War fever ran high in the New England town
to which we new, young officers from Plattsburg were assigned, and we were
flattered when the first citizens took us to their homes, making us feel heroic.
Here was love, applause, war; moments sublime with intervals hilarious. I was
part of life at last, and in the midst of the excitement I discovered liquor. I
forgot the strong warnings and the prejudices of my people concerning drink. In
time we sailed for "Over There." I was very lonely and again turned to alcohol.
We landed in England. I visited Winchester
Cathedral. Much moved, I wandered outside. My attention was caught by a doggerel
on an old tombstone:
"Here lies a Hampshire Grenadier
Who caught his death
Drinking cold small beer.
A good soldier is ne'er forgot
Whether he dieth by musket
Or by pot."
Ominous warning which I failed to heed.
Twenty-two, and a veteran of foreign wars,
I went home at last. I fancied myself a leader, for had not the men of my
battery given me a special token of appreciation? My talent for leadership, I
imagined, could place me at the head of vast enterprises which I would manage
with the utmost assurance. I took a night law course, and obtained employment as
investigator for a surety company. The drive for success was on. I'd prove to
the world I was important. My work took me about Wall Street and little by
little I became interested in the market. Many people lost money but some became
very rich. Why not I? I studied economics and business as well as law. Potential
alcoholic that I was, I nearly failed my law course. At one of the finals I was
too drunk to think or write. Though my drinking was not yet continuous, it
disturbed my wife. We had long talks when I would still her forebodings by
telling her that men of genius conceived their best projects when drunk; that
the most majestic constructions philosophic thought were so derived.
By the time I had completed the course, I
knew the law was not for me. The inviting maelstrom of Wall Street had me in its
grip. Business and financial leaders were my heroes. Out of this ally of drink
and speculation, I commenced to forge the weapon that one day would turn in its
flight like a boomerang and all but cut me to ribbons. Living modestly, my wife
and I saved $1,000. It went into certain securities, then cheap and rather
unpopular. I rightly imagined that they would some day have a great rise. I
failed to persuade my broker friends to send me out looking over factories and
managements, but my wife and I decided to go anyway. I had developed a theory
that most people lost money in stocks through ignorance of markets. I discovered
many more reasons later on.
We gave up our positions and off we roared
on a motorcycle, the sidecar stuffed with tent, blankets, a change of clothes,
and three huge volumes of a financial reference service. Our friends thought a
lunacy commission should be appointed. Perhaps they were right. I had had some
success at speculation, so we had a little money, but we once worked on a farm
for a month to avoid drawing on our small capital. That was the last honest
manual labor on my part for many a day. We covered the whole eastern United
States in a year. At the end of it, my reports to Wall Street procured me a
position there and the use of a large expense account. The exercise of an option
brought in more money, leaving us with a profit of several thousand dollars for
that year.
For the next few years fortune threw money
and applause my way. I had arrived. My judgment and ideas were followed by many
to the tune of paper millions. The great boom of the late twenties was seething
and swelling. Drink was taking an important and exhilarating part in my life.
There was loud talk in the jazz places uptown. Everyone spent in thousands and
chattered in millions. Scoffers could scoff and be damned. I made a host of
fair-weather friends.
My drinking assumed more serious
proportions, continuing all day and almost every night. The remonstrances of my
friends terminated in a row and I became a lone wolf. There were many unhappy
scenes in our sumptuous apartment. There had been no real infidelity, for
loyalty to my wife, helped at times by extreme drunkenness, kept me out of those
scrapes.
In 1929 I contracted golf fever. We went at
once to the country, my wife to applaud while I started out to overtake Walter
Hagen. Liquor caught up with me much faster than I came up behind Walter. I
began to be jittery in the morning. Golf permitted drinking every day and every
night. It was fun to carom around the exclusive course which had inspired such
awe in me as a lad. I acquired the impeccable coat of tan one sees upon the
well-to- do. The local banker watched me whirl fat checks in and out of his till
with amused skepticism.
