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BASIC CONCEPTS OF ALCOHOLICS
ANONYMOUS
N.Y. STATE JOURNAL OF MEDICINE©
Vol. 44, Aug.,1944.
William G. Wilson
Alcoholics Anonymous is an informal fellowship of about
12,000 formerly alcoholic men and women who are to be
found banded together as groups in about three hundred
and twenty-five American and Canadian communities, these
groups ranging in size from half a dozen to many
hundreds of individuals. Our oldest members have been
sober for from eight to nearly ten years. Of those
sincerely willing to stop drinking about 50 per cent
have done so at once, 25 per cent after a few relapses,
and most of the remainder have improved. It is probable
that half of our members, had they not been drinkers,
would have appeared in ordinary life to be normal
people. The other half would have appeared as more or
less pronounced neurotic.
Alcoholics Anonymous, or "AA," popularly so-called, has
but one purpose - one objective only -"To help other
alcoholics to recover from their illness."
Nothing is asked of
the alcoholic approaching us save a desire on his part
to get well. He subscribes to no membership
requirements, no fees or dues, nor is belief in any
particular view, medical or religious, demanded of him.
As a group we take no position on any controversial
question. Emphatically, we are not evangelists or
reformers. Being alcoholics who have recovered, we aim
to help only those who want to get well. We do this
because we have found that working with other alcoholics
plays such a vital part in keeping us all sober.
You may inquire "Just
how does AA work?" I cannot fully answer that question.
Many AA techniques have been adopted after a ten-year
process of trial and error which has led to some
interesting results. But, as laymen, we doubt our own
ability to explain them. We can only tell you what we
do, and what seems, from our point of view, to happen to
us.
At the very outset we
should like it made ever so clear that AA is a synthetic
concept - a synthetic gadget, as it were, drawing upon
the resources of medicine, psychiatry, religion, and our
own experience of drinking and recovery. You will search
in vain for a single new fundamental. We have merely
streamlined old and proved principles of psychiatry and
religion into such forms that the alcoholic will accept
them. And then we have created a society of his own kind
where he can enthusiastically put these very principles
to work on himself and other sufferers.
Then too, we have
tried hard to capitalize on our one great natural
advantage. That advantage is, of course, our personal
experience as drinkers who have recovered. How often the
doctors and clergymen throw up their hands when, after
exhaustive treatment or exhortation, the alcoholic still
insists, "But you don’t understand me. You never did any
serious drinking yourself, so how can you? Neither can
you show me many who have recovered."
Now, when one
alcoholic who has got well talks to another who hasn't,
such objections seldom arise, for the new man sees in a
few minutes that he is talking to a kindred spirit, one
who understands. Neither can the recovered AA member be
deceived, for he knows every trick, every
rationalization of the drinking game. So the usual
barriers go down with a crash. Mutual confidence, that
indispensable of all therapy, follows as surely as day
does night. And if this absolutely necessary rapport is
not forthcoming at once it is almost certain to develop
when the new man has met other AA’s. Someone will, as we
say, "click with him."
As soon as that
happens we have a good chance of selling our prospect
those very essentials which you doctors have so long
advocated, and the problem drinker finds our society a
congenial place to work them out for himself and his
fellow alcoholic. For the first time in years he thinks
himself understood and he feels useful; uniquely useful,
indeed, as he takes his own turn promoting the recovery
of others. No matter what the outer world thinks of him,
he now knows he can get well, for he stands in the midst
of scores of cases worse than his own who have attained
the goal. And there are other cases precisely like his
own - a pressure of testimony which usually overwhelms
him. If he doesn't succumb at once, he will almost
surely do so later when Barleycorn builds a still hotter
fire under him, thus blocking off all his other
carefully planned exits from dilemma. The speaker
recalls seventy-five failures during the first three
years of AA - people we utterly gave up. During the past
seven years sixty—two of these people have returned to
us, most of them now making good. They tell us they
returned because they knew they would die or go mad if
they didn't. Having tried everything else within their
means and having exhausted their pet rationalizations,
they came back and took their medicine. That is why we
never need to evangelize alcoholics. If still in their
right minds they come back, once they have been well
exposed to AA
Now to recapitulate.
Alcoholics Anonymous has made two major contributions to
the program of psychiatry and religion. These are, it
seems to us, the long—missing links in the chain of
recovery:
1. Our ability, as
ex-drinkers, to secure the confidence of the new man -
to "build a transmission line into him."
