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Bill W. the co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous the program that has given
Alcoholics and Addicts a real solution to living in recovery.
For those in 12step fellowships, please read this transcript from Bill's
testimony, this was an act of humble service, which inspires many in the
recovering community to assist in educating policy makers on this disease that
many can and do recover from. It is important that those still suffering
find access to help and hope, if you like join us on
this journey and assist in passing the word to others for change in our
communities.
THURSDAY, JULY 24,1969
UNITED STATES SENATE,
SPECIAL SUBCOMMITTEE ON ALCOHOLISM AND
NARCOTICS OF THE COMMITTEE ON LABOR AND PUBLIC WELFARE
Washington, D.C.
.
[Page 107]
The subcommittee met at 9:30 a.m., pursuant
to call in room 4232, New Senate Office Building,
Senator Harold E. Hughes (chairman of the Subcommittee
presiding.
Present: Senators Hughes, Yarborough,
Williams, Javits, Dominick, and Bellmon.
* * * * * * * *
[Page 141]
Senator Hughes. For the next witness there
will be no television. There will be no pictures
taken.
The next witness is Bill W., Cofounder of
Alcoholics Anonymous. Audio is fine. You may
photograph the Senators or you may photograph Bill W.
from the back of the head if you want to.
Bill, you may proceed with your statement
as you desire.
STATEMENT OF BILL W., CO-FOUNDER,
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
Mr. Bill W. Mr. Chairman, Senators, we of
AA, it is already apparent, are going to have reason
for great gratitude on account of your invitation to
put in an appearance here. For me this is an extremely
moving and significant occasion. It may well mark the
advent of the new era in this old business of
alcoholism.
I think that the activities of this
committee and what they may lead to may be a turning
point historically. This is splashdown day for
Apollo.1 The impossible is happening. Like my dear
friend Marty [Marty Mann], who has just spoken to you,
I share with her the opinion that in this field of
alcoholism we are now seeing the beginning of the
achievement of the impossible.
Because or my appearance here as an AA
member, I have to limit myself pretty much to
statements about AA. But you must remember that as
time passes in these hearings a great many AA's will
be testifying as citizens, and they will be far more
free to express opinions on the general field and
their activities in it than I am.
So I take it that my mission here today
will be to acquaint you with the resources that AA may
reveal for treatment, for education and so on.
I shall start off by taking the dry part of
my recital first: a few figures. Our national
magazine, "The AA Grapevine," makes a brief and simple
statement as to what AA is: "Alcoholics Anonymous is a
fellowship of men and women who share their
experience, strength and hope with each other that
they may solve their common problem and help others to
recover from alcoholism.
"The only requirement for membership is a
desire to stop drinking. There are no dues or fees for
membership. We are self-supporting through our own
contributions.
"AA is not allied with any sect
denomination, politics, organization or institution,
does not wish to engage in controversy, neither
endorses nor opposes any causes. Our primary purpose
is to stay sober and help other alcoholics to achieve
sobriety."
Now, as a little more background for my
presentation, let me present just a few figures. Our
last census, that is to say, reports of our group
sessions, shows that we have 15,000 AA groups
throughout the world and an active membership of
285,000.
Besides the 285,000 there are hundreds of
thousands - maybe 200,000, for all we know, 300,000
recovered AA's on the sidelines who do not get caught
up in the active statistics, people who have remained
for the greater part sober, who are carrying AA
attitudes and practices and philosophies into the
community life.
So AA is much more in reality than a
generator of mere sobriety, it is returning us to
citizenship in the world.
Now, then, that breaks down these figures
into something like this: groups in the United States,
9,000, active members, 148,000; groups in Canada,
1,500; members in Canada, 21,000; groups overseas,
3,300, membership, 62,000; internationalists, 344. We
mean by that, people on ships, largely, who travel
from port to port spreading the AA message.
We have 648 groups in hospitals, members in
hospitals (and this means largely mental
institutions), 18,500; and groups in prisons, 33,000.