Abruptly in October 1929 hell broke loose
on the New York stock exchange. After one of those days of inferno, I wobbled
from a hotel bar to a brokerage office. It was eight o'clock five hours after
the market closed. The ticker still clattered. I was staring at an inch of the
tape which bore the inscription XYZ-32. It had been 52 that morning. I was
finished and so were many friends. The papers reported men jumping to death from
the towers of High Finance. That disgusted me. I would not jump. I went back to
the bar. My friends had dropped several million since ten o'clock so what?
Tomorrow was another day. As I drank, the old fierce determination to win came
back.
Next morning I telephoned a friend in
Montréal. He had plenty of money left and thought I had better go to Canada. By
the following spring we were living in our accustomed style. I felt like
Napoleon returning from Elba. No St. Helena for me! But drinking caught up with
me again and my generous friend had to let me go. This time we stayed broke.
We went to live with my wife's parents. I
found a job; then lost it as the result of a brawl with a taxi driver.
Mercifully, no one could guess that I was to have no real employment for five
years, or hardly draw a sober breath. My wife began to work in a department
store, coming home exhausted to find me drunk. I became an unwelcome hanger-on
at brokerage places.
Liquor ceased to be a luxury; it became a
necessity. "Bathtub" gin, two bottles a day, and often three, got to be routine.
Sometimes a small deal would net a few hundred dollars, and I would pay my bills
at the bars and delicatessens. This went on endlessly, and I began to waken very
early in the morning shaking violently. A tumbler full of gin followed by half a
dozen bottles of beer would be required if I were to eat any breakfast.
Nevertheless, I still thought I could control the situation, and there were
periods of sobriety which renewed my wife's hope.
Gradually things got worse. The house was
taken over by the mortgage holder, my mother-in-law died, my wife and
father-in-law became ill.
Then I got a promising business
opportunity. Stocks were at the low point of 1932, and I had somehow formed a
group to buy. I was to share generously in the profits. Then I went on a
prodigious bender, and that chance vanished.
I woke up. This had to be stopped. I saw I
could not take so much as one drink. I was through forever. Before then, I had
written lots of sweet
promises, but my wife happily observed
that this time I meant business. And so I did.
Shortly afterward I came home drunk. There
had been no fight. Where had been my high resolve? I simply didn't know. It
hadn't even come to mind. Someone had pushed a drink my way, and I had taken it.
Was I crazy? I began to wonder, for such an appalling lack of perspective seemed
near being just that.
Renewing my resolve, I tried again. Some
time passed, and confidence began to be replaced by cocksureness. I could laugh
at the gin mills. Now I had what it takes! One day I walked into a cafe to
telephone. In no time I was beating on the bar asking myself how it happened. As
the whisky rose to my head I told myself I would manage better next time, but I
might as well get good and drunk then. And I did.
The remorse, horror and hopelessness of the
next morning are unforgettable. The courage to do battle was not there. My brain
raced uncontrollably and there was a terrible sense of impending calamity. I
hardly dared cross the street, lest I collapse and be run down by an early
morning truck, for it was scarcely daylight. An all night place supplied me with
a dozen glasses of ale. My writhing nerves were stilled at last. A morning paper
told me the market had gone to hell again. Well, so had I. The market would
recover, but I wouldn't. That was a hard thought. Should I kill myself? No not
now. Then a mental fog settled down. Gin would fix that. So two bottles, and
oblivion.
The mind and body are marvelous mechanisms,
for mine endured this agony two more years. Sometimes I stole from my wife's
slender purse when the morning terror and madness were on me. Again I swayed
dizzily before an open window, or the medicine cabinet where there was poison,
cursing myself for a weakling. There were flights from city to country and back,
as my wife and I sought escape. Then came the night when the physical and mental
torture was so hellish I feared I would burst through my window, sash and all.
Somehow I managed to drag my mattress to a lower floor, lest I suddenly leap. A
doctor came with a heavy sedative. Next day found me drinking both gin and
sedative. This combination soon landed me on the rocks. People feared for my
sanity. So did I. I could eat little or nothing when drinking, and I was forty
pounds under weight.
