When I drink, I cannot control the amount I drink (physical craving), and this phenomenon, directly or indirectly, causes me to do things I shouldn't do and fail to do things I should do (unmanageability). Given this, for me to drink makes no sense (insanity). I have a mind that does not like or accept this, so I try to prove this wrong and beat the game (mental obsession). Simply knowing that I am an alcoholic is insufficient (failure of self-will). There is no conventional treatment that allows me to drink normally or refrain entirely (incurable). What's more, it gets worse over time (progressive), and alcoholics tend to die decades early (fatal). I need a Higher Power to stay sober (spiritual solution). Without that, the outlook is bleak (hopelessness).
Quotation |
|
SPIRITUAL SOLUTION |
In the course of his third treatment he acquired certain ideas concerning
a possible means of recovery. As part of his rehabilitation he commenced to
present his conceptions to other alcoholics, impressing upon them that they
must do likewise with still others. This has become the basis of a rapidly
growing fellowship of these men and their families. This man and over one
hundred others appear to have recovered. |
INCURABLE |
I personally know scores of cases who were of the type with whom other
methods had failed completely. |
PHYSICAL CRAVING |
In this statement he confirms what we who have suffered alcoholic torture
must believe—that the body of the alcoholic is quite as abnormal as his mind.
It did not satisfy us to be told that we could not control our drinking just
because we were maladjusted to life, that we were in full flight from
reality, or were outright mental defectives. ... But we are sure that our
bodies were sickened as well. |
PHYSICAL CRAVING |
The doctor's theory that we have an allergy to alcohol interests us. ...
But as ex-problem drinkers, we can say that his explanation makes good sense.
It explains many things for which we cannot otherwise account. |
INCURABLE |
We doctors have realized for a long time that some form of moral
psychology was of urgent importance to alcoholics, but its application
presented difficulties beyond our conception. What with our ultra-modern
standards, our scientific approach to everything, we are perhaps not well
equipped to apply the powers of good that lie outside our synthetic
knowledge. |
PHYSICAL CRAVING |
We believe, and so suggested a few years ago, that the action of alcohol
on these chronic alcoholics is a manifestation of an allergy; that the
phenomenon of craving is limited to this class and never occurs in the
average temperate drinker. These allergic types can never safely use alcohol
in any form at all; and once having formed the habit and found they cannot
break it, once having lost their self-confidence, their reliance upon things
human, their problems pile up on them and become astonishingly difficult to
solve. |
SPIRITUAL SOLUTION |
Frothy emotional appeal seldom suffices. The message which can interest
and hold these alcoholic people must have depth and weight. In nearly all
cases, their ideals must be grounded in a power greater than themselves, if
they are to re-create their lives. |
PHYSICAL CRAVING |
After they have succumbed to the desire again, as so many do, and the
phenomenon of craving develops, they pass through the well-known stages of a
spree, emerging remorseful, with a firm resolution not to drink again. This
is repeated over and over, ... |
HOPELESSNESS |
... and unless this person can experience an entire psychic change there
is very little hope of his recovery. |
SPIRITUAL SOLUTION |
On the other hand—and strange as this may seem to those who do not
understand—once a psychic change has occurred, the very same person who
seemed doomed, who had so many problems he despaired of ever solving them,
suddenly finds himself easily able to control his desire for alcohol, the
only effort necessary being that required to follow a few simple rules. |
INCURABLE |
Faced with this problem, if a doctor is honest with himself, he must
sometimes feel his own inadequacy. Although he gives all that is in him, it
often is not enough. One feels that something more than human power is needed
to produce the essential psychic change. Though the aggregate of recoveries
resulting from psychiatric effort is considerable, we physicians must admit
we have made little impression upon the problem as a whole. Many types do not
respond to the ordinary psychological approach. |
PHYSICAL CRAVING |
I do not hold with those who believe that alcoholism is entirely a
problem of mental control. I have had many men who had, for example, worked a
period of months on some problem or business deal which was to be settled on
a certain date, favorably to them. They took a drink a day or so prior to the
date, and then the phenomenon of craving at once became paramount to all
other interests so that the important appointment was not met. These men were
not drinking to escape; they were drinking to overcome a craving beyond their
mental control. |
FATAL |
There are many situations which arise out of the phenomenon of craving
which cause men to make the supreme sacrifice rather than continue to fight. |
PHYSICAL CRAVING |
All these, and many others, have one symptom in common: they cannot start
drinking without developing the phenomenon of craving. This phenomenon, as we
