The
Man Who Mastered Fear
pp. 246-257
He
spent eighteen years in running away, and then found he didn't have
to run. So he started A.A. in Detroit.
For eighteen years, from the time I was twenty-one, fear governed my
life. By the time I was thirty, I had found that alcohol
dissolved fear---for a little while. In the end I had tow
problems instead of one: fear and alcohol.
I
came from a good family. I believe the sociologists would call
it upper middle class. By the time I was twenty-one, I had had
six years of life in foreign countries, spoke three languages fluently,
and had attended college for two years. A low ebb in the family
fortunes necessitated my going to work when I was twenty. I
entered the business world with every confidence that success lay ahead
of me. I had been brought up to believe this, and I had shown
during my teens considerable enterprise and imagination about earning
money. To the best of my recollection, I was completely free from
my abnormal fears. Vacations from school and from work spelled
"travel" to me---and I traveled with gusto. During my first year
out of college, I had endless dates and went to countless dances,
balls, and dinner parties.
Suddenly
all this changed. I underwent a shattering nervous
breakdown. Three months in bed. Three more months of being
up and around the house for brief periods and in bed the rest of the
time. Visits
p. 246
from friends that lasted over fifteen minutes
exhausted me. A complete checkup at one of the best hospitals
revealed nothing. I heard for the first time an expression that I
was to grow to loathe: "There is nothing organically
wrong." Psychiatry might have helped, but psychiatrists had not
penetrated the Middle West.
Spring
came. I went for first walk. Half a block from the
house. I tried to turn the corner. Fear froze me in my
tracks, but the instant I turned back toward home, this paralyzing fear
left me. This was the beginning of an unending series of such
experiences. I told our family doctor---an understanding man who
gave hours of his time trying to help me---about this experience.
He told me that it was imperative that I walk around the entire block,
cost me what it might in mental agony. I carried out his
instructions. When I reached a point directly back of our house,
where I could have cut through a friend's garden, I was almost over
powered by the desire to get home, but I made the whole journey.
Probably only a few readers of this story will be able, from personal
experiences of their own, to understand the exhilaration and sense of
accomplishment I felt after finishing this seemingly assignment.
The
details of the long road back to something resembling normal
living---the first short streetcar ride, the purchase of a used bike,
which enabled me to widen the narrow horizon of life, the first trip
downtown---I will not dwell on. I got an easy, part=time job
selling
printing for a small neighborhood printer. This widened the scope
of
my activities. A year later I was able to buy a Model T roadster
and
take a better
p. 247
job with a downtown printer. From this job and the next
one with yet another printer, I was courteously dismissed. I
simply
did not have the pep to do hard, "cold-turkey" selling. I
switched to
real estate brolerage and property management work.Almost
simultaneously, I discovered that cocktails in the late afternoon and
highballs in the evening relieved the many tensions of the day.
This
happy combination of pleasant work and alcohol lasted for five
years.
Of course, the latter ultimately killed the former, but of this, more
anon.
All this changed when I
was thirty years old. My parents died,
both in the same year, leaving me, a sheltered and somewhat immature
man, on my own. I moved into a "bachelor hall." These men
all drank
on Saturday nights and enjoyed themselves. My pattern of drinking
became very different from theirs. I had bad, nervous headaches,
particularly at the base of my neck. Liquor relieved these.
At last I
discovered alcohol as a cure-all. I joined their Saturday night
parties and enjoyed myself too. But I also stayed up weeknights
after
they had retired and drank myself into bed. My thinking about
drinking
had undergone a great change. Liquor had become a crutch on the
one
hand and a means of retreat from life on the other.
The
ensuing nine years were the Depression years, both nationally
and personally. With the bravery born of desperation, and abetted
by
alcohol, I married a young and lovely girl. Our marriage lasted
four
years. At least three of those four years must have been a living
hell
for my wife, because she had to watch the man she loved disintegrate
morally, mentally, and
p. 248
financially. The birth of a baby boy did
nothing toward staying the downward spiral. When she finally took
the
baby and left, I locked myself in the house and stayed drunk for a
month.
