One of the great
strengths of Alcoholics Anonymous has always been that everyone is
equal and everyone is welcome. A.A.'s traditions of anonymity and
self-support and singleness of purpose all contribute to this true
equality of Fellowship found in A.A. meetings. So it is small wonder
that "special" groups have been viewed with suspicion,
alarm and sometimes-outright hostility within A.A. Nevertheless,
"special" groups based on a commonality of interest beyond
their common alcoholism - gender, age, race, occupation, sexual
preference, etc. - have existed within A.A. since the earliest days.
A number of these kinds of groups have found it helpful to organize
on an international level, often holding their own conventions, with
steering committees or central contacts where interested A.A.'s can
write for further information. Their addresses are listed in the
front of the A.A. Directories for the U.S. and Canada.
In the mid-1970's, when
feelings against "special purpose" groups were at their
height, the point was made that these should not be called "special
purpose" groups since all A.A. groups have the same purpose:
sobriety.
Rather, they are
"special composition" groups. In 1977, after tempers had
cooled down a bit, Dr. Jack Norris, then Chairman of the General
Service Board, made a presentation on the subject to the Conference.
He said, in part: "When other requirements are added that might
seem to exclude some alcoholics, these should be considered A.A.
meetings and not A.A. groups. We have never discouraged A.A.'s from
forming special-purpose meetings of any or all kinds to meet the
needs of interested individuals, but we have been hesitant to
consider as groups those that might seem to exclude any alcoholic,
for whatever reason.
"Many members feel
that no A.A. group is special and, therefore, that no group should be
labeled as such or even give the impression that it is 'special.'
However, the fact is that such groups do exist...These groups feel
that 'labels' serve the purpose of attraction (providing double
identification) and are not intended to imply exclusion of other
alcoholics."
In a Grapevine article
in October of the same year, K.S. said, "When I discussed the
purpose of such groups with people who attend them, they expressed a
definite belief that they could not be entirely open about themselves
in most regular A.A. groups. . . Homosexuals believe that the
specifics of their emotional relationships would not be understood or
accepted in regular A.A. meetings. Young people are convinced that
their life -styles...are not understandable to older members. And
professionals feel they get more understanding from those they
consider their peers, particularly in matters relating to their
conduct in their professions when they were active alcoholics.
"Furthermore,
there seems to be genuine concern about anonymity" --
especially, K.S. noted, among people whose professional status calls
for licensing, homosexuals who are in groups made up mostly of
heterosexuals, and young people who were once involved illegally with
drugs. "Members of special groups are certain that many of their
kind would never be able to get themselves to A.A. if they had to
enter through a regular group. Whether or not we agree with this
thinking, the point is that many alcoholics do believe in it. And
they believe in it seriously enough to form these special groups and
make them work."
Women
Women's groups were
probably the first special groups to form. The first Women's group in
the world is believed to be one started in Cleveland, Ohio, in June
1941. The following year, Ruth B. wrote G.S.O. from Minneapolis,
"There has been some discussion here of having the women
alcoholics meet in a separate group. We have heard that women do meet
in separate groups in Chicago and Cleveland...We have less than a
dozen women alcoholics in Minneapolis, only four of whom are very
active..." Bobbie B. replied, "I suggest you write directly
to Marion R., 12214 Detroit Ave., Cleveland, Ohio. Marion is the
secretary of a women's group out there who recently celebrated their
first anniversary. New York who has about 40 women alcoholics on
their lists, 25 of whom have been dry since contacting A.A., holds a
meeting once every two weeks for women only..." At about the
same time, Bobbie received a similar query from Harrisburg, Pa., and
replied in part, "There are over 60 in the New York [women's]
group. This is remarkable, because when I first met the group a
little over two years ago, there were only 2, and some thought that
perhaps this program just wouldn't work for women." In a letter
which Grace 0. of New York wrote Bill W. in 1945, she said, "Our
gal's group now has 19 newcomers -- all in seven weeks!
San Diego, California,
has had a women's group that has met continuously, every week, since
September 1945. It met first at the office of the husband of one of
the members, but soon rotated among the homes of the various women.
By February 1946, a strong nucleus of 15 members made it possible to
rent a meeting place of their own. The first Women's group in Salt
Lake City listed itself with G.S.O. in the spring of 1952.