My brother-in-law is a physician, and
through his kindness and that of my mother I was placed in a nationally-known
hospital for the mental and physical rehabilitation of alcoholics. Under the
so-called belladonna treatment my brain cleared. Hydrotherapy and mild exercise
helped much. Best of all, I met a kind doctor who explained that though
certainly selfish and foolish, I had been seriously ill, bodily and mentally.
It relieved me somewhat to learn that in
alcoholics the will is amazingly weakened when it comes to combating liquor,
though if often remains strong in other respects. My incredible behavior in the
face of a desperate desire to stop was explained. Understanding myself now, I
fared forth in high hope. For three or four months the goose hung high. I went
to town regularly and even made a little money. Surely this was the answer self-
knowledge.
But it was not, for the frightful day came
when I drank once more. The curve of my declining moral and bodily health fell
off like a ski-jump. After a time I returned to the hospital. This was the
finish, the curtain, it seemed to me. My weary and despairing wife was informed
that it would all end with heart failure during delirium tremens, or I would
develop a wet brain, perhaps within a year. We would soon have to give me over
to the undertaker of the asylum.
They did not need to tell me. I knew, and
almost welcomed the idea. It was a devastating blow to my pride. I, who had
thought so well of myself and my abilities, of my capacity to surmount
obstacles, was cornered at last. Now I was to plunge into the dark, joining that
endless procession of sots who had gone on before. I thought of my poor wife.
There had been much happiness after all. What would I not give to make amends.
But that was over now.
No words can tell of the loneliness and
despair I found in that bitter morass of self-pity. Quicksand stretched around
me in all directions. I had met my match. I had been overwhelmed. Alcohol was my
master.
Trembling, I stepped from the hospital a
broken man. Fear sobered me for a bit. Then came the insidious insanity of that
first drink, and on Armistice Day 1934, I was off again. Everyone became
resigned to the certainty that I would have to be shut up somewhere, or would
stumble along to a miserable end. How dark it is before the dawn! In reality
that was the beginning of my last debauch. I was soon to be catapulted into what
I like to call the fourth dimension of existence. I was to know happiness,
peace, and usefulness, in a way of life that is incredibly more wonderful as
time passes.
Near the end of that bleak November, I sat
drinking in my kitchen. With a certain satisfaction I reflected there was enough
gin concealed about the house to carry me through that night and the next day.
My wife was at work. I wondered whether I dared hide a full bottle of gin near
the head of our bed. I would need it before daylight.
My musing was interrupted by the telephone.
The cheery voice of an old school friend asked if he might come over. He was
sober.It was years since I could remember his coming to New York in that
condition. I was amazed. Rumor had it that he had been committed for alcoholic
insanity. I wondered how he had escaped. Of course he would have dinner, and
then I could drink openly with him. Unmindful of his welfare, I thought only of
recapturing the spirit of other days. There was that time we had chartered an
airplane to complete a jag! His coming was an oasis in this dreary desert of
futility. The very thing an oasis! Drinkers are like that.
The door opened and he stood there,
fresh-skinned and glowing. There was something about his eyes. He was
inexplicably different. What had happened?
I pushed a drink across the table. He
refused it. Disappointed but curious, I wondered what had got into the fellow.
He wasn't himself.
"Come, what's all this about? I queried.
He looked straight at me. Simply, but
smilingly, he said, "I've got religion."
I was aghast. So that was it last summer an
alcoholic crackpot; now, I suspected, a little cracked about religion. He had
that starry-eyed look. Yes, the old boy was on fire all right. But bless his
heart, let him rant! Besides, my gin would last longer than his preaching.
But he did no ranting. In a matter of fact
way he told how two men had appeared in court, persuading the judge to suspend
his commitment. They had told of a simple religious idea and a practical program
of action. That was two months ago and the result was self-evident. It worked!
He had come to pass his experience along to
me if I cared to have it. I was shocked, but interested. Certainly I was
interested. I had to be, for I was hopeless.
He talked for hours. Childhood memories
rose before me. I could almost hear the sound of the preacher's voice as I sat,
on still Sundays, way over there on the hillside; there was that proffered
temperance pledge I never signed; my grandfather's good natured contempt of some
church fold and their doings; his insistence that the spheres really had their
music; but his denial of the preacher's right to tell him how he must listen;
his fearlessness as he spoke of these things just before he died; these
recollections welled up from the past. They made me swallow hard.
