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STUDIES
IN FORMATIVE SPIRITUALITY
Vol. 8: No. 2, May, 1987
ALCOHOL
AND OTHER DRUGS IN SPIRITUAL FORMATION
by James E. Royce
"The
only alcohol problem I ever had in the seminary was where
could I get my next drink." This recollection of a
recovered
alcoholic priest recounting his story is probably typical
of more
young religious and seminarians than is realized. Alcohol
and other
drugs, especially prescription rather than street drugs,
are simply
a part of our society today. Unless there is a serious problem,
the
tendency is to take them for granted and certainly not to
see them
as a threat to spiritual formation (Ford, 1959).
Wine
at dinner is no longer only for big feasts in the
convent, and beer is presumed to be a harmless source of
conviviality. Neither is recognized as having the same alcohol
as
hard liquor, and as having the danger of addiction. Alcohol
in some
form is considered a necessity for any picnic or social
gathering,
male or female. Our good Catholic doctors prescribe tranquilizers
and sleeping pills on the naive presumption that no sister
or
priest could possibly be a "Junkie" or addict.
Perhaps more
important is the fact often missed that, short of alcoholism
or
other addiction, even "moderate" use of these
substances can
interfere notably with the development of a vigorous spiritual
life.
The
facts, of course, contradict some implicit assumptions in
all the above. The percentage of alcoholism and other addictions
among priests and other religious is now being reported
as probably
higher than in the average population (NCCA), and higher
than
reported earlier (Fichter, 1977; Sorensen, 1976). It often
goes on
longer undetected, or even if suspected goes on longer before
it is
confronted by superiors or there is an intervention by concerned
peers. I know one sister who was getting pills from five
different
doctors, another who shopped the various liquor stores telling
the
clerk in each that there was a special feast coming up,
a priest
who drank himself to death while his brother priests covered
his
weddings and funerals for him, a sacristan who consumed
large
quantities of alter wine without being suspected, and one
alcoholic
nun who was put into treatment whereupon the prioress found
68
bottles of pills in her room.
This
last case illustrates the fact of polydrug or
cross-addiction, which is extremely damaging to the body
because
the effects of alcohol and other drugs in the system do
not just
add: they multiply, in what is called potentiation or synergism.
Polydrug use is so common now that we train our alcoholism
counselor not to ask whether one is using other drugs, but
to
routinely ask "and what other drugs are you using?"
If the
assumption is wrong, it will be corrected and no harm is
done.
But,
you say, they know better. Of course. Doctors, nurses and
dentists know more about drugs than most people, and they
have an
above-average incidence of problems. Dr. Claudia Black's
book on
the children of alcoholics has the poignant but terrifying
title,
"It Will Never Happen to Me" (1981) which tells
of the millions of
youngsters who became alcoholics in spite of resolving never
to
touch the stuff because of what they see it did to their
parents.
Knowledge does not guarantee conduct: I know how to shoot
par golf,
but that doesn't mean I do it - any more than being a professional
psychologist guarantees my being perfectly adjusted.
Causality
How
does all this get started? Very subtly. Contrary to the
now outmoded theory that alcoholism is the symptom of some
underlying personality problem which the victim is trying
to
sedate, it is now recognized that alcoholics are mostly
normal
people who start drinking for the same reason as everyone
else: to
be sociable, to relax, out of custom. The problem is that
about one
out of ten becomes addicted to the drug. All too often the
addiction is seen as the result or symptom of psychological
problems, instead of the cause of them, as is the usual
case.
Many,
but not all, of these have a hereditary biological
disposition which may not appear in their parents but might
be
traced back to a grandparent who lived and died before alcoholism
was recognized as a disease. Hence the importance of good
screening
and education. Not that those with a history of alcoholism
in their
ancestry should be denied a vocation: just that "forewarned
is
forearmed" here; they should know that they are biologically
more
vulnerable and that total abstinence might be the wiser
or even
necessary route for them.
I
recently met a sister who had been an alcoholic since age
14, entered the sisterhood at 22, and shortly thereafter
as a
novice was admitted to an alcoholism treatment center. A
liver scan
showed the effects of her heavy teen-age drinking, but how
many
physicians will routinely run a liver scan on a sister applicant?
In early years of seminary or religious life, diagnosis
and
especially early detection can be quite difficult. The physician
is
reluctant to suspect alcoholism or other drug abuse. Those
in
charge of formation tend to dismiss the symptoms as immaturity
or
rebellion which will disappear in time.