Significantly, a special session for Women members was included in
the program of the First International Convention of A.A. in 1950 in
Cleveland. No attempt has been made to keep a count of women's groups
over the years, but it is safe to say they exist in almost any
sizeable community where there is A.A.
The reason was touched
upon in a letter from the Archivist, Nell Wing, replying in 1979 to
an inquiry from a woman writer. She explained, "It was difficult
for a woman to approach AA. in the late '30's or early '40's, and
more difficult still to be accepted in an A.A. group. It was
generally felt by male members that women had no place in an A.A.
meeting where their presence was considered by many to be a
disturbing factor. Since much of the success of the A.A. program
centered around a one-to -one relationship (especially in the
beginning years of the Fellowship), there was a perhaps justifiable
concern that a side effect of sharing and practicing the program
together might result in some hanky-panky." When an occasional
woman alcoholic Showed up, men felt it best not to sponsor her and
often turned her over to the wives of A.A. members to befriend and
offer support. As more women came in, they were actively encouraged
to form their own groups.
"Duke" P.,
who came into A.A. in 1940, explains (with his wife Katie's
corroboration) that there was sometimes resistance to women attending
regular meetings by the spouses -- from both sides! That is, the
wives of the men were Suspicious of the motives and the behavior of
the women alcoholics. And if the woman newcomer was married, her
husband would forbid her to spend evening after evening with a bunch
of men. So the answer wag to form women's groups.
Women in A.A. decided
to meet in a national conference of their own in February 1964. The
purpose was "to provide a forum to share experiences common to
women alcoholics; to discuss problems of particular interest; to
provide opportunities to Share with women from other areas; and to
learn how to be of greater service to those who still suffer."
At the first National A.A. Women's Conference, held in Kansas City,
Missouri, 45 women were present. It has been held annually ever
since, and attendance has grown to several hundred. The permanent
motto of the event is, "The Language of the Heart Will Be Spoken
Here."
Black Alcoholics
Alcoholics Anonymous
always welcomed any alcoholic, in principle -_regardless of race,
color, religion or any other characteristic that might otherwise set
him apart. However, A.A. is inescapably a part of the society in
which it exists. And when the Fellowship was founded -- and for three
decades thereafter --de facto discrimination against Blacks was
accepted in many places. Later, and indeed even now, when a Black
alcoholic comes into a white A.A. meeting, even though he may be
warmly welcomed with every effort made to make him feel at home, he
often feels "different" and is likely to drift away.
Although alcoholism is
rampant in the Black community, A.A. has never enjoyed a percentage
of Black membership equivalent to the percentage of Blacks in the
general population. Joe McQ., himself the first Black member of A.A.
in Little Rock, Arkansas, believes cultural differences mitigate
against Blacks seeking help -- in A.A. or elsewhere. In his day, he
says, from the viewpoint of the young Black male, his world was
divided rather sharply between the pious, spiritual-singing
church-goers who were teetotalers; and the bottle-drinking, hip group
who hung out in the pool halls and on the street corners. And the
drinkers identified any nondrinker as a part of the pious group, of
which they wanted no part. This stereotype has faded in the last two
decades with the rapid assimilation of Blacks into the general
society, but the fact that A.A. is not reaching Black alcoholics as
it should has been a continuing concern of the General Service Board
and G.S.O.
The problem was to be
the topic of a General Sharing Session on a Board weekend in January
1986. Garrett T., the first Black Trustee (1983-87), shared that when
he came to A.A., Blacks were not welcomed at white meetings in
Washington, D.C., so his home group has always been a Black group,
the Mideast. It was brought out that in keeping with its Traditions,
A.A. has not taken an aggressive or advocative role with regard to
racial causes, but has "let it happen." The result, in
A.A., has been that in many parts of the country, integration came
earlier and easier than segregation (i.e., formation of Black
groups.)!
