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Bill's Wife Remembers When He and She and the First
A.A.'s Were Very Young
Copyright ©
AA Grapevine, Inc, Christmas Issue, 1944
As the wife of an early A.A., some of our experiences
and my reactions to my husband’s changed life may be
interesting to other wives. Bill was an alcoholic, I
believe, from the first drink he ever took, just a few
months before our marriage. From then on, for seventeen
years, I did everything I could think of to keep him
away from liquor.
I will tell a little of our life before A.A. to help
explain some of my later emotions. Bill and I had no
children, so I soon felt that my job in life was to help
Bill straighten himself out. As time went on, he
earnestly tried to stop drinking. He was always very
remorseful and perplexed the mornings-after. We would
then resolve to lick this liquor situation together,
launching off on some new tack.
As his drinking got worse, all decision and
responsibility had to be taken by me. It was lucky that
we were companionable, for gradually as our social
contacts were broken we were thrust back on each other
for company. In order to get away from alcohol over the
week ends, I used to engineer some sort of outing, as we
both loved the outdoors. If our pocketbook was flat, we
might take the subway to the Dyckman Street ferry and
hike along the Palisades to some scenic spot where we
would nibble our sandwiches and gaze at the view. Or we
might ferry to Staten Island and walk there; perhaps
broiling a steak over a campfire. We have hired a
rowboat at Yonkers and, using a bath towel as a sail,
floated up the Hudson, to a spit of land near Nyack,
were we camped and tried to sleep. We once went so far
to get away from alcohol that we both gave up our jobs
and took a whole year off. This we spent motorcycling
and camping over half the United States.
Theses trips, although good for Bill’s health, did
nothing towards his permanent sobriety. In fact, his
alcoholism grew steadily more serious. He lost job after
job until I became entirely hopeless about him.
And then suddenly and finally Bill straightened out
through the help of an old friend. At once I was
convinced of his complete change and was of course
extremely happy. Bill began to go to religious meetings
and to work feverishly with alcoholics. I would go to
meetings too and would try to share his newfound
enthusiasms. He always had some drunk in tow and would
work all night or get up in the middle of the night to
go to the suburbs if one called him. We had drunks all
over the house; sometimes as many as five lived there at
one time.
One drunk committed suicide in the house after having
sold about 700 dollars worth of our clothes and luggage.
Another slid down the coal chute from the street to the
cellar when we refused him the front door. Two others
took to fighting, and one chased the other all around
the house with a carving knife. The intended victim was
saved by a third drunk, who delivered the knife-minding
one a knockout blow. An alcoholic who was living in the
basement was invited up for a pancake breakfast. After
eating his share, he suddenly put on his hat and started
out the door remarking that he was going to Childs for
PLENTY of pancakes.
Bill had found himself a job about this time; and it
used to take him away from home a great deal and I was
left with one or more alcoholics to look after. Once one
of these boys lay in the vestibule all night and
screamed invectives at me because I would not let him
in. He was so loud the passers-by all stopped, looked
and listened. Another time it was 4 a.m. before I
succeeded in towing a drunk home. He was anxious to be
at his job the next morning and we had gone out around
midnight to look for a doctor, having been unable to get
one to come to the house at that hour. I helped his
shaky steps up and down stoops, lit his cigarettes for
him and finally, when we could not rouse a doctor, held
a drink to his lips in a bar. When I asked him how he
then felt he said, “Well, a bird can’t fly on one wing.”
After a few more drinks I managed to get him home, but
he did not get to his job the next morning. I was once
suddenly taken sick, and when my sister arrived to nurse
me she found five men milling around in the living room,
one of them muttering, “One woman can look after five
drunks but five drunks cannot look after one woman.”
Now to describe my reactions to it all. When Bill first
sobered up I was terribly happy but soon, without my
realizing it, I began to resent the fact that Bill and I
never spent any time together any more. I stayed at home
while he went off somewhere scouting up new drunks or
working with old ones. My life’s job of sobering up Bill
with all its former responsibilities was suddenly taken
away from me. I had not yet found anything to fill the
void. And then there was the feeling of being on the
outside of a very tight little clique of alcoholics into
which no mere wife could possibly enter. I did not
understand what was going on within myself until one
Sunday, Bill asked me to go with him to a meeting. To my
own surprise as well as his I burst forth with, “Damn
all your meeting,” and threw my shoe at him as hard as I
could.
This bad display of temper woke me up. I realized that I
had been wallowing in self pity; that Bill’s change was
simply miraculous; that his feverish activity with
alcoholics was absolutely necessary to his sobriety; and
that if I did not want to be left way behind I had
better jump on the bandwagon, too!
Bill’s wife, Lois W.
Copyright © The A.A.
Grapevine, Inc., Christmas Issue, 1944
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