|
|
| print this
BOOK REVIEW
SATURDAY
REVIEW
Vol.
38, August 27, 1955
"THE
BIG BOOK" BIBLE FOR ALCOHOLICS
There was a time when the organization known as Alcoholics
Anonymous, which has become one of the greatest boons to
the drunkards of the world, had a membership which was a
little lopsided. On its rolls the Bowery was better represented
than Park Avenue, a fact deplored by the organization's
leaders. So, recognizing that the rich can become just as
alcoholic as the poor, the organization decided to do something
about it. Acting on its long-held tenet that only a sober
ex-drunk can cure a down-and-out drunk, the A.A. leaders
looked around for an ex-drunk with glamour and the ability
to speak the Park Avenue language. They found it in an ex-drunk
countess. The result: Park Avenue became as well represented
as the Bowery on the rolls of A.A.
Now,
in the past few years, another change has taken place in
the membership of A.A. -- a change which has proved even
more important than that accomplished by the countess, but
which was comparatively unnoticed by the public-at-large
until last month. At that time A.A. held its bone-dry twentieth-anniversary
convention and, in conjunction with the ceremonies, issued
a revised, second edition of an oversized, ocean-blue volume
which is familiarly known to all A.A members as "The
Big Book." The new edition, like its predecessors,
is jacketed in a reversible dust cover, one side of which
is blank, which allows it to be read in trains and buses
without attracting the eyes of the curious. But,unlike its
predecessor, the new edition is not intended solely for
alcoholics of the last-gasp variety. Right in the middle
of it lies a whole section devoted to drinkers who have
not yet lost their businesses or broken up their homes or,
as most of A A.'s original members seem to have done, landed
in jail. Says ex-A. A.president Bill W. (who still keeps
his last name anonymous, though he has now stepped down
from his executive position): "Now we're getting cases
whose drinking has merely become a menacing nuisance, and
we're glad for them"
In
the same way that A.A. discovered that the Park Avenue set
could not be reach' by the Bowery set it soon learned that
potential alcoholics of the "menacing nuisance"
variety cannot be reached by a membership composed largely
of ex-last-gasp drunks. The solution: A A. members made
an effort to get a few representative "menacing nuisances"
into the fold and, having accomplished this goal, found
that its roll call of these "nuisances" soon began
to increase by leaps and bounds. In the new edition of "The
Big Book" appear twelve well authenticate self-confessions
by former "menacing nuisances." The section is
subtitled "They Stopped in Time" and it will,
A.A. leaders hope, bring even more "menacing nuisances"
into the organization. "Half the people coming into
A.A. today are in this group," Bill W. says, "and
the membership of this new class immediately identify with
each other. Otherwise we couldn't keep them"
Who
exactly are these "menacing nuisances?" For A.A.'s
purposes they are that segment of drinkers who are potential
alcoholics. According to Bill W , there are certain well-defined
symptoms by which they can be distinguished from other drinkers,
e.g :
A
persistent lack of control over your drinking even when
you want to control it and when it is necessary that you
do control it.
An
underlying maladjustment from which the excessive drinking
usually stems.
Like
all A.A. 's, the new members find themselves in one of the
most cleverly constructed organizations of modern times.
It accepts no money from outsiders, so that even if you
wanted to leave a bequest to A.A. the money would be refused.
It also insists on the public anonymity of its members.
(Last year Bill W turned down an honorary degree of Doctor
of Laws at Yale because it would have brought him a personal
type of glory frowned on by A.A) Yet these two rules alone
have been credited with bringing the organization more really
worthwhile publicity (i e., the kind of publicity that reaches
alcoholics who need A.A.) than could have been achieved
by any other public-relations policy. (Good A A. 's, for
example, disapprove of such authors as Lillian Roth, who
has publicly broken the shell of her A.A. anonymity to write
such a best-seller as "I'll Cry Tomorrow." Says
one A.A, spokesman privately in this connection: "We
have many members who have pulled themselves up by their
own resources.")
By
equal cleverness, A.A., which has baffled psychiatrists
and religionists, has at the same time been approved by
both psychiatrists and religionists. There was a time when
the Catholic Church, for example, did not see eye to eye
with A A., believing that its religion was enough to cure
any alcoholic. Then A.A. pointed out to the Church that
many of its own priests, far from being able to pull themselves
up by their religien, had joined A.A. to be cured. As a
result the Catholic stigma was removed from A.A. Yet the
basis of A.A itself, which once was closely associated with
the Oxford Moral Rearmament Group, is a highly individualized
religion that has been made palatable for even the most
adamant atheist. Organized, as what Bill W. describes as
"everything from a benign anarchy to a democracy to
a republic," the organization is one in which no member
can be compelled to contribute anything to it or to believe
in any particular dogma "If you believe," says
Bill, "that the hen came before the egg or that the
egg came before the hen you have enough religion to join
A.A." Even the most scientific alcoholic, he says,
has to admit that by the time he gets around to A.A. he
can't help himself. Therefore, he has to admit that there's
a higher power than himself and, says Bill, "We put
teeth into this belief by telling him that God in effect
is saying, 'I hope you boys behave' but John Barleycorn
is saying 'You dam well better behave, because if you don't.'
By
such methods A.A. leaders estimate that they have now corralled
150,000 to 200,000 former alcoholics into their organization,
although accurate membership figures are hard to come by,
partly because all members of A.A. are allowed to make their
own decisions on how closely they will work with the organization
and partly because there are thousands of A.A.'s who, being
isolated from cities where A A. groups are able to meet,
must in their own words "stay sober" solely by
means of "The Big Book." and by means of A.A.'s
monthly magazine, The Grapevine. Sales figures of the first
edition of the book alone reached a mammoth 300,000 copies
-- a figure which has helped convince A.A. leaders that
their membership extends far beyond their records. They
know, for example, that by means of their tried-and-true
methods the French membership has jumped a great deal from
a time when the only A.A.'s in France were American alcoholics
in Paris. They also know that A.A. has transcended many
international boundaries which are normally not transcended:
for example, A.A.'s meet together from both North and South
Ireland, crossing the boundary line to do so. One boundary
still to be got across, however: the Iron Curtain. But in
time even this boundary as well as others may disappear
for, as A.A. leaders say, they have a built-in self-perpetuating
system: in order to stay cured every alcoholic has to spend
some time helping another drunk to be cured or otherwise
he may very well sink back into drunkenness himself.
Today
for those alcoholics and potential alcoholics who would
like to join A.A. but who are remote from all A.A. groups
the new and revised edition of "The Big Book"
is now available for $4.50 a copy. (To groups the price
is $4.00) If you cannot find it in your local bookstore
the book can be ordered from Box 459, Grand Central Terminal
Annex, New York City. Nobody - not even A.A. leaders - can
speculate what the demand for this book will be. Only one
thing is certain: that is that this edition will do better
saleswise than did the original edition when it was first
published in 1939. In that year A.A. publishing Inc., was
left with 5,000 copies of a book which nobody seemed to
want and for which the unpaid printer's bills were so alarming
that A.A. headquarters was actually visited by a deputy
sheriff bearing a dispossess notice.Fortunately for everybody,
however, the old Liberty Magazine published an article on
the struggling organization and shortly thereafter John
D.Rockefeller, Jr., sponsored a dinner for the organization.
From that moment on A.A. was a success and so was "The
Big Book."
by
Robert Payne
|

|