The first inquiry
received at G.S.O. from a "colored" alcoholic came from
Pittsburgh in 1943. In reply to the next inquiry in October 1944,
Bobbie B. wrote, "We do not have a colored group anywhere and
the problem is popping up more and more every day. In Pittsburgh they
have ~ colored member, and I suggest you write and find out how the
situation is handled there." In 1945, however, there were Black
groups in both Washington, D.C., and St. Louis, Missouri. In January
of the following year, a group started in Los Angeles and within a
year had 20 members. In June, the Outhwaite group in Cleveland, Ohio,
registered at G.S.O. with eight members. And a month later there was
news of a colored group in Charleston, South Carolina. In the same
period, colored groups began in Kansas City, Missouri, and Toledo,
Ohio.
By 1947, the pace
picked up. A colored group began in New York's Harlem, and two were
reported in New Jersey. Philadelphia's first negro group met for the
first time at the end of June, and a group was formed in Cincinnati.
The first negro group in Crowley, Louisiana, was started in May 1949.
By 1952, there were about 25 known negro groups, according to Ann M.,
who was especially dedicated to helping A.A. reach Black alcoholics.
As no effort has been made at G.S.O. to distinguish Black groups from
others in the A.A. Directories, it is next to impossible to trace
their growth in the intervening decades, nor to estimate the present
number. They are obviously very strong in Northern Ohio; Detroit,
Michigan; Washington, D.C.; Atlanta, Georgia; and probably in most
major cities with concentrations of Black population.
Young People
When A.A. was young,
most of the members were not. The majority of those whose alcoholism
had brought them to their knees were middle-aged. On the other hand,
there has always been a sprinkling of younger alcoholics, who were
regarded almost as curiosities; in fact, many of today's long-time
members came in at a relatively youthful age -- or they wouldn't
still be around! There were enough Young People in A.A. by 1950 that
the First International Convention that year in Cleveland included a
session for them!
Then, as A.A. grew
older in the '50's and '60's, more alcoholics began showing up in
their early thirties, their twenties and even their teens.
There were several
reasons for this trend. Awareness of alcoholism was much higher, so
those with a problem sought help earlier. The stigma was steadily
reduced. Drugs, as they became more available and more commonly used
by young people, hastened their progression and ultimate desperation.
Later on, treatment centers turned out large numbers of younger
graduates. And here, as always in A.A., the principle that "like
attracts like" applied. When a youthful alcoholic hesitantly
approached a group for the first time and saw another youth, he or
she was more likely to stay. And when a kid - rejecting his family
(or rejected by them) and running with a street crowd -- found
acceptance, a new way of life and evident joy in A.A., his young
alcoholic peers were sometimes attracted to see what had happened to
him.
In 1985, one of the
better known examples of A.A. 's ability to turn a young person's
life around was the story of June G., who came to Alcoholics
Anonymous in Venice, California, in 1972 at the age of 13. The
product of delinquent, violent, alcoholic parents June was
pathologically suicidal as a child, and had been turned out onto the
street before she had reached her teens because she had physically
abused her mother as a result of her own drinking and drugging.
Beaten up in a gang fight, the waif attempted suicide once more, and
ended up in the hospital. From there, she was induced to go to an
A.A. meeting. And she kept showing up, as she had nowhere else to go.
"I hated the people there, and they avoided me," she says.
Her appearance and dress, her language and her attitude were
unacceptable. "It was a year before I put on shoes," June
admits. But she kept coming, and gradually some of the adult members
-- and particularly a caring sponsor -- took her under their wing.
They virtually adopted her -- gave her a place to sleep, slowly
changed the way she dressed, persuaded her to attend school, made her
get some kind of work. June G. went on to high school, then the
university, then law school -- and today practices as a public
defender in the court system of the City of Los Angeles. A charming,
lovely looking, smartly attired young lady of 26 (in 1985), June has
13 years of solid sobriety --thanks to her only "family":
Alcoholics Anonymous.
Typically, the path of
most young people coming to. A.A. was not without obstacles. Many in
the '60's told how they were ignored or scorned by older members at
regular A.A. groups. "You're too young to be an alcoholic,"
they were told. "Go out and do some more drinking." One
speaker at a young people 's A.A. convention said, "As I was
leaving one of my first meetings, I overheard an older member remark,
'I've spilled more booze than that. young punk has drunk' He probably
had, but it was the alcohol I had drunk -- not what he spilled --
that made my life unmanageable.
