The Unmanageable Life
What brought You to A.A. or a 12 Step Fellowship?
By Dick B.
Copyright 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved.
A Little Chunk of History For Openers
Some of us get all wrapped up in difficult words when we
enter A.A. or another 12 Step Fellowship. We wonder what in the heck it means
to be "powerless over alcohol." We wonder if our life has truly
become "unmanageable." But a little bit of history might show us how
much more simple the early AAs kept these issues.
Bill Wilson didn't say in his story that he was powerless
over alcohol and that his life had become unmanageable. No sir. He said,
"I was licked." And I could sure relate to that. Then, a bit later when Bill was writing about
what he said were the six word-of-mouth ideas that were involved in the A.A.
program, he said: "We got honest with ourselves." Now that's a
tougher concept to apply or see or accept. But think about it: How often did I
really take an honest look at my drinking to excess. How often did I look at
the shambles my life had become. How often did I even try to link up the drink
with the disaster. The real story involved drink-drunk-disaster. But I didn't
see it that way. I thought drinking was the answer to all my problems.
But drinking wasn't the answer. It was the problem. I came
to A.A. because of problems - not a drinking problem. I was licked, and I knew
it. I soon took an honest look at my life, and I began to see it as an imponderable
mess. AAs though just kept pushing the idea that everything would get better if
I just didn't take the first drink. And that was a tall one! But some of us
began to realize at least that the seemingly unmanageable mess would never get
any better if we continued to souse ourselves with an alcohol remedy. Finally,
a very few of us learned some history of early A.A.
Early AAs often used a simple prayer that was used in its
predecessor the Oxford Group. They would say: "God manage me because I
can't manage myself." In other words, they didn't quibble over the
problems. They just came to believe that they could be solved if resort were
had to the Almighty. Well that's enough for history.
Now let's look at denial, dishonesty, and disarray.
What Unmanageable Events Did We See?
I don't claim that things were the same for all us
newcomers. In fact we were peppered with stories that didn't seem to mesh with
ours. "I'm not like that guy," was a common response. "I never
got that bad," was another. "Maybe I'm just a loser, and my real
problem isn't drinking at all," could be a supposed way out of any
discipline or treatment.
Yet I think most AAs and members of other fellowships would
concede that many or most of the following tangles had become part of our lives.
Things weren't going well with the family. Sure they were
all to blame, but how is it that problems with wives, kids, siblings, aunts and
uncles - girlfriends or boyfriends - were getting larger and large; their
warnings and concerns were getting louder and louder; and their actual
assistance in getting us out of messes was really getting smaller and smaller.
Things weren't going well with the job. Sure we hadn't
necessarily been fired or lost our customers or clients. But somehow the
patience of any or all had been strained and evidently less and less with each
missed appointment, with each fouled up activity, with each angry outburst,
with each fearful approach to the person or the job itself.
Then there was the dishonesty. Instead of bragging about how
much we drank, it seemed better to cover it up. To buy at different stores. To
drink at different bars. To eat at different restaurants. To hang out with
different people - the ones who drank too much. Maybe there was even the hiding
of the evidence - hiding the extra bottles, placing the excessive evidence at
the bottom of the garbage can, denying the amount we had to drink, hiding the
facts about the people, places, and things that were becoming a new part of
life.
What about the legal problems? The bills that were not being
paid, with the dun-notices that were piling up. The traffic tickets that really
didn't need to be dealt with. The diminishing number of business and customers
leading to debt and thoughts of bankruptcy. The very real considerations of
divorce, loss of child custody, and restraining orders. The pile-up of tax
returns, and the delays in payment of taxes, followed by IRS activity. Then the
real criminal stuff. Drunk driving. Driving without insurance. Driving without
a license. Driving without proper registration. Driving with open containers.
Driving under the influence. Possession. Surely they weren't just the result of
drinking too much, but the events piled up.
What about ethical problems? The doctor who commits
malpractice. The lawyer who misses court or misrepresents his clients. The
fiduciary who embezzles or falsifies reports. The person who takes bribes. The
person who regularly lies to family, friends, employers, authorities, courts,
doctors, therapists, and businesses.
What about the criminal problems? Were we embezzling funds,
dipping into trust accounts, breaching fiduciary obligations, cheating people,
lying to clients and customers, padding expense accounts, cheating on tax
returns, filing false insurance applications and reports? Oh, those couldn't be
due to alcohol. But isn't it interesting how many of us found ourselves in just
such circumstances. Then the biggies for some: Robbing. Breaking and entering.
Larceny. Assault. Battery. Domestic violence. Manslaughter and homicide.
Messing with under-age children. And just about anything else that is covered
in the penal codes-local, state, and federal
What about health problems? The liver disorders. The heart
troubles. The falls and fractures. The injuries in fights or accidents or
job-related problems. The vague aches and pains. The "hangovers." The
blackouts - can't find the keys or the car or the house; and can't remember
what was said or done. The confusion and forgetfulness - not thinking too
clearly from time to time. And the ones the doctor warns about - tremors and
physical aberrations.