The next two years were simply a long, drawn-out process of less and
less work and more and more whiskey. I ended up homeless,
jobless, peeniless, and rudderless, as the problem guest of a close
friend whose family was out of town. Haunting me
through each day's stupor---and there were eighteen or nineteen such
days in this man's home---was the thought: Where do I go when his
family comes home? When the day of their return was almost upon
me,
and suicide was the only answer I had been able to think of, I
went
into Ralph's room one evening and told him the truth. He was a
man of
considerable means, and he might have done what many men would have
done in such a case. He might have handed me fifty dollars and
said
that I ought to pull myself together and make a new start. I have
thanked God many times in the last sixteen years that that was just
what he did not do!
Instead,
he got dressed, took me out, bought me three or four double shots, and
put me to bed. The next day he turned me over to a couple who,
although neither was an alcoholic, knew Dr. Bob and were willing to
drive me to Akron where they would turn me over to his care. The
only
stipulation they made was this: I had to make the decision
myself.
What decision? The choice was limited. To go north into the
empty
pine country and shoot myself, or to go south in the faint hope that a
bunch of strangers might help me with my drinking problem. Well,
suicide was a last-straw matter, and I had not drawn the last straw
p. 249
yet. So I was driven to Akron the very next day by these Good
Samaritans and turned over to Dr. Bob and the then tiny Akron Group.
Here, while I was in a hospital bed, men with clear eyes, happy faces,
and a look of assurance and purposefulness about them came to see me
and told me their stories. Some of these were hard to believe,
but it did not require a giant brain to perceive that they had
something I could use. How could I get it? It was simple,
they said, and went on to explain to me in their own language the
program of recovery and daily living that we know today as the Twelve
Steps of A.A. Dr. Bob dwelt at length on how prayer had given him
release, time and time again, from the nearly overpowering compulsion
to take a drink. It was he who convinced me, because his own
conviction was so real, that a Power greater than myself could help me
in the crises of life and that the means of communicating with this
Power was simple prayer. Here was a tall, rugged, highly educated
Yankee talking in a matter-of-course way about God and prayer. If
he and these other fellows could do it, so could I.
When
I got out of the hospital, I was invited to stay with Dr. Bob
and his dear wife, Anne. I was suddenly and uncontrollably seized
with
the old, paralyzing panic. The hospital had seemed so safe.
Now I was
in a strange, in a strange city, and fear gripped me. I shut
myself in
my room, which began to go around in circles. Panic, confusion,
and
chaos were supreme. Out of this maelstrom just two coherent
thoughts
came to the surface; one, a drink would mean homelessness and death;
two, I could no longer relieve the pressure of fear by starting home,
as was once my
p. 250
habitual solution to this problem, because I no longer
had a home. Finally, and I shall never know how much later it
was, one
clear thought came to me: Try prayer. You can't lose, and
maybe God
will help you---just maybe, mind you. Having no one else to turn
to, I
was willing to give Him a chance, although with considerable
doubt. I
got down on my knees for the first time in thirty years. The
prayer I
said was simple. It went something like this: "God, for
eighteen
years I have been unable to handle this problem. Please let me
turn it
over to you."
Immediately a great
feeling of peace descended upon me,
intermingled with a feeling of being suffused with a quiet
strength. I
lay down on the bed and slept like a child. An hour later I awake
to a
new world. Nothing had changed and yet everything had
changed. The
scales had dropped from my eyes, and I could see life in its proper
prospective. I had tried to be the center of my own little world,
whereas God was the center of a vast universe of which i was perhaps an
essential, but very tiny, part.
It is
well over sixteen years since I came back to life. I have
never had a drink since. This alone is a miracle. It is,
however, only the first of a series of miracles that have followed one
another as a result of my trying to apply to my daily life the
principles embodied in our Twelve Steps. I would like to sketch
for you the highlights of these sixteen years of a slow but steady and
satisfying upward climb.
Poor
health and a complete lack of money necessitated my remaining
with Dr. Bob and Anne for very close to a year. It would be
impossible
for me to pass over this without mentioning my love for, and my
p. 251
indebtedness to, these two wonderful people who are no longer with
us.