And even when a regular
group made them feel welcome, the young people sometimes felt
different for the same reasons that nonalcoholic youngsters feel
different from adults; they dressed differently, talked differently,
and had different fears and hang--ups.
Some helpful insights
into young people in A.A. were gained from a strictly unofficial
study done in 1976 by Darlene L., a college student and A.A. member
in Southern California, assisted by Jerry F., the then Delegate. The
project consisted of distributing questionnaires addressed to "under
30" A.A.'s in that area. Darlene got 79 replies from which she
drew her conclusions. The first discovery was that three out of four
had a parent or other close relative who was an alcoholic (a much
more startling fact in 1976 than today!). Many respondents had
attended their first A.A. meeting as a child; in the company of a
parent, so they knew where to come when they got into trouble
themselves. The second discovery was that the young persons '
progression into serious alcoholism was very fast; within three years
of beginning to drink regularly, they knew they had a problem.
Similarly, the study revealed they realized their powerlessness over
alcoholism very early, enabling them to overcome their denial
syndrome. Most of the young alcoholics had also been drug users,
greatly speeding up their reaching a bottom. And finally, when they
came to A. A., most identified with the alcoholism of the older
members but had problems arising out of their identity as young
people.
So the younger members
in various parts of the country began banding together in their own
groups. The first known group "for men and women under 35"
was formed in January 1946 in Philadelphia. Within a year, it had
about 30 members and an admirable record of sobriety. The same year,
in October, a similar group was started in San Diego, California, but
for young men only.
It was followed within
months by a young women's group. In 1947, a "35 and under"
group began in New York City "with a mere handful." But
three years later, it had 75 to 100 alcoholics.
A September 1961
Grapevine article on these "Youth Groups" states, "In
some places, naturally enough, (they] were started with high hopes
and flood-tide energy, but little stable or wise leadership. Groups
turned into social clubs, or other Traditions were broken, and groups
died." But in the long run, most of the groups survived and
became viable, because they filled a need. "One girl admitted,
'I guess we just rebel more at our age, even in A.A. groups. And
here, I don't have to try to compare my drinking with that of fellows
who reminisce about bathtub gin or speakeasies.' And another fellow
said, 'My young people' s group helps me with current problems.
Because I'm young, I
have lots of domestic, professional and other personal problems.
Getting started in a career or starting a family are not problems
most older members are now facing, so we younger ones can face them
together and help one another. That's in addition to helping each
other stay sober -- which always comes first.'"
Young people's groups
were often regarded with suspicion by older groups.
Not uncommonly, they
were not included in the local service structure because they were
"not A.A." But the youngsters continued doing their thing
and gradually came to be not only accepted but admired. In the 1961
article, the Milwaukee A.A. Central Office secretary is quoted as
saying, "These young people's groups are the lifesavers of A.A.
in our area. The service workers under 35 are where we get most of
our best volunteers who keep our Central Office functioning. They're
the ones we can count on most to take on Twelfth Step jobs,
institutional work and public information tasks."
The young people's
groups -- along with young people from regular A.A. groups -- banded
together in. 1958 to form the International Conference of Young
People in Alcoholics Anonymous, or ICYPAA (pronounced "Icky-Pa")
for short. They held their first convention at Niagara Falls, New
York, April 26-27, 1958. Less than a hundred people attended. The
event has been held annually ever since in different cities from
coast to coast, and the attendance now runs 3,000 or more, and are
eagerly bid for by young A.A. 's in the host regions and eagerly
sought by the convention bureaus of host cities.
Predictably, the large
conventions and the existence of ICYPAA caused more controversy
within conventional A.A. than the individual young people's groups.
It was immediately accused of being some kind of non-affiliated
splinter group. Older A.A.'s felt vaguely threatened. ICYPAA leaders
kept insisting, "We're not a separate movement or a
breaking-away from Alcoholics Anonymous. The Ninth Tradition says 'we
may create service committees directly responsible to those they
serve.' Our primary purpose is to carry the message to younger
alcoholics."