have suggested, may be the manifestation of an allergy which differentiates
these people, and sets them apart as a distinct entity. |
INCURABLE |
It has never been, by any treatment with which we are familiar,
permanently eradicated. The only relief we have to suggest is entire
abstinence. |
FATAL |
... among physicians, the general opinion seems to be that most chronic
alcoholics are doomed. |
SPIRITUAL SOLUTION |
He accepted the plan outlined in this book. One year later he called to
see me, and I experienced a very strange sensation. I knew the man by name,
and partly recognized his features, but there all resemblance ended. From a
trembling, despairing, nervous wreck, had emerged a man brimming over with
self-reliance and contentment. I talked with him for some time, but was not
able to bring myself to feel that I had known him before. To me he was a
stranger, and so he left me. A long time has passed with no return to
alcohol. |
UNMANAGEABILITY |
An illness of this sort—and we have come to believe it an
illness—involves those about us in a way no other human sickness can. If a
person has cancer all are sorry for him and no one is angry or hurt. But not
so with the alcoholic illness, for with it there goes annihilation of all the
things worthwhile in life. It engulfs all whose lives touch the sufferer’s.
It brings misunderstanding, fierce resentment, financial insecurity,
disgusted friends and employers, warped lives of blameless children, sad
wives and parents—anyone can increase the list. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
Moderate drinkers have little trouble in giving up liquor entirely if
they have good reason for it. They can take it or leave it alone. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
Then we have a certain type of hard drinker. He may have the habit badly
enough to gradually impair him physically and mentally. It may cause him to
die a few years before his time. If a sufficiently strong reason—ill health,
falling in love, change of environment, or the warning of a doctor—becomes
operative, this man can also stop or moderate, although he may find it
difficult and troublesome and may even need medical attention. |
PHYSICAL CRAVING |
But what about the real alcoholic? He may start off as a moderate
drinker; he may or may not become a continuous hard drinker; but at some
stage of his drinking career he begins to lose all control of his liquor consumption,
once he starts to drink. |
UNMANAGEABILITY |
Here is the fellow who has been puzzling you, especially in his lack of
control. He does absurd, incredible, tragic things while drinking. He is a
real Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. He is seldom mildly intoxicated. He is always
more or less insanely drunk. His disposition while drinking resembles his
normal nature but little. He may be one of the finest fellows in the world.
Yet let him drink for a day, and he frequently becomes disgustingly, and even
dangerously anti-social. He has a positive genius for getting tight at
exactly the wrong moment, particularly when some important decision must be
made or engagement kept. He is often perfectly sensible and well-balanced
concerning everything except liquor, but in that respect he is incredibly
dishonest and selfish. He often possesses special abilities, skills, and
aptitudes, and has a promising career ahead of him. He uses his gifts to
build up a bright outlook for his family and himself, and then pulls the structure
down on his head by a senseless series of sprees. He is the fellow who goes
to bed so intoxicated he ought to sleep the clock around. Yet early next
morning he searches madly for the bottle he misplaced the night before. If he
can afford it, he may have liquor concealed all over his house to be certain
no one gets his entire supply away from him to throw down the wastepipe. As
matters grow worse, he begins to use a combination of high-powered sedative
and liquor to quiet his nerves so he can go to work. Then comes the day when
he simply cannot make it and gets drunk all over again. Perhaps he goes to a
doctor who gives him morphine or some sedative with which to taper off. Then
he begins to appear at hospitals and sanitariums. |
PHYSICAL CRAVING |
We are equally positive that once he takes any alcohol whatever into his
system, something happens, both in the bodily and mental sense, which makes
it virtually impossible for him to stop. The experience of any alcoholic will
abundantly confirm this. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
These observations would be academic and pointless if our friend never
took the first drink, thereby setting the terrible cycle in motion.
Therefore, the main problem of the alcoholic centers in his mind, rather than
in his body. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
If you ask him why he started on that last bender, the chances are he
will offer you any one of a hundred alibis. Sometimes these excuses have a
certain plausibility, but none of them really makes sense in the light of the
havoc an alcoholic’s drinking bout creates. They sound like the philosophy of
the man who, having a headache, beats himself on the head with a hammer so
that he can’t feel the ache. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
Once in a while he may tell the truth. And the truth, strange to say, is
usually that he has no more idea why he took that first drink than you have.