And lone members throughout the world, who correspond
with the world headquarters, 522.
Those statistics are of interest, but they
are scarcely inspiring, because they are not as yet
connected with the flesh and blood of human
experience. I think the best way of presenting some of
that experience would be to relate to you certain
fragments of AA history that have a particular bearing
upon this occasion.
Oddly enough, and contrary to the
information of most people, Alcoholics Anonymous, we
see in retrospect, very definitely had its start in
the offices of one of the founders of modern
psychiatry. I refer to Karl Jung, who in the early
1930's received a patient from America, a well-known
businessman. He had run the gamut of the cures of the
time, and desperately wanted to stop and could get no
help at all.
He came to Jung and stayed with him about a
year. He came to love the great man. During this
period the hidden springs of his motivation were
revealed. He felt now with this new understanding,
plus communication with this new and wonderful friend
that he had really shed this strange illness of mind,
body and spirit.
Leaving there, he was taken drunk, as we
AA's say, in a matter of a month, perhaps, and coming
back, he said, "Karl, what does this all mean?" Then
this man made the statement which I think led to the
formation of AA. It took a great man to make it. He
said, "Roland, up until recently I thought you might
be one of those rare cases who could be aided and made
to recover by the practice of my art. But like most
who will pass through here, I must confess that my art
can do nothing for you."
"What," said the patient, "Doctor, you are
my port of last resort. Where shall I turn now? Is
there no other recourse?"
The Doctor said "Yes, there may be. There
is the off-chance. I am speaking you of the
possibility of a spiritual awakening, if you like, a
conversion."
"Oh," said the patient "but I am a
religious man. I used to be a vestryman in the
Episcopal Church. I still have faith in God, but He
has little in me, I should think."
Jung said, "I mean something that goes
deeper than that Roland, not just a question of faith.
I am talking about a transformation of spirit that can
motivate you and set you free from this.
"Time after time alcoholics have recovered
by these means. The lightning strikes here and there,
and no one can say why or how. All I can suggest is
that you expose yourself to some religious environment
of your own choice."
The patient went to England. He became
associated with the group of that day in later years
called "Moral Rearmament," [the Oxford Groups] and to
his great surprise he began to feel released from this
hideous compulsion.
He returned to America. He had a place in
Vermont. There he ran into a friend of mine about to
be committed, a friend that we AA's lovingly call Ebby.
Ebby, at the time a wealthy man, had just run his car
through the house of a farmer, into the kitchen,
pushing in the wall, and when he stopped, out stepped
a horrified lady from inside and said, "How about a
cup of coffee?"
This was the extent of his illness and he
was about to be committed. The patient, Roland, got
hold of him, took him to New York, exposed him to the
Oxford Groups, whose emphasis was upon admission of
hopelessness, in a sense, on one's unaided resources a
human being could not go too far.
Another was self-survey. Another was a
species of confession, and then there was restitution
and belief in a Higher Power.
That movement was rather evangelical, but
AA owes it a great debt in what to do and also in what
not to do.
Then, thinking of me, and I was about at
the end of my rope, my friend visited me. In the
previous summer I had been in a drying-out emporium in
New York City, and there my doctor, who was to make a
crucial contribution to AA, had said to my wife,
"Lois, I am afraid, my dear, that I can do nothing. I
thought that he might be one of those rare instances
in which I could help him stay sober, but I am afraid
not. He is the victim of a compulsion to drink against
his will, and, as much as he desires, that compulsion
I don't think can be broken; and this compulsion is
coupled with what I call an allergy.
"It is a misnomer, but it is indicating
that there is something wrong with this man
physically. Therefore, the eternal dilemma has been
this eternal compulsion to drink, to the point almost
of lunacy, coupled with the physical allergy that
guarantees insanity and death. I think you will have
to lock him up."
After that treatment I came home and a few
months later this friend appeared, sat across the
kitchen table where there was a big pitcher of gin and
pineapple juice. I was a solitary drinker of about two
or three bottles of bathtub gin a day. The year is
1934. Enters this friend of mine that I had known to
be a very hopeless case.