The resistance from
regular AA. groups has now generally disappeared. Trustees from the
General Service Board (including its Chairman) now routinely and
delightedly attend the annual ICYPAA conventions -- and sometimes the
regional ones, too. Past members of young people's groups have become
trusted servants, Delegates and even Trustees. (George D., past
Pacific Regional Trustee, was a former member of the first young
people's group in Los Angeles.) The Conventions are very large
supporters of G.S.O. A t the invitation of the General Service Board,
ICYPAA leaders have attended a Board sharing session, and they gave
extremely valuable assistance in arranging subjects to be interviewed
and filmed for A.A.'s documentary film targeting young people. These
are the future of A.A.
Seniors
Ironically, this influx
of young people into the Fellowship has led older members of A.A. to
form a number of groups and meetings for senior citizen alcoholics.
The first of these is believed to be the Golden Years group started
in North Hollywood, California, in 1978. "Teet" C., one of
the founders, says they had seen older alcoholics "fall by the
wayside because they felt they did not belong in large 'wide-open'
A.A. meetings." He adds, however, that all newly sober elders
are cautioned against making the Golden Years group their sole
participation." Many of the members are long-timers with 25 to
40 years' sobriety, who try to help the newcomer break through his or
her denial. In the last decade, many other "over-40",
"sober seniors" or "golden years" groups have
formed throughout the country. A.A. has recognized the special needs
of the older alcoholic with the publication of the pamphlet, "Time
To Start Living", including a large-type edition. A.A. has
exhibited at conventions of the American Association of Retired
People, and the staff member on the CPC assignment has also attended.
Homosexual Alcoholics
Homosexual --i.e., gay
and lesbian alcoholics have found help and recovery in Alcoholics
Anonymous from its very early days. Bill W. refers to them in Twelve
Steps and Twelve Traditions and in a 1958 letter expresses deep
sympathy and concern. The dedication and talents of gay and lesbian
A.A. members have often led them into service, where they have
contributed enormously in all capacities including Delegate and
Trustee. Almost never overt in their lifestyle, they have been
completely accepted.
In 1975, Lillen Fifield
published a study of alcohol abuse in the Los Angeles gay community
entitled, "On My Way to Nowhere: Alienated, Isolated, Drunk."
Its title suggested the author's theory to account for the high
incidence of alcoholism among homosexuals -- which is reflected in
the number of homosexual A.A.s in that city. The point was made that
A.A. serves unique needs for gay and lesbian alcoholics over and
above those of straight alcoholics. The former are frequently
estranged from their families at an early age, and hence feel
rejected, lonely and "different" -- which makes them
especially vulnerable to alcoholism. Add to this that their social
life usually revolves around gay bars, partying and drinking. When
they reach their bottom and come to A.A., they find in recovery not
only a new way of life and new values, but also an acceptance and,
indeed, a new "family" they have never had before.
Therefore, in large
cities with a significant homosexual population -- New York, Los
Angeles, San Francisco, Washington, Boston - gays and lesbians came
to A.A. as early as the 1940's and in increasing numbers ever since.
Going back to the late
'40's and more noticeably in the '50's and '60's, there were groups
in certain neighborhoods such as Greenwich Village and the East Side
of Manhattan in New York, and downtown San Francisco, which were
primarily composed of gay people, though they were not listed or
designated as gay groups. "We were getting along fine,"
recalls a gay A.A. member in San Francisco, "with plenty of gay
people getting sober in groups downtown or Mann or East Bay which
were predominantly gay but also had a rich diversity of people."
However, although the
gays identified with the drinking and the feelings of straight A. A.
's, they sometimes had difficulty being comfortable or openly sharing
their experiences and problems. And so, in San Francisco in about
1967, some people felt they wanted a group which was exclusively gay.
It is recalled that there was considerable debate and controversy
within the gay A.A. community whether or not to do it, but it was
finally decided to give it a try downtown at the Episcopal Church on
Fell Street. At first, the members identified themselves with names
and "I'm a gay alcoholic." Shortly, however, most of them
dropped saying "gay" and said simply, "I'm an
alcoholic." "We regarded this just as a place where
homosexual alcoholics could come who were intimidated in coming to a
straight A.A. group," a founder says. "We had no idea of
creating something in which people would come in and get sober and
spend their entire A.A. life. But that's what's happened, and if we
hadn't done it, someone else would
And someone else was
indeed doing it in other cities. In Washington, D.C., for example,
four alcoholics - two gay and two lesbian - gathered for a meeting in
a private home on December 8, 1971. All of them found an exclusively
homosexual group extremely helpful. They continued meeting on Sundays
at two homes in nearby Virginia until the summer of 1972, when Cade
W. and Bob W approached Fr. Goodrich of St. James Episcopal Church
and requested meeting space. He gave his permission. A later pastor
said, "If it had gone to the Vestry Council, it would have been
turned down." Soon a Wednesday Step meeting was added to the
Sunday meeting at St. James. Besides Cade and Bob, early members
included Blanche M., Gerry Kay T., Tom H., Ray C., Vern W., Barbara
C., Nancy T. and Dennis L.
