Personal Stories From The First Edition
THE SALESMAN
I LEARNED to drink in a workmanlike
manner when the law of the land said I couldn't and what
started out as a young man's fun became a habit which in
its later existence laid me by the heels many a time and
almost finished my career.
'Teen years were uneventful for me. I
was raised on a farm but saw little future in farming. I
was going to be a business man, took a business college
course, acquired a truck and stand in the city market of
a nearby town, and started off. I brought produce from
my folks' place and sold it to city customers and there
were plenty of them with bulging pocketbooks.
Back of me was the normal life of a
farmer's son. My parents were unusually understanding
people. My father was a life-long comrade till the day
of his death. The business theory I had learned in
college was now being practiced and I was equipped
beyond many of my competitors to be materially
successful. Soon I had expanded until I was represented
in all the city markers and also in another city. In
1921 we had the forerunner of the later depression and
my customers disappeared. Successively I had to close my
stands and was finally wiped out altogether. Being a
young man of affairs, I had begun to do a little
business and social drinking and now with time on my
hands, I seemed to do more of it.
Following a year of factory work,
during which time I got married, I got a job with a
grocer as clerk. My grocer-employer was an expert
wine-maker and I had free access to his cellar. The work
was monotonous in the extreme, behind a counter all day
when I had been used to driving around attending to
business, meeting people and building for what was a
great future. I mark, too, as a milestone, the death of
my father, whom I missed greatly.
I kept hitting the wine, with just
occasional use of liquor. Leaving the grocery I went
back into the produce business and out among people,
went back to liquor again and got my first warning to
quit before it got me.
I was anxious to get with a concern
which would give me an opportunity to build up again,
and landed a job with a nationally known biscuit
company. I was assigned to a good business region,
covering several important towns, and almost at once
began to earn real money. In a very short time I was the
star salesman of the company, winning a reputation as a
business-getter. Naturally I drank with my better
customers for on my route I had many stops where that
was good business. But I had things rather well under
control and in the early days on this job I seldom wound
up in my day's work with any visible effects of
drinking.
I had a private brewery at home which
was now producing 15 gallons a week most of which I
drank myself. It is typical of the attitude I had toward
alcohol at that time that, when a fire threatened total
destruction of my home and garage, I rushed to the
cellar and rescued my most precious possessions-a keg of
wine and all the beer I could carry, and got pretty
indignant when my better half suggested that I had
better get some of the needed effects out of the house
before it burned down.
My home-brewing gradually became a
bore and I began to carry home bottles of powerful
bootleg whiskey, starting with half a pint as my daily
after-supper allowance. For a time I kept on the job
spacing my drinks en route and very little of them in
the morning hours. I just couldn't wait until I got home
to drink. In a very short time I became an all-day
drinker.
Chain-store managers and quantity
buyers were both my guests and hosts and every now and
then we had prodigious parties. Finally, in a
re-organization shake-up resulting in new district
managers with a pretty poor territory deal for me, I
gave the company two weeks notice and quit. I had bought
a home but in the year and a half following I had little
income and finally lost that. I became satisfied with
just enough to live on and buy the liquor I wanted. Then
I landed in the hospital when my car was hit by a truck.
My car was ruined entirely. That loss and my injuries
plus the recriminations of my wife sort of sobered me
up. When I got out of the hospital I stayed sober for
six weeks and had made up my mind to quit.
I went back in the business where I
had been a successful salesman, but with another
company. When I started with this concern I talked
things over with my wife and made her some very solemn
promises. I wasn't going to touch another drop of
liquor.
By this tie prohibition was a thing
of the past and saloons and clubs where I was well known
as a good customer and good spender became my patrons. I
rolled up business until I was again a star, but after
the first four months on the new job I began to slip. It
is not unusual in the drinking experience of any man
that after a time of sobriety he comes to the conclusion
that he "can handle it." In no time at all liquor again
became the most important thing in my life and every day
became like another, steady drinking in every saloon and
club en route. I would get to headquarters every night
in a top-heavy condition, just able to maintain
equilibrium. I began to get warnings and was repeatedly
fired and taken on again. My wife's parents died about
this time in unfortunate circumstances. All my troubles
seemed to be piling up on me and liquor was the only
refuge I knew.