Some drinkers have excuses with which they are satisfied part of the time.
But in their hearts they really do not know why they do it. Once this malady
has a real hold, they are a baffled lot. There is the obsession that somehow,
someday, they will beat the game. But they often suspect they are down for
the count. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
The tragic truth is that if the man be a real alcoholic, the happy day
may not arrive. He has lost control. At a certain point in the drinking of
every alcoholic, he passes into a state where the most powerful desire to
stop drinking is of absolutely no avail. This tragic situation has already
arrived in practically every case long before it is suspected. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
The fact is that most alcoholics, for reasons yet obscure, have lost the
power of choice in drink. Our so-called will power becomes practically
non-existent. We are unable, at certain times, to bring into our
consciousness with sufficient force the memory of the suffering and
humiliation of even a week or a month ago. We are without defense against the
first drink. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
The almost certain consequences that follow taking even a glass of beer
do not crowd into the mind to deter us. If these thoughts occur, they are
hazy and readily supplanted with the old threadbare idea that this time we
shall handle ourselves like other people. There is a complete failure of the
kind of defense that keeps one from putting his hand on a hot stove. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
The alcoholic may say to himself in the most casual way, “It won’t burn
me this time, so here’s how!” Or perhaps he doesn’t think at all. How often
have some of us begun to drink in this nonchalant way, and after the third or
fourth, pounded on the bar and said to ourselves, “For God’s sake, how did I
ever get started again?” Only to have that thought supplanted by “Well, I’ll
stop with the sixth drink.” Or “What’s the use anyhow?” |
INCURABLE |
When this sort of thinking is fully established in an individual with
alcoholic tendencies, he has probably placed himself beyond human aid, and
unless locked up, may die or go permanently insane. |
SPIRITUAL SOLUTION |
But for the grace of God, there would have been thousands more convincing
demonstrations. |
SPIRITUAL SOLUTION |
The great fact is just this, and nothing less: That we have had deep and
effective spiritual experiences which have revolutionized our whole attitude
toward life, toward our fellows and toward God’s universe. The central fact
of our lives today is the absolute certainty that our Creator has entered
into our hearts and lives in a way which is indeed miraculous. He has
commenced to accomplish those things for us which we could never do by
ourselves. |
SPIRITUAL SOLUTION |
If you are as seriously alcoholic as we were, we believe there is no
middle-of-the-road solution. We were in a position where life was becoming
impossible, and if we had passed into the region from which there is no
return through human aid, we had but two alternatives: One was to go on to
the bitter end, blotting out the consciousness of our intolerable situation
as best we could; and the other, to accept spiritual help. This we did
because we honestly wanted to, and were willing to make the effort. |
INCURABLE |
His physical and mental condition were unusually good. Above all, he
believed he had acquired such a profound knowledge of the inner workings of
his mind and its hidden springs that relapse was unthinkable. Nevertheless,
he was drunk in a short time. More baffling still, he could give himself no
satisfactory explanation for his fall. |
SPIRITUAL SOLUTION |
“Yes,” replied the doctor, “there is. Exceptions to cases such as yours
have been occurring since early times. Here and there, once in a while,
alcoholics have had what are called vital spiritual experiences. To me these
occurrences are phenomena. They appear to be in the nature of huge emotional
displacements and rearrangements. Ideas, emotions, and attitudes which were
once the guiding forces of the lives 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 such emotional rearrangement
within you. With many individuals the methods which I employed are
successful, but I have never been successful with an alcoholic of your
description.” |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
The idea that somehow, someday he will control and enjoy his drinking is
the great obsession of every abnormal drinker. |
FATAL |
The persistence of this illusion is astonishing. Many pursue it into the
gates of insanity or death. |
PROGRESSIVE |
We alcoholics are men and women who have lost the ability to control our
drinking. We know that no real alcoholic ever recovers control. All of us
felt at times that we were regaining control, but such intervals—usually
brief—were inevitably followed by still less control, which led in time to
pitiful and incomprehensible demoralization. We are convinced to a man that
alcoholics of our type are in the grip of a progressive illness. Over any
considerable period we get worse, never better. |
INCURABLE |
We are like men who have lost their legs; they never grow new ones.