In early 1974, Ray C.
started the St. Margaret's open speaker meeting on Friday evenings.
The Lambda group in Virginia followed on Saturday nights. A Big Book
meeting began at St. Thomas in late '75, and the Montrose group began
a month later. A.A. groups for gays continued to grow and in 1985
Washington, Maryland and Virginia had 15 groups with about 40
meetings a week.
As similar patterns of
growth occurred in other cities, and A.A. groups for gays began to
appear in other locations, the need was felt for a directory of
gay/lesbian groups. (Since 1974, they were listed, without special
designation, in A.A.'s Directories for U.S./Canada, by Conference
action.)
For this purpose as
well as to provide a contact point for homosexual alcoholics, the
International Advisory Council for Homosexual Men and Women in
Alcoholics Anonymous was organized. They also publish a helpful
pamphlet.
The Council is listed
in the front of the A.A. Directories, along with contacts for other
special composition groups, and the Council has worked with G.S.O. to
help provide workshops and social events for gay/lesbian A.A. 's at
International Conventions since 1980. However, gay members in other
cities are quick to point out that the Council does not speak for all
gay A.A.'s, nor is it responsible to them. "Some of us out
here," says a member in San Francisco, "are a little
nervous and a little resentful at the recognition given to this
particular bunch."
The question of listing
groups for homosexuals raged in Los Angeles (and some other
localities) long after the Conference had decided it at the national
level. The problem in Southern California was due not only to the
large number of such groups, but it was further complicated by the
existence of a whole coterie of groups for gays who called themselves
"Alcoholics Together." They pressured the Los Angeles
Central Office to list them in the local meeting directory. Actually,
however, "Alcoholics Together" were religious in origin
and, though they patterned themselves after all aspects of the A.A.
program, they were not A.A. -- which finally settled the issue.
In 1975, an ad hoc
group of gay A.A. 's in Northern California decided they would put on
an A.A. round-up. A gay member who tried to help them says the
trouble was, none of the Sponsoring group had more than two years'
sobriety.
"They made a lot
of mistakes, including putting out a flyer that was carefully
designed to offend almost everybody, without their realizing they
were offending anybody." Howls of protest were heard as far as
the G.S.O. in New York, and the local Delegate was asked to meet with
them and try to straighten them out. Subsequently, a second flyer was
produced, and when it was shown to staff member Cora Louise B. during
the Conference, she remarked, "My, this is as proper and
decorous as an invitation to a coming-out party in Greenville,
Mississippi!"
That first round-up in
1976 was a great success, with about 200 in attendance from as far
away as Vancouver, British Columbia, and Los Angeles.
They immediately wanted
to go home and have a similar event of their own and so the idea
spread. The format of the ICYPAA conferences was followed in many
cases. Criticism has been heard that the largest of these round-ups
in New York and San Francisco, drawing around 2,000 people, have
gotten far afield from A.A. in their workshops. But other recent
local gatherings of gay A.A.'s have been "pure, basic A.A. --
absolutely marvelous!" according to one discriminating member.
Doctors in A.A.
Bill W. courted the
favor of doctors toward Alcoholics Anonymous. He considered medical
recognition of alcoholism as a disease to be critical to A.A.'s
future, and he valued doctors as a resource to reach the
still-suffering alcoholic and refer him to A.A. However, though the
co-founder was a doctor and another doctor's personal story was
included in the first edition of the Big Book, it was not fully
recognized that doctors had a more direct relationship with A.A. as
recovered drunks. Doctors are statistically more prone to alcoholism
than any other profession; yet they are less prone to recognize their
problem or accept help from anyone other than another doctor.
