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CUP
OF COFFEE ? STRONG?
- MEDIUM?
- WEAK?
GRESHAM’S LAW - THAT BAD CURRENCY DRIVES OUT GOOD - HAS BEEN OPERATIVE IN THE LIFE OF ALCOHOLICS ANONYOUS. WEAK AA IS TENDING TO DRIVE OUT STRONG AA.
There are three ways to
work the program of Alcoholics Anonymous. (1)
The strong, original way, proved powerfully and reliably effective over forty
years. (2) A medium way - not so
strong, not so safe, not so sure, not so good, but still effective.
And (3) a weak way, which turns out to be really no way at all but
literally a heresy, a false teaching, a twisting corruption of what the founders
of Alcoholics Anonymous clearly stated the program to be. As an eleven year member
of Alcoholics Anonymous, I am still awed by the combination of simplicity,
practicality, and profundity built into the Twelve Steps; the AA recovery plan. This audacious blueprint
for life change was drawn up in 1939 by a former dead-end drunk serving as
spokesman for an unknown, unproven society of 100 reformed problem drinkers,
many of whom were still in the relatively early stages of recovery from alcohol
addiction. Yet for all their
boldness of scope, the Steps are so plainly worded, and so well-explained in
chapters five and following of “Alcoholics Anonymous” the AA “Big Book,” that they can be done by anyone.
And, therein lies their greatest genius. There is no prior requirement
of purity of life or advancement of learning. Just a willingness to admit personal defeat and a sincere desire to
change. The Twelve Steps sharply
contradict the secular psychological axiom that where the level of performance
is low you must set a low level of aspiration in order to gain a positive result
in life. By this view, the proper
approach for the early AAs would have been to put together a program aimed
certainly no higher than alcohol abstinence and a return to life as it had been
in the pre-alcoholic days, life as ordinary men and women of the world.
But these newly-sobered-up drunks set out to become totally committed men
and women of God. The authors of the Big
Book knew that this radical recovery plan was apt to jar many of the newcomers
they were trying to reach with their message and they
made two moves to sugarcoat their pill.
First, they put the following disclaimer immediately after listing the
Twelve Steps in chapter five: “Many of us exclaimed, I can't go through with
it. Do not be discouraged.
No one among us has been able to maintain anything like perfect adherence
to these principles. We are not saints. The
point is that we are willing to grow along spiritual lines.
The principles we have set down are guides to progress.
We claim spiritual progress rather than spiritual perfection.” That short paragraph was
a stroke of inspiration, especially the phrase, “We are not saints.”
It has eased thousands of new, half-convinced AA members (myself
included) past the fact that we were headed, under the guidance of the Steps, in
the completely unfamiliar direction of spiritual perfection. Most of us began practicing the Steps without realizing their full implications. Experience quickly taught us that they worked. They got us sober and enabled us to stay sober. From our intensely pragmatic standpoint, that was what mattered. We were content to enjoy our sobriety and leave all debates as to why the Steps worked to non-alcoholic theorizers - whose lives did not hang in the balance if they got themselves confused and came to some wrong conclusions. AA's founders did
something else to keep the spiritual rigor and power of the Twelve Steps from
scaring off new prospects. They put
the Steps forth as suggestions rather than as directives.
The sentence which introduces the Steps in chapter five of the Big Book
says, “Here are the steps we took, which are suggested as a program of
recovery.” This idea had enormous
appeal throughout the AA movement from the time the Big Book was first
published. We drunks hate to be
told to do anything. The freedom to
take the Steps at their own pace and in their own way quickly grew to be deeply
cherished among AA members. Before we explore the results
of this permissive approach to the Steps, there is one oddity worth noting.
AA existed for four full years before the Steps were put in their
final written form. During
that time there was a program and it was sobering up alcoholics. It consisted of two parts: a Six-step word-of-mouth program,
and the Four Absolutes - absolute honesty, absolute purity, absolute
unselfishness, and absolute love - taken over from the Oxford Group, the
evangelical Christian movement out of which AA was born.
The six steps of the word-of-mouth program from the early pioneering
years of Alcoholics Anonymous as given in "Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of
Age" are:
1. We admitted that we were powerless over alcohol. In those early days of AA
there was no talk of suggestions. The
basic points of the program, were regarded by all the older members as
directives, as indispensable essentials, and were passed on to newcomers as
such. When Bill first formulated the
Twelve Steps, he conceived of them, too, as instructions, not as suggestions.
