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Alcoholics
Anonymous in a Postwar Emergency
Quarterly
Journal of Studies on Alcohol, Vol. 6, No. 2, September
1945
By Bill W.
What
is the picture of alcoholism in the days ahead? The opinion
of one of my friends indicates what the possibilities may
be. With the emphasis characteristic of true alcoholics
he said, "It looks like hell to me." I asked why.
"Practically the whole world has gone neurotic,"
he replied. "Mankind is on an emotional jag. Nation
against nation, class against class - all clamoring for
security, all crying that if only other people were different
how happy we would be. Hate, fear, envy, boredom, insecurity,
acquisitiveness - all the negatives - running riot as never
before, breeding neurotics as a malarial swamp does
mosquitoes. Conflict - national, social, personal - conflict
that gets nowhere, that never gets settled. This is our
modern world."
"Now,
I ask you," he continued, "under these appalling
conditions what will sensitive, frustrated people do? Arent
they going to drink - and not for fun, either? Arent
they going to use alcohol as an emotional pain killer? Yes,
they will try to get away from themselves and their problems
not for temporary release but for keeps. Even as
you and I once did, they will try to find release in alcohol.
Many of them will become alcoholics -you and I ought to
know!"
Since
the Quarterly Journal of Studies on Alcohol is primarily
a scientific journal, my friends statement may seem
somewhat out of place here. It may not too accurately forecast
the future. But this one opinion does reflect what most
members of Alcoholics Anonymous think they see coming.
The
question then arises: What can our 17,000 members do that
will alleviate this picture? Although our contribution to
recovery from alcoholism has been described by friends as
significant and encouraging, no one is more aware than we
that what has been done is but a start. Our work so far
is but a beginning in helping to overcome an extensive malady
to which the recent war gave fresh and ominous import.
The
average member of Alcoholics Anonymous does not suppose
that we have a cure all. What we promise for the future,
however, is that we shall offer unstinted aid to those alcoholics
who wish to recover.
We
members of Alcoholics Anonymous believe that we shall be
able to handle almost any number of alcoholic cases
tens of thousands if necessary which may be referred
to us in the postwar. period. Nor is this statement purely
surmise. Today some 500 groups comprising 17,000 members
are to be found in America. We have groups in nearly every
state of the Union and in several Canadian Provinces. This
means that most cases of alcoholism are within easy reach
of Alcoholics Anonymous groups.
The
question is often asked, "Wouldnt too rapid growth
be bad, both for new alcoholics and for Alcoholics Anonymous
itself?" Some of us used to think so, but several experiences
of quick expansion have largely dissipated that fear. We
had a striking experience at Cleveland, Ohio. In the fall
of 1939 Cleveland had, perhaps, 30 members. Most of. them
had become Alcoholics Anonymous by traveling to the nearby
city of Akron where our very first group had taken root
in the summer of 1935.
At
this juncture the Cleveland Plain Dealer published a striking
and forceful series of articles about us. Placed on the
editorial page, these pieces told the people of Cleveland
that Alcoholics Anonymous worked; that it cost nothing;
that it stood ready to help any alcoholic in town who really
wanted to get well. Cleveland quickly became Alcoholics
Anonymous conscious. Hundreds of inquiries by phone and
mail descended upon the Plain Dealer and the expectant but
nervous members of Alcoholics Anonymous. The rush was so
great that new members, sober themselves but a week or two,
had to be used to instruct the still newer arrivals. Several
private hospitals threw open their doors to cope with the
emergency and were so pleased with the result that they
have cooperated with us ever since. To the great surprise
of everyone, this rapid growth, hectic though it was, did
prove very successful. Within 90 days the original group
of 30 had expanded to 300; in 6 months we had about 500;
and within 2 years we had mushroomed to about 1,000 members
distributed among a score of groups in the Cleveland area.
Although we have no precise figures, it is probably fair
to say that 3 out of 4 who came during this period, and
who have since remained with the groups, have recovered
from their alcoholism.
Growth
so spectacular as this sometimes does cause a certain amount
of internal confusion. And it may be, during such periods,
that some of the more difficult alcoholics cannot be helped
adequately. We know, however, that most of these seeming
failures receive enough indoctrination to come back later
on. In any case we are sure that the net benefits of even
the most rapid growth far outweigh any possible liability.
Most of us are satisfied, from this and like experiences,
that any Alcoholics Anonymous group could double its membership
every few months if put to the test. This is why we believe
that with some 500 active centers we have the basis for
taking care of practically any number of alcoholics as fast
as they may come to us.
We
have been able to give so many groups their start with little
or no personal contact that we do not anticipate any great
difficulty in foreign countries. It was discovered several
years ago that the "A.A." job could be done solely
through correspondence and our literature. At New York we
maintain a Central Office. Writing from this point our national
secretary has often been able to bring together groups of
alcoholics in distant communities who had previously responded
to our publicity. By sending our literature and writing
them as their problems arose our secretary has fostered
many successful groups of Alcoholics Anonymous. Besides
those so started in this country, there are now conspicuous
examples in Hawaii and Australia. Sooner or later, of course,
such "mail order" groups are reached by our traveling
members whose business or pleasure takes them to distant
places.
Now
that our methods and results are better known we are receiving
splendid cooperation every-where from clergymen, doctors,
employers, editors in fact, from whole communities.
While there is still a well understood reluctance on the
part of city and private hospitals to admit alcoholic patients,
we are pleased to report a great improvement in this direction.
But we are still very far, in most places, from having anything
like adequate hospital accommodations.
Over
and above this traditional activity, we may give some counsel
to those who work upon various aspects of the total problem.
It may be possible that our experience fits us for a special
task. Writing of Alcoholics Anonymous, Dr. Harry Emerson
Fosdick once said: "Gothic cathedral windows are not
the sole things which can be truly seem only from within.
Alcoholism is another. All outside views are clouded and
unsure." Thus, with our inside view one best
seen by those drinkers who have suffered from alcoholism
we would help those working on alcohol problems who
have not had our first-hand experience.
While
we members of Alcoholics Anonymous are not scientists, our
special insight may help science; while we are of all religions
and sometimes none, we can assist clergymen; although not
educators, we shall, perhaps, aid in clearing away unsure
views; not penologists, we do help in prison work; not a
business or organization, we nevertheless advise employers;
not sociologists, we constantly serve families, friends
and communities; not prosecutors or judges, we try to promote
understanding and justice; emphatically not doctors, we
do minister to the sick. Taking no sides on controversial
questions, we may sometimes mediate fruitless antagonism
which have so often blocked effective cooperation among
those who would solve the riddle of the alcoholic.
These
are the activities and aspirations of thousands of the members
of Alcoholics Anonymous. While our organization as a whole
has but one aim to help the alcoholic who wishes
to recover there are few of us, indeed, who as individuals
do not wish to meet some of the broader responsibilities
for which we may be especially fitted.
That
alcoholism, compulsive drinking, is becoming recognized
as the illness which it really is as not only a moral
problem but our fourth largest public health problem; and
that so many constructive forces are being assembled to
cope with it notably those stemming just now from
Yale these are the things for which we Alcoholics
Anonymous are deeply grateful. If alcoholism should increase
in the postwar period, the hope of its ultimate control
seems possible. Brighter pages ought soon to relieve the
long, dark annals which record the problems of this baffling
malady. Of that increasing knowledge and guidance, we of
Alcoholics Anonymous are supremely confident. Our collaboration
will be available to all individuals and agencies who may
engage in helping the problem drinker in the postwar world.
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