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(12)
FREEDOM FROM BONDAGE
Young
when she joined, this A.A. believes her seri-
ous drinking was the result of even deeper defects.
She here tells how she was set free.
THE
MENTAL TWISTS that led up to my drinking began many
years before I ever took a drink for I am one of those
whose history proves conclusively that my drinking was
"a symptom of a deeper trouble."
Through me efforts
to get down to "causes and conditions," I
stand convinced that my emotional illness has been present
from my earliest recollection. I never did react normally
to any emotional situation.
The medical profession
would probably tell me I was conditioned for alcoholism
by the things that happened to me in my childhood. And
I am sure they would be right as far as they go, but
A.A. has taught me I am the result of the way I
reacted to what happened to me as a child. What
is much more important to me, A.A. has taught me that
through this simple program I may experience a change
in this reaction pattern that will indeed allow me to
"match calamity with serenity."
I am an only child,
and when I was seven years old my parents separated
very abruptly. With no explanation at all, I was taken
from my home in Florida to my grandparents' home in
the middle west. My mother went to a nearby city to
go to work, and my
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father,
being an alcoholic, simply went. My grandparents were
strangers to me and I remember being lonely, and terrified
and hurt.
In time I concluded
that the reason I was hurt was because I loved my parents,
and I concluded too that if I never allowed myself to
love anybody or anything I could never be hurt again.
It became second nature for me to remove myself from
anything or anybody I found myself growing fond of.
I grew up believing
that one had to be totally self-sufficient, for one
never dared to depend on another human being. I thought
that life was a pretty simple thing; you simply made
a plan for your life, based upon what you wanted, and
then you needed only the courage to go after it. I thought
I knew exactly what I wanted out of life and I thought
I knew exactly how to get it.
In my late teens
I became aware of emotions I'd not counted on; restlessness,
anxiety, fear and insecurity. The only kind of security
I knew anything about at that time was material security
and I decided that all these intruders would vanish
immediately if I only had a lot of money. The solution
seemed very simple. With cold calculation I set about
to marry a fortune, and I did. The only thing this changed,
however, was my surroundings, and it was soon apparent
that I could have the same uncomfortable emotions with
an unlimited checking account that I could on a working
girl's salary. It was impossible for me to say at this
point, "Maybe there is something wrong with my
philosophy," and I certainly couldn't say, "Maybe
there is something wrong with me." It
was not difficult to convince myself that my unhappiness
was the fault of the
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man
I had married, and I divorced him at the end of a year.
I was married and
divorced again before I was twenty-three years old,
this time to a prominent band leader—a man that
many women wanted. I thought this would give me ego-strength,
make me feel wanted and secure, and alleviate my fears,
but again nothing changed inside me.
The only importance
in all of this lies in the fact that at twenty-three
I was just as sick as I was at thirty-three, when I
came into A.A., but at that time I apparently had no
place to go because I had no drinking problem. Had I
been able to explain to a psychiatrist the feelings
of futility, loneliness and lack of purpose, that had
come with my deep sense of personal failure at this
second divorce, I seriously doubt that the good doctor
could have convinced me that my basic problem was a
spiritual hunger, but A.A. has shown me this was the
truth. And if I had been able to turn to the church
at that time I'm sure they could not have convinced
me my sickness was within myself, nor could they have
shown me the need for self-analysis that A.A. has shown
me is vital if I am to survive. So I had no place to
go. Or so it seemed to me.
I looked around
me at people who seemed happy and tried to analyze their
happiness, and it seemed to me that without exception
these people had something or somebody they loved very
much. I didn't have the courage to love; I was not even
sure I had the capacity. Fear of rejection and its ensuing
pain were not to be risked, and I turned away from myself
once more for the answer, this time to the drinks I
had al-
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ways
refused before, and in alcohol I found a false courage.
I wasn't afraid
of anything or anybody after I learned about drinking,
for it seemed right from the beginning that with liquor
I could always retire to my little private world where
nobody could get at me to hurt me. It seems only fitting
that when I did finally fall in love it was with an
alcoholic, and for the next ten years I progressed as
rapidly as is humanly possible into what I believed
to be hopeless alcoholism.