When the idea of presenting the Steps as suggestions came up, Bill for a
long time flatly opposed it. Finally
- and reluctantly - he agreed. In "Alcoholics
Anonymous Comes of Age" he related how this concession enabled
countless AA’s to approach the fellowship who would otherwise have been turned
off AA - and back to active alcoholism. Still, Bill was a man whose
watchword was prudence and who went out of his way to steer clear of destructive
controversy. One cannot help
wondering if his feelings on the decision to present the Twelve Steps in the
form of suggestions were not a bit more ambiguous than he was willing to let on
in public once the compromise had been reached.
There is no denying that the paragraphs of chapter five of the Big
Book which introduce the Twelve Steps are full of language that would be utterly
appropriate as a preamble to a set of action directions, but is not nearly as
fitting as an introduction to a group of suggestions.
Here is the beginning of chapter five, with the key words and phrases
underlined: “Rarely have we seen a person fail who has thoroughly
followed our path. Those who do
not recover are people who cannot or will not completely give themselves to
this simple program, usually men and women who are constitutionally
incapable of being honest with themselves.
There are such unfortunates. They
are not at fault; they seem to have been born that way. They are naturally
incapable of grasping and developing a manner of living which demands
rigorous honesty. Their chances
are less than average. There are
those, too, who suffer from grave emotional and mental disorders, but many of
them do recover if they have the capacity to be honest.
Our stories disclose in a general way what we used to be like, what
happened, and what we are like now. If
you have decided you want what we have and are willing to go to any length to
get it - then you are ready to take certain steps. “At some
of these we balked. We thought we could find an easier, softer way.
But we could not. With all the earnestness at our command, we beg of you to be
fearless and thorough from the very start. Some of us have tried to hold
on to our old ideas and the result was nil until we let go absolutely. “Remember
that we deal with alcohol - cunning, baffling, powerful! Without help it is too much for us. But there is One who has all power - that One is God.
May you find Him now! “Half
measures availed us nothing. We stood at the turning point.
We asked His protection and care with complete abandon.
Here are the steps we took...” Granting that Bill ended up
fully reconciled to the compromise, his initial misgivings may turn out in the
long run to have been prophetic. At
the time, however, there were no indications whatsoever that the permissive,
suggestions only approach was anything but a boon to the movement. In 1938 and 1939 when the Big
Book was being written, there were 100 members in the fellowship.
By 1945 active AA membership was up to 13,000.
The primary reason for this explosive increase was that the program - the
Steps - were a winning formula; they worked, and there was a big need for them
out there in the population. America
was boozy and was spawning a great many alcoholics. Highly favorable press
coverage of the AA story was also a major factor in the spectacular growth
pattern. A series of enthusiastic
articles on AA appeared in the fall of 1939 in the Cleveland "Plain Dealer." These
pieces produced a flood of new AA members in the Cleveland area.
This sudden expansion was the first tangible evidence that AA had the
potential to grow into a movement of major proportions. The sequence of events during
this period is significant. The Big
Book was published in April of 1939, and in it the suggestions-only approach to
the Steps was disseminated for the first time.
A few months later the "Plain
Dealer" articles ran, and Cleveland AA’s found themselves relating to
new prospects on an unprecedented scale. It
suddenly became attractive, in a way it had not been before when the fellowship
was smaller and more intimate, to ease up a bit on the idea that all the
principles should be practiced all the time by all the members. More and more
emphasis began to be placed on the fact that the Steps were to be considered as
suggestions only. At this time, and through this set of circumstances, the
"cafeteria style" take-what-you-like-and-leave-the-rest approach to
the Twelve Steps came into practice. And it seemed to work.
It turned out that many newcomers could get sober and stay sober without
anything like the full and intensive practice of the whole program that had been
considered a life-or-death necessity in the early years.
In fact, alcoholics in significant numbers began to demonstrate that they
could stay off booze on no more than an admission of powerlessness, some work
with other alcoholics, and regular attendance at AA meetings. This is not to say that all
AA’s began to take this super-permissive approach to the Twelve Steps.
