A - Few people know that the first taproot of A.A. hit paydirt some thirty years ago in a physicians office. Dr. Carl Jung, that great pioneer in psychiatry was taking to an alcoholic patient. This is in effect what happened:
The
patient, a prominent American businessman, had gone the typical
alcoholic route. He had exhausted the possibilities of medicine and
psychiatry in the United States and had then come to Dr. Jung as to a
court of last resort. Carl Jung had treated him for a year and the
patient, whom we shall call Mr. R., felt confident that the hidden
springs underneath his compulsion to drink had been discovered and
removed. Nevertheless, he found himself intoxicated within a short
time after leaving Dr. Jung's care.
Now
he was back, in a state of black despair. He asked Dr. Jung what the
score was, and he got it. In substance, Dr. Jung said, "For some
time after you came here, I continued to believe that you might be
one of those rare cases who could make a recovery. But I must now
frankly admit that I have never seen a single case recover through
the psychiatric art where the neurosis is so severe as yours.
Medicine has done all that it can for you, and that's where you
stand."
Mr.
R.'s depression deepened. He asked, "Is there no exception, is
this really the end of the line for me?"
"Well,"
replied the doctor, "there are some exceptions, a very few. Here
and there, once in a while, alcoholics have had what are called vital
spiritual experiences. They appear to be in the nature of huge
emotional displacements and rearrangements. Ideas, emotions and
attitudes which were once the guiding forces of these men are
suddenly cast to one side, and a completely new set of conceptions
and motives begin to dominate them. In fact, I have been trying to
produce some emotional rearrangement within you. With many types of
neurotics, the methods which I employ are successful, but I have
never been successful with an alcoholic of your description."
"But,"
protested the patient, "I'm a religious man, and I still have
faith."
To
this Dr. Jung replied, "Ordinary religious faith isn't enough.
What I'm talking about is a transforming experience, a conversion
experience, if you like. I can only recommend that you place yourself
in the religious atmosphere of your own choice, that you recognize
your own hopelessness, and that you cast yourself upon whatever God
you think there is. The lightening of the transforming experience may
then strike you. This you must try -- it is your only way out."
So spoke the great and humble physician.
For
the A. A -to-be, this was a ten strike. Science had pronounced Mr. R.
virtually hopeless. Dr. Jung's words had struck him at great depth,
producing an immense deflation of his ego. Deflation at depth is
today a cornerstone principle of A.A. There in Dr. Jung's office it
was first employed on our behalf.
The
patient, Mr. R., chose the Oxford Groups of that day as his religious
association and atmosphere. Terribly chastened and almost helpless,
he began to be active with them. To his intense joy and astonishment,
the obsession to drink presently left him.
Returning
to America, Mr. R. came upon an old school friend of mine, a chronic
alcoholic. This friend -- whom we shall call Ebby -- was about to be
committed to a State Hospital. At this juncture another vital
ingredient was added to the synthesis. Mr. R., the alcoholic, began
talking to Ebby, also an alcoholic and a kindred sufferer. This made
for identification at depth, a second cardinal principle. Over this
bridge of identification, Mr. R. passed Dr. Jung's verdict of how
hopeless, medically and psychiatrically, most alcoholics were. He
then introduced Ebby to the Oxford Groups where my friend promptly
sobered up. (N.Y. City Med. Soc. Alcsm., April 28, 1958)
Bill
W
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