That war-time day in old Winchester
Cathedral came back again.
I had always believed in a Power greater
that myself. I had often pondered these things. I was not an atheist. Few people
really are, for that means blind faith in the strange proposition that this
universe originated in a cipher and aimlessly rushes nowhere. My intellectual
heroes, the chemists, the astronomers, even the evolutionist, suggested vast
laws and forces at work. Despite contrary indications, I had little doubt that a
might purpose and rhythm underlay all. How could there be so much of precise and
immutable law, and no intelligence? I simply had to believe in a Spirit of the
Universe, who knew neither time nor limitation. But that was as far as I had
gone.
With ministers, and the world's religions,
I parted right there. When they talked of a God personal to me, who was love,
superhuman strength and direction, I became irritated and my mind snapped shut
against such a theory. To Christ I conceded the certainty of a great man, not
too closely followed by those who claimed Him. His moral teaching most
excellent. For myself, I had adopted those parts which seemed convenient and not
too difficult; the rest I disregarded.
The wars which had been fought, the
burnings and chicanery that religious dispute had facilitated, made me sick. I
honestly doubted whether, on balance, the religions of mankind had done any
good. Judging from what I had seen in Europe and since, the power of God in
human affairs was negligible, the Brotherhood of Man a grim jest. If there was a
Devil, he seemed the Boss Universal, and he certainly had me.
But my friend sat before me, and he made
the pointblank declaration that God had done for him what he could not do for
himself. His human will had failed. Doctors had pronounced him incurable.
Society was about to lock him up. Like myself, he had admitted complete defeat.
Then he had, in effect, been raised from the dead, suddenly taken from the scrap
heap to a level of life better than the best he had ever known!
Had this power originated in him? Obviously
it had not. There had been no more power in him than there was in me at that
minute; and this was none at all.
That floored me. It began to look as though
religious people were right after all. Here was something at work in a human
heart which had done the impossible. My ideas about miracles were drastically
revised right then. Never mind the musty past; here sat a miracle directly
across the kitchen table. He shouted great tidings.
I saw that my friend was much more than
inwardly reorganized. He was on different footing. His roots grasped a new soil.
Despite the living example of my friend
there remained in me the vestiges of my old prejudice. The word God still
aroused a certain antipathy. When the thought was expressed that there might be
a God personal to me this feeling was intensified. I didn't like the idea. I
could go for such conceptions as Creative Intelligence, Universal Mind or Spirit
of Nature but I resisted the thought of a Czar of the Heavens, however loving
His sway might be. I have since talked with scores of men who felt the same way.
My friend suggested what then seemed a
novel idea. He said, "Why don't you choose your own conception of God?"
That statement hit me hard. It melted the
icy intellectual mountain in whose shadow I had lived and shivered many years. I
stood in the sunlight at last.
It was only a matter of being willing to
believe in a Power greater than myself. Nothing more was required of me to make
my beginning. I saw that growth could start from that point. Upon a
foundation of complete willingness I might build what I saw in my friend. Would
I have it? Of course I would!
Thus was I convinced that God is concerned
with us humans when we want Him enough. At long last I saw, I felt, I believed.
Scales of pride and prejudice fell from my eyes. A new world came into view.
The real significance of my experience in
the Cathedral burst upon me. For a brief moment, I had needed and wanted God.
There had been a humble willingness to have Him with me--and He came. But soon
the sense of His presence had been blotted out by worldly clamors, mostly those
within myself. And so it had been ever since. How blind I had been.
At the hospital I was separated from
alcohol for the last time. Treatment seemed wise, for I showed signs of delirium
tremens.
There I humbly offered myself to God, as I
then I understood Him, to do with me as He would. I placed myself unreservedly
under His care and direction. I admitted for the first time that of myself I was
nothing; that without Him I was lost. I ruthlessly faced my sins and became
willing to have my new-found Friend take them away, root and branch. I have not
had a drink since.