Neither does there appear to be any kind of treatment which will make
alcoholics of our kind like other men. We have tried every imaginable remedy.
In some instances there has been brief recovery, followed always by a still
worse relapse. Physicians who are familiar with alcoholism agree there is no
such thing as making a normal drinker out of an alcoholic. Science may one
day accomplish this, but it hasn’t done so yet. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
Despite all we can say, many who are real alcoholics are not going to
believe they are in that class. By every form of self-deception and
experimentation, they will try to prove themselves exceptions to the rule, therefore
non-alcoholic. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
Here are some of the methods we have tried: Drinking beer only, limiting
the number of drinks, never drinking alone, never drinking in the morning,
drinking only at home, never having it in the house, never drinking during
business hours, drinking only at parties, switching from scotch to brandy,
drinking only natural wines, agreeing to resign if ever drunk on the job,
taking a trip, not taking a trip, swearing off forever (with and without a
solemn oath), taking more physical exercise, reading inspirational books,
going to health farms and sanatoriums, accepting voluntary commitment to
asylums—we could increase the list ad infinitum. |
PHYSICAL CRAVING |
We do not like to pronounce any individual as alcoholic, but you can
quickly diagnose yourself. Step over to the nearest barroom and try some
controlled drinking. Try to drink and stop abruptly. Try it more than once.
It will not take long for you to decide, if you are honest with yourself
about it. It may be worth a bad case of jitters if you get a full knowledge
of your condition. |
FAILURE OF SELF-WILL |
Then he fell victim to a belief which practically every alcoholic
has—that his long period of sobriety and self-discipline had qualified him to
drink as other men. |
PROGRESSIVE |
Out came his carpet slippers and a bottle. In two months he was in a
hospital, puzzled and humiliated. He tried to regulate his drinking for a
while, making several trips to the hospital meantime. Then, gathering all his
forces, he attempted to stop altogether and found he could not. Every means
of solving his problem which money could buy was at his disposal. Every
attempt failed. Though a robust man at retirement, he went to pieces quickly
and was dead within four years. |
INCURABLE |
Most of us have believed that if we remained sober for a long stretch, we
could thereafter drink normally. But here is a man who at fifty-five years
found he was just where he had left off at thirty. We have seen the truth
demonstrated again and again: “Once an alcoholic, always an alcoholic.”
Commencing to drink after a period of sobriety, we are in a short time as bad
as ever. If we are planning to stop drinking, there must be no reservation of
any kind, nor any lurking notion that someday we will be immune to alcohol. |
INCURABLE |
Young people may be encouraged by this man’s experience to think that
they can stop, as he did, on their own will power. We doubt if many of them
can do it, because none will really want to stop, and hardly one of them,
because of the peculiar mental twist already acquired, will find he can win
out. Several of our crowd, men of thirty or less, had been drinking only a
few years, but they found themselves as helpless as those who had been
drinking twenty years. |
FAILURE OF SELF-WILL |
To be gravely affected, one does not necessarily have to drink a long
time nor take the quantities some of us have. This is particularly true of
women. Potential female alcoholics often turn into the real thing and are
gone beyond recall in a few years. Certain drinkers, who would be greatly
insulted if called alcoholics, are astonished at their inability to stop. We,
who are familiar with the symptoms, see large numbers of potential alcoholics
among young people everywhere. But try and get them to see it! |
FAILURE OF SELF-WILL |
As we look back, we feel we had gone on drinking many years beyond the
point where we could quit on our will power. If anyone questions whether he
has entered this dangerous area, let him try leaving liquor alone for one
year. If he is a real alcoholic and very far advanced, there is scant chance
of success. In the early days of our drinking we occasionally remained sober
for a year or more, becoming serious drinkers again later. Though you may be
able to stop for a considerable period, you may yet be a potential alcoholic.
We think few, to whom this book will appeal, can stay dry anything like a
year. Some will be drunk the day after making their resolutions; most of them
within a few weeks. |
FAILURE OF SELF-WILL |
For those who are unable to drink moderately the question is how to stop altogether.
