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October
24, 1939 Cleveland Plain Dealer
Alcoholics Anonymous Makes
Its Stand Here
Part
3
By
ELRICK B. DAVIS
In
two previous articles, Mr. Davis told of Alcoholics Anonymous,
an organization of former drinkers, banded to overcome their
craving for liquor and to help others to forego the habit.
This is the third of a series.
Help
The ex-drunks cured of their medically incurable alcoholism
by membership in Alcoholic Anonymous, know that the way
to keep themselves from backsliding is to find another pathological
alcoholic to help. Or to start a new man toward cure. That
is the way that the Akron chapter of the society, and from
that, the Cleveland fellowship was begun.
One of the earliest of the cured rummies had talked a New
York securities house into taking a chance that he was really
through with liquor. He was commissioned to do a stock promotion
chore in Akron. If he should succeed, his economic troubles
also would be cured. Years of alcoholism had left him bankrupt
as well as a physical and social wreck before Alcoholics
Anonymous had saved him.
His Akron project failed. Here he was on a Saturday afternoon
in a strange hotel in a town where he did not know a soul,
business hopes blasted, and with scarcely money enough to
get him back to New York with a report that would leave
him without the last job he knew of for him in the world.
If ever disappointment deserved drowning, that seemed the
time. A bunch of happy folk were being gay at the bar.
At the other end of the lobby the Akron church directory
was framed in glass. He looked up the name of a clergyman.
The cleric told him of a woman who was worried about a physician
who was a nightly solitary drunk. The doctor had been trying
to break himself of alcoholism for twenty years. He had
tried all of the dodges: Never anything but light wines
or beer; never a drink alone; never a drink before his work
was done; a certain few number of drinks and then stop;
never drink in a strange place; never drink in a familiar
place; never mix the drinks; always mix the drinks; never
drink before eating; drink only while eating; drink and
then eat heavily to stop the craving and all of the
rest.
Every alcoholic knows all of the dodges. Every alcoholic
has tried them all. That is why an uncured alcoholic thinks
someone must have been following him around to learn his
private self-invented devices, when a member of Alcoholics
Anonymous talks to him. Time comes when any alcoholic has
tried them all, and found that none of them work.
Support
The doctor had just taken his first evening drink when the
rubber baron's wife telephoned to ask him to come to her
house to meet a friend from New York. He dared not, his
wife would not, offend her by refusing. He agreed to go
on his wife's promise that they would leave after 15 minutes.
His evening jitters were pretty bad.
He met the New Yorker at 5 o'clock. They talked until 11:15.
After that he stayed "dry" for three weeks. Then
he went to a convention in Atlantic City. That was a bender.
The cured New Yorker was at his bedside when he came to.
That was June 10, 1935. The doctor hasn't had a drink since.
Every Akron and Cleveland cure by Alcoholics Anonymous is
a result.
The point the society illustrates by that bit of history
is that only an alcoholic can talk turkey to an alcoholic.
The doctor knew all of the "medicine" of his disease.
He knew all of the psychiatry. One of his patients had "taken
the cure" 72 times. Now he is cured, by fellowship
in Alcoholics Anonymous. Orthodox science left the physician
licked. He also knew all of the excuses, as well as the
dodges, and the deep and fatal shame that makes a true alcoholic
sure at last that he can't win. Alcoholic death or the bughouse
will get him in time.
The cured member of Alcoholics Anonymous likes to catch
a prospective member when he is at the bottom of the depths.
When he wakes up of a morning with his first clear thought
regret that he is not dead before he hears where he has
been and what he has done. When he whispers to himself:
"Am I crazy?" and the only answer he can think
of is: "Yes." Even when the bright-eyed green
snakes are crawling up his arms.
Then the pathological drinker is willing to talk. Even eager
to talk to someone who really understands, from experience,
what he means when he says: "I can't understand myself."
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