By Walter L.
In 1960, at the Long
Beach, California Convention of Alcoholics Anonymous, Bill Wilson
wrote this dedication in an AA book that he gave to Ebby Thacher.
"Dear Ebby,
No day passes that I do
not remember that you brought me the message that saved me - and only
God knows how many more.
In affection, Bill"
It was Ebby who found
relief from his alcoholism in the simple spiritual practices of the
Oxford Group which was an attempt to return to First Century
Christianity - before it was complicated and distorted by religious
doctrines, dogma and opinions. The program offered by Ebby to Bill
involved taking a personal moral inventory, admitting to another
person the wrongs we had done, making things right by amends and
restitution, and a genuine effort to be of real service to others. In
order to obtain the power to overcome these problems, Ebby had been
encouraged to call on God, as he understood God, for help.
Bill was deeply
impressed by Ebby's words, but was even more affected by Ebby's
example of action. Here was someone who drank like Bill drank - and
yet Ebby was sober, due to a simple religious idea and a practical
program of action. The results were an inexplicably different person,
fresh-skinned, glowing face, with a different look in his eyes. A
miracle sat directly across the kitchen table from Bill. Ebby was not
some "do-gooder" who had read something in a book. Here was
a hopeless alcoholic who had been completely defeated by John
Barleycorn, and yet, had in effect, been raised from the dead. It was
a message of hope for an alcoholic - that God would do for us what we
could not do for ourselves.
Bill continued to drink
in a more restrained way for a short while, and then was admitted to
Towns Hospital on December 11, 1934. Ebby visited him there on
December 14th and essentially helped Bill take what would become
Steps Four, Five, Six, Seven and Eight.
But that "boost"
from Ebby's visit wore off and that night, Bill's feeling of
hopelessness deepened and a terrifying darkness yawned in the abyss.
As the last trace of self-will was crushed, Bill said to himself,
with neither faith nor hope, "I'll do anything, anything at all!
If there be a God, let Him show Himself!"
The Conference approved
biography, Pass It On, quotes Bill as describing this experience:
"What happened
next was electric. Suddenly, my room blazed with an indescribably
white light. I was seized with an ecstasy beyond description. Every
joy I had known was pale by comparison. The light, the ecstasy - I
was conscious of nothing else for a time.
Then, seen in the
mind's eye, there was a mountain. I stood upon its summit, where a
great wind blew. A wind, not of air, but of spirit. In great, clean
strength, it blew right through me. Then came the blazing thought,
"You are a free man." I know not at all how long I remained
in this state, but finally the light and the ecstasy subsided. I
again saw the wall of my room. As I became more quiet, a great peace
stole over me, and this was accompanied by a sensation difficult to
describe. I became acutely conscious of a Presence, which seemed like
a veritable sea of living spirit. I lay on the shores of a new
world."
Ebby had carried the
message of the Oxford Group to Bill with great care and
dedication---that recovery from alcoholism was possible using
spiritual principles, but only if it was combined with practical
actions. Bill Wilson never took another drink, and left Towns
Hospital to dedicate the rest of his life to carrying the message to
other alcoholics.
Ebby, however, took a
different path, one that caused him to have a series of relapses. The
man whom Bill Wilson called his sponsor could not stay sober himself,
and became an embarrassment. There were periods of sobriety, some
long, some short, but eventually Ebby would, "fall off the
wagon," as he called it.
More revealingly, Ebby
referred to his periods of sobriety as, "being on the wagon."
For an AA to regularly use this sort of language is an indication
that the commitment to sobriety is temporary in nature. If there is
an "on the wagon" then there is an "off the wagon"
too. And that was the on/off cycle of Ebby's drinking.
Ebby was born on April
29, 1896, into a prominent and well-to-do family in Albany, New York,
with roots going back before the American Revolution. His grandfather
started a railroad wheel manufacturing business in 1852 and became
the main supplier of wheels for the New York Central Railroad, as
well as Mayor of Albany. Two other members of Ebby's family were also
mayors of Albany, including his older brother, "Jack." One
of New York State's most beautiful parks, located on the Helderberg
escarpment southwest of Albany, was donated by the widow of Ebby's
uncle, John Boyd Thacher and is named after him.
