By Dr. Bob Smith, July
1944, AA Grapevine©
During nine years in
AA, I have observed that those who follow the Alcoholics Anonymous
program with the greatest earnestness and zeal not only maintain
sobriety but often acquire finer characteristics and attitudes as
well. One of these is tolerance. Tolerance expresses itself in a variety of
ways: in kindness and consideration toward the man or woman who is
just beginning the march along the spiritual path; in the
understanding of those who perhaps have been less fortunate in
education advantages; and in sympathy toward those whose religious
ideas may seem to be at great variance with our own.
I am reminded in this
connection of the picture of a hub with its radiating spokes. We all
start at the outer circumference and approach our destination by one
of many routes. To say that one spoke is much better than all the
other spokes is true only in the sense of its being best suited to
you as an individual. Human nature is such that without some degree
of tolerance, each one of us might be inclined to believe that we
have found the best or perhaps the shortest spoke.
Without some tolerance,
we might tend to become a bit smug or superior - which, of course, is
not helpful to the person we are trying to help and may be quite painful or
obnoxious to others. No one of us wishes to do anything that might
act as a deterrent to the advancement of another - and a patronizing
attitude can readily slow up this process.
Tolerance furnishes, as
a by-product, a greater freedom from the tendency to cling to
preconceived ideas and stubbornly adhered-to opinions. In other
words, it often promotes an open-mindedness that is vastly important
- is, in fact, a prerequisite to the successful termination of any
line of search, whether it be scientific or spiritual.
These, then, are a few
of the reasons why an attempt to acquire tolerance should be made by
each one of us.
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