Is
A.A. based totally on your own experiences?
Answer
Let's
look. Dr. Bob recovered. Then we two set to work on
alcoholics in Akron. Well, again came this tendency
to preach, again this feeling that it has to be done
in some particular way, again discouragement, so our
progress was slow. But little by little we were forced
to analyze our experiences and say, "This approach didn't
work very well with that fellow. Why not? Let's try
to put ourselves in his shoes and stop this preaching
and see how he might be approached if we were he." That
began to lead us to the idea that A.A. should be no
set of fixed ideas, but should be a growing thing, growing
out of experience. After a while we began to reflect:
"This wonderful blessing that has come to us, from what
does it get its origin?" It was a spiritual awakening
growing out of adversity. So then we began to look harder
for our mistakes, to correct them, to capitalize on
our errors. Little by little we began to grow so that
there were 5 of us at the end of that first year; at
the end of the second year 15; at the end of the third
40; and at the end of the fourth year, 100.
During those first four years most of us had another
bad form of intolerance. As we commenced to have a little
success, I am afraid our pride got the better of us
and it was our tendency to forget about our friends.
We were very likely to say, "Well, those doctors didn't
do anything for us, and as for these sky pilots, well,
they just don't know the score." And we became snobbish
and patronizing.
Then we read a book by Dr. Carrell (Man, The Unknown).
From that book came an argument which is now a part
of our system. Dr. Carrel wrote, in effect; The world
is full of analysts. We have tons of ore in the mines
and we have all kinds of building materials above ground.
Here is a man specializing in this, there is a man specializing
in that, and another one in something else. The modern
world is full of wonderful analysts and diggers, but
there are very few who deliberately synthesize, who
bring together different materials, who assemble new
things. We are much too shy on synthetic thinking -
the kind of thinking that's willing to reach out now
here and now there to see if something new cannot be
evolved.
On reading that book some of us realized that was just
what we had been groping toward. We had been trying
to build out of our own experiences. At this point we
thought, "Let's reach into other people's experiences.
Let's go back to our friends the doctors, let's go back
to our friends the preachers, the social workers, all
those who have been concerned with us, and again review
what they have got above ground and bring that into
the synthesis. And let us, where we can, bring them
in where they will fit." So our process of trial and
error began and at the end of four years, the material
was cast in the form of a book known as Alcoholics Anonymous.
(Yale Summer School of Alcohol Studies, June 1945)