They
don't disappear in time, so the person is shunted from
one assignment to another instead of being confronted with
the real
problem. Confrontation is difficult, and always mixed with
fear
that one will lose a friend, or at least get the subject
angry. But
Christian fortitude here is also genuine charity, now often
called
"tough love." The fear that one will lose a friend
is counteracted
by the statement of a director at Guest House that when
recovered
priests return to their diocese after treatment for alcoholism
and
other addictions, they are most grateful to those who forced
them
into treatment. The ones they are angry at are their peers
who
encouraged them to be "one of the boys" when they
were progressing
in a terminal illness.
Diagnosis
The
fact that the sister in the polydrug case cited above also
had a Master's degree and a very responsible administrative
position parallels the fact that it is often the most capable
priest and religious who develop these problems, and go
longest
without suspicion because they are respected and trusted.
Since it
is a disease of denial, a classic symptom of alcoholism
is the
assertion, "I can quit any time I want to" or
"I can take it or
leave it alone." (The true social drinker doesn't have
to play
these games of control, or make these protestations.) But
a
superior wants to trust the subject, and often believes
a con line
that no experienced alcoholism counselor would buy for a
minute.
Again, good tolerance is mistakenly thought to be a sign
that
things are under control, that one can "handle"
one's liquor,
whereas the truth is that high tolerance tells us that they
are
alcoholics.
Drinking
more than one intends, short of getting drunk, is a
sign often missed by those who still have the false stereotype
of
an alcoholic as one who always gets drunk every time they
drink. In
this case, praying over it, or retreat resolutions about
cutting
down, may be just pious bargaining games one is playing
with God to
avoid the complete surrender implied in a frank admission
that one
is alcoholic and cannot drink moderately.
One
diagnostic tool is to make a check list of all the
person's life problems with no reference to alcohol, then
go back
and see how many of these problems are alcohol-related in
fact. The
next step is to get an accurate account of the number of
prescriptions that have been written for the person in the
last
five years, and all other sources of drugs of all kinds.
The result
can be amazing, and easily reveal the major root of what
seemed to
be other problems.
An
honest drinking history is not easy to obtain, as
alcoholics are notorious for deceiving both themselves and
others.
Vague, evasive answers like "not very much" and
"sometimes not at
all" are suspect. They don't count how much they had,
and sometimes
honestly do not remember - a blackout does not mean passing
out but
amnesia later on even though one is quite conscious at the
time.
Thinking about drinking, or planning one's next drink, is
typical
of alcoholics. So is giving reasons (excuses) for drinking,
or
using alcohol to cope rather than merely enjoying it. Here
are some
symptoms that can add up even though any one by itself is
not
conclusive: procrastination on assignments and lack of punctuality
for meetings or tasks, undependability often combined with
blaming
others, personality change or moodiness, irritability,
secretiveness, careless dress and appearance, heavy use
of breath
mints and mouth wash, unaccountable expenditures, and avoidance
of
old friends.
Physical
symptoms of alcohol and other drug misuse may appear
only in latter stages: pupils of eyes contracted or dilated,
use of
sun-glasses when not in sun, glazed "spaced-out"
look in eyes,
sweaty palms, slight hand tremor, morning cough, high blood
pressure, puffiness or redness or small veins on nose or
chin, acid
stomach (frequent use of Turns, Rolaids), skin disorders,
or trouble
fighting off infections and colds. Sleep disturbances, fatigue,
nervousness, digestive system disorders, headaches, heavy
smoking
and coffee consumption are all suggestive of alcohol or
other drug
problems.
Spiritual
"Disease"
Addiction
is now recognized as a disease (AMA, 1984). But
unlike many illnesses it is not just physical, nor the province
solely of the medical profession. It is a physical, psychological,
social, and spiritual disease. Let us examine what we mean
by
saying it is a spiritual disease.
Health
is integral to functioning, the whole person being able
to relate to the whole of reality in proper proportion.
Sickness or
disease is a defect in this integral functioning, a lack-of-ease
or
dysfunction. Alcohol and other drugs impair one's ability
to think
and feel right about God, to function in relation to God
as one
should. The result is spiritual dis-ease. One cannot be
comfortable
in the presence of the Creator, gets distorted ideas of
God or
feelings toward God which make it difficult to really trust
and
love. One is ill-at-ease with God, not attuned to the Infinite
which is the most important part of the whole of reality
to which
one must relate. Alcohol or marijuana or pills anesthetize
one's
sensitivity to spiritual values. Religion becomes sick:
mechanical,
shallow, external instead of deeply felt and experienced.
Spiritual
life becomes dormant, but one is anesthetized to that fact,
too.