What about the loneliness, the guilt, the shame, the anger,
the fear, the despair? Long before the judge or the doctor or the clergyman or
the family begins to get the point across, we feel distant, abandoned, ashamed,
sometimes angry, often guilty, filled with fear, and without friends. If the
problems get bad enough, enter despair—thoughts of suicide.
What about the mental conditions? Depression, melancholy
moods, sleep disorders, manic episodes, brain damage, and more. How many are
seen by the psychiatrist, the psychologist, the counselor, and the family
doctor before finally being sent to or seeking a mental ward or hospital.
What about the religious consequences? Most of the scum bag
things alcoholics finally do are squarely violative of Biblical principles,
Christian teaching, and even the Ten Commandments. In short, they are sin!
Excessive drinking is a sin. Adultery is a sin. Lying is a sin. And on and on
from there. Sin may be commonplace, but it's still sin - large, small, hidden,
open, productive of harm, or temptingly pleasant and permissible.
What about the trips to the Emergency Room? To Juvvie? To
court? To jail? To prison? To the Probation or Parole Officer? To the
therapist? Do these have anything to do with drinking?
Are These Unmanageable Events Tied To Drinking Too Much
I won't try to claim that every unmanageable event I've
mentioned is the special private property of an alcoholic or addict. I'm not an
expert. And there are plenty of surveys and scholarly papers that deal with
each and every one of the items.
I do know that most of us can sit in an A.A. meeting, hear
the drunkalogs, laugh at the episodes, cry at the disasters, and wonder if we
ever were or could be or are like that. But sooner or later, you begin to feel
at home - if for no other reason than your conclusion that you either did most
of those things, came close to doing them, would be terrified if you did them,
or actually harbor some secret memories of wanting to be in exactly those spots
- without the adverse consequences.
I've sponsored more than 100 men in their recovery. I've
done a Fifth Step with my first sponsor, listened to his shortcomings, and
shared mine. And I saw far more similarities than differences in conduct - even
though we were poles apart in education, vocation, age, family background,
religious beliefs, and so on. Then when
I did the Fifth Steps with the men I sponsored—many of whom were 40 years
younger than I - I concluded that their traits, their adventures, their
troubles, their disasters, and their stories were really quite similar to mine
in the most important area—they were drinking or drugging related. I saw that in Fifth Steps. I heard that in
drunkalogs. I read that in the Big Book and its stories. I discussed it with
hundreds of AAs. I studied it in the classic books by alcoholics. I saw it in
the movies about alcoholism. I heard it in the treatment center. I heard it in
the VA Psych Ward in San Francisco. I heard it in the State Prison at
Vacaville. And I hear about it by phone, by letter, and by email almost every
day today.
You Can't Change The Alcoholic. But The Alcoholic Can. And
God Can
I've found nothing in the Bible that suggests that living
outside the law, outside the Bible, outside the teachings of Christ, and in the
devil's workshop of sin produces anything consistent with God’s will or with
the prosperous and healthy life He clearly wants us to have. I've found lots to
suggest that those who don't become born again of God's spirit can expect a hot
time on the return of Jesus Christ. I've found lots to prove that those who
obeyed God received His forgiveness, His healings, His deliverance, His comfort
and love, His kindness, His consolation, and His everlasting promise of
spending eternity with Him and His son, as well as utilizing His power and
guidance to live an abundant life right here and now.
There's nothing in my A.A. experience to suggest that
hammering an alcoholic with evidence of his drinking or preaching to him about
the extent of his sins or calling his attention to the self-destructive hole he
has dug for himself will cause him to do an about face and change. There's
substantial evidence, however, that you can bring him to examine his drinking,
his sins, and his disasters and mismanagement when you share your own and show
you understand the relevance of drinking and overcame seemingly insurmountable
problems, including excessive drinking, by turning to our Creator for
help.
Alcoholics used to listen to their brothers during their
early hospitalization and received daily visits by the pioneers. Alcoholics
used to listen to Dr. Bob when he spent hours at the hospital talking to them.
Alcoholics knew they were among people who had shared their misery,
mismanagement, and despair and come out ahead of the game. Just don't drink, they were told. Stay away
from temptation, they were warned. Surrender your life to God's care and
direction and trust Him, they were advised. And get out there in the trenches
and bring to others the message of how much God loves us and will take care of
us when we seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness. I've seen it
work, and it's worked for me.
The Unmanageable Life Pointed Me To A.A. And God
The Bible recounts over and over that when "the poor
man cried, the Lord (YAHWEH) heard him and delivered him from all his
troubles." That's what I wanted. I wasn't thinking about drinking. And I
didn't drink. But I sure was thinking of getting out of the mess I had made of
my life, and I never harbored the idea that quitting drinking and going to A.A.
meetings would do the job. Before long, I knew I needed God's help for all of
it. I sought it, and I received it! So can you.
END
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