We are assuming, of course, that the reader desires to stop. Whether such a
person can quit upon a nonspiritual basis depends upon the extent to which he
has already lost the power to choose whether he will drink or not. Many of us
felt that we had plenty of character. There was a tremendous urge to cease
forever. Yet we found it impossible. This is the baffling feature of
alcoholism as we know it—this utter inability to leave it alone, no matter
how great the necessity or the wish. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
“Suddenly the thought crossed my mind that if I were to put an ounce of
whiskey in my milk it couldn’t hurt me on a full stomach. I ordered a whiskey
and poured it into the milk. I vaguely sensed I was not being any too smart,
but felt reassured as I was taking the whiskey on a full stomach. The
experiment went so well that I ordered another whiskey and poured it into
more milk. That didn’t seem to bother me so I tried another.” |
FAILURE OF SELF-WILL |
He had much knowledge about himself as an alcoholic. Yet all reasons for
not drinking were easily pushed aside in favor of the foolish idea that he
could take whiskey if only he mixed it with milk! |
INSANITY |
Whatever the precise definition of the word may be, we call this plain
insanity. How can such a lack of proportion, of the ability to think
straight, be called anything else? |
INSANITY |
But there was always the curious mental phenomenon that parallel with our
sound reasoning there inevitably ran some insanely trivial excuse for taking
the first drink. Our sound reasoning failed to hold us in check. The insane
idea won out. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
In some circumstances we have gone out deliberately to get drunk, feeling
ourselves justified by nervousness, anger, worry, depression, jealousy or the
like. But even in this type of beginning we are obliged to admit that our
justification for a spree was insanely insufficient in the light of what
always happened. We now see that when we began to drink deliberately, instead
of casually, there was little serious or effective thought during the period
of premeditation of what the terrific consequences might be. |
INCURABLE |
He tries every known means to get the jaywalking idea out of his head. He
shuts himself up in an asylum, hoping to mend his ways. But the day he comes
out he races in front of a fire engine, which breaks his back. Such a man
would be crazy, wouldn’t he? |
INSANITY |
However intelligent we may have been in other respects, where alcohol has
been involved, we have been strangely insane. |
FAILURE OF SELF-WILL |
But the actual or potential alcoholic, with hardly an exception, will be
absolutely unable to stop drinking on the basis of self-knowledge. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
“I went to my hotel and leisurely dressed for dinner. As I crossed the
threshold of the dining room, the thought came to mind that it would be nice
to have a couple of cocktails with dinner. That was all. Nothing more. I
ordered a cocktail and my meal. Then I ordered another cocktail. After dinner
I decided to take a walk. When I returned to the hotel it struck me a
highball would be fine before going to bed, so I stepped into the bar and had
one. I remember having several more that night and plenty next morning. I
have a shadowy recollection of being in an airplane bound for New York, and
of finding a friendly taxicab driver at the landing field instead of my wife.
The driver escorted me about for several days. I know little of where I went
or what I said and did. Then came the hospital with unbearable mental and
physical suffering. |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
“As soon as I regained my ability to think, I went carefully over that
evening in Washington. Not only had I been off guard, I had made no fight
whatever against the first drink. This time I had not thought of the
consequences at all. I had commenced to drink as carelessly as though the
cocktails were ginger ale. I now remembered what my alcoholic friends had
told me, how they prophesied that if I had an alcoholic mind, the time and
place would come—I would drink again. They had said that though I did raise a
defense, it would one day give way before some trivial reason for having a
drink. Well, just that did happen and more, for what I had learned of
alcoholism did not occur to me at all. I knew from that moment that I had an
alcoholic mind. I saw that will power and self-knowledge would not help in
those strange mental blank spots. …” |
HOPELESSNESS |
“What you say about the general
hopelessness of the average alcoholic’s plight is, in my opinion, correct. As
to two of you men, whose stories I have heard, there is no doubt in my mind
that you were 100% hopeless, apart from divine help. Had you offered
yourselves as patients at this hospital, I would not have taken you, if I had
been able to avoid it. People like you are too heartbreaking. Though not a
religious person, I have profound respect for the spiritual approach in such
cases as yours. For most cases, there is virtually no other solution.” |
MENTAL OBSESSION |
Once more: The alcoholic at certain times has no effective mental defense
against the first drink. Except in a few rare cases, neither he nor any other
human being can provide such a defense. His defense must come from a Higher
Power. |