A FLOWER OF THE SOUTH
Somewhat faded, she nevertheless bloomed afresh.
She still had her husband, her home, and a chance to
help start A.A. in Texas.
I KNOW THAT if I do daily what I
have done for these last thirteen and a half years, I will stay sober. I didn't know that
when I came into A.A. I knew that I wanted to try A.A. and if that didn't work, I didn't
think anything would. I wish I could tell you how and why A.A. works, but I don't know. I
only know that it does—if you desire it with your whole heart and without reservation. I
think that no one comes to A.A. until he's tried everything else. As I grow in A.A., I
realize that a person with as much self-will as I had, as hard a head and as diseased an
ego, had to try everything that I could think of, butting my head against every stone wall
before I was ready to come in. The only thing I have really to offer you is my own story,
telling you just what sort of a drunk I was.
I came from a family where alcohol was socially acceptable. I lived in New Orleans where, in
the twenties, cocktail parties, dances and night spots were almost the order of the day—or
rather the night. I can't remember a dinner at home that we didn't have a white wine or
claret on the table. We always had cordials after dinner and I know my sister and my
brother and I loved creme de menthe. So I was used to it, but I didn't
know what the effect of alcohol was because I always had wine, usually with dinner, but
always with a lot of ice and about two tablespoons of sugar in it. Drinking it with your
meals, you didn't feel it.
I believe the first time I ever realized what alcohol would do for me was at my own wedding.
I was an extremely sensitive person and so self-conscious that I hurt all over.
The night that I was married I had a big church wedding. But I couldn't enjoy anything; I
was scared to death. Scared that my dress wasn't going to fit right, that the church wasn't
going to be filled, that I'd fall flat on my face walking up the aisle; in fact; I was
afraid I wasn't going to be a prima donna in the place where I should be. You didn't carry a
little orchid up the aisle in those days; you carried a great big bouquet, like a funeral
spray, and you didn't have your picture taken until just before you went to the church. As
self-conscious as I was, I had to pose for those pictures, holding this huge bouquet. By the
time all this was over, I was really in a terrific state, and my father taking in things
said, "Miss Esther is about to faint. Get her something to drink." The servant he turned to
was our old cook, and she liked to drink. Emma ran out to the kitchen and came back with a
water glass full of bourbon and made me drink it down. The church was just three blocks from
our home. I got right into the car and they drove me over, and just as soon as I got to the
church they started the wedding. As I started down the aisle, that bourbon went right
through me. I walked up that aisle
just like Mae West in her prime. I wanted to do it all over again.
I don't think that I was conscious of what had happened to me, but I think that it
registered sub-consciously. It was really medicinal that night, that whiskey, and it was a
medication after that. As long as it eased situations socially, it helped just fine, but
somewhere along the line, it backfired. When I crossed that line, I don't know. Something
went haywire and I got to depend on it so I could do nothing without it.
I think that it was about 1931 that it first dawned on me that I had a problem, and yet
nobody was very critical about it except my family, and that was only because I decided,
after seven years of marriage, that I would divorce my husband. I did divorce him in July.
It only took a month to get a divorce in Texas. Then I went home. I was free, white and
twenty-one and I had a time for myself. I put my poor mother and father through agonies but,
finally, I couldn't stand living with them and having them watch everything I did. I had no
feeling of security, and I knew that I had done a very stupid thing, so I went back to Texas
and remarried my ex-husband. Then we moved up to Oklahoma. That was when all the boys and
Esther got drunk and the wives didn't. They would talk about it. That went on for about
three years, and then we moved back to Texas again. I really started drinking
then.
Frank, my husband, would come home day after day and find me passed out. Or he would leave
on a trip and by the time he came home, I'd be passed out. So finally, he said to me one
morning, "Esther, why do
you do this?" I said, "Well, I don't know why." I had been reading a lot
about psychiatry and I thought, "Maybe if I talk to a psychiatrist he can find out what is
happening, and then I can drink like a lady." Frank said, "If you'd like to talk to a
psychiatrist, I'll see a doctor and find out who to go to here." Frank left to find the
doctor and I got drunk.
Frank found the doctor, but the doctor didn't want to take an alcoholic. He called me that
because I was drinking too much. So I got drunker and drunker, and then, suddenly, I woke up
in the booby-hatch.