2. The provision of
an understanding society of ex-drinkers in which the
newcomer can successfully apply the principles of
medicine and religion to himself and others.
So far as we AA’s are
concerned, these principles, now used by us every day,
seem to be in surprising agreement. Let's compare
briefly what in a general way medicine and religion tell
the alcoholic:
Medicine Says
1. The alcoholic
needs a personality change.
2. The patient ought
to be analyzed and should make a full and honest mental
catharsis.
3. Serious
personality defects must be cured through accurate
self-knowledge and realistic adjustment to life.
4. The alcoholic
neurotic retreats from life, is a picture of anxiety and
abnormal self concern; he withdraws from the "herd."
5. The
alcoholic must find, "a new compelling interest in
life," must "get back into the herd," He should find an
interesting occupation, should join clubs, social
activities, political parties, or discover hobbies to
take the
place of alcohol.
Religion Says
1. The alcoholic
needs a change of heart, a spiritual awakening.
2. The alcoholic
should make an examination of the "conscience" — or a
moral inventory and a frank discussion.
3. Character defects
(sins) can be eliminated by acquiring more honesty,
humility, unselfishness, tolerance, generosity, love,
etc.
4. The alcoholic's
basic trouble is self-centeredness. Filled with fear and
self seeking he has forgotten the brotherhood of man.
5. The alcoholic
should learn the "expulsive power of a new affection,"
love of serving man, of serving God. He must "lose his
life to find it;" he should join the church and there
find self forgetfulness in service. For "faith without
works is dead."
Thus far religion and
medicine are seen in hearty accord. But in one respect
they do differ. When the doctor has shown the alcoholic
his underlying difficulties and has prescribed a program
of readjustment, he says to him, "Now that you
understand what is required for recovery, you should no
longer depend on me. You must depend on yourself. You go
do it."
Clearly, then, the
object of the doctor is to make the patient
self-sufficient and largely, if not wholly, dependent
upon himself.
Religion does not
attempt this. It says that faith in self is not enough,
even for a nonalcoholic. The clergyman says that we
shall have to find and depend upon a higher power - God.
He advises prayer and frankly recommends an attitude of
unwavering reliance upon Him who presides over all. By
this means we discover a strength much beyond our own
resources.
So, the main
difference seems to add up to this: Medicine says, know
yourself, be strong and you will be able to face life.
Religion says, know thyself, ask God for power, and you
become truly free.
In Alcoholics
Anonymous the new man may try either method. He
sometimes eliminates "the spiritual angle" from the
Twelve Steps to Recovery and wholly relies upon honesty,
tolerance and working with others. But it is interesting
to note that faith always comes to those who try this
simple approach with an open mind - and in the meantime
they stay sober.
If, however, the
spiritual content of the Twelve Steps is actively
denied, they can seldom remain dry. That is our AA
experience everywhere. We stress the spiritual simply
because thousands of us have found we can't do without
it.
At this point I
should like to state the Twelve Steps of the Alcoholics
Anonymous Program of Recovery so that you physicians may
accurately compare your methods with ours.
The Twelve Steps
1. We admitted we
were powerless over alcohol — that our lives had become
unmanageable.
2. Came to believe
that a power greater than ourselves could restore us to
sanity.
3. Made a decision to
turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as
we understood him.
4. Made a searching
and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.
5. Admitted to God,
to ourselves, and to another human being the exact
nature of our wrongs.
6. Were entirely
ready to have God remove all these defects of character.
7. Humbly asked Him
to remove our shortcomings.
8. Made a list of all
persons we had harmed, and became willing to make amends
to them all.
9. Made direct amends
to such people wherever possible, except when to do so
would injure them or others.
10. Continued to take
personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly
admitted it.
11. Sought through
prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact
with God as we understood Him, praying only for
knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry that
out.
12. Having had a
spiritual experience as the result of these steps, we
tried to carry this message to alcoholics, and to
practice these principles in all our affairs
Boiled down, these
steps mean, simply (1) admission of alcoholism; (2)
personality analysis and catharsis; (3) adjustment of
personal relations; (4) dependence upon some higher
power; and (5) working with other alcoholics.