Ebby's full name was
Edwin Throckmorton Thacher and he can be said to have arrived in the
world with "a silver spoon in his mouth." It is possible
that because of his upper-class origins, with servants waiting on him
and the respect brought by his family name, Ebby developed the
attitude that life should always be easy for him. He was 'entitled',
it seems.
Lois Wilson shared her
insights into Ebby in her biography, Lois Remembers, and stated that
while Bill wanted sobriety with his whole soul, Ebby appeared to want
just enough sobriety to stay out of trouble. In addition, Lois said,
"Beyond that crucial visit with Bill, Ebby seemed to do very
little about helping others. He never appeared really a member of AA.
After his first slip, many harmful thoughts seemed to take possession
of him. He appeared jealous of Bill and critical, even when sober, of
both the Oxford Group and AA." Lois felt that it was important
that AA's know why Ebby was not considered the founder of AA. Ebby
carried the message to Bill, but he never followed it up with the
years of devoted action needed to develop the AA program.
Despite his failure to
follow through after his vital visit with Bill, Ebby still seemed to
feel he was not recognized adequately for his contribution to the
start of AA. His employer for many years in Texas said that Ebby,
"kind of thought the world owed him a living, to a certain
extent. He thought he never got the recognition that he should. That
was stuck in his craw for years." Another AA who had known Ebby
in Texas said that, "Ebby held a deep resentment for Bill, Dr.
Bob, and others, because he felt he was more the founder of what was
to become AA than anyone else". In the author's opinion, this
resentment may be the reason for his repeated "slips" in
the program.
Ebby also had the idea
that he needed the right woman and an ideal job in order to stay
sober. The implication is that if he didn't have the perfect woman
and the perfect job, he couldn't stay sober. And he didn't stay
sober. AA members know that sobriety has to be sought without any
conditions, that we have to be "willing to go to any length to
get it" and that "half measures availed us nothing."
Some of Ebby's own
letters bring to mind Lois's observation noted earlier, that Ebby
seemed to be "around" AA, but never really "in"
it. Typical correspondence form AA's devotes substantial discussion
to the AA Program and the application of the Steps to their own
lives. Ebby's letters avoid these topics and are significant for what
they don't say. In 1954, Bill wrote that Ebby now, "shows more
signs of really joining AA than ever before." The implication is
that Ebby had shown less commitment to the AA program before then,
but even at that time, there were still substantial doubts about his
sincerity.
Earlier, in 1947, his
sister-in-law received a letter from Ebby, and she wrote back
suggesting that the answer to his problems was to devote himself to
helping others and then continued, "But as I read
your letter this thought is far from your mind and you are again
concerned with the petty and material affairs of your surroundings
and the bickerings and by-plays of your associates, with the thought
still deep in your mind that you have been persecuted and
discriminated against by others, while the real facts might well be
that it is your own ego that is at fault."
Ebby drifted in and out
of sobriety, and in and out of AA, with many AA members trying to
help him regain a more stable sobriety. The person who was ultimately
successful was Searcy W., who had established a hospital for
alcoholics in Texas. Early in 1953, Searcy had asked Bill what he
would like to see happen in AA, and Bill said, "I would like for
Ebby to have a chance to sober up in your clinic." Several
months later, it came to pass, and after a short slip in 1954, Ebby
remained sober for seven years.
In 1961, Ebby's
girlfriend died and the next day Ebby got drunk. He apparently still
believed that his sobriety was conditional on having the right woman,
and now she was gone. Ebby moved back to New York and lived at
several places for the next two years, one of which was at his
brother Ken's home in Delmar, a suburb of Albany. He had emphysema,
the same disease that caused Bill's death, and was in poor health,
his weight having dropped from 170 to 122 pounds.
