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++++Message 1634. . . . . . . . . . . . Periodical Literature, Akron Beacon
Journal, IA, Thursday, Jan. 8, 2004
From: NMOlson@aol.com . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/2/2004 2:46:00 AM
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Thu, Jan. 08, 2004
A.A. members object to relocating history
Hospital may move world's first alcohol treatment site
By John Higgins
Beacon Journal staff writer
The first hospital in the world to acknowledge alcoholism as a disease
rather than a moral failing might move its revered treatment center to a
different floor.
St. Thomas Hospital would continue to provide alcoholism and drug treatment,
but Ignatia Hall would lose its fifth-floor home. The hospital wants to use
that space as a psychiatric unit for Alzheimer's and dementia patients; the
unit would be the first of its kind in Akron.
The rearrangements probably wouldn't attract much attention at most
hospitals, but to recovering alcoholics worldwide, Ignatia Hall is a sacred
site. Named after Alcoholics Anonymous pioneer Sister Ignatia, it became the
first alcohol treatment center in the world in 1939.
It's a history that the 75-year-old hospital, now part of Summa Health
System, proudly claims. But tinkering with the past to accommodate the
future is a tricky business.
Ignatia Hall, which has been on the fifth floor since the early 1980s, has
become a shrine for the thousands of pilgrims who visit Akron each summer to
commemorate the birthplace of A.A.
Local A.A. members have heard rumors about the proposed changes for a few
months. Some have talked about trying to make Ignatia Hall an official
historical landmark to ensure the hospital doesn't mess with it.
"A lot of members are upset," said Rob of the Akron Intergroup Council of
Alcoholics Anonymous, which does not publicize the last names or titles of
its staffers.
"Even if we banded together and started to whine, it's a business decision,
and it's strictly the bottom line. (The hospital) doesn't care about the
history," he said, speaking for himself as a recovering alcoholic.
The council coordinates weekly meetings for 6,000 to 8,000 A.A. members in
the Akron area and oversees the annual Founders Day events. As a matter of
policy, A.A. doesn't take a position.
Hospital officials say money has nothing to do with the planned change.
"The legacy will continue. There's been no question about that," said Dr.
Robert A. Liebelt, the treatment center's medical director. "We're not going
to get rid of Ignatia Hall."
Patients who need medically supervised detoxification, a process that
typically requires three days' stay, probably would be moved to a medical
surgical floor. Liebelt said they would have to be kept together, separated
from other patients, to ensure confidentiality.
"It will be a designated area and have the same ambience that Ignatia Hall
as it stands today has," Liebelt said. "It's just that it will be in another
part of the hospital."
After those first three days, patients begin what is traditionally known as
treatment, which can include talk therapy, group meetings and other
counseling.
That had been done in Ignatia Hall until those patients grew too numerous
and were then scattered in classrooms throughout the hospital. More
recently, those services have had a permanent home on the third floor in the
former medical library.
Summa spokeswoman Carrie Massucci said the changes are still tentative and
the hospital has no timeline for the proposed transition.
But should plans go through, the hospital would want that space for elderly
psychiatric patients because it would be near other psychiatric services.
"Summa Health System now has the only dedicated senior services program in
Akron," she said. "This is just another way that we can continue to serve
that population."
The hospital hasn't forgotten about its past, she said. Since Ignatia Hall's
founding, "we've relocated those services at least six times," she said.
"They stayed in St. Thomas Hospital, but they've moved around."
Sister Ignatia originally put the cots in the chapel's choir loft, now
walled in, so the patients could participate in Mass, Liebelt said.
But for the last 20 years, visitors to Ignatia Hall have always found it on
the fifth floor. So have the former patients who return to the place they
say saved their lives.
At least 3,000 visitors paid homage at Ignatia Hall last summer during the
Founders Day celebration, which now attracts 10,000 visitors from around the
world.
"It's really sad that they would destroy their own heritage," said Mary C.
Darrah, the Fairlawn author of Sister Ignatia: Angel of Alcoholics
Anonymous. "Over the years, people have become more and more interested in
the founding places of A.A. It's like a family. They want to go back to
their family roots."
She likens relocating the center to tearing down A.A. co-founder Dr. Bob
Smith's house, another pilgrimage site, and rebuilding it somewhere else.
Physical locations matter.