Most strongly we
point out that adherence to these principles is not a
condition of AA membership. Any alcoholic who admits he
has a problem is an A.A. member regardless of how much
he disagrees with the program. Based upon our
experience, the whole program is a suggestion only. The
alcoholic, objecting at first to the spiritual factor,
is urged to keep an open mind, meanwhile treating his
own AA group as a "power greater than himself." Under
these conditions the newcomer commences to undergo a
personality change at such a rate and of such dimensions
that he cannot fully account for it on the basis of
self-realization and self-discipline. Not only does his
alcoholic obsession disappear, but he finds himself
progressively free of fear, resentment, and inferiority.
These changes seem to have come about automatically.
Hence he concludes that "A power greater than himself"
must have indeed have been at work. Having come to this
point, he begins to form his own concept of God. He then
develops confidence in that concept, which grows as he
gets proof in everyday life that his new faith actually
works, really produces results.
This is what AA’s are
trying to say when they talk about a spiritual
experience. They mean a certain quality of personality
change which, in their belief, could not have occurred
without the help and presence of the creative spirit of
the universe.
With the average AA,
many months, may lapse before he is aware of faith in
the spiritual sense. Yet I know scarcely an AA member of
more than a year's standing who still thinks his
transformation wholly a psychologic phenomenon based
entirely upon his own normal resources. Almost everyone
of our members will tell you that, while he may not go
along with a clergyman's concept of God, he has
developed one of his own on which he can positively
depend, one which works for him.
We AA’s are quite
indifferent to what people may call this spiritual
experience of ours. But to us it looks very much like
conversion, the very thing most alcoholics have sworn
they never would have. In fact I am beginning to believe
that we shall have to call it just that, for I know our
good friend, Dr. Harry Tiebout, is sitting in this room.
As you may know, he is the psychiatrist who recently
told his own professional Society, The American
Psychiatric Association, that what we AA’s get is
conversion - sure enough and no fooling! And if the
spirit of that great psychologist, William James, could
be consulted, he'd doubtless refer us to his famous
book, varieties of Religious Experience, in which
personality change through the "educational variety of
spiritual experience, or conversion is so ably explored.
Whatever this mysterious process is, it certainly seems
to work, and with us who are on the way to the asylum or
the undertaker anything that works looks very, very good
indeed.
And I'm very happy to
say that many other distinguished members of your
profession have pronounced our Twelve Steps good
medicine. Clergymen of all denominations say they are
good religion, and of course we AA’s like them because
they do work. Most ardently we hope that every physician
here today will find himself able to share this happy
agreement. In the early years of AA, it seemed to us
alcoholics that we wandered in a sort of no-man's-land,
which appeared to divide science and religion. But all
that has changed since AA has now become a common
meeting ground for both concepts.
Yes, Alcoholics
Anonymous is a cooperative venture. All cases requiring
physical treatment are referred to you physicians. We
frequently work with the psychiatrist and often find
that he can do and say things to a patient, which we
cannot. He, in turn, avails himself of the fact that as
ex-alcoholics we can sometimes walk in where he fears to
tread. Throughout the country we are in daily touch with
hospitals and sanitariums, both public and private. The
enthusiastic support given us by so many of your noted
institutions is something for which we are deeply
grateful. The opportunity to work with alcoholics means
everything; to most of us it means life itself. Without
the chance to forget our own troubles by helping others
out of theirs, we would certainly perish. That is the
heart of AA - it is our lifeblood.
We have torn still
other pages from the Book of Medicine, putting them to
practical use. It is from you gentlemen we learn that
alcoholism is a complex malady; that abnormal drinking
is but a symptom of personal maladjustment to life;
that, as a class, we, alcoholics are apt to be
sensitive, emotionally immature, grandiose in our
demands upon ourselves and others; that we have usually
"gone broke" on some dream ideal of perfection; that,
failing to realize the dream, we sensitive folk escape
cold reality by taking to the bottle; that this habit of
escape finally turns into an obsession, or, as you
gentlemen put it, a compulsion to drink so subtly
powerful that no disaster, however great, even near
death or insanity, can, in most cases, seem to break it;
that we are the victims of the age-old alcoholic
dilemma; our obsession guarantees that we shall go on
drinking, but our increasing physical sensitivity
guarantees that we shall go insane or die if we do.
When these facts,
coming from the mouths of you gentlemen of science, are
poured by an AA member into the person of another
alcoholic they strike deep - the effect is shattering.
