(Transcribers note: The following address was delivered by Bill W. at Guest House, a treatment center for alcoholic priests in Lake Orion, Michigan, a few years before his death, possibly in 1968 or 1969. Where words are unintelligible, best guesses appear in brackets)
Well,
I like the informal discussion type of approach. It seemed to me that
on an occasion like this questions have something of infinitely more
value than a lecture or a story. But Ripp* suggested that I make some
remarks here tonight, and I'm only too glad to do that.
(*Transcriber's
note: probably refers to Austin Ripley, who founded Guest House in
1956.)
And
coming down on the plane, I got speculating with myself about the
early days of AA and about the meaning of them in terms of the grace
of God. I read somewhere that if a grain of wheat, which has been
stored for centuries in, a dry place is exposed to the right soil and
the right climate and to enough light from above it will manifest
life and it will unfold and it will grow. But this presupposes the
right soil, the right climate and, above all, enough light.
Well,
I think it's that way with AA. I remember, years back, when we first
began to get publicity, and the first very large occasion was a
feature piece done in the Saturday Evening Post which all at once
produced us about six thousand members. This was in '41, and by then
a number of medics had become close friends, some of them
psychiatrists. And these fellows allowed their names to be used (a
rather audacious step in those days, I assure you) their names were
used in the Post article.
I
make this point because, when later asked to testify on another
occasion, they refused to do it, and these were the circumstances:
the first gal that got sober in AA is one known to many of you as
Marty, still very much a going concern in the educational field.
Marty was a most difficult case. God knows we're all complex, but
Marty was really a champ. And she had been under the care of a Dr.
Foster Kennedy, a man of very wide repute in that time, worldwide
renown, a neurologist. And he watched Marty as she was planted in the
new soil. He watched her receive this light.
Well,
he was tremendously impressed. He came to some meetings and soon he
said to me, "Bill, would it be possible to have two or three of
the psychiatrists in institutions who have seen recoveries of very
grim cases, people that you say are friends of yours and who have
testified for you in the Post piece, couldn't we get a group of this
sort to come to the Academy of Medicine and explain what hey have
seen?" Well, we thought this was just great, because in those
days there were few friends, indeed. So shoring by these people, by
reason of Dr. Kennedy, well, what could be better? So, one by one, we
went to them, and we
said
"would they come to the Academy" and we supposed they
would. After all, some of the Kennedy glory could brush off, and, you
know, they were friends anyhow, and they'd proved it, so why not? And
not a one would do it!
And,
when pressed for their reasons for not doing it, each one of them
separately said the same thing. In effect, each said, "Look,
Bill. You folks have added up in one column more of the resources
which have been separately applied to alcoholics than anyone else.
For example: you have this kinship in suffering; you have
possibilities of communication that others don't have; you have a
crude form of self-examination or analysis and of catharsis; you have
a great new outgoing interest; you reduce guilt by restitution and
you have this great compelling interest in helping others.
"And
then there is the religious factor. And then there is this factor of
the hopelessness, so far as the resources of the individual are
concerned, of this malady. Now this is a formidable list of forces,
but we still can't come to the Academy."
"Well,
why not?"
"Well,"
said they, "we see in AA, sometimes in weeks, in a few months,
shifts in motivation that even the sums of these forces couldn't
begin to account for, because we all too well understand the
difficulties of this subtle compulsion. And the sum of them won't add
up to the speed of these transformations in these very grim cases.
So, for us, there is an unknown factor at work in AA. And, among
ourselves, being scientists we call it the "X" factor. We
believe you people call it the grace of God. And who shall go to the
Academy to explain the grace of God to that body? No one can. And we
simply won't."
So,
I think it is just as futile as ever for any of us to presume to
explain this matter of grace around which our entire galaxy of
principles and activities gathers and clusters. We can't do that, but
we can examine this matter of the soil and this matter of climate and
this matter of illumination [for], which, for some reason or other,
we have made ourselves ready. Clearly, God's grace is in and through
all.
So,
it might be said, "Why haven't alcoholics sobered many times
more often through grace than they have? It's available. Why hasn't
religion been more successful, numerically at least? Why hasn't
medicine been more successful? How is it that laymen seem to be
doing this thing?" So I would like to tell a story depicting, at
least as it seems to me, what the soil is and what the climate is and
what the light is, these things of which we have been placed in such
treasured possession.
There
is no doubt that in an ordinary sense of time AA began in the office
of a psychiatrist, and we might be mindful of this when we criticize
people in this profession. Of course, for most of us, the origin is
two thousand years old, for some of us perhaps older. But I am
speaking of the situation in an immediate sense: how was it
precipitated? This too is a matter of conjecture, but here's how it
seems to me.