A great many continued to opt for the original, full program approach.
But now for the first time the workability of other, less rigorous
approaches was established, and a tendency had emerged which was to become more
pronounced as time went on. At first this seemed like an
unmixed blessing. After all, those
who chose actively to practice all of the Twelve Steps were as free as ever to
do so. Those who preferred working
with some, or just a couple, of the
Steps were staying sober too. And
AA was attracting more and more new members and more and more favorable
recognition. In 1941, Jack
Alexander's article on Alcoholics Anonymous was published in the “Saturday Evening Post.”
AA membership at the time stood at 2,000. In the next nine months it jumped 400%. By now it was possible to
distinguish three variant practices of the AA program which we have labeled the
strong-cup-of-coffee, medium-cup-of-coffee, and weak-cup-of-coffee approaches.
Strong AA was the original, undiluted, dosage of the spiritual
principles. Strong AA’s took all
twelve of the Steps - and kept on taking them.
They did not stop with the admission of powerlessness over alcohol, but
went on right away to turn their wills and lives over to God's care.
They began to practice rigorous honesty in all their affairs. In short order they proceeded to take a moral inventory,
admit all their wrongs to at least one other person, take positive and forceful
action in making such restitution as was possible for those wrongs, continued
taking inventory, admitting their faults, and making restitution on a regular
basis, pray and meditate every day, go to two or more AA meetings weekly, and
actively work the Twelfth Step, carrying the AA message to others in trouble. The medium AA’s started off
with a bang, pretty much like the strong AA’s, except they hedged or
procrastinated a bit on parts of the program that they feared or did not like -
maybe the God Steps, maybe the inventory Steps, depending on their particular
nervousness or dislikes. But after
they had stayed sober for a while, the medium AA’s eased up and settled into a
practice of the program that went something like this: an AA meeting a week;
occasional Twelfth Step work (leaving more and more of that to the "newer
fellows" as time went on); some work with the Steps (but not like before);
less and less inventory (as they became more and more "respectable");
some prayer and meditation still, but not on a daily basis any more (not enough
time, due to the encroachment of business engagements, social activities, and
other baggage that went along with the return to normal life in the workaday
world). The weak AA’s were a varied
lot. The thing common to all of
them was that they left big chunks of the program totally and permanently out of
their reckoning right from the outset - sometimes the God Steps, sometimes the
inventory Steps, often both. Weak
AA’s tended to talk in terms like, "All you need to do to stay sober is
go to meetings and stay away from the first drink." Most of the weak AA’s who were successful in staying sober
were pretty faithful meeting-goers. Since they were doing so little with the
principles, their sobriety and their survival depended more exclusively than did
those of the strong and medium AA’s on constant exposure to the people of AA. The fact is that only the
strong-cup-of-coffee-ers were practicing the program as it had been laid out in
the Big Book. Granting that the
medium and weak AA’s had every right as AA members to practice the principles
any way they wanted (including hardly any at all), since the Steps were
"suggestions only" - still, the way the first members had done it, and
the way the Big Book had recorded it was the strong-cup-of-coffee way. The medium approach had - and
still has - a real, constructive place in the AA recovery scheme, in that it can
be used as a temporary platform for reluctant beginners. The medium-cup-of-coffee option enables many who initially
are not up to the strong approach to gain a foothold in the fellowship of
Alcoholics Anonymous. But medium AA can, and often
does, become a trap. It is no place
for an AA member to try to settle out permanently.
People who stick too long in medium AA pass the point where they might be
encouraged to step up to strong AA and end up sliding back into weak AA. Weak AA has none of the
redeeming features of medium AA. It
is clearly at odds with the program as outlined in the Big Book. It bases itself on a flat and unnegotiable refusal to work
with vital recovery principles. Weak
AA’s cop out and stay copped out on most of the Twelve Steps.
They water down the program to the point where there really is no program
in the sense that the first members of AA understood the program.
A more inclusive, more accurate, and more descriptive term than
"weak AA" for this practice is "copped-out and watered-down
AA", or COWD AA for short. With
the passage of time, a definite evolution has taken place in AA in the
respective popularity and acceptability of the strong and COWD approaches. In the first years of their
existence, the COWD AA’s tended to feel obligated to defend and sing the
praises of their "heterodox" approaches and even to chide the strong
AA’s a bit for being rigid and holier-than-thou.