During this time,
our country was engaged in a second World War and my
husband was one of the first to go overseas. My reaction
to this was identical in many respects to my reaction
to my parents leaving me when I was seven. Apparently
I'd grown physically at the customary rate of speed,
and I had acquired an average amount of intellectual
training in the intervening years, but there had been
no emotional maturity at all. I realize now that this
phase of my development had been arrested by my obsession
with self, and my egocentricity had reached such proportions
that adjustment to anything outside my personal control
was impossible for me. I was immersed in self-pity and
resentment, and the only people who would support this
attitude or who I felt understood me at all were the
people I met in bars and the ones who drank as I did.
It became more and more necessary to escape from myself,
for my remorse and shame and humiliation when I was
sober were almost unbearable. The only way existence
was possible was through rationalizing every sober moment
and drinking myself into complete oblivion as often
as I could.
My husband eventually
returned, but it was not
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long
until we realized we could not continue our marriage.
By this time I was such a past master at kidding myself
that I had convinced myself I had sat out a war and
waited for this man to come home and, as my resentment
and self-pity grew, so did my alcoholic problem.
The last three years
of my drinking, I drank on my job. The amount of will
power exercised to control my drinking during working
hours, diverted into a constructive channel, would have
made me President, and the thing that made the will
power possible was the knowledge that as soon as my
day was finished I could drink myself into oblivion.
Inside, though, I was scared to death, for I new that
the time was coming (and it couldn't be too remote)
when I would be unable to hold that job. Maybe I wouldn't
be able to hold any job, or maybe (and this was my greatest
fear) I wouldn't care whether I had a job or not. I
knew it didn't make any difference where I started,
the inevitable end would be skid row. The only reality
I was able to face had been forced upon me by its very
repetition—I had to drink; and I didn't
know there was anything in the world that could be done
about it.
About this time,
I met a man who had three motherless children and it
seemed that might be a solution to my problem. I had
never had a child and this had been a satisfactory excuse
many times for my drinking. It seemed logical to me
that if I married this man and took the responsibility
for these children that they would keep me sober. So
I married again. This caused the rather cryptic comment
from one of my A.A. friends, when I told my story after
coming into the program, "that I had always been
a cinch for the pro
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gram,
for I had always been interested in mankind, but that
I was just taking them one man at a time."
The children kept
me sober for darn near three weeks, and then I went
on (please God) my last drunk. I've heard it said many
times in A.A., "There is just one good drunk in
every alcoholic's life, and that's the one that brings
us into A.A.," and I believe it. I was drunk for
sixty days around the clock and it was my intention,
literally, to drink myself to death. I went to jail
for the second time during this period for being drunk
in an automobile. I was the only person I'd ever known
personally who had ever been in jail, and I guess it
is most significant that the second time was less humiliating
than the first had been.
Finally, in desperation,
my family appealed to a doctor for advice and he suggested
A.A. The people who came knew immediately I was in no
condition to absorb anything of the program, and I was
put in a sanitarium to be defogged so that I could make
a sober decision about this for myself. It was here
that I realized for the first time that as a practicing
alcoholic I had no rights. Society can do anything it
chooses to do with me when I am drunk and I can't lift
a finger to stop it, for I forfeit my rights through
the simple expedient of becoming a menace to myself
and to the people around me. With deep shame came the
knowledge too that I had lived with no sense of social
obligation nor had I known the meaning of moral responsibility
to my fellow man.
I attended my first
A.A. meeting on July 25th, 1947, and it is with deep
gratitude that I'm able to say I've not had a drink
since that time, and that I take no sedation or narcotics,
for this program is to me one of
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complete
sobriety and I no longer need to escape reality. One
of the truly great things A.A. has taught me is that
reality too has two sides; I had only known the grim
side before the program, but now I had a chance to learn
about the pleasant side as well.