I had never been inside of an insane asylum and I really thought I was going to a private
hospital. I woke up in this bare room with nothing around me but bars; they wouldn't let me
smoke and treated me, well, like I was nuts. I knew this, and right away
I got furious and would not even talk to the doctor in the place. I wanted to go home. But
they kept me there—I was supposed to stay a month, but they only kept me there seventeen
days. I know that I was terribly screwed up inside, but I came out much worse. I could not
identify myself with the people with whom I found myself and there was no understanding, and
I can't stand confinement anyhow. Because of this state of confusion and frustration I had
hysterics on the seventeenth day for the first and only time in my life. So the doctor let
me go home on one condition. He asked if I would cooperate with him after I went home, and
if I would have a trained nurse stay with me for at least two weeks.
I was so happy over getting home that I changed overnight, but not enough!
This was in 1936 or 1937. I was crazy about my
doctor. I cooperated with that man one hundred per cent! That is how
dishonest I was with myself. I know now that I asked questions and told him that I wanted to
learn, but I told him only what I wanted to believe about myself. The questions he asked me
that I didn't answer honestly, I thought were none of his business. I could see no reason
why they should have any relationship to this problem of getting drunk every now and then.
So it drove me deeper into the psychosis or neurosis that I had, and that I hated deep down
in my heart. I resented the fact that Frank had done this to me, and I just didn't know what
was going on. Life was pretty miserable.
About this time, at Christmas, after being under this doctor's care, we decided that there
wasn't anything more to do. Every time I got drunk, my husband would send me to a nursing
home. He hesitated to send me back to that hospital. I think I disrupted the hospital.
Anyhow, after Christmas my husband gave me a cocker spaniel who is, I think, just as
notorious in A.A. as I am. Frank had to go to New York, but because I had a dog, we had a
duplex, and I thought—if only we had a house! A duplex apartment isn't any place to raise a
dog. So I located a house, and I thought we ought to move into it immediately, but Frank was
horrified, because he never knew what was going to happen to me. He always thought that
maybe I was safer in a building where there were other people. He said that because of my
drinking, he shouldn't leave, but that he had to go to New York for two weeks. Then he said
I couldn't possibly move on the first of February because I couldn't stay in that place by
myself.
He said, "If your father will come out and stay with you, you can have
the house." So I called my father and he said, "Yes," he'd come out and stay with me for
that time. I loved my father dearly and I adored my dog, and I'd gotten this new house and
Frank had just given me a new fur coat and I was thrilled to death. So Frank went to New
York and despite all these things, I got drunk.
My father, as I have said, was very indulgent and loved me dearly, and knew how to get
around me. He talked me into taking the Samaritan Treatment. He even had the people come
out, and tell me what kind of a room I was going to have, and that he could come and see me,
and that the dog could come and see me. So I took the Samaritan Treatment. I guess there are
plenty of other graduates of this treatment around. There are no easy ways to sober up, but
that's the most excruciating. I took that treatment three times and it didn't work—at least,
for me.
There was a doctor in our church congregation who was interested in my case, and he thought
it was a vitamin deficiency. So I went down to him quite a few times a month and had him
shoot me full of the stuff; and then I went across the street to a little drug store to take
a glass of beer or two beers, and then stopped at the liquor store to get myself a pint and
go home. You know those vitamins just don't keep you sober!
In 1940, we moved once more, to Houston; my husband thought maybe a change of environment
would help and I'd be all right. There was nothing else left to try. We had tried
everything. The only thing that I could do would be to call the doctor to help sober me up.
I wouldn't go to hospitals because I wanted my dog there, so I had to
have a trained nurse. The only time my dog would have anything to do with me was when I had
a hangover, and when I was so sick he was the only one who would have anything to do with me
at all.
I have told you some of the funny things, but not much of the shame and degradation. I fell
down and knocked out my front teeth. I dropped a two-quart water bottle on my big toe. I
couldn't walk, having it in a cast, and the doctor left the cast on three weeks longer than
was necessary because he never found me sober enough to take it off. It was one bang after
another, so finally, one afternoon in April of 1941, I got as drunk as a skunk, and while I
do not walk very straight sober, you should see me when I'm drunk! I was just as drunk as I
could be, getting ready to take an afternoon walk. I got into slacks and out I went, weaving
with the dog. A patrol car passed. The cop must have seen the condition that I was in
because he decided to take me home. When he picked me up, I must have gotten sassy and told
him that he couldn't do that, so he took my dog home and took me to jail! As I said before,
I don't like to be fenced in, and with those bars you don't get hotel service. They phoned
my husband that I was in jail and in such terrible shape that they didn't know what I would
do to myself; and they realized that jail was no place for me, but that he was to wait a
while before he got me, because at the time they called him to come over for me I was
beating a tin cup against the wall. I wanted a cigarette and room service, which I didn't
get. So I was in just a few hours. But somewhere during that
time, I remembered going back on the bunk and crying my eyes out. I
think that is when I hit bottom.