"This is the birthplace of the first treatment center affiliated with A.A.,"
Darrah said. "That's a major piece of history that belongs to the community.
And the community should at least, in my opinion, have input."
Liebelt said the memorabilia will be relocated along with the patients, and
the pilgrims will still have a place to visit.
The center was already on the fifth floor when Liebelt began in 1982. He
stopped counting about three years ago, but he figures he's treated 15,000
patients and cares as much about the history of the place as anyone else.
"The legacy of Ignatia Hall and St. Thomas Hospital is doing well and is
viable and will continue to do well and be viable," Liebelt said.
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++++Message 1635. . . . . . . . . . . . 12 step prayers--a prayer for each step
From: buickmackane0830 . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/3/2004 5:03:00 AM
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Good morning,
I just been granted the privilege of working on the archives for my local intergroup. We have a newsletter which does a good job of putting information for our groups. We have been printing prayers for each step. I questioned this and was told A.A. at one time used these prayers. I have searched on my own and could not find 12 step prayers for each step connected to A.A.
Does anyone know of such prayers connected to A.A. (except 3rd, 7th step) In the big book and then there is the 11th step in the 12+12.
What really bothered me was the relious implication of the prayers so if any one is aware of these prayers connected to AA or know where I can find their connection to AA please email.
Note: I found 12th step prayers.
Thank you
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++++Message 1636. . . . . . . . . . . . RE: Stepping Into History -Westchester Journal News Jan04
From: Lash, William (Bill) . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/3/2004 1:02:00 PM
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Hello group!
My mother lives not far from Bedford Hills & she sent me the below Journal
News article. It contained extras not mentioned below so I just wanted to
include them here. Take it easy & God bless!
Just Love,
Barefoot Bill
Historic Place
Stepping Stones (picture) has been nominated for the National Register of
Historic Places because Bill and Lois Wilson (picture) are national figures
who co-founded significant social movements, not because the homestead
itself has important architecture. Yet, the nomination notes that the six
buildings on the 8-acre Stepping Stones homestead are intact and unified.
Designed in matching brown shingle siding, white casings and trim, and with
bright blue doors, the buildings retain a high level of historic integrity."
Among the highlights:
-A three-bedroom Dutch Colonial main house, built in 1920 as a summer
cottage.
-A large living room dominated by a stone fireplace and wall-length French
doors.
-The kitchen includes a porcelain-topped table where Wilson first discussed
with a newly sober friend the importance of trusting the God of one's own
understanding.
-A winding stair leading to a second-floor library preserved as Lois Wilson
left when she died in 1988.
-A collection of antiques, glassware, china, photographs, printed materials
and musical instruments of the Wilsons, including Bill Wilson's cello and
Lois
Wilson's piano, which visitors are encouraged to play.
-Bill Wilson's homemade backyard studio, named Wit's End, has a large
picture
window and the desk where he wrote four books about the AA experience.
Information
Alcoholics Anonymous: Call 212-647-1680, visit the Web site www.aa.org, look
up local listings under Alcoholics Anonymous in either the telephone
directory's white pages or Yellow Pages, or write Alcoholics Anonymous,
Grand
Central Station, P.O. Box 459, New York, N.Y. 10163.
Al-Anon Family Groups: Call Al-Anon Information Services at 914-946-1748,
visit
the Web site www.al-anon.alateen.org or write to the World Service Office
for
Al-Anon and Alateen, 1600 Corporate Landing Parkway, Virginia Beach, VA
23454-5617.
Stepping Stones: Call 914-232-4822, visit the Web site
www.steppingstones.org,
or write Stepping Stones Foundation, Box 452, Bedford Hills, N.Y. 10507.
Excerpts from Bill Wilson's letters
In the Spring 1941, after 23 years of marriage and a stretch of homelessness
that had lasted two years, Bill and Lois Wilson moved to their first and
only
true home in Bedford Hills. Originally they called the home "Bi-Lo's Break,"
because a friend had offered it to them for one-fourth of what it cost to
build. In the next four decades, as the AA and Al-Anon movements that the
Wilsons co-founded grew, they added land and buildings to their beloved
homestead, which they renamed Stepping Stones. Here are excerpts from three
letters Bill Wilson wrote about Stepping Stones. The letters are the
property
of the Stepping Stones Foundation.