It was the late Dr.
C.P., of Cape Vincent, New York, who, after Joining Alcoholics
Anonymous in 1946, realized that doctors in A.A. needed to band
together to help other doctors. The first meeting of ten doctors was
held in the garage of Dr. Clarence P. in Clayton, New York, in 1947.
As three of them were Canadians, they were "International"
from the beginning. Clarence then issued an invitation through the
Grapevine, which resulted in a gathering of 25 doctors from all over,
in late summer 1949. Those present agreed that an annual gathering,
held in different parts of the U.S./Canada, would be a desirable
addition to their attendance at local A.A. meetings the rest of the
year.
The annual meetings
have been held the first weekend in August every year since, at
various locations including Chicago, Denver, San Antonio, San Diego,
Toronto, New York, etc., etc. Guest speakers, in and out of A.A.,
representing fields connected with alcoholism, are featured, with
plenty of time for regular A.A. sharing. There are no dues, but a
modest registration fee at the annual meeting .covers expenses of the
meeting, postage for the year, and a contribution to G.S.O.
The International
Doctors in A.A., as they call themselves, have upwards of 2,000 on
their confidential mailing list --including names in Australia, New
Zealand, South America, South Africa, Japan, etc. All are assumed to
be active in their local A.A. groups as well. The IDAA itself is
organized loosely like an A.A. group, with a Secretary-Treasurer who
maintains the mailing list, corresponds with newcomers, and
circulates newsletters periodically. Dr. Lewis "Luke" R.,
of Youngstown, Ohio, has had the position through most of IDAA's
existence. Regional meetings and groups, organized by local A.A.
doctors, have also been successful and well attended. The majority of
IDAA members are medical doctors --physicians, surgeons,
psychiatrists, etc. The membership also includes dentists,
psychologists, veterinarians and medical scientists such as
biochemists and microbiologists. "Through our association with
this group," states Dr. "Luke" R, "we hope to
better cope with and understand our own problems, the problems of
other doctors, and most certainly the problems of our patients."
Lawyers in A.A.
Admittedly indebted to
the International Doctors in A.A. for advice and inspiration, a
number of lawyers in A.A., led by Igor S. of Hartford, Connecticut,
founded the International Lawyers in A.A. at a meeting in Niagara
Falls, Ontario, in September 1975. Twenty lawyers were present, 16
from Canada and four from the U.S.
They met in September
of the next year in Buffalo, New York, at what they called their
second annual convention. Again, about 20 were present. The
conventions have continued ever since.
They shared their
drinking experiences and identified strongly with their common
difficulties in. the practice of law when drinking alcoholically.
They widened their
focus to discuss when and under what circumstances they should
divulge their A.A. membership, and how best to extend a hand to
colleagues or clients in trouble with booze. They concluded they were
in a position to carry the A.A. message effectively without risking
their professional reputations or practices. Like IDAA, the ILAA
viewed themselves not as a special-purpose group, but rather as a
supplement to attendance at regular A.A. meetings and a "vestibule"
for lawyers with a drinking problem to meet with other lawyers before
entering mainstream A.A.
Igor S. says, "ILAA
emphatically does not seek to form a separatist or elitist group.
Instead, it serves as a sharing community, demonstrating to the
frightened, guilt-laden lawyer that he is not alone."
Concurrently with the
founding of International Lawyers in A.A., state bar associations
began to set up procedures to identify alcoholism or drug abuse in
the profession and to provide help. Local lawyer's groups were able
to assist be offering their experience, strength and hope to those in
trouble.
Airline Pilots in A.A.:
"Birds of a Feather"
With airline pilots, an
alcohol problem had large and terrifying dimensions. If they were
discovered, even in recovery they would lose their jobs, under FAA
regulations. They had no secure place to go to attend A.A. meetings.
"We had a constant, gut-wrenching, sweat producing fear of being
found out -- even after treatment," says one pilot in A.A.
The first discussion of
the special needs of alcoholic airline personnel for treatment and
subsequent recovery in A.A. was held in the early summer of 1975
between Mike M., an airline dispatcher at the Seattle-Tacoma
(SEA-TAC) airport, and Larry Haynie, then director of the Alcoholism
Treatment Center at Puget Sound Hospital in Tacoma. Mike had also
been discussing with Ward B., a pilot, the need for an airmen-only
A.A. meeting, so he was drawn into a second appointment with Haynie.