That inflated ego, those elaborate rationalizations by
which our neurotic friend has been trying to erect
self—sufficiency on a foundation of inferiority, begin
to ooze out of him. Sometimes his deflation is like the
collapse of a toy balloon at the approach of a hot
poker. But deflation is just what we AA’s are looking
for. It is our universal experience that unless we can
start deflation, as so self-realization, we get nowhere
at all. The more utterly we can smash the delusion that
the alcoholic can get over alcoholism "on his own," or
that someday he may be able to drink like a gentleman,
the more successful we are bound to be.
In fact, we aim to
produce a crisis, to cause him to "hit bottom," as AA’s
say. Of course you will understand that this is all done
by indirection. We never pronounce sentences, nor do we
tell any alcoholic what he must do. We don’t even tell
him he is an alcoholic. Relating the seriousness of our
own cases, we leave him to draw his own conclusions. But
once he has accepted the fact that he is an alcoholic
and the further fact that he is powerless to recover
unaided, the battle is half won. As the AA’s have it,
"he is hooked." He is caught as if in a psychological
vise.
If the jaws of it do
not grip him tightly enough at first, more drinking will
almost invariably turn up the screw to the point where
he will cry "Enough!" Then, as we say, he is softened
up. This reduces him to a state of complete dependence
on whatever or whoever can stop his drinking. He is in
exactly the same mental fix as the cancer patient who
becomes dependent, abjectly dependent, if you will, on
what you men of science can do for cancer. Better still,
he becomes "sweetly reasonable," truly open-minded, as
only the dying can.
Under these
conditions, accepting the spiritual implications of the
AA program presents no difficulty even to the
sophisticate. About half of the AA members were once
agnostics or atheists. This dispels the notion that we
are only effective with the religiously susceptible. You
remember now the famous remark, "There are no atheists
in the foxholes." So it is with most alcoholics. Bring
them within range of the AA and "blockbusters" will soon
land near enough to start radical changes in outlook,
attitude, and personality.
These are some of the
basic factors which perhaps partly account for such
success as we have had. I wish time permitted me to give
you an intimate glimpse of our life together, of our
meetings, of our social side, of those fast friendships
unlike any we had known before, of our participation by
thousands in the war effort and the armed services,
where so many AA’s are discovering that they can face up
to reality - no longer institutionalized, even within an
AA Group. We have all found that God can be relied upon
both in Alaska and India, that strength can come out of
weakness, that perhaps only those who have tasted the
fruits of reliance upon a higher power can fully
understand the true meaning of personal liberty, freedom
of the human spirit.
Surely, you who are
here this morning must realize how much we A.A.’s are
beholden to you, how much we have borrowed from you, how
much we still depend on you. For you have supplied us
with ammunition which we have used as your lay
assistants - gun pointers for your artillery. I have put
out for inspection our version of the factors which
bring about personality change, our method of analysis,
catharsis, and adjustment. I have tried to show you a
little of our great new compelling interest in life -
this society where men and women understand each other,
where the clamors of self are lost in our great common
objective, where we can learn enough of patience,
tolerance, honesty, humility, and service to subdue our
former masters - insecurity, resentment, and unsatisfied
dreams of power.
But I must not close
without paying tribute to our partner, Religion. Like
Medicine, it is indispensable. At this temple of science
I hope none will take it amiss if I give Religion the
last word:
"God grant us the
serenity to accept the things we cannot change, courage
to change the things we can, and wisdom to know the
difference."
Please address
inquiries and requests for AA literature to The
Alcoholic Foundation, Box 459, Grand Central Annex, New
York 17, New York.
DISCUSSION
Dr. C. Kirby Collier,
Rochester.
Realizing how
ineffectual our efforts in the treatment of the chronic
alcoholic through the usually accepted psychiatric
procedures were was my reason for investigating
Alcoholics Anonymous. With one of their members I was
privileged to attend a meeting in New York and had the
opportunity to discuss their philosophy with Mr. Wilson.