The strong AA’s, for their part, tended to be more relaxed and
tolerant, less strident, less defensive. After all, their method was obviously
safer since it involved taking more of the medicine.
And it was obviously the original and genuine article as the Big Book
eloquently attested But this juxtaposition of
attitudes came to have a peculiar effect in a movement which prided itself on
its good-natured inclination to let all kinds of maverick opinions and practices
have their say and their way. The
loudest voices came to be the voices of heterodoxy, and these came in time to
have the greatest impact on newcomers. Copped-out
and watered-down AA came to be the "in" thing, the wave of the future;
strong AA came to be regarded - not universally, but widely - as a bit stodgy
and a bit passé. The COWD AA’s had in a sense
proven Bill and the first hundred AA’s wrong.
In the introduction to the Twelve Steps, the statement: "...we
thought we could find an easier, softer way, but we could not..." was an
unequivocal assertion that it was necessary to practice all the Steps.
But the COWD AA’s did not practice all the Steps, and they were staying
sober. They had found an easier,
softer way. Human nature
being what it is, it was inevitable that the less demanding, medium-to-weak
approach would grow in popularity while the older, more rigorous approach would
decline. Who wants to do things the
hard way when they do not have to? Who
wants to drive a car with standard shift when the model with automatic is a
hundred dollars cheaper? AA has been in existence now
more than forty years. There is
still widespread lip service in the movement to the importance of working all
the Steps and practicing rigorous honesty in all one's affairs. But as a matter of fact, precious few AA’s continue to
attempt seriously and consistently to DO these things on a daily basis - not
after their first months of sobriety in the fellowship. Reversion to a lower, more
"normal" level of aspiration is the order of the day. Those who do
continue to practice strong AA have to be careful how they talk about what they
are doing in AA meetings. In many
places, too much or too serious talk about God is considered bad form.
The same is true about talk on the subjects of confession, restitution,
and rigorous honesty - especially where they affect such difficult and sensitive
life areas as job applications, tax returns, business dealings, and sex
relations. But if weak AA works - if it
produces recovery - what fault is there to find with it? Maybe this is a case
where heterodoxy turns out to be superior to orthodoxy. Why should anyone go to the extra bother of practicing strong
AA? For one very good reason. Weak
AA brings about a far less profound life alteration than strong AA does.
In many cases that relatively superficial change is not enough to crack
the alcoholic pattern. In many other cases, it results in an apparent recovery which
does not last, but sooner or later eventuates in a relapse into drinking. What the original AAs were
shooting for - and what they aimed their program at - was not mere sobriety.
That would have been the "common-sense" approach, the way of
worldly wisdom, the reasonable-level-of-aspiration gambit. But the founders
of AA were men moved by inspiration. They
were coming at the problem with the uncommon sense of men under guidance. The common-sense approach had
already been tried and it had failed. If
you set a drunk's level of aspiration at mere abstinence - "'Why don't you
be a good fellow, use your will power; and give the stuff up” - it did not
work. The poor candidate for reform
was back drinking again in short order. The
discovery that launched AA in the first place was that if an alcoholic were
somehow to be rocketed into a state way beyond abstinence, if he were to achieve
a real spiritual conversion, an utterly new relationship with God, then
permanent abstinence would automatically occur as a blessed and life-saving
by-product. That was how it
happened with Bill. That was how it
happened with Dr. Bob. That was how
it happened with most of the first hundred members. That was how the authors of the Big Book thought it would
have to happen with everyone. Originally, the Twelfth Step
read: "Having had a spiritual experience as the result of these Steps, we
tried to carry this message to alcoholics, and to practice these principles in
all our affairs". Two key
phrases were "spiritual experience" and "as the result of these
Steps". The assumption was: no
spiritual experience - no recovery. It
was also assumed that there were not a number of different results from working
the Steps; there was one result -"the" result - and that was
spiritual experience. To the first
members, spiritual experience meant that God had touched your life - directly,
tangibly - and turned it around. Sometime between 1939, when
the “Plain Dealer” article
was published, and 1941, when the Alexander piece ran in the “Post”, a major shift in philosophy occurred.