One
can be very active in a religion with a low level of
spiritual life, or be very spiritual without even belonging
to a
religion. Gordon Allport of Harvard probably was getting
at this
distinction between religious and spiritual when he researched
external vs. internal religion. The distinction is often
used to
explain why Alcoholics Anonymous is not a religion, although
it is
an intensely spiritual program and its Twelve Steps are
centered
around God, with alcohol being mentioned only once. The
result is
that A.A. can be a boost to the religious life of anyone,
regardless of their religion. It is very concerned with
spiritual
health, because it recognizes alcoholism as being also a
spiritual
disease as well as physiological and psychological.
Deterioration
of the person's spiritual life is almost
inevitable as addiction to alcohol or other drugs starts
to
progress. Subtle at first, and not related in the mind of
either
the person or their spiritual advisor, the connection is
often
realized only during recovery. It is hard to pray well when
one is
high, or hung over. Eventually prayer becomes a mere formality,
though it rarely ceases altogether in a priest or religious.
Sometimes it takes the form of prayer asking God to remove
the
alcohol/drug problem, but it is never thoroughgoing and
effective
because, as mentioned above, there is no real surrender
to the fact
of addiction at this point.
I
think it useful and tactful, for those of us who are not
alcoholics to refrain from describing how an alcoholic feels
(Royce, 1984). Rather than telling them that all alcoholics
are
liars, say "alcoholics tell me they have a problem
with telling the
truth." How do alcoholics describe themselves? As feeling
discouraged, powerless, guilty, frustrated at their lack
of will
power, anxious, dishonest, self-centered, alienated from
God and
and the community, with low frustration tolerance, lacking
true
humility but with low self-esteem. They are indeed spiritually
sick
(Royce, 1981, chapter 18).
They
may also report some moral deterioration. At one time
this was thought to be the cause of alcoholism, which was
looked
upon as moral depravity or weak will. We now know that this
is the
result, not the cause, of the addiction. They may have become
dishonest, selfish, neglectful of duties to the point of
at least
some sins of omission. Their guilt feelings may be grossly
exaggerated, and they need to be reassured that they are
sick, not
bad. In any case they are probably discouraged, depressed.
They
need to know that this is their dark night of the soul,
that
emptying of the cup of all that is material before it can
be filled
with God.
Prevention
Much
of this describes latter stages of the illness. During the
formative years this may all be quite minimal, and imperceptible
to
the average spiritual guide or superior. But it is happening,
in
seminaries and in religious orders of men and women all
over the
world. It is indeed very difficult to separate the mere
fun and
partying from the early stages of addiction. Superiors are
loathe
to be suspicious, but the fact is that Jansenism and Prohibition
have had the pendulum effect of swinging us to far in the
opposite
direction. It is only partly in jest that I speculate as
to how
many Catholics, during the Prohibition years and the century
of
bitter emotional battles which led up to it, drank themselves
into
alcoholism to prove they were not Methodists or Baptists.
Let's
look at the facts. An estimated 16% of American priests
have their apostolic effectiveness impeded to some degree
by
alcohol. Note we do not say that they are full blown alcoholics.
But the work of God should not be diminished even to that
degree by
an avoidable cause. And most of it could be avoided if the
seeds
were detected early in formation. Not that dire threats
and
warnings by themselves are effective prevention. Not even
good
education alone can accomplish that. But education is the
first
phase of prevention. It is appalling the amount of ignorance
one
observes in supposedly sophisticated and educated people
when it
comes to the facts about alcohol and other drugs.
The
current interest among the young in nutrition and good
health habits, the whole human potential movement, can be
capitalized on in prevention efforts. Alcohol is the classic
case
of "empty calories" - 210 calories to the ounce
with no protein, no
vitamins, no minerals. It attacks every organ and tissue
in the
human body, especially the brain and liver. It should be
stressed
that alcohol causes more problems than alcoholism. One does
not
have to be an alcoholic to kill somebody with an automobile
after
drinking even moderate amounts. Nor does one have to be
an
identifiable alcoholic to have their spiritual growth stunted
by
drinking. Our description of spiritual disease given above
could
apply to many seminarians and religious in formation long
before
they are recognized as alcoholics.
Besides
education, the next prevention need is a psychological
climate in our houses of formation which does not look down
on
abstinence as prissy or old-fashioned. I am not a total
abstainer
nor a recovered alcoholic; but we need to admit that temperance
is,
after all, one of the Christian virtues we are supposed
to be
inculcating in our young charges. It is irony that there
are 37
million ex-smokers in the U.S., and the heir to the R.J.