My schoolmate visited me, and I fully
acquainted him with my problems and deficiencies. We made a list of people I had
hurt or toward whom I felt resentment. I expressed my entire willingness to
approach these individuals, admitting my wrong. Never was I to be critical of
them. I was to right all such matters to the utmost of my ability.
I was to test my thinking by the new
God-consciousness within. Common sense would thus become uncommon sense. I was
to sit quietly when in doubt, asking only for direction and strength to meet my
problems as He would have me. Never was I to pray for myself, except as my
requests bore on my usefulness to others. Then only might I expect to receive.
But that would be in great measure.
My friend promised when these things were
done I would enter upon a new relationship with my Creator; that I would have
the elements of a way of living which answered all my problems. Belief in the
power of God, plus enough willingness, honesty and humility to establish and
maintain the new order of things, were the essential requirements. Simple, but
not easy; a price had to be paid. It meant destruction of self-centeredness. I
must turn in all things to the Father of Light who presides over us all. These
were revolutionary and drastic proposals, but the moment I fully accepted them,
the effect was electric. There was a sense of victory, followed by such a peace
and serenity as I had never know. There was utter confidence. I felt lifted up,
as though the great clean wind of a mountain top blew through and through. God
comes to most men gradually, but His impact on me was sudden and profound. For a
moment I was alarmed, and called my friend, the doctor, to ask if I were still
sane. He listened in wonder as I talked. Finally he shook his head saying,
"Something has happened to you I don't understand. But you had better hang on to
it. Anything is better than the way you were." The good doctor now sees many men
who have such experiences. He knows that they are real. While I lay in the
hospital the thought came that there were thousands of hopeless alcoholics who
might be glad to have what had been so freely given me. Perhaps I could help
some of them. They in turn might work with others. My friend had emphasized the
absolute necessity of demonstrating these principles in all my affairs.
Particularly was it imperative to work with others as he had worked with me.
Faith without works was dead, he said. And how appallingly true for the
alcoholic! For if an alcoholic failed to perfect and enlarge his spiritual life
through work and self-sacrifice for others, he could not survive the certain
trials and low spots ahead. If he did not work, he would surely drink again, and
if he drank, he would surely die. Then faith would be dead indeed. With us it is
just like that.
My wife and I abandoned ourselves with
enthusiasm to the idea of helping other alcoholics to a solution of their
problems. It was fortunate, for my old business associates remained skeptical
for a year and a half, during which I found little work. I was not too well at
the time, and was plagued by waves of self-pity and resentment. This sometimes
nearly drove me back to drink, but I soon found that when all other measure
failed, work with another alcoholic would save the day. Many times I have gone
to my old hospital in despair. On talking to a man there, I would be amazingly
lifted up and set on my feet. It is a design for living that works in rough
going.
We commenced to make many fast friends and
a fellowship has grown up among us of which it is a wonderful thing to feel a
part. The joy of living we really have, even under pressure and difficulty. I
have seen hundreds of families set their feet in the path that really goes
somewhere; have seen the most impossible domestic situations righted; feuds and
bitterness of all sorts wiped out. I have seen men come out of asylums and
resume a vital place in the lives of their families and communities. Business
and professional men have regained their standing. There is scarcely any form of
trouble and misery which has not been overcome among us. In one western city and
its environs there are one thousand of us and our families. We meet frequently
so that newcomers may find the fellowship they seek. At these informal
gatherings one may often see from 50 to 200 persons. We are growing in numbers
and power. [NOTE: In 1982, A.A. is composed of more than 42,000 groups.]
An alcoholic in his cups is an unlovely
creature. Our struggles with them are variously strenuous, comic, and tragic.
One poor chap committed suicide in my home. He could not, or would not see our
way of life.
There is, however, a vast amount of fun
about it all. I suppose some would be shocked at our seeming worldliness and
levity. But just underneath there is deadly earnestness. Faith has to work
twenty-four hours a day in and through us, or we perish.
Most of us feel we need look no further for
Utopia. We have it with us right here and now. Each day my friend's simple talk
in our kitchen multiplies itself in a widening circle of peace on earth and good
will to men.