 1934, that he would never drink alcohol again, he made
restitution with his wife and others he had harmed. "I started telling my
wife what kind of a fellow I was," he says. "I did this for three nights
to get all of the garbage out. I wanted to be honest about everything in
my life." He says his wife was grateful for the talk and then understood
his behavior. "Now we could start our family and raise the children with
the same guidelines. We had family quiet time every day. That's the way we
raised the whole family." Houck lost his wife to cancer in 1988, but
believes the lessons learned from the Oxford Group gave him a life he had
not been sure was possible. "A marriage that wasn't supposed to last one
year lasted 57 years."
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++++Message 2029. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Big Book Printed
From: jacqueline belgium . . . . . . . . . . . . 9/26/2004 1:50:00 AM
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Hi !
Thanks for the info re BB printings.
I would like to know how much copies of the BB have been printed in French !
Thanks.
Jacqueline - Brussels-Belgium
>From: "Arthur Sheehan"
>Reply-To: AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
>To:
>Subject: Re: [AAHistoryLovers] Big Book Printed
>Date: Fri, 24 Sep 2004 09:42:38 -0500
>
>Hi Tommy
>
>
>
>I gleaned the following from the final report of the 2002 General Service
>Conference (pg 15).
>
>Big Book distribution
>
>
>
>1st edition - 300,000 copies were distributed from 1939 to 1955
>
>2nd edition - 1,150,000 copies were distributed from 1955 to 1976
>
>3rd edition - 19,550,000 copies were distributed from 1976 to 2002
>
>
>
>In 2002, the Conference approved publication of the 4th edition Big Book.
>
>More than 2,000,000 copies of the 4th edition have been distributed so far.
>
>The price of the 4th edition was initially set at $5.00 as a special
>introductory price.
>
>It returned to its regular price this year.
>
>
>
>Cheers
>
>Arthur
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Tom Hickcox
> To:
>AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Tuesday, September 21, 2004 9:46 AM
> Subject: [AAHistoryLovers] Big Book Printed
>
>
>
> I am interested in the number of Big Books in each of the printings of
>the
> First, Second, Third, and Fourth Editions.
>
> Could someone point me towards the data?
>
> Tommy in Baton Rouge
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Sponsor
> ADVERTISEMENT
>
>
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