Reynolds
tobacco fortune came out in the Spring of 1986 as publicly
opposing
cigarettes, while professed pursuers of an ascetical life
and even
many of their spiritual directors are still puffing away.
Nicotine
is an extremely addictive drug. Smoking is an expensive
habit not
in accord with the Christian poverty we pretend to advocate
when we
talk about concern for the poor, nor with the mortification
proper
to followers of the Christ who said that unless we take
up our
cross we are not worthy to be called his disciples. Yet
smokers are
treated as privileged members of the community in many religious
houses. And any attempt to restrict alcohol consumption
is looked
upon as priggish.
What
I propose is not Prohibition. It is not a high level of
sanctity. It is very low-level asceticism, if you will,
the minimum
one might reasonably expect of people who claim to be pursuing
Christian perfection. It is just common-sense care of one's
health,
a moral obligation we all have. We cannot perpetuate the
attitudes
of the past which grew out of ignorance of the efforts of
alcohol
and other drugs on the human body. The Reynolds heir explained
his
stand to the press by saying that when his grandfather built
up the
tobacco fortune it was not known what we know today about
the
impact of smoking on health. Perhaps the tendency toward
rebellion
and protest which are characteristic of youth may be useful
here.
Young people may take rightful satisfaction in rejecting
the
stupidity of their elders in these matters.
Community
attitudes can be changed, and indeed are changing in
America with regard to smoking and drunk driving. Heavy
drinking is
no longer looked upon as a sign of sophistication or manliness.
Pushing drinks, instead of being seen as generous hospitality,
is
now viewed as dangerous and the possible source of a civil
liability lawsuit. Drunken behavior is no longer considered
funny.
One wonders why clergy and religious are not in the forefront
of
such changes instead of dragging their feet.
Thirdly,
plenty of alternatives, attractive and readily
available, should always accompany alcoholic beverages any
time
they are served. One should have a choice, and I don't mean
between
Scotch and Bourbon. At one university, the Friday night
keggers
dropped from eight kegs of beer to five per night, without
any
rules or moralizing, when the student body leaders decided
to have
plenty of the favorite soft drinks available, ice cold and
very
prominently displayed. Many students would switch to soft
drinks
after one or two beers or say, "I prefer 7-Up (or Pepsi)
tonight."
The whole lifestyle in a seminary or religious house should
avoid
the implication that alcohol is necessary to have fun or
to
socialize.
Fourthly,
spiritual directors need to be alert to the
connection between the problems presented to them and possible
misuse of alcohol and other drugs. Anger, for instance,
is often
the result of being frustrated, hurt, irritated in ways
that we all
suffer. But alcohol can keep one from learning more constructive
and Christian ways of dealing with anger, and indeed may
be the
cause of the hurt or frustration in the first place. Anxiety
is a
typical excuse for drinking, yet the net effect of alcohol
is to
make one more anxious, similarly with trying to cope with
depression by drinking alcohol, which is itself a depressant.
Inability to get along with others and general alienation
(except
from drinking companions) can be an early warning sign of
future
addiction.
Ego
problems betray a lack of genuine humility, the most
fundamental and the most difficult virtue in the spiritual
life.
Low self-esteem is a perennial problem, often accompanied
by
anxiety and depression. The rejection and failure, real
or
imagined, which stems from feelings of low self-worth are
often the
result of drinking and in turn are used as an excuse for
more
drinking in a vicious cycle of self-defeat. Guilt naturally
ensues,
and the resulting feelings of unworthiness and self-blame
can
seriously interfere with any solid spiritual growth. Indecisiveness
may be related to the anesthetizing effect of drugs, including
alcohol, on one's ability to think through alternatives
and make
clear-cut decisions.
Spiritual
Recovery
Rather
than an obstacle to spiritual growth or even a tragedy,
addiction can be a great boost to one's spiritual life.
As
mentioned earlier, Alcoholics Anonymous is a beautiful and
psychologically sound spiritual program, which can enhance
the life
of grace of anyone who practices the Twelve Steps. Several
professional psychologists, for example Dr. Brown (1985),
have
shown how A.A. and psychotherapy can be quite compatible.
And
certainly the A.A. literature contains a wealth of helps
for
spiritual growth. Apthorp (1985) has given us a clergy manual
which
demonstrates in detail how A.A. principles can be used in
parish
work. Robin Norwood, in her book Women Who Love Too Much
(1985),
showing how the Twelve Steps can be applied to other
obsessive-compulsive tendencies, emphasizes the spiritual
dimensions of the steps. All this can be integrated readily
with
Catholic spirituality. Although not a member, I go to open
meetings
of A.A. because it is good for my spiritual life. One pair
of
sisters who are A.A. and Al-Anon, respectively, do a great
deal of
good with their talks to both religious and laity.