My husband couldn't tell whether I wanted to do something about my drinking. I was as
defiant as anybody could be because I was scared. I didn't know which way to turn. So when
he came for me, as he walked down the stairs, I could see him through the bars, and he was
signing for me; I looked at him and said, "Don't you sign anything in this place!" I was
going to sue the city for what they did to me. But Frank turned around and looked at me and
said, "Esther, remember you're in jail and not at home." I don't want anybody ever to look
at me like that again. The contempt and disgust that was in his face and thoughts! I think I
actually read more contempt than was really there because just a week before someone had
sent him the Saturday Evening Post article on A.A., and there was a glimmer of hope in it
for him.
There was something else that I could try—A.A. But Frank was frightened to death to give it
to me, because I resented everything he said and did. So he waited another week or two and I
don't think I stayed sober hardly at all. Frank was out of town, and I remember that he'd
gotten in this one night and found me drunk. The next morning he came into my room and said,
"Esther, I'm not going to lecture you any more, but I want you to read this article. If you
will try this thing, I'll go along with you. If you don't, you will have to go home. I
cannot sit by and watch you destroy yourself."
When he left I thought, what is this crack-pot thing? I took two or three drinks so my eyes
could focus, and
I could see that horrible picture of the awful drunk on the first page;
he couldn't get the drink to his mouth, he had a towel around his hand and he needed a
shave. But, from the very first paragraph on, something happened to me. I realized that
there were other people in this world who behaved and acted as I did, and that I was a sick
person, that I was suffering from an actual disease. It had a name and symptoms, just like
diabetes or T.B. I wasn't entirely immoral; I wasn't bad; I wasn't vicious. It was such a
feeling of relief that I wanted to know more about it and with that, I think for the first
time, came the realization that there was something horribly, horribly wrong with me. Up to
that time, I was so completely baffled by my behavior that I had never really stopped to
think at all.
So, as I have said, I don't know how or why A.A. works. I only know that it first reached me
through that Saturday Evening Post article. There was no one I could call. I know that when
Frank came home, I said, "I want to try this thing," and he said, "There's a box to write to
in New York." It was the A.A. General Service Office in New York that I wrote to, and that
office has always meant a lot to me. Today, because of A.A.'s growth during the intervening
years, it is of course much bigger than it was then.
I wrote on a Saturday. I was shaking so, I asked my husband to write the letter for me, but
he said no. This was something I had to do all by myself. So I wrote this letter in very
shaky handwriting, and in just one week came back a letter with A.A. literature from New
York. They sent me the regular letter they
send to everybody else, but along with it, Ruth Hock, the nonalcoholic
secretary, wrote a little note in long-hand because she could see from the letter that I
really needed help badly. That personal touch did help me too.
That was on Saturday and my husband was leaving town Sunday night. He said, "Wait until I
get back and I will go with you to see this man." (That was the man the A.A. office had
referred me to.) So Frank left town, and by Monday morning I had been sober for that whole
week. I wanted to try A.A. with my whole heart and soul. I had learned an awful lot about
myself in that one little article. Monday morning I was feeling just like a million
dollars—all I needed was half a pint! So I got a half pint and at midnight that night, I
called the number I had been given, but the man who had started the group was in the
hospital so I didn't know what to do. The letter from A.A. had said this man would see
me—there weren't any women.
I stayed drunk from Monday until Friday, and I call that my spill into A.A. I'm glad I had
it then. In spite of knowing that my drunkenness was a symptom of the things that were wrong
with me, and that I could never drink again, I thought I couldn't yet give it up, although I
was going to try. I never want to forget that last drunk as long as I live. It was one of
the worst I ever had. It was the first time in my life that I could not get a lift out of
what I was drinking; and so one Friday night, May 16th, 1941, at five minutes to six, I had
half a water glass of warm gin, and that is when I first asked God to help me.
There are so many to whom I feel deeply grateful; to my husband (and best critic), whose
generous love, compassion and understanding have helped me along
the way; to those before me in A.A. who inspired the first article I
read, and the friend who sent that article to Frank; to Ruth for her personal note, and the
first A.A. to talk to me; to my Bishop, whose loving and believing spirit inspired me; and
to all the members of the Houston Group who were