At once it struck me that he was in a state
of release, this just was not another drunk on the
wagon. Then he told me this story, how he had felt
this relief, the moment he had gotten honest with
himself and adhered to their simple program, he began
to feel this release, how much more he had gotten
through his friend, Roland. He told me the story about
him.
Finally I put the question to him. I said,
"Ebby, you say you don't want to drink, you are not
drinking today. What does this mean?"
He said, "Well, I have got religion." I
said, "Well, what brand is it?" So he revealed to me
his story. I was deeply impressed, really, because
here was somebody that I knew had lived in this
strange world of alcoholism, where I, too, was a
denizen. So this transmission of the fatal nature of
this malady in many cases struck me. I think it caused
a great personal deflation and laid the ground for
what was subsequently to happen.
My friend went off. I didn't see him for a
few days. In no waking hour could I forget the face
across the kitchen table. Yet I gagged on this concept
of a Higher Power, even in its lowest denominator.
So I finally decided I would go to the
hospital, get detoxified. I appeared at the hospital.
Dr. Silkworth began treatment. I announced that I had
found something new, I thought, I wanted to get
sobered up.
I could not have any emotional conversion.
So after about 3 days detoxification, I found myself
falling into a terrible depression. I felt trapped.
In other words, I was asking the
impossible, to believe in a Higher Power, let alone
cast my dependence on it on the one side, and yet my
guide in science [Dr. Silkworth] was saying, "But
medically you are pretty hopeless."
Out of this eventuated a very sudden
spiritual awakening in which I was released from this
compulsion to drink, a compulsion on my mind morning,
noon and night for several years. I was suddenly
released from it.
Mine was a rather spectacular experience.
But it is quite identical to what happens to any good
AA. In other words, their experiences are apt to take
a longer time and they are not so sensational, but we
do get the transforming effect on motivation.
With the experience came this thought: Why
can't this be induced chain style? In other words, I
can identify myself with another alcoholic through
this kinship of suffering, then why can't that inflate
him and perhaps he will be motivated and one can talk
to the other.
I came out of the hospital, began to
feverishly work with alcoholics. We had a house full
of them. I was so keyed up with the paranoid side with
my spiritual awakening, I even thought I had a kind of
divine appointment about all the alcoholics in the
world.
There was 6 months of complete failure.
Finally I went to Akron on a business trip to see if I
could regain my fortunes. I was away from my friends.
The business deal fell through. I had hardly carfare
home and all of a sudden the old desire to drink
started to come back. I was frightened.
Then I realized that in talking and trying
to help other alcoholics, even though the cases had
all been paid, this had a great deal to do with my
staying sober. These were the elements of the process
and through a strange set of circumstances I was led
to a physicist and from there to the doctor in town
who was to become my partner in this thing.
He, too, when the nature of his malady was
revealed to him in medical terms, one drunk talking to
another, achieved sobriety that he had long since
thought impossible.
Shortly after that, in one of the Akron
hospitals, No.3 got sober, and an AA group, the first
one really, came into existence in June 1935 in Akron,
Ohio. Then there was a return to New York and a group
started there. A few people in from Cleveland began to
come to the group meetings in Akron.
We grew very, very slowly, trial and error
all along the line. If it seemed to work, get with it,
if it failed, discard it. That was our practice until
about 4 years later, after hundreds of failures, we
found that we had a hundred people sober. At that
time, having retired from the Oxford Group, and yet
having no name actually, we just called ourselves a
nameless bunch of drunks trying to help each other get
well. At that time we began to think in terms of a
book, which supported by case histories would portray
our approach.
The book is called "Alcoholics Anonymous"
and it was published when we had a hundred members. Up
to this time we had been virtually a secret society.
Then we realized that we would have to be publicized.
So we were very reluctant about this, what kind of
people would come in?