There
was a certain businessman of great attainment. He's cut down by the
grog, he runs the gamut of treatments in this country, and this would
be in the year about 1932 when he was just about at the end of his
tether. So, he went abroad and became a patient of Dr. Carl Jung.
And,
as all of you know, Jung was one of the founding fathers of the "art"
(I prefer that instead of "science") of psychiatry. And
Jung, Adler, Freud were the three founding fathers, but, of these,
only Jung seemed to think that man is something more than two
dollar's worth of chemicals, a bundle of instincts and an uncertain
intellect. Jung thought that man had something beyond this, that man
has soul.
So
our traveler had found a truly great human being, great, indeed, as
events [spell or fell] out. He placed himself under that dear man's
tutelage for a whole year, becoming more and more confident that the
hidden springs of this baleful compulsion to drink were being
understood and removed and cast away. He began to feel more free.
There was no drinking while he was under treatment. At the end of a
year, he left Carl Jung and in one month he was tight. And the bender
was terrific.
So,
in infinite despair, he came back to Carl Jung and said, "Is
there anything now for me? You were my court of last resort."
And this great man said, "Roland, I thought for a time after you
first came that you might be one of those rare cases in which my art
has been helpful. Otherwise I should not have encouraged you to stay.
But, alas, I am obliged to conclude that you are not, and that there
is nothing that I have to offer you. My art has failed you."
I
need not say that, coming from a man of his eminence, this was a
statement of beautiful humility. And the whole destiny of AA, you and
me and all of us, has since hung on that sentence.
So
then Hazard found that agony was added to despair, and he cried out,
"But is there nothing else?" And this was the answer he
got: "Roland, time out of mind, alcoholics have recovered here
and there, now and then, through religious experiences, spiritual
experiences let us say, or very truly through conversion (a naughty
word for us AA’s; we don't use it for obvious reasons).
"But,"
said the doctor," this benign lighting seldom strikes, and no
one can say where or when it will, or for the resuscitation of whom.
So I simply would advise you to place yourself in a religious
atmosphere, remembering the hopelessness of your doing anything about
it on your own remaining resources alone, and cooperating with your
associates and casting yourself upon whatever God there may be."
So
Roland aligned himself with the Oxford groups of that time, a rather
evangelical
movement, rather aggressive (very easy it is to criticize). It was
nondenominational, however, and it used simple common denominators of
religions, simple moral principles. It called upon its members to
admit that they could not solve the life problem on their own. It
called upon them for self-examination. It called upon them for
restitution. It called upon them for a kind of giving in the
Franciscan manner, the kind of giving that demands no return in
money, power, prestige and the like, the losing of one's self in the
lives of others. Such was the nature of the crowd with which he
became associated.
Unaccountably,
to him, the obsession to drink left. And for some years he had no
more trouble. At the time in the groups there were a few alcoholics
sober. There is one now at Ann Arbor that goes back to that time, an
old friend who never became an AA. Sobered up in the Oxford Groups.
So
Roland returned to America. And the groups here in those days were
headed by an Episcopal clergyman called Sam Shoemaker. And in his
congregation and among the groups were two or three other alcoholics
that, for the nonce, were staying dry.
And
Hazard had a summer place near Bennington, Vermont. And these
friends, one of them son of a local judge and himself an alcoholic,
described the plight of a boy who was a school-time chum of mine,
Ebby Thatcher. And Ebby had been deteriorating horribly. There were
summer folks in the town above Manchester. Ebby had run his car into
the side of the farmer's house, pushed the wall of the kitchen in,
the door could still be opened to the car, Ebby stuck his head out
and, to the poor woman cowering in the corner who hadn't been hit, he
said, "Hey, what about a cup of coffee?"
Well,
the town fathers had had it. They were going to commit Ebby for
alcoholic insanity, so the judge's son and Hazard picked up the man
who was to become my sponsor.
Meanwhile,
I had gone the route with which you're all familiar. I had sobered up
the summer before, scared to death by the verdict of my doctor, Dr.
Silkworth, the one we have since named "the little doctor who
loved drunks," and must have then because in his lifetime he
dealt with some forty thousand of them as a hack doctor in a drying
out place.
And
he had an idea that this thing was an illness having several
components: a spiritual illness, a moral illness and also a physical
illness. And, perhaps oversimplifying, he was apt to describe an
alcoholic as a person condemned by a compulsion to drink against his
own interests, to drink in spite of his perfect willingness to stop,
and that this drinking was coupled to an increasing sensitivity of
the body which, if the drinking went on, guaranteed his insanity and,
one day, his death. So this sort of a sentence had been spoken to
Lois at long last by my doctor, Dr. Silkworth. So you see the soil
was under preparation. We were beginning to learn a little more about
climate. Ebby and my other friend Roland had received a considerable
amount of light.