No one in AA was much aware that it was taking place at the time, and to
this day the process that went on remains almost totally unacknowledged
throughout the fellowship. What
changed was the importance of the roles assigned respectively to the recovery
principles and the recovery fellowship in AA. Up until 1939, AA was a small,
unknown organization whose success record, though excellent, applied only over a
tiny group of cases, and had not yet stood the test of time.
Recovering alcoholics in the young movement relied upon each other and
worked closely with one another. But
the principles were the primary life transformers.
The movement as such was not large enough or well enough established that
it could be leaned on in lieu of faithful work with the Steps. After AA became big, after it
gained national recognition as a success, a new relationship became possible
with it, one which had not previously been an option, and which the founders had
not really foreseen. It became
possible for an alcoholic to come to meetings and get sober without undergoing a
real spiritual conversion, simply by the process of mimesis, or imitation
- by the practice of something no more spiritual than the principle of
when-in-Rome-do-as-the-Romans-do. Here is how AA-by-mimesis
worked. The newcomer was joining
himself to a big, successful organization, like the Elks or the Kiwanis.
One of the customs of this particular club was that you did not drink; so
if the newcomer liked the people he had met in AA and wanted to stay associated
with them, he gave up drinking. He
made AA meetings and AA people the focus of his social life and his leisure-time
activities and stayed sober, more off the power of the pack than anything else. The true nature of this quite
other, and quite non-spiritual, recovery option was never clearly faced and
admitted within the fellowship. Instead,
an attempt was made to broaden the meaning of the term "spiritual" to
include both kinds of recovered alcoholics: the sober-by-conversion alcoholics -
those who as the result of working the Steps had had a spiritual experience and
become transformed human beings, seriously involved with regenerative life and
ideas - and the sober-by-imitation alcoholics - those who had remained
essentially the same type of people they had been before coming into AA, except
that they had joined a new organization, made a new set of friends, and given up
drinking in conformity to their new social setup. There is only one term in the
Twelve Steps that has been changed since the Big Book was first published in
1939. That term is "spiritual
experience" in the Twelfth Step. A
member of my home AA group, who first came into the fellowship in 1941, tells it
this way: “When I first came in, they were still talking about 'spiritual
experience'. A year or two later
they started calling it 'spiritual awakening'.”
It was at this time that the official version of the Twelfth Step was
changed to read: "Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these
steps ..." The term spiritual
experience, which had been perfectly acceptable in the early years when the
fellowship was small and explicitly conversion-oriented, came to be viewed as
too narrow and prejudicial against the less-profound life changes resulting from
mimesis-oriented AA, which were coming to be the majority recovery pattern in
AA. An explanatory note was added
to the Big Book, as follows: “The terms
"spiritual experience" and "spiritual awakening" are used
many times in this book, which upon careful reading, shows that the personality
change sufficient to bring about recovery from alcoholism has manifested itself
among us in many different forms. “Yet it is
true that our first printing gave many readers the impression that these
personality changes, or religious experiences, must be in the nature of sudden
and spectacular upheavals. Happily
for everyone, this conclusion is erroneous. “In the
first few chapters a number of sudden revolutionary changes are described.
Though it was not our intention to create such an impression many
alcoholics have nevertheless concluded that in order to recover they must
acquire an immediate and overwhelming "God-consciousness" followed at
once by a vast change in feeling and outlook. “Among our
rapidly growing membership of thousands of alcoholics such transformations,
though frequent, are by no means the rule. Most of our experiences are what the
psychologist William James calls the "educational variety" because
they develop slowly over a period of time. Quite often friends of the newcomer
are aware of the difference long before he is himself. He finally realizes that
he has undergone a profound alteration in his reaction to life; that such a
change could hardly have been brought about by himself alone.
What often takes place in a few months could seldom have been
accomplished by years of self-discipline. With
few exceptions our members find that they have tapped an unsuspected inner
resource which they presently identify with their own conception of a Power
greater than themselves. “Most of
us think this awareness of a Power greater than ourselves is the essence of
spiritual experience. Our more
religious members call it "God consciousness.” “Most
emphatically we wish to say that any alcoholic capable of honestly facing his
problems in the light of our experience can recover, provided he does not close
his mind to all spiritual concepts. He
can only be defeated by an attitude of intolerance or belligerent denial. “We find
that no one need have difficulty with the spirituality of the program.