We were publicized first by Liberty
magazine, and flooded by 6,700 inquiries into a post
office box in New York. We gave these inquiries to a
few of our traveling people out of the small
established groups. Then came an experience in mass
production of sobriety which I think is most relevant
to any presentation here.
Up until the fall of 1939, 5 years after I
had sobered up, we had thought that the presentation
of our case to the other alcoholics was up to the
founding fathers or the elder hierarchy or whatnot. We
thought it to be a very slow business indeed.
The idea of a mass revival was very far
from our minds. The Cleveland Plain Dealer decided to
publish a series of articles about us. There was a
chap doing the articles who himself was an alcoholic.
The poor devil never recovered, but he could talk our
language.
These articles were placed in a box on the
editorial page every 3 or 4 days and a supporting
editorial was written. Then our friends of the press
and the communications media began this benign process
of bringing us customers.
At this time the group in Cleveland
numbered only about 20 people. They were suddenly
confronted with hundreds of frantic telephone calls to
hospitals and people with or without money, people who
were hospitalized this week, next -week were going
with an older member to see somebody in the hospital.
This thing pyramided so that in the succeeding year of
1940 these 20 had pyramided themselves into what had
turned out to be several hundred sound recoveries.
Now this is the final suggestion, that the
resources of Alcoholics Anonymous for mass society
have hardly been touched. This set of figures shows in
the last 10 years Alcoholics Anonymous membership has
pyramided at the rate of only 8 or 10 percent a year,
when in the early days, in the first decade, increases
of 100 percent 500 percent 1,000 percent were very
common. Therefore, we have a tremendous lot of people
with whom to deal. This is partly due to the
reluctance of the alcoholic himself.
Figures tell us that we have 5 million
alcoholics in America. This means 5 million poor souls
who are in all stages of this dissolution and in the
early years scarcely one of these people can be
brought to believe that he is actually beginning to be
sick.
This rationalization can exist right
through all sorts of evidence of sickness right down
to the undertaker himself. It is this mass capability
of the alcoholic to rationalize himself out of this
predicament. This is one of the great obstacles to
bringing alcoholics toward treatment. In fact this is
the obstacle that all of the remarkable agencies we
now have at work are running against, how do we get
these people in?
It is a process of education, but what kind
of education we simply don't know. Another part of the
resistance of Alcoholics Anonymous stems from the fact
that it has a spiritual content and a great many of
our professional friends are apt to believe Alcoholics
Anonymous is for the religiously susceptible only.
Well, this is a very mistaken impression.
At last year's New York dinner, we were talking about
this topic and it suddenly occurred to me that of the
four speakers on the platform, only one of us four had
any religious background whatever..
Why were they in AA? They were driven there
because there was no other place to go, no other place
to get well.
So these are the treatment resources.
How can the resources of experience which
have to do with the other agencies and disciplines in
the field be brought to this committee by our friends
and by AA members who are also working in these area.
You have begun to surmise that in effect, we are
coming out of the woodwork, we are in practically all
of these efforts bringing the AA experience to them,
making it available and that kind of experience can be
made available by any members here in these committee
hearings if they come here acting as citizens and
recovered alcoholics [but not as AA members].
We have to do that as a protective thing
for AA. Now we have great numbers of friends. Those,
too, can be called upon and I notice that some are
going to be available here. For instance here is Jack
Norris, a nonalcoholic.
Many of you know him. He is chairman of our
board of trustees. He is second in charge, or was
until his retirement in the medical department of
Eastman Kodak, the second industrial company to give
the nod to AA and make use of the resources.
In Wilmington, for example, we have Dr.
Glanto, the head of the medical department of the
first company ever to make AA arrangements with AA. I
think he would be quite happy to testify.
On our board we have Mr. Austin McCormick,
one of the country's great criminologists, and I think
he could throw much light on the situation. We have AA
members beyond count.
So you have that sort of resource available
for treatment and for experience.
Well, I think I am presenting this overlong
and perhaps you gentlemen would like to ask questions
at this point.