These three are considered the co-founders of what came to be called
"Birds of a Feather" (BOAF). The first organized group
meeting was held Friday, December 5, 1975, in a conference room at
Puget Sound Hospital.
It soon included Rudy
D., who vigorously championed the need for a secret, protective
meeting. His airline had just announced that they had no alcoholic
pilots, because if they found one, they would fire him. Al J. also
became an active organizer and contact for the "Birds."
From that modest
beginning, BOAF grew to about 90 names throughout the world. Their
meetings, which they call "nests," are held usually at or
near airports in Atlanta, Washington, Denver, Las Vegas, Los Angeles,
Miami, Chicago, La Jolla, Seattle, Burlingame and Morristown, N.J. In
June 1981, the formation of a "nest" at Vancouver, British
Columbia, Canada, made the "Birds" truly international, in
addition to "solo" members in Ireland, Germany, Iceland and
India. Membership has broadened to include other licensed cockpit
crew besides pilots. Birds of a Feather meetings are simply closed
A.A. meetings at which the strictest anonymity is observed. They are
registered at G.S.O., but are not listed in. any A.A. Directories
(except for the address of the national contact) or local Intergroup
meeting lists.
In 1978 the need was
recognized for a national BOAF body to coordinate the meetings and
serve as a communications link. John R. was appointed its first
secretary, followed by Chuck C., Al J., Pat W., Grant B. and Ron D. A
newsletter, the "Bird Word," is circulated periodically. In
December 1982, Renton, Washington, hosted the first international
convention of the Birds, followed by Atlanta and Chicago. In
addition, every December 7, the Washington, D.C., "nest"
hosts a "Pearl Harbor Day" meeting attended by several
hundred ex-airmen from the military as well as current pilots. The
Pearl Harbor day meeting pre-dates BOAP by many years and has none if
its secrecy.
Other Special
Composition Groups
The hearing impaired
may be more susceptible to alcoholism than hearing people because of
their isolation and sense of being "different." And their
recovery in A.A. is hampered by the difficulty of communicating. Long
recognizing this need, A.A. has attempted to serve the hearing
impaired through the group services assignment at G.S.O. The first
Deaf group, apparently, was started in Los Angeles in March 1962,
with as many as 18 in attendance -- but attendance dwindled and the
group was inactivated in 1981.
Meanwhile, the Eye
Opener group for the hearing impaired was formed in Washington, D.C.,
in 1970, and the Sign of Hope group in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in
1981. In 1985, G.S.O. listed about 100 groups and contacts throughout
the country.
The exclusively Deaf
groups have tended to lose members to regular A.A. groups which have
increasingly tried to provide an interpreter who can "sign"
for hearing impaired members when needed. Signing for the deaf is now
provided at all International Conventions and many other A.A.
gatherings as well.
Indian (or Native
American, in the modern terminology) groups have existed.
They are essentially de
facto Indian because they meet on or near reservations, but they also
provide powerful identification for the Native American newcomer and
recognize cultural differences. The first all Indian group in the
U.S. is believed to be the Oneida, Wisconsin, group started in 1953;
it is now known as the Hobart group. A letter from Hazel R. at G.S.O.
in 1966 says there are 20 Indian groups in the U.S. and 11 in Canada.
The number was probably nearer 100 by 1985.
Still other groups are
composed of A.A.'s who speak languages other than English. There were
many Spanish-speaking groups in the U.S./Canada in 1985.
They have formed their
own Intergroups in cities with large Hispanic population, and they
held their first "Convention Nacional A.A. de Habla Hispana"
in 1972. It has been held annually ever since, rotating among various
locales, and draws about 1,000 attendees.
Similarly, there are a
large number of French-speaking groups, centered mainly in Quebec,
Canada. A huge annual convention held in Montreal is billed as the
Bi-Lingual, but its attendance is probably 80 percent from
French-speaking groups.
Still other groups
organized on the basis of language include Polish-, Finnish-,
Italian-, Korean- and Vietnamese-speaking.
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