Personal Stories From The First Edition
THE SEVEN MONTH SLIP
AT FOURTEEN years of age, when I
should have been at home under the supervision of my
parents, I was in the United States army serving a one
year enlistment. I found myself with a bunch of men none
too good for a fourteen year old kid who passed easily
for eighteen. I transferred my hero-worshipping to these
men of the world. I suppose the worst damage done in
that year in the army barracks was the development of an
almost unconscious admiration for their apparently jolly
sort of living.
Once out of uniform I went to Mexico
where I worked for an oil company. Here I learned to
take on a good cargo of beer and hold it. Later I rode
the range in the Texas cow country and often went to
town with the boys to "whoop it up on payday." By the
time I returned to my home in the middle west I had
learned several patterns of living, to say nothing of a
cock-sure attitude that I needed no advice from anyone.
The next ten years are sketchy.
During this time I married and established my own home
and everything was lovely for a time. Soon I was having
a good time getting around the law in speakeasies. Oh
yes, I outsmarted our national laws but I was not quite
successful in evading the old moral law.
I was working for a large industrial
concern and had been promoted to a supervisional job. In
spite of big parties, I was for three or four years able
to be on the job the next morning. Then gradually the
hangovers became more persistent and I found myself not
only needing a few shots of liquor before I could go to
work at all, but finally found it advisable to stay at
home and sober up by the taper-off method. My bosses
tried to give me some good advice. When that didn't help
they tried more drastic measures, laying me off without
pay. They covered up my too frequent absences many times
in order to keep them from the attention of the higher
officials in the company.
My attitude was that I could handle
my liquor whenever I wanted to go about it seriously,
and I considered my absences no worse than those of
other employees and officials who were getting away with
murder in their drinking.
One does not have to use his
imagination much to realize that this sort of drinking
is hard on the matrimonial relationship. After proving
myself neither faithful nor capable of being temperate,
my wife left me and obtained a judicial separation. This
gave me a really good excuse to get drunk.
In the years 1933 and 1934 I was
fired several times, but always got my job back on my
promises to do better. On the last occasion I was
reduced to the labor gang on the plant. I made a
terrific effort to stay sober and prove myself capable
of better things. I succeeded pretty well and one day I
was called into the production chief's office and told I
had met with the approval of the executive department
and to be ready to start on a better job.
This good news seemed to justify a
mild celebration with a few beers. Exactly four days
later I reported for work only to find that they too
knew about the "mild" celebration and that they decided
to check me out altogether. After a time I went back and
was assigned to one of the hardest jobs in the factory.
I was in bad shape physically and after six months of
this, I quit, going on a drunk with my last pay check.
Then I began to find that the friends
with whom I had been drinking for some time seemed to
disappear. This made me resentful and I found myself
many times feeling that everybody was against me.
Bootleg joints became my hangouts. I sold my books, car,
and even clothing in order to buy a few drinks.
I am certain that my family kept me
from gravitating to flophouses and gutters. I am
eternally thankful to them that they never threw me out
or refused me help when I was drinking. Of course, I
didn't appreciate their kindness then, and I began to
stay away from home on protracted drinking spells.
Somehow my family heard of two men in
town who had found a way to quit drinking. They
suggested that I contact these men but I retorted "If I
can't handle my liquor with my own will power then I had
better jump over the viaduct."
Another of my usual drinking spells
came on. I drank for about ten days with no food except
coffee before I was sick enough to start the battle back
to sobriety with the accompanying shakes, night sweats,
jittery nerves, and horrible dreams. This time I felt
that I really needed some help. I told my mother she
could call the doctor who was the center of the little
group of former drinkers. She did.
I allowed myself to be taken to a
hospital where I took several days for my head to clear
and my nerves to settle. Then, one day I had a couple of
visitors, one man from New York and the other a local
attorney. During our conversation I learned that they
had been as bad as myself in this drinking, and that
they had found relief and had been able to make a
come-back. Later they went into more detail and put it
to me very straight that I'd have to give over my
desires and attitudes to a power higher than myself
which would give me new desires and attitudes.
Here was religion put to me in a
different way and presented by three past-masters in
liquor guzzling. On the strength of their stories I
decided to give it a try. And it worked, as long as I
allowed it to do so.
After a year of learning new ways of
living, new attitudes and desires, I became
self-confident and then careless. I suppose you would
say I got to feeling too sure of myself and Zowie! First
it was beer on Saturday nights and then it was a fine
drunk. I knew exactly what I had done to bring myself to
this old grief. I had tried to handle my life on the
strength of my own ideas and plans instead of looking to
God for the inspiration and the strength.
But I didn't do anything about it. I
thought "to hell with everybody. I'm going to do as I
please." So I floundered around for seven months
refusing help from any quarter. But one day I
volunteered to take another drunk on a trip to sober him
up. When we got back to town we were both drunk and went
to a hotel to sober up. Then I began to reason the thing
out. I had been a sober, happy man for a year, living
decently and trying to follow the will of God. Now I was
unshaven, unkept, ill-looking, bleary-eyed. I decided
then and there and went back to my friends who offered
me help and who never lectured me on my seven month
failure.
But that was a long time ago. I don't
say now that I can do anything. I only know that as long
as I seek God's help to the best of my ability, just so
long will liquor never bother me.
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