Some nights I wouldn't go home at all
and when I did go home I was displeased when my wife had
supper ready and equally angry when she didn't. I didn't
want to eat at all and frequently when I underestimated
my consumption of the amount of liquor I brought home, I
made extra trips back to town to renew the supply. My
morning ration when I started out was five double
whiskies before I could do any business at all. I would
go into a saloon, trembling like a leaf, tired in
appearance and deathly sick, I would down two double
whiskies, fell the glow and become almost immediately
transformed. In half an hour I would be able to navigate
pretty well and start out on my route. My daily reports
became almost illegible and finally, following arrest
for driving while intoxicated and on my job at that, I
got scared and stayed sober for several days. Not long
afterward I was fired for good.
My wife suggested I go to my old home
in the country, which I did. Continued drinking
convinced my wife I was a hopeless case and she entered
suit for divorce. I got another job, but didn't stop
drinking. I kept on working although my physical
condition was such as to have required extensive
hospitalization. For years I hadn't had a peaceful
night's sleep and never knew a clear head in the
morning. I had lost my wife, and had become resigned to
going to bed some night and never waking again.
Every drunkard has one or two friends
who haven't entirely given up hope for him, but I came
to the point where I had none. That is, none but my
Mother, and she, devoted soul, had tried everything with
me. Through her, people came to me and talked, but
nothing they said-some were ministers and others good
church members-helped me a particle. I would agree with
them when they were with me and as fast as they went
away, I'd go after my bottle. Nothing suggested to me
seemed to offer a way out.
I was getting to a place where I
wanted to quit drinking but didn't know how. My mother
heard of a doctor who had been having marked success
with alcoholics. She asked me if I'd like to talk to him
and I agreed to go with her.
I had known, of course, of the
various cures and after we had discussed the matter of
my drinking fairly thoroughly, the doctor suggested that
I go into the local hospital for a short time. I was
very skeptical, even after the doctor hinted there was
more to his plan than medical treatment. He told me of
several men whom I knew who had been relieved and
invited me to meet a few of them who got together every
week. I promised I would be back on deck at their next
meetings but told him I had little faith in any hospital
treatments. Meetings night, I was as good as my word and
met the small group. The doctor was there but somehow I
felt quite outside of the circle. The meeting was
informal, nevertheless I was little impressed. It is
true they did no psalm singing, nor was there any set
ritual, but I just didn't care for anything religious.
If I had thought of God at all in the years of drinking,
it was with a faint idea that when I came to die I would
sort of fix things up with Him.
I say that the meeting did not
impress me. However, I could see men who I had known as
good, hard-working drunkards apparently in their right
minds, but I just couldn't see where I came into the
picture. I went home, stayed sober for a few days, but
was soon back to my regular quota of liquor every day.
Some six months later, after a
terrific binge, in a maudlin and helpless state, I made
my way to the doctor's home. He gave me medical
treatment and had me taken to the home of one of my
relatives. I told him I had come to the point where I
was ready for the remedy, the only remedy. He sent two
of the members to see me. They were both kindly to me,
told me what they had gone through and how they had
overcome their fight with liquor. They made it very
plain that I had to seek God, that I had to state my
case to Him and ask for help. Prayer was something I had
long forgotten. I think my first sincere utterance must
have sounded pretty weak. I didn't experience any sudden
change, and the desire for liquor wasn't taken away
overnight, but I began to enjoy meeting these people and
began to exchange the liquor habit for something that
has helped me in every way. Every morning I read a part
of the Bible and ask God to carry me through the day
safely.
There is another part I want to talk
about-a very important part. I think I would have had
much more difficulty in getting straightened out if I
hadn't been almost immediately put to work. I don't mean
getting back on my job as a salesman. I mean something
that is necessary to my continued happiness. While I was
still shakily trying to rebuild my job of selling, the
doctor sent me to see another alcoholic who was in the
hospital. All the doctor asked me to do was tell my
story. I told it, not any too well perhaps, but as
simply and as earnestly as I knew how.
I've been sober several years, kept
that way by submitting my natural will to the Higher
Power and that is all there is to it. That submission
wasn't just a single act, however. It became a daily
duty; it had to be that. Daily I am renewed in strength
and I have never come to the point where I have wanted
to say, "Thanks, God, I think I can paddle my own canoe
now," for which I am thankful.
I have been reunited with my wife,
making good in business, and paying off debts as I am
able. I wish I could find words to tell my story more
graphically. My former friends and employers are amazed
and see in me a living proof that the remedy I have used
really works. I have been fortunate to be surrounded
with friends ever ready to help, but I firmly believe
any man can get the same result if he will sincerely
work at it God's way.
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