Willingness, honesty and open mindedness are the essentials of recovery. But
these are indispensable.” When you compare this
statement to that which introduced the Twelve Steps in chapter five, the
difference in tone is astonishing. Chapter
five rings with a series of booming affirmations that the goal of the program is
a life given to God and the way is an uncompromisingly spiritual one. In the later-added appendix there is virtually a full retreat
from the earlier vigor and un-self-conscious joy in God-commitment.
The stated purpose of this appendix is to reassure people that the
spiritual change accompanying an AA recovery need not be in the form of a sudden
upheaval. The point needed making
and was well made. But a further point was also
made - not directly, but by implication - in the defensive, back-pedaling,
almost apologetic treatment of the whole subject of religious experience.
That point was the following: the authors and publishers of the Big Book,
unofficial spokesmen for the movement, were responding to a change in the AA
recovery pattern by lowering the spiritual level of aspiration of the society, a
move they would not have dared to make in the early days but could, and even
felt they must, make now that the society had become large and gained a
reputation for respectability and reasonableness.
The facts of the situation in AA which prompted the rewording of the
Twelfth Step and the adding of the explanatory appendix to the Big Book could
have been summarized in this way: "It is now possible to
recover in one of two ways in AA. Option
one is the original, spiritual experience way which follows from working all of
the Steps. Option two is the way of partial practice of the Steps, and primary
dependence on the social, fellowship-related aspects of life in AA.
This second approach generally does not produce a spiritual experience as
strong, full-program AA practice does. It
also violates our tradition that we should always place principles before
personalities. But in its favor, it requires less commitment and less work;
it involves less in the way of life rearrangement; and it has proven itself
sufficient in many cases to produce lasting abstinence from drinking."
But no such statement was ever made, and the switch in terms from
spiritual experience to spiritual awakening had the net effect of clouding in
everyone's mind the real nature of the change which had come about. It was not a matter of
conscious deception on anyone’s part. It
was just a failure to see a dividing into two camps when it had occurred.
This would have been an easy mistake in any case for those living through
that period in AA's history, a quite understandable failure to see a trend
developing, comparable to a mother's inability to notice growth changes in her
own child. But in a movement committed almost before all else to the avoidance
of controversy, blindness to this split was all but inevitable. The drawback to the original,
rigorous, strong-cup-of-coffee approach to the AA program was that it required
new members to plunge into a drastic program of spiritual transformation, a
course which has never in history had appeal with large masses of people.
Had the original approach remained the only approach, it is doubtful that
AA would have reached anything like its present size of 850,000 members.
(1976) But the weak-cup-of-coffee
practice had even more serious flaws built into it. The relatively superficial
life change which it produces is sufficient to get some alcoholics sober.
It is not adequate - it is not effective - it simply doesn't work - for a
very large number of others. This
is particularly evident with the "hard" cases - the alcoholics who
have been badly beat up physically and mentally before they arrive at their
first AA meeting; the people whose alcoholism is complicated with drug abuse,
perversion, criminal or psychotic tendencies, or a streak of psychopathology;
and the "slippers," those who have developed a pattern of hanging
around AA, staying sober for periods, but relapsing repeatedly into drinking.
(Generally, the slippers are alcoholics with psychopathic tendencies who
keep coming back to AA but are unwilling or unable to work with root principles,
notably rigorous honesty.) Weak AA
does not touch most of these people. They cannot stay sober that way. Yet if these hard cases find
their way into an environment where strong AA, and nothing but strong AA, is
being practiced, many of them are able to achieve lasting sobriety.
The East Ridge Community in
upstate New York has worked with
hundreds of these tough drunks over the past twelve years.
Strong AA is the standard fare at East Ridge, and they have a recovery
rate of over seventy percent with these so-called AA failures.