First, I was impressed with the honesty and sincerity of
those members I met, and second, with the broad
socio-religious background and its psychiatric
implications - chiefly man's recognition of self, his
abilities as well as his inefficiencies, and that
intangible power which all mankind recognizes, whether
he acknowledges it or not. Upon my return home, I asked
three chronic alcoholics, all of twenty to twenty—five
years duration, to organize a group, after going over
the situation with them as I understood it. These three
contacted others and held their first meeting in the
small apartment of one. Growing, they approached me as
to a place for meeting. We eliminated the YMCA, Public
Library, church halls, or parish homes for obvious
reasons, and at last advised a room in one of our large
centrally located hotels. This has worked out nicely and
meetings are held each Sunday afternoon and Wednesday
evening. From the original group of three, contacts have
been made with over 500, of whom 60 per cent are active
members, having been free from indulgence in alcohol for
one to two years.
In our city we have
had a Council on Alcohol for about three years. The
group consists of psychiatrists, social workers, and
others, who meet each month for discussion. At two of
these meetings members of AA have spoken, and, as a
result, two members of AA are now members of this
Council. Members of AA are frequently called upon to
address various groups, and it is most interesting to
hear of men who have never spoken in public before being
willing to get up and talk before any group. In
Rochester they have become especially interested in
meeting with youth groups. I might say that I have
attended but few meetings of the Rochester group and
these only at their invitation. I have felt that AA is a
group unto themselves and their best results can be had
under their own guidance, as a result of their
philosophy. Any therapeutic or philosophic procedure
which can prove a recovery rate of 50 to 60 per cent
must merit our consideration. As stated by Tiebout in a
paper read at Detroit, Michigan, before the American
Psychiatric Association in May 1943, "It is highly
imperative for us, as presumably open—minded scientists,
to view wisely and long the efforts of others in our
field of work. We may be wearing bigger blinders than we
know.
Dr. Foster Kennedy,
New York City.
We have heard a truly
moving and eloquent address, moving in its form and in
its facts.
I have no doubt that
a man who has cured himself of the lust for alcohol has
a far greater power for curing alcoholism than a doctor
who has never been afflicted by the same curse. No
matter how sympathetic and patient the doctor may be in
the approach to his patient, the patient is sure either
to feel, or to imagine, condescension to himself, or to
the notion that he is being hectored by one of the minor
prophets.
This organization of
Alcoholics Anonymous calls on two of the greatest
reservoirs of power known to man — religion and that
instinct for association with one's fellows which
Trotter has called the "herd instinct." Religious faith
has been described by Matthew Arnold as a convinced
belief in a power greater than ourselves that makes for
righteousness, and a sense of helpfulness from this can
be acquired through a kind of spiritual conversion which
might well be called a variety of religious experience.
The sick man's
association with those who, having been sick, have
become or are becoming well, is a therapeutic suggestion
of cure and an obliteration of his feelings of being, in
society, a pariah; and this tapping of deep internal
forces is shown by the great growth of this sturdy and
beneficent movement. Furthermore this movement furnishes
an objective of high emotional driving power in making
every cured drunkard a missionary to the sick.
We physicians, I
think, have always had difficulty in finding an
occupation for our convalescent patients of sufficient
emotional driving power to replace the psychic results
of the alcohol that has been withdrawn. These men grow
filled with a holy zeal, and the very zealousness keeps
the missionary steady while the next man is being cured.
I think our
profession must take appreciative cognizance of this
great therapeutic weapon. If we do not do so, we shall
stand convicted of emotional sterility and of having
lost the faith that moves mountains, without which
medicine can do little.
Dr.
Harry M. Tiebout, Greenwich, Connecticut.
My first contact with
AA began five years ago when a patient with whom I had
been working for well over a year came under the
influence of AA and within a relatively short time dried
up and for at least four years has remained completely
dry. At that time I was puzzled and a little indignant
that my best efforts had failed but AA had worked; but I
kept sending patients, and now the situation has
reversed. I get puzzled and a little indignant when AA
doesn't work.
As a psychiatrist, I
have to think about the relationship of my specialty to
AA and I have come to the conclusion that our particular
function can very often lie in preparing the way for the
patient to accept any sort of treatment or outside help.
I now conceive the psychiatrist's job to be the task of
breaking down the inner resistance so that which is
inside will flower, as under the activity of the AA
program.
In this respect I
should like to point out that the same flowering can
take place with patients who are not alcoholics, and I
should like at this time to record my indebtedness to
Mr. Wilson and AA for the understanding which has made
my own therapeutic practice a more intelligent and
meaningful process in so far as my own attitudes is
concerned. I now have more faith in the patient's own
inner resources.
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