From a Jan. 11, 1941 letter to his mother, Emily Wilson:
"It is a rather large house perched on a hill with a magnificent view
extending
for miles....This house was a dream of Mrs. Griffith, an artist and
well-known
actress. Her husband died of alcoholism so she feels quite partial to Lois
and
me.
"[Griffith] spent about $25,000 on it before getting tired of the project. I
think it can be bought for five or six thousand dollars and hope the
Alcoholic
Foundation will undertake to make the purchase on a small monthly payment
plan
over a period of years so that my earnings, if they materialize, can go into
improvements."
From an April 23, 1941 letter to AA co-founder Dr. Bob Smith in Ohio:
"This place is going to be a godsend for Lois and me....We can't get over
the
peace and quiet....
"From anyplace in this living room, you may look out over the treetops on a
swell view of rolling wooded country."
From an undated letter many years after the Wilsons moved to Stepping
Stones:
"The idea of Westchester real estate seemed out of the question....
"One day we visited a new A.A. member in Chappaqua....We remembered the
Bedford Hills house Mrs. Griffith had described....Lois and I drove over
with
[them] to see the house....We broke in at the back window and looked
around....
"At the very next meeting Mrs. Griffith approached Lois and me....She told
us
we might have the Bedford Hills place for $40 a month....It was a great
year,
1941."
-----Original Message-----
From: t [mailto:tcumming@airmail.net]
Sent: Saturday, January 31, 2004 7:42 PM
To: AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [AAHistoryLovers] Stepping Into History -Westchester Journal
News Jan04
Stepping Into history
By ROB RYSER
THE JOURNAL NEWS of Westchester County NY
(Original publication: January 20, 2004)
BEDFORD HILLS -- It's hard to say how Alcoholics Anonymous would have ended
up
if
Bill and Lois Wilson had stayed homeless in 1941.
Bill Wilson's only work then was with alcoholics, and his 1939 book about
the AA
fellowship had not gotten the acclaim that the group's early members
expected.
Lois was finding scattered jobs as a decorator, but her real work was
keeping
the
couple off the street. The Wilsons slept at 51 places in two years.
Then 1941 brought what Bill Wilson called a godsend -- a chocolate brown
cottage
in
Bedford Hills with French doors that Lois adored and a fieldstone fireplace
that
reminded Bill of the East Dorset, Vt., home where he was born.
The house belonged to actress Helen Griffith, whose husband drank himself to
death
and whose alcoholic friend had been "revived" by an AA group in New Jersey.
She
knew
the Wilsons were destitute and offered them what Bill Wilson later called
"unbelievably easy terms."
The impact that the Wilsons had during the next four decades in the home
they
named
Stepping Stones is still being lived out today. Yet the contributions they
made
to
the understanding of alcoholism, the requirement for spiritual steps in
recovery
and
the need for families of alcoholics to have their own support are so
substantial
that
the National Park Service is preparing to crown the contemporary couple's
home
as
historic.
"The Wilsons' influence on 20th-century society is immeasurable," reads the
nominating statement, prepared by Margaret Gaertner, a preservation
specialist
with
the Dobbs Ferry architectural firm Stephen Tilly. "AA enabled, and continues
to
enable, millions of people around the world to achieve and sustain permanent
sobriety."
Although it may seem contradictory to call a 20th-century home historic in a
region
where historic properties often have 200-year pasts, the nominating form
says
the
Wilsons are legends who make it easy to forget that as recently as 1940,
alcoholism
was considered one of society's great unsolved public health enigmas.
Bill Wilson proclaimed that alcoholism was a disease three decades before
the
American Medical Association did in 1956. The 12-step solution that Wilson
and
AA
co-founder Dr. Bob Smith created to treat the physical, mental and spiritual
dimensions of alcoholism has become the standard for U.S. hospitals and
clinics.
Remarkably, AA was proved not in hospitals but in church basements, where
recovering
alcoholics shared their experiences, strength and hope to help others find
the
inspiration and power to stop drinking.
"Wilson realized that only another alcoholic could truly understand the
tangled
emotions evoked by his debilitating ordeal," reads the nominating form.
The Wilsons' cozy Dutch Colonial, with its barn-like gambrel roof and
cement-block
studio where Bill Wilson wrote, could be added to the state's Register of
Historic
Places in the spring. Stepping Stones could then join the National Register
of
Historic Places by summer.