They made me feel as if I were a part of their family, and so did their
children. The example they and Bill W., whose visits to Akron
were
fairly frequent, set for me of service to their fellow men imbued me
with a great desire to emulate them. Sometimes during that year I
rebelled inwardly at what seemed like lost time and at having to be a
burden to these good people whose means were limited. Long before
I
had any real opportunity to give, I had to learn the equally important
lessons of receiving graciously.
During my first few months
in Akron. I was quite sure that I never
wanted to see my hometown again. Too many economic and social
problems
would beset me there. I would make a fresh start somewhere
else.
After six months of sobriety, I saw the picture in a different
light:
Detroit was the place I had to return to, not only because I must
face
the mess I had made there, but because it was there that I could be of
the most service to A.A. In the spring of 1939, Bill stopped off
in
Akron on his way to Detroit on business. I jumped at the
suggestion
that I accompany him. We spent two days there together before he
returned to New York. Friends invited me to stay on for as long
as I
cared to. I remained with them for three weeks, using part of the
time
in making many amends, which I had had no earlier opportunity of making.
The
rest of my time was devoted to A.A. spadework. I wanted "ripe"
prospects, and I didn't feel that I would get very far chasing
individual drunks in and out of bars. So I spent much of my time
calling on the people who I felt would logically come in contact
p. 252
with
alcoholic caes---doctors, ministers, lawyers, and the personnel men in
industry. I also talked A.A. to every friend who would listen, at
lunch, at dinner, on street corners. A doctor tipped me off to my
first prospect. I landed him and shipped him by train to Akron,
with a
pint of whiskey in his pocket to keep him from wanting to get off the
train in Toledo! Nothing has ever to this day equaled to the
thrill of
that first case.
Those three weeks left me
completely exhausted, and I had to return
to Akron for three more months of rest. While there, two or three
more
"cash customers" (as Dr. Bob used to call them---probably because they
had so little cash) were shipped in to us from Detroit. When I
finally
returned to Detroit to find work and to learn to stand on my own feet,
the ball was already rolling, however slowly. But it took six
more
months of work and disappointments before a group of three men got
together in my rooming-house bedroom for their first A.A. meeting.
It
sounds simple, but there were obstacles and doubts to
overcome. I well remember a session I had with myself soon after
I returned. It ran something like this: If I go around
shouting from the rooftops about my alcoholism, it might very possibly
prevent me from getting a good job. But supposing that just one
man died because I had, for selfish reasons, kept my mouth shut?
No, I was supposed to be doing God's will, not mine. His road lay
clear before me, and I'd better quit rationalizing myself into
detours. I could not expect to keep what I had gained unless I
gave it away.
The
Depression was still on, and jobs were scarce. My health was
still uncertain. So I created a job for
p. 253
myself selling women's
hosiery and men's made-to-order shirts. This gave me the freedom
to do A.A. work and to rest periods of two or three days when i became
too exhausted too carry on. There was more than one occasion when
I got up in the morning with just enough money for coffee and toast and
the bus fare to carry me to my first appointment. No sale---no
lunch. During that first year, however, I managed to make both
ends meet and to avoid ever going back to my old habit-pattern of
borrowing money when I could not earn it. Here by itself was a
great step forward.
During
the first three months, I carried on all these activities
without a car, depending entirely on buses and streetcars---I, who
always had to have a car at my immediate command. I, who had
never made a speech in my life and who would have been frightened sick
at the prospect, stood up in front of Rotary groups in different parts
of the city and talked about Alcoholics Anonymous. I, carried
away with the desire to serve A.A., gave what was probably one of the
first radio broadcasts about A.A., living through a case of mike fright
and feeling like a million dollars when it was all over. I lived
through a week of the fidgets because I had agreed to address a group
of alcoholic inmates in one of our state mental hospitals. There
it was the same---exhilaration at a mission accomplished. Do I
have to tell you who gained the most out of all this?
Within
a year of my return to Detroit, A.A. was a definitely
established little group of about a dozen members, and I too was
established in a modest but steady job handling an independent
dry-cleaning route of my own. I was my own boss. It took
five years
of A.A. living, and a substantial improvement in my
p. 254
health, before I
could take a full-time office job where someone else was boss.