No success turns to success for the lion's share of them when weak AA is
replaced with strong AA. There is another, more
insidious, danger built into weak AA. In
many cases the "recovery" produced by watered-down approaches to the
Twelve Steps fails to hold up over the long haul. What looked in the beginning like an easier, softer way to
maintain happy sobriety yields progressively less and less contentment, finally
ending in a complete reversal of momentum and a relapse into serious personal
misery. The end result may be a
return to active alcoholism; or, short of that total disaster, it may be a
sinking out into a life of discontented abstinence, marred by some combination
of tension, resentment, depression, compulsive sick sex, and an overall sense of
meaninglessness. Either way, it is
a final failure to reap the benefits of the AA program; it is, in the last
analysis, a failure to recover. Two disturbing tendencies are
noticeable in contemporary AA. One
is toward a lower recovery rate overall.
For the first twenty years, the standard AA recovery estimate was seventy-five
percent. AA experience was that
fifty percent of the alcoholics who came to AA got sober right away and stayed
sober. Another twenty-five percent
had trouble for a while but eventually got sober for good, and the remaining
twenty-five percent never made a recovery.
Then there was a period of some years when AA headquarters stopped making
the seventy-five percent recovery claim in their official literature.
In 1968, AA's General
Service Organization published a survey indicating an overall recovery rate of
about sixty-seven percent. The
net of all this seems to be that as AA has gotten bigger and older, its
effectiveness has dropped from about three in four to about two in three.
(Note:
two in three was in 1976 - our data shows numbers much LESS in 1997 - 1 in 15 ) The second unhealthy trend
movement-wise is not backed by figures, but it is clear enough to any careful
observer of the AA scene. As the
fellowship grows older in time, its class of old-timers, alcoholics sober ten
years and longer, grows. And the
question of the staying power of an AA recovery looms even larger.
It is an unhappy fact that growing numbers of these old-timers find the
joy going out of their sobriety, that many of them search around frantically for
ways to recapture the old zest for booze-free living, often ending up in such
blind alleys as lunatic religions, dangerous pop psychological fads, or chemical
alternatives like acid, pot, tranquilizers, and mood elevators.
And far too many end up either back drinking or, what is almost as sad,
sunk in despondency, hostility, bizarre acting-out patterns of one sort or
another, or just plain, devastating boredom. All of this is unnecessary.
The gradually shrinking recovery rate and the old-timer blues do not require a
complex or an innovative solution. The
answer lies in a return to original, strong AA. The men who wrote the Big Book were, as it turns out, right
after all. There is no easier,
softer way. The extra work and
commitment required by the full program approach pay enormous dividends. They
make sobriety fun because they do not make sobriety an end in itself.
Mere non-drinking is a very negative kind of life goal.
Even the power of a world-scale society of non-drinkers can be in and of
itself only a temporary and limited deterrent for most alcoholics. The majority of those who
become addicted are people with a mystical streak,
an appetite for inexhaustible bliss. We
sought in bottles what can only be found in spiritual experience.
AA worked in the first place because its Twelve Steps were a workable set
of guidelines to spiritual experience. Growth
of the movement made possible for a time a kind of parasitism in which partial
practitioners and non-practitioners of the spiritual principles were able to
feed off the strength of those who had undergone real spiritual experiences.
But at this point in time, (1976) the parasites have already drained the
host organism of a considerable portion of its life force. It is late in the day to be
sounding a call for a return to the original way, the way of faithful practice
of the full program. Still, a great
deal of life is left in the fellowship, and a major revival is possible if
enough of us see our dangerous situation, personally and as a fellowship, in
time. What we need to do is clear
enough. It is spelled out in the
first seven chapters of the Big Book. What
it all boils down to - especially for us old-timers - is a willingness to
continue practicing all the principles in all our affairs today, rather than resting on our laurels, taking our stand on what we
did way back when, in our first weeks and months of sobriety. But we must not fail to face
squarely the need for change, the need for re-dedication. Complacency, smugness in our record of success, is our
greatest enemy. If we, as a
recovered-addict society, are unwilling to reverse our present course, the
outlook Is clear enough. We stand to recapitulate in less than a century what the
Christian church has spent the last two thousand years demonstrating: that even
the best of human institutions tend to deteriorate in time; and that size in
spiritual organizations is all too often achieved at the expense of compromise
of basic principles and the progressive abandonment of original goals and
practices. I owe my life to AA. I hope we have the vision, and the humility, to change. I know we can if we will. This much is certain: the Twelve Steps are as inspired, as effective, as un-compromised, and as practicable now as they were when they were first put in writing thirty-seven years ago. (1976) |