|
| print this
Individual
Has Responsibilities, Bill Notes
By
Bill W., General Service Conference, 1964
In
a brief but moving talk at Sunday mornings closing
session of the Conference, Bill W., surviving co-founder
of Alcoholics Anonymous, reminded Delegates of the individual
A.A. members responsibilities for his own development
and growth and for that of the Society as a whole.
We
are propelled to this Society by the threat of death itself
by alcoholism", Bill suggested. "But when we have
acquired a little grace and some of the mist has passed
from our eyes, we find ourselves in a new world. We also
find that we are faced with immense responsibilities; for
our own growth and development, for the welfare of our Group,
for the welfare of A.A. as a whole, for better homes, for
better relations with the world around us."
"We
are met with all these vast responsibilities and of course
we recoil and we rebel. But little by little, prodded from
behind by John Barleycorn and drawn by the love we feel
here and by the love of God, we pick up the tab for a little
more responsibility."
A Step
Toward Maturity
"This
is not maturity; this is just a step toward that distant
goal."
"Sometimes
we pick up these tabs rather unwilling because it seems
the right thing to do. But finally we conform to these principles
and their practice in all our affairs because this is really
what we want for ourselves...not just because John Barleycorn
is going to kill us of f if we dont conform, not just
because the A.A. community says they are right, but because
we want them for ourselves."
"My
mind goes back to the early days of A.A. and I think how
valuable to us is the sense of history. But, like all things
of value, it can be misused. Let us not suppose that we
have all the requisites, else the past will lay a dead hand
on us."
Bill
quoted the "Warranties of the General Service Conference"
adopted by the movement at St. Louis in 1955. "These
are," he said, "really in broad brush strokes
the measure of several and selective responsibilities, responsibilities
which I feel the fourteenth Conference has met magnificently.
They are responsibilities which do not entitle us to call
ourselves mature, but which do entitle us to say that we
have arrived at the age of full responsibility."
Recalls
Conference Development
Earlier
at the opening Conference dinner Tuesday night, Bill had
described A.A. as a body of beliefs (The Twelve Suggested
Steps) and attitudes (The Twelve Traditions). He recalled
how the first members, along with helpful nonalcoholic friends
had discharged responsibilities for A.A.s growth as "trusted
servants" of the movement. By 1950 it was recognized
that there had been a reversal in the "current of authority"
in A.A., Bill said, and the Conference, "called in
great trepidation," symbolized the transfer of responsibility
for A.A. s services to the movement as a whole. A
trusted servant, he declared, is not a "trusted housemaid"
but "a person who is capable of taking those decisions
in your behalf that he thinks you would take yourself if
you had all the facts about a situation."
|