This office job brought me
face to face with a problem that I had
sidestepped all my adult life, lack of training. This time I did
something about it. I enrolled in a correspondence school that
taught nothing but accounting. With this specialized training,
and a liberal business education in the school of hard knocks, I was
able to set up shop some two years later as an independent
accountant. Seven years of work in this field bright an
opportunity to affiliate myself actively with one of my clients, a
fellow A.A. We complement each other beautifully, as he is a born
salesman and my taste is for finance and management. At long last
I am doing the kind of work I have always wanted to do but never had
the patience and emotional stability to train myself for. The
A.A. program showed me the way to come down to earth, start from the
bottom, and work up. This represents another great change for
me. In the long ago past I used to start at the top as president
or treasurer and end up with the sheriff breathing down my neck.
So
much for my business life. Obviously I have overcome fear to a
sufficient degree to think in terms of success in business. With
God's
help I am able, for one day at a time, to carry business
responsibilities that, not many years ago, I would not have dreamed of
assuming. But what about my social life? What about those
fears that
once paralyzed me to the point of my becoming a semi-hermit? What
about my fear of travel?
It
would be wonderful were I able to tell you that my confidence in God
and my application of the
p. 255
Twelve Steps to my daily living have utterly
banished fear. But this would not be the truth. The most
accurate answer I can give you is this: Fear has never again
ruled my life since that day In September 1938, when I found that a
Power greater than myself could not only restore me to sanity but could
keep me both sober and sane. Never in sixteen years have I dodged
anything because I was afraid of it. I have faced life instead of
running away from it.
Some of the things that used to stop me in my tracks from fear
still make me nervous in the anticipation of their doing, but once I
kick myself into doing them, nervousness disappears and I enjoy
myself. In recent years I have had the happy combination of time
and
money to travel occasionally. I am apt to get into quite an
uproar for
a day or two before starting, but I do start, and once started, I have
a swell time.
Have
I ever wanted a drink during these years? Only once did I
suffer from a nearly overpowering compulsion to take a drink.
Oddly enough, the circumstances to take a drink and surroundings were
pleasant. I was at a beautifully set dinner table. I was in
a perfectly happy frame of mind. I had been in A.A. a year, and
the last thing in my mind was a drink. There was a glass of
sherry at my place. I was seized with an almost uncontrollable
desire to reach out for it. I shut my eyes and asked for
help. In fifteen seconds or less, the feeling passed. There
have also been numerous times when I have thought about taking a
drink. Such thinking usually began with thoughts of the pleasant
drinking of my youth. I learned early in my A.A. life that I
could not afford to fondle such thoughts, as you might fondle a pet,
because this particular pet could
p. 256
grow into a monster. Instead, I
quickly substitute one or another vivid scene from the nightmare of my
later drinking.
Twenty-odd
years ago, I made a mess out of my one and only
marriage, It was therefore not extraordinary that I should shy
away from any serious thought of marriage for a great many years after
joining A.A. Here was something requiring a greater willingness
to assume responsibility and a larger degree of cooperation and give
and take than even business requires of one. However, I must have
felt, deep down inside myself, that living the selfish life of a
bachelor was only half living. By living alone you can pretty
much eliminate grief from your life, but you also eliminate joy.
At any rate the last great step toward a well-rounded life still lay
ahead of me. So six months ago I acquired a ready-made family
consisting of one charming wife, four grown children to whom I am
devoted and three grandchildren. Being an alcoholic, I couldn't
dream of doing anything by halves! My wife, a sister member in
A.A., had been a widow nine years and I had been single eighteen
years. The adjustments in such a case are difficult and take
time, but we both feel that they are certainly worth it. We are
both depending upon God and our use of the Alcoholics Anonymous program
to help us make a success of this joint undertaking.
It is undoubtedly too soon for me to say how much of a success I shall
be as a husband in time to come. I do feel, though, that the fact
that I finally grew up to a point where I could even tackle such a job
is the apex of the story of a man who spent eighteen years running away
from life.
p. 257