Ebby eventually came to
Margaret and Micky McPike's farm outside Ballston Spa, New York, in
May, 1964 and it was under their loving care that he finished the
final two years of his life, dying sober on March 21, 1966. While at
McPike's farm, he never even attempted to get something to drink
although he never attended any AA meetings. Still, AA visitors were
frequent and AA principles were in constant evidence, permeating the
entire atmosphere at McPike's. Dr. Bob said that the AA program
boiled down to love and service and that was the essence of Margaret
and Micky McPike, who helped more than four thousand persons to
recover from alcoholism. Ebby was one of them.
AA's agree that no
matter what happens to them, the most important thing is to not pick
up that first "sucker" drink. Once alcohol is placed in our
bodies, the results are physically inevitable in the same way that
once a dose of castor oil has been taken, all the mental will power
in the world is of no avail. Our problem as alcoholics centers in our
minds, in having an entire psychic change as a result of taking the
actions set out exactly in the 12 Steps. It is said in the rooms, "If
you do what we did, you'll get what we got." Ebby was unable,
for whatever reasons, to put the AA program of action into his life
on a regular basis.
All of his life, Ebby
was overshadowed by the recognition and success of his father and
grandfather and in his own generation, by the accomplishments and
respect given to his older brothers. This may have developed in him a
sense of "never good enough" so familiar to alcoholics. It
is also likely that his privileged childhood accentuated the sense of
self-importance and self-focus that the AA program requires us to
deflate at depth.
If Ebby had been
recognized as the founder of the AA program, it would have given him
respect and recognition far surpassing anyone in his family. After
Bill received the message of recovery from Ebby, he devoted the rest
of his life to helping other alcoholics. If Ebby had been willing and
able to take similar actions of love and service, he would have been
a co-founder with Bill Wilson. But he would not, or could not, do the
day-to-day work with others needed to bring AA into a concrete
reality.
Rather than
realistically looking at his own shortcomings in establishing AA,
Ebby wallowed in resentments, the greatest obstacle to sobriety and
the number one killer of alcoholics. Perhaps Bill was thinking of the
example of his sponsor, Ebby, when he wrote the many strong
statements in the Big Book condemning resentments. For whatever the
reasons, Ebby never seemed to give himself completely to the simple
program of Alcoholics Anonymous.
There are many others
who achieve periods of sobriety yet relapse from time to time. They
are not to be condemned, but welcomed back into the Fellowship. Their
experience is a lesson to others that alcohol as an enemy is indeed
cunning, baffling and powerful. If anyone might feel smug or
superior, he or she should be grateful that they have not gotten that
bad - yet.
If there is a Higher
Power, then by implication there is a lower power. And the lower
power can never win, unless we give up. Despite many slips, Ebby
never gave in to the lower power and always came back. He ran the
race; he kept the faith and died sober. Ebby deserves to be honored
for carrying the message of spiritual recovery to Bill and for acting
as his sponsor. Whatever his problems may have been with sobriety,
Bill was always grateful to Ebby and so should all AA's.
Bill said, in "The
Language of the Heart",
"Ebby had been
enabled to bring me the gift of grace because he could reach me at
depth through the language of the heart. He had pushed ajar that
great gate through which all in AA have since passed to find their
freedom under God."
Much of the above
material is synthesized from Ebby's biography by Mel B., Ebby-The Man
Who Sponsored Bill W., published by Hazelden. Other material was
taken from sections of Conference approved books listed in the
reference section below. Comments and inferences in the article are
the opinion of the author.
References:
Alcoholics Anonymous
(The Big Book). Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Box 459 Grand
Central Station, New York, NY 10163.
AA Comes of Age.
Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Box 459 Grand Central Station,
New York, NY 10163.
Language of the Heart.
Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Box 459 Grand Central Station,
New York, NY 10163.
Lois Remembers. Al-Anon
Family Group Headquarters, 1600 Corporate Landing Parkway, Virginia
Beach, VA 23454-5617.
Pass It On. Alcoholics
Anonymous World Services, Box 459 Grand Central Station, New York, NY
10163.
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