Senator Hughes. Bill, I thank you for your
bring us up to date on the beginnings and where you
are now. I would like to ask some pointed questions.
No.1, I have never been in a prison
institution, I have never been in mental hospital
institution, where there was not an AA group in my
years in public life, not only of the inmates but of
people coming in from the outside who were conducting
meetings in an effort to help these people recover.
This is also true in the case of halfway houses,
private treatment centers, and every public treatment
center that I know of dealing with the alcoholic where
there are Government programs sponsored by State,
community, or county divisions.
I take from your testimony that as a
cofounder of AA you certainly believe that in any
program this committee and this Congress might
develop, that there would be a place and a willingness
for AA members to work in recovery, education, and
counseling of the ailing alcoholics, and prevention
also?
Mr. Bill W. I should think so. Of course,
this is the pleasure of our friends. But certainly
this experience is of great value and in respect of
this communication one alcoholic is certainly of
unique value.
Senator Hughes. I think what you indicated
is what I expected. No. 1, we have available through
Alcoholics Anonymous a resource of willing people whom
you have indicated have the capabilities of
multiplying not 100 percent, but 1,000 percent if they
can get to the people.
Mr. Bill W. If we can get to the people.
Senator Hughes - This is the essence of my
question. Undoubtedly knowing the organization quite
well myself, these people have dedicated themselves to
doing the job of calling on alcoholics and assisting
in any way they can in their recovery.
Mr. Bill W. Yes. Of course, it ought to be
observed at this point that the virtues of AA are not
really earned virtues. It is a matter of do or die.
Nothing is too good for the next sufferer. So our
dedication is first based on the fact that our lives
and fortunes have been saved and we want to share this
with the next fellow, knowing that it is a part of the
maintenance of our own recovery and life or death.
So this is the source of the great
dedication that you see among the AA.
Senator Javits. I would like to just join
the Chair in what he has said and assure you, sir,
from what I see here, we will do our utmost to utilize
to the fullest these resources which you have so
eloquently testified to.
Senator Hughes. Thank you very much,
Senator Javits. Senator Yarborough?
Senator Yarborough. Mr. Bill W., I am
astonished to learn that AA had its beginning in 1934
and 1935 and was very small until 1939. Because the
escalation was so fast after that, so well known
nationally now, that you have an idea this has gone on
for generations.
Mr. Bill W. When you consider the enormous
ramifications of this disease, we have just scratched
the surface. I think we should humbly remember this.
Senator Yarborough. The experience you
personally described when this burden fell away from
you, I have thought back in my reading, I know of only
two other men who have had such a dramatic experience.
One was Saul of Tarsus, on the road to Damascus and
the other was Sam Houston, the great national hero.
Sam Houston, who once was called by the
Indians, Big Drunk, became, while he was a U.S.
Senator, a temperance lecturer all over the United
States.
Congratulations on what you have done for
so many hundreds of thousands who are in your debt and
the millions I believe who will be reached in the not
distant future.
Senator Hughes. Bill, I thank you kindly
for your willingness to come forward as a cofounder of
the fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous and express the
basis of its founding, it's willingness to cooperate,
and the hope of people over the last few decades who
have found their way through this. The Subcommittee
and the Committee are indebted to you for your
willingness to do this. I want to express also the
Chair's appreciation to the press for their
cooperation in honoring tenets of your institution to
retain the anonymity of your members.
Mr. Bill W. I thank them, too, with you.
Senator Hughes. Thank you very much, Bill.
The committee will recess until 1:30 p.m.
(I am happy to make this testimony
available. Bill assured the AA members who testified
during the three days of hearings that it was
perfectly permissible for them to testify "as citizens
and recovered alcoholics" so long as they did not, in
this public forum, reveal their membership in AA,
which would have been a violation of the AA tradition.
I was present at this hearing, at which both Bill
Wilson and Marty Mann testified. I served on the
Subcommittee professional staff from 1969 to 1980. I
have added the footnote on page 2, and a few
explanatory words in brackets to make it more
understandable to today's readers.)
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