The A.A. members
who sponsored me told me in the beginning that I would
not only find a way to live without having a drink,
but that I would find a way to live without wanting
to drink, if I would do these simple things. They said
if you want to know how this program works,
take the first word of your question—the H is
for honesty, the O is for open-mindedness and the W
is for willingness; these our Book calls the essentials
of recovery. They suggested that I study the A.A. book
and try to take the Twelve Steps according to the explanation
in the Book, for it was their opinion that the application
of these principles in our daily lives will get us sober
and keep us sober. I believe this, and I believe too
that it is equally impossible to practice these principles
to the best of our ability, a day at a time, and still
drink, for I don't think the two things are compatible.
I had no problem
admitting I was powerless over alcohol, and I certainly
agreed that my life had become unmanageable. I had only
to reflect on the contrast between the plans I made
so many years ago for my life with what really happened
to know I couldn't manage my life drunk or sober. A.A.
taught me that willingness to believe was enough
for a beginning. It's been true in my case, nor could
I quarrel with "restore us to sanity," for
my actions drunk or sober, before A.A., were not those
of a sane person. My desire to be honest with myself
made it necessary
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for
me to realize that my thinking was irrational. It had
to be or I could not have justified my erratic behavior
as I did. I've been benefited from a dictionary definition
I found that reads: "rationalization is giving
a socially acceptable reason for socially unacceptable
behavior, and socially unacceptable behavior is a form
of insanity."
A.A. has given me
serenity of purpose, the opportunity to be of service
to God and to the people about me, and I am serene in
the infallibility of these principles that provide the
fulfillment of my purpose.
A.A. has taught
me that I will have peace of mind in exact proportion
to the peace of mind I bring into the lives of the other
people, and it has taught me the true meaning of the
admonition "happy are ye who know these things
and do them." For the only problems I
have now are those I create when I break out in a rash
of self-will.
I've had many spiritual
experiences since I've been in the program, many that
I didn't recognize right away, for I'm slow to learn
and they take many guises. But one was so outstanding
that I like to pass it on whenever I can in the hope
that it will help someone else as it has me. As I said
earlier, self-pity and resentment were my constant companions
and my inventory began to look like a thirty-three year
diary, for I seemed to have a resentment against everybody
I had ever known. All but one "responded to the
treatment" suggested in the Steps immediately,
but this one posed a problem.
It was against my
mother and it was twenty-five years old. I had fed it,
fanned it and nurtured it as one might a delicate child,
and it had become as much
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a
part of me as my breathing. It had provided me with
excuses for my lack of education, my marital failures,
personal failures, inadequacy, and of course, my alcoholism
and, though I really thought I had been willing to part
with it, now I knew I was reluctant to let it go.
One morning, however,
I realized I had to get rid of it, for my reprieve was
running out, and if I didn't get rid of it I was going
to get drunk—and I didn't want to get drunk any
more. In my prayers that morning I asked God to point
out to me some way to be free of this resentment. During
the day a friend of mine brought me some magazines to
take to a hospital group I was interested in, and I
looked through them and a "banner" across
the front of one featured an article by a prominent
clergyman in which I caught the word "resentment."
He said, in effect:
"If you have a resentment you want to be free of,
if you will pray for the person or the thing that you
resent, you will be free. If you will ask in prayer
for everything you want for yourself to be given to
them, you will be free. Ask for their health, their
prosperity, their happiness, and you will be free. Even
when you don't really want it for them, and your prayers
are only words and you don't mean it, go ahead and do
it anyway. Do it every day for two weeks and you will
find you have come to mean it and to want it for them,
and you will realize that where you used to feel bitterness
and resentment and hatred, you now feel compassionate
understanding and love."
It worked for me
then, and it has worked for me many times since, and
it will work for me every time I am willing to work
it. Sometimes I have to ask first for the willingness,
but it too always comes. And be-
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cause
it works for me, it will work for all of us. As
another great man says, "The only real freedom
a human being can ever know is doing what you ought
to do because you want to do it."
This great experience
that released me from the bondage of hatred and
replaced it with love is really just another affirmation
of the truth I know: I get everything I need in
Alcoholics Anonymous—everything I need I get—and
when I get what I need I invariably find that it
was just what I wanted all the time.
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