Well,
I got drunk in about two months, even in spite of this sentence that
I would have to be locked up or go nuts, maybe within a year. And
then my friend Ebby, who had been brought to New York from Vermont,
who had unaccountably sobered up for the time being in the Oxford
Groups, came to visit me for I too was in great despair.
Despair
is the primary ingredient, indeed, of this soil. In the medical
jargon
we might call it "deflation at depth." Some deflation, huh?
So, Ebby came to see me. And he pitched at me this list of moral (you
might say) clichés. Nothing so new about that. I was in favor of
honesty. I was in favor of helping other people.
I
was in favor of practically everything he had to say except one
thing: I was not in favor of God, for I had received one of these
magnificent modeled modern schillings, scientific schooling, that
assured that by a series of stages, picking up increments from
somewhere as they went along, I could be traced back to a single
piece of ooze in prehistoric seas. And this was my faith. And science
was my god.
So
along comes Ebby, and along comes Jung, for whom I had respect, and
here was my doctor: Science can't do it; medicine can't do it;
psychology can't do it. Religion? Sometimes. That was his story. But
how could I buy religion? So I felt trapped. In other words, I was
gripped in the trap which we every day construct for the drunk who
approaches us saying, "Well, I think the group life must be
great. Helping other people? I'm for it. But I couldn't get the
spiritual angle (as our jargon has it)."
Now,
as you know, this gentleman is the newcomer, like me, is being caught
in this trap. When you and I talk to another alcoholic, and we
identify ourselves as having been denizens of this strange world,
and, having emerged, and we describe this malady in the terms of our
god, Science, and THAT God pronounces the sentence of hopelessness
upon us, the sentence, we are deflated at depth. And then we learn
that now we have accepted our personal hopelessness, there still
isn't any hope because we cannot go for the God business.
And
this was the awful dilemma into which I was cast by my friend Ebby,
bringing,
on the one side, all of this bad news, but on the other side, the
spectacle of his own release, and that was the word to use. He didn't
say he was on the water-wagon; the obsession had just left him as
soon as he became willing to try on the basis of these principles,
and, indeed, as he became willing to appeal to whatever God there
might be. And this was reducing the theological requirements an awful
lot.
Well,
I went on drinking about three weeks, and in no waking hour would I
forget the face of my friend, a spectacle of release as I looked out
through a haze of gin into his face, as he pitched this "synthesis"
at me. So I thought, "well, I better go up to the hospital and
get sobered up. A conversion experience is not for me: I'm an
obstinate Vermonter.
Besides,
I can't buy it. People say to me, 'Have faith.' And I believe I'd
have faith if I could have it but I can't. But anyhow, I'll go and
get dried up.
So
I went to the hospital. I must have had a little optimism, because I
came in with a bag of beer (I had tried to share it on the subway
up). I was waving a bottle.
Dear
little Dr. Silkworth came out and I yelled at him, "This time,
Doc, I got it!"
He
said, "I'm afraid you have, Bill. You better get upstairs and go
to bed." And he looked very sad, for he loved me. So I went
upstairs, and went to bed. I was there while I entered the D.T.’s.
So,
in about three days, I was all in the clear. But, the more sober I
got, the more awful the despair, the depression. So, I think it was
the morning of the third or the fourth day that my friend Ebby showed
up in the doorway, and my feeling was ambivalent at once.
So
I said, "Well, this is the time he's going to pour on the
evangelism." And on the other hand I was saying, "Well, he
should be looking for a job. Why is he up here at eleven o'clock in
the morning to see me? He does practice what he preaches."
So,
Ebby knew my prejudices, and so he waited for me to ask him again for
that neat little formula through which he had achieved release. And
dutifully he went through it: you got honest with yourself, with
another person in confidence; you made restitution; you helped
others; and you prayed to God as you understood Him (I think he might
have even used that phrase).
And
without much more ado, he was gone. No pressure. And again I couldn't
have truck with the God business. And again the despair deepened
until the last of this prideful obstinacy momentarily was apparently
crushed out. And then, like a child crying out in the dark, I said,
"If there is a Father, if the is a God, will he show himself?"
And
the place lit up in a great glare, a wondrous white light. Then I
began to have images, in the mind's eyes, so to speak, and one came
in which I seemed to see myself standing on a mountain and a great
clean wind was blowing, and this blowing at first went around and
then it seemed to go through me. And then the ecstasy redoubled and I
found myself exclaiming, "I am a free man! So THIS is the God of
the preachers!"
