Educated Agnostic
WHY go into the drinking pattern
that is so much the same with all of us? Three times I had left the hospital with hope that
I was saying goodbye forever. And here I was again.
The first day there I told the kindly doctor that I was a thoroughly hopeless case and would
probably continue to return as long as I could beg, borrow, or steal the money to get in. On
the second day he told me that he knew of something that would keep m e off liquor for life.
I laughed at him. Yes, indeed, I would do anything or take anything that would produce such
results, but there wasn't anything. On the third day a man came to talk with me. He was an
alcoholic who had stopped! He talked about alcoholism and a spiritual way of life. I was
deeply impressed by his seriousness, but nothing that he said made sense to me. He spoke
about God, and a power greater than one's self. I remember being very careful not to say
anything that might shake his faith i n whatever it was he believed! I was deeply grateful
to him for taking the trouble to talk with me, but what he had was not for me. I had thought
much about religion and had come to rather definite conclusions. There was no God. The
universe was an inexplicable phenomenon. In spite of my sorry state and outlook, there were
many beautiful things in life, but no beauty. There were truths discoverable about life, but
no truth.
There were people who were good, kind, considerate, but no such thing as
goodness. I had read rather extensively, but when people began to talk in such ultimates I
was lost. I could find in life no eternal purpose nor anything that might be labeled "divine
guidance." War, illness, cruelty, stupidity, poverty and greed were not and could not be the
product of any purposeful creation. The whole thing simply didn't make sense.
About this I felt no deep emotion. I had struggled with the problem during late adolescence,
but had long since ceased to give it anxious thought. Many people believe in a god of some
sort and worship him in various ways. That was excellent. I thought it nice that so many
people, poor misguided souls, could find so simple a solution to their problems. If this
world proved too hopelessly disillusioning they could always seek comfort in a more pleasant
existence promised in a world to come, where wrongs would be righted and justice tempered
with tender mercy would prevail. But none of that was for me. I had enough courage and
intellectual honesty to face life as I saw it without recourse to a self-erected deity.
The next day another man visited me. He, too, had been an alcoholic and stopped drinking. He
pointed out that I had found myself unable to handle my liquor problem by myself. He had
been in the same position, yet he hadn't had a drink in over three years! He told me of
other men who had found sobriety through the recognition of some power beyond themselves. If
I cared to I was to consider myself invited to a gathering
the following Tuesday where I would meet other alcoholics who had
stopped.
With the knowledge I now have, it is hard for me to recall how screwy the whole thing
sounded-the blind leading the blind, a union of drunks, all banded together in some kind of
a spiritual belief! What could be more idiotic! But . . . these men were sober!
Nuts!
I returned to my despairing wife with this incoherent story of a bunch of drunks who had
found a cure for their alcoholism through some kind of spiritual exercise and who held
regular meetings where, as far as I could figure out, they went through some kind of
spiritual exercise! She was very nearly convinced that my mental balance had now been
completely and probably permanently destroyed. The only rational support I could find for
giving it a try was that it was vouched for by the kindly doctor whom she had met on several
occasions at the hospital. That and the fact that nothing else worked.
May I stop at this point and address a few sentences direct to agnostic or atheistically
inclined alcoholics: You can't take less stock in the references made to God in this book
than I would have if this book had been available to me at that time. To you those
references have no meaning. They have simply used a name that people give to a fond
delusion. All your life, except possibly in early childhood, when you conceived of an
enormous figure with a flowing white beard somewhere beyond the clouds, it has meant
nothing. You have now too much intelligence and honesty to allow of such delusions. Even if
you could, you are too proud to affirm
a belief now that you are in desperate trouble, that you denied when
things were rosy. Or, you might possibly persuade yourself to believe in some creative
force, or algebraic "X," but what earthly good would an "X" be in solving such a problem as
you face? And, even admitting, from your knowledge of psychology, it is possible you might
acquire such delusions, how could you possibly believe in them if you recognized them as
delusions? Some such thinking must have been going on in your mind as you have weighed these
incredible experiences against your own inability to cope with a problem that is gradually
destroying your personality. Rest assured that such questions were in my mind. I could see
no satisfactory solution to any of them. But I kept hard to the only thing that seemed to
hold out any hope, and gradually my difficulties were lessened. I have not given up my
intellect for the sake of my soul, nor have I destroyed my integrity to preserve my health
and sanity. All I had feared to lose I have gained and all I feared to gain I have
lost.
But to conclude my story: The following Tuesday, hardly daring to hope and fearful of the
worst, my wife and I attended our first gathering with former alcoholic slaves who had been
made free through the rediscovery of a power for good, found through a spiritual attitude
toward life. I know that I have never before been so inspired. It was not anything that
happened. Because nothing happened. Nor yet by anything that was said, but more by an
atmosphere created by friendliness, sincerity, honesty, confidence, and good cheer. I
couldn't
believe that these men could have been drunks, and yet gradually I
learned their stories, alcoholics every one!
That was, with me, the beginning of a new life. It would be difficult, if not impossible,
for me to put into words the change that has taken place in me, I have since learned that
with many members the change has been almost instantaneous. This was not the case with me. I
was tremendously inspired at first, but my basic thinking was not altered that evening nor
did I expect any profound change. I felt that while the spiritual aspect of what these men
had was not for me, I did believe strongly in the emphasis they put on the need to help
others. I felt that if I could have the inspiration of these gatherings and if I could have
an opportunity to try to help others that the two together would re-enforce my own willpower
and thus be of tremendous assistance. But gradually, in a manner I cannot explain, I began
to re-examine the beliefs I had thought beyond criticism. Almost imperceptibly my whole
attitude toward life underwent a silent revolution. I lost many worries and gained
confidence. I found myself saying and thinking things that a short time ago I would have
condemned as platitudes! A belief in the basic spirituality of life has grown and with it
belief in a supreme and guiding power for good.
In the process of this change I can recognize two immensely significant steps for me. The
first step I took when I admitted to myself for the first time that all my previous thinking
might be wrong. The second step came when I first consciously wished to believe. As a
result of this experience I am convinced that to seek is to find, to ask is to be given. The day never passes that I do not silently cry out in thankfulness, not merely for my release from alcohol, but even more for a change that has given life new meaning, dignity, and beauty.