It
is true that A.A. is not the only or necessary way to
sobriety, but good sociological research (Fichter, 1982)
confirms
what common sense would suspect, namely that the highest
percentage
of successful recovery in alcoholic priests occurs when
they attend
A.A. regularly after discharge from treatment. Today seminarians
and novices are getting into A.A. long before in-patient
treatment
would be necessary. What they are surprised to find is that
any
A.A. group will welcome a sister or priest or seminarian
without
the slightest condescension and nary a raised eyebrow. Instead,
what one hears at A.A. meetings is St. Augustine's, "there
but for
the grace of God go I."
Of
course, one goes to A.A. meetings in mufti and is there
to
listen and profit, not counsel or preach. And if one has
a polydrug
problem, tact and discretion suggest that one concentrate
on the
alcohol problem and not bring up the other drugs if that
is
offensive to the group. (The same is true of using Antabuse,
which
is quite compatible with A.A. and has saved many lives;
but some
A.A.'s mistakenly object, and its use is often better left
unmentioned.) However, mention of polydrug abuse, provided
alcohol
is a principal drug, is now becoming very common at many
A.A.
meetings and is actually encouraged in an A.A. Conference
-
approved pamphlet (1978, p.16).
Many
alcoholic priests and religious have reported that
compared to what they learned in A.A., their whole previous
spiritual life was shallow, and their relation to God was
very
impersonal. Resignation to God's will becomes a reality
in their
use of Steps Three and Six/Seven (see Chapter 5, "How
it Works," in
the book Alcoholics Anonymous, 1939, 1976). They use the
word
surrender, although I prefer acceptance. "Thy will
be done" becomes
a reality in their life. The whole "Our Father"
takes on a richer
meaning than they ever imagined.
They
have really learned how to pray and meditate by
practicing Step Eleven: "Sought through prayer and
meditation to
improve our conscious contact with God as we understood
Him,
seeking only a knowledge of His will and the power to carry
that
out." This can be rather high-level spirituality: seeking
only
God's will! Their concept of God is transformed from that
of a
punishing tyrant to that of a loving, wise, and kind parent.
They
can truly pray to God as "Abba" with all the familiarity
of Mamma
or Daddy implied by this term.
And
from a feeling of helplessness they grow into a
realization with St. Paul that "I can do all things
in Him who
strengthens me." They learn that it is good theology
to say God
helps those who help themselves. Like a good Al-Anon, God
is not a
Rescuer or Enabler. Turning one's will and life over to
the care of
God does not mean sitting back and letting God do it. We
must still
produce, but under the care of a loving God.
They
learn that confession is more than "dumping garbage"
and
that forgiveness is not analysis of why one did something,
to
explain it away. Reconciliation means healing, spiritual
health,
re-establishing a personal relationship with God, getting
"at ease"
with Him again. True humility means being comfortable with
our
human imperfection, a recognition of the truth that we are
not bad
bad but just not-God, to use the phrase from the title of
Kurtz's
(1979) definitive scholarly history of A.A. whose theme
is that it
is the history of over a million people who discovered that
they
are not God. They learn that A.A. claims spiritual progress,
not
perfection.
Sobriety
is more than just abstinence. Merely avoiding a drink
is a pretty empty way of life. A.A.'s live life to the full,
joyfully and with a clean conscience, with plenty of fun
and no
hangovers. I am often asked why I work in this field, to
which the
answer is simply: it is a source of great satisfaction to
see
recovering alcoholics get well, start to look better and
feel
better, grow spiritually and in their zest for life. They
become
not only well but "weller than well"- which now
seems to be
confirmed by research using psychological tests (Mellor
et
al., 1986) This is not meant in any "healthier than
thou" sense, but
at least to the extent that they are better off than they
would
have been had they never been alcoholics and hence never
discovered
how much God loves them and how much they love God.
Although
there are no rules, most identify themselves at A.A.
meetings with "My name is Mary (or Joe) and I am a
GRATEFUL
alcoholic" which reminds us that St. Ignatius of Loyola
and many
other great mystics tell us that the beginning of the love
of God
is gratitude for his gifts. And there are none more thankful
than
recovered alcoholics. Married lovers tell me that after
intercourse
they sometimes just murmur "Thank you, thank you, thank
you...."
and that might well be the prayer of one who loves God very
much.
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