And
little by little the ecstasy subsided and I found myself in a new
world of consciousness. And one of the early reflections in this
world of great peace which stole over me was that all is well with
God. I am a part of His cosmos at last. Even evil in His hands can be
transmuted into good.
So
I had been deflates at depth by a fellow sufferer who used the
scientific verdict to deflate me, who used his ability to communicate
to me through our kinship of common suffering, and who made the
example of a person who practiced what he preached. So, then, for me,
here indeed was the soil, here was the climate, and, God knows, the
light was great.
Now,
I venture this assertion [that every member] of AA has a spiritual
awakening or experience of exactly this character. Certainly it is
not for me to dicker with theologians, but let me say I prefer to
think that there is no essential difference between what happened to
me and what happens to each sound AA, excepting the time element.
Going
back to those psychiatrists who said, "We can't understand this
tremendous shift in motivation despite all your resources."
Well, in my case the shifts ...[tape paused]. but the fruits have
been the same. And one of the most terrible compulsions and
obsessions known has been expelled from us almost wholesale. It's
true, this happy synthesis of medicine, religion and our own
experience in suffering, in recovery and sharing the grace of this,
one with the next. So, fellas, there's my speech.
Q:
Bill, is that light relative in the sense of illumination? It must
be. Not every one of us has gone through the experience of ecstasy or
any light shining or ...
OK.
Maybe... You know, this is a curbstone opinion, but here's how I look
at it. You go to AA meetings and somebody gets up, and this happens
time after time, and he says, "Now, folks, I ain't got the
spiritual angle. Yet. I'm making the group my Higher Power. They're
sober and I wasn't. So I got a Higher Power, I ain't got the
spiritual angle the way you fella’s did. And as for Bill's thing,
well, he looks sane in other respects, but, you know.."
Now,
this guy will get up there and tell a story of losing this compulsion
and of its being cleared out of him and his being re-motivated in
many other ways, just like those psychiatrists said, in a matter of
months, or of six months or a year.
Now
just take one of those fellows and try to imagine all of those shifts
in motivation taking place within six months, or within six minutes
instead of six months. I think, had this happened to that fellow, he
too could have had ecstasy.
So
I think it's a time element, and I personally see no great advantage
in these tremendous experiences, save in my case only one. It did
give me an instant conviction of the presence of God which has never
left me from that moment, in spite of the worst I can do (and it's
often been damned bad), and no matter what the pressure. And I feel
that that extra dividend may have made the difference whether I would
have persisted with AA in the early years or not.
Actually,
it has some liabilities, and I've seen it in others who have had
these experiences in AA, and there are quite a lot. And this is the
penance, and I think you theologians give us some excuse for it too,
of beginning to think that, because we have these tremendous
illuminations, that WE are something special.
So,
you begin to develop a kind of a paranoia alongside of a perfectly
valid experience. And this is just what happened to me. I damned near
botched up the whole works by coming out of this working furiously
with drunks and, before anybody had been sobered up, I got so far off
base as to loudly declare one time to an audience by no means
spellbound that I was going to sober up all the god damned drunks in
the world! Now THAT is pure paranoia if you ever...
So,
don't long for the illumination. I think you're apt to have the
experience that's appropriate
Q:
Well, I'm not longing for it. I...
Well,
some people do. You know: "Oh, my God! If I could only have one
like Bill's!" Now, actually, this may be said very sincerely
because this may be a guy who's slipping around, but he may be
slipping around on account of the fact that he's a little schizy and
needs some of them vitamin B3s, so now we'll put on Hawkins.
Moderator:
Well, you got it from the horse's mouth, fellas. Very inspiring and
illuminating, the things that Bill [tells] of how this all began. Now
you've gone with him you know what the purpose of their meeting is
here: is on niacin. And tomorrow we'll have Dr. Hoffer and Dr. Osborn
and a couple of other people. But one of the most active in the field
with some startling developments is Dr. Dave Hawkins in New York, and
I'll read you a little bit of his background: both his Bachelor of
Science degree and medical degree were received from Marquette
University. He interned in Columbia Hospital in Milwaukee. He then
graduated from [end of tape] Transcriber's note: According to "Pass
It On," Dr. Humphry Osmond (not Osborn) and Abram Hoffer were
English psychiatrists working in a mental hospital in Saskatoon,
Saskatchewan, principally with alcoholics and schizophrenics.
It
was they who introduced Bill to LSD. Later, they gained some success
in treating alcoholics by administering vitamin B3, also known as
niacin. Bill felt strongly that this was the key to the "allergy
of the body" that Dr. Silkworth had suspected, and spent the
remaining years of his life actively promoting niacin therapy (much
to the consternation of the AA fellowship).
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.