Managed by a foundation that Lois Wilson formed in 1979, eight years after
Bill's
death at 71, Stepping Stones is a sacred site for Alcoholics Anonymous and
Al-Anon,
the 12-step program co-founded by Lois Wilson for the spouses and children
of
alcoholics.
Yet, Stepping Stones is not mobbed with pilgrims. A mere 1,000 visitors stop
by
each
year -- and up to half of those come for the annual picnic in June.
"We could increase our visitors by 100 percent, and we could handle it,"
said
Eileen
Giuliani, Stepping Stones' executive director.
Of course, she means that theoretically. For one thing, Stepping Stones is
surrounded
by single-family homes and wants to keep the peace. The other matter is that
not
all
recovering alcoholics and Al-Anons know that Stepping Stones is the Wilson
home,
much
less that it is in Bedford Hills.
The historical designation is sure to raise awareness among AA's 2.2 million
members
in 100,000 groups worldwide, and among the 29,000 Al-Anon groups with some
387,000
members in 115 countries, according to the organizations' estimates.
Giuliani said federal recognition will advance Stepping Stones' mission to
protect
the Wilson museum and archives, and promote the tenets of the AA experience.
Neighbors -- for once in Westchester -- seem ready to yield to the prospect
of
more
cars in the neighborhood.
"It's fine with me, and I've been here seven years," said Kim Cassone, a
mother
of
two who lives near Stepping Stones on Oak Street. "They were out there to
help
people
who had problems, and that is a good thing."
Once at Stepping Stones, visitors often feel an unmistakable presence: The
air
seems
sweet, as though bread has been baking, but no one has lived here since Lois
died at
age 97 in 1988.
The house is as Lois Wilson left it -- wall lengths of books stacked five
shelves
high, scores of grandmotherly collections, a gallery's worth of photos and
framed
proclamations by dignitaries ranging from Pope Paul VI to President
Eisenhower.
Susan Cheever, a Manhattan resident, will publish a biography, "My Name is
Bill:
Bill
Wilson -- His Life and the Creation of Alcoholics Anonymous," this month.
Cheever,
who grew up in Ossining, is the daughter of Pulitzer Prize-winning
short-story
writer
John Cheever, whose own battle with alcohol she documented in her 1984
memoir,
"Home
Before Dark."
"It is a very powerful place," Cheever said of Stepping Stones. "The ghosts
are
still
there."
It is a rite for visitors to sit at the 1920s porcelain-topped kitchen table
where
Bill Wilson had a spiritual breakthrough with his childhood friend Ebby
Thatcher, one
month before Bill got sober in December 1934. Ignoble as the little white
table
seems, it is venerated at Stepping Stones, sometimes drawing tears from
those in
recovery.
"I was overwhelmed," said Mark W., 51, of Topeka, Kan., a businessman who
has
been
sober 10 years and is obliged under AA's 12 Traditions to be anonymous when
speaking
to the media.
He has made three pilgrimages to Stepping Stones in the past three years. It
was
his
second visit with his wife when he dropped his composure and cried.
"I already knew how much I lost drinking," he said. "But sitting there made
me
realize how much I gained by staying sober."
Other relics nearly as special to visitors are the desk in Bill's backyard
studio and
the desk in the home's upstairs library, where in 1951 Lois Wilson organized
the
first Al-Anon groups.
It was on Bill Wilson's desk, which he brought to Stepping Stones from New
Jersey,
that he wrote the important opening 11 chapters to "Alcoholics Anonymous" --
the
575-page AA textbook that has sold 20 million copies.
"I don't want to call Stepping Stones a shrine, but it is pretty close,"
said
Mark.
W. "If it hadn't been for those people, I wouldn't be sane."
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++++Message 1637. . . . . . . . . . . . Dr. Bob Memorial Edition of the AA
Grapevine (1951), Part 1 of 3
From: Lash, William (Bill) . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/2/2004 12:17:00 PM
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Dr. Bob Memorial Edition
January 1951 AA Grapevine
(for those of you that don't know, this has now been discontinued by GSO)
Part 1 of 3
Therefore, if thou bring thy gift to the altar, and there rememberest that
thy brother hath ought against thee, leave there thy gift before the altar,
and go thy way; first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer
thy gift. - Matthew V, 23-24
For 120,000 of us...and for the thousands yet to come...we who have cause
for eternal gratitude dedicate this issue of the AA Grapevine to the memory
of the Co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous our beloved DR. BOB.
A Tribute from Bill
Dr. Bob
SERENELY remarking to his attendant, "I think this is it," Dr. Bob passed
out of our sight and hearing November sixteenth at noonday. So ended the
consuming malady wherein he had so well shown us how high faith can rise
over grievous distress. As he had lived, so he had died, supremely aware
that in his Father's House are many Mansions.
In all those he knew, memory was at floodtide. But who could really say what
was thought and felt by the five thousand sick ones to whom he personally
ministered and freely gave a physician's care; who could possibly record the
reflections of his townsmen who had seen him sink almost within the grasp of
oblivion, then rise to anonymous world renown; who could express the
gratitude of those tens of thousands of AA families who had so well heard of
him but had never seen him face to face? What, too, were the emotions of
those nearest him as they thankfully pondered the mystery of his
regeneration fifteen years ago and all its vast consequence since? Not the
smallest fraction of this great benefaction could be comprehended. He could
only declare, "What indeed hath God wrought?"
Never would Dr. Bob have us think him saint or superman. Nor would he have
us praise him or grieve his passing. He can almost be heard, saying, "Seems
to me you folks are making heavy going. I'm not to be taken so seriously as
all that. I was only a first link in that chain of Providential circumstance
which is called AA. By Grace and great fortune my link did not break; though
my faults and failures might often have brought on that unhappy result. I
was just another alcoholic trying to get along - under the Grace of God.
Forget me, but go you and do likewise. Securely add your own link to our
chain. With God's help, forge that chain well and truly." In this manner
would Dr. Bob estimate himself and counsel us.
It was a Saturday in May, 1935. An ill-starred business venture had brought
me to Akron where it immediately collapsed leaving me in a precarious state
of sobriety. That afternoon I paced the lobby of Akron's Mayflower Hotel. As
I peered at the gathering crowd in the bar, I became desperately frightened
of a slip. It was the first severe temptation since my New York friend had
laid before me what were to become the basic principles of AA, in November
1934. For the next six months I had felt utterly secure in my sobriety. But
now there was no security; I felt alone, helpless. In the months before I
had worked hard with other alcoholics. Or, rather, I had preached at them in
a somewhat cocksure fashion. In my false assurance I felt I couldn't fall.
But this time it was different. Something had to be done at once.
Glancing at a Church Directory at the far end of the lobby, I selected the
name of a clergyman at random. Over the phone I told him of my need to work
with another alcoholic. Though I'd had no previous success with any of them
I suddenly realized how such work had kept me free from desire. The
clergyman gave me a list of ten names. Some of these people, he was sure,
would refer me a case in need of help. Almost running to my room, I seized
the phone. But my enthusiasm soon ebbed. Not a person in the first nine
called could, or would, suggest anything to meet my urgency.
One uncalled name still stood at the end of my list - Henrietta S. Somehow I
couldn't muster courage to lift the phone. But after one more look into the
bar downstairs something said to me, "You'd better." To my astonishment a
warm Southern voice floated in over the wire. Declaring herself no
alcoholic, Henrietta nonetheless insisted that she understood. Would I come
to her home at once?
Because she had been enabled to face and transcend other calamities, she
certainly did understand mine. She was to become a vital link to those
fantastic events which were presently to gather around the birth and
development of our AA society. Of all names the obliging Rector had given
me, she was the only one who cared enough. I would here like to record our
timeless gratitude.
Straightway she pictured the plight of Dr. Bob and Anne. Suiting action to
her word, she called their house. As Anne answered, Henrietta described me
as a sobered alcoholic from New York who, she felt sure, could help Bob. The
good doctor had seemingly exhausted all medical and spiritual remedies for
his condition. Then Anne replied, "What you say, Henrietta, is terribly
interesting. But I am afraid we can't do anything now. Being
Mother's Day, my dear boy has just brought in a fine potted plant. The pot
is on the table but, alas, Bob is on the floor. Could we try to make it
tomorrow?" Henrietta instantly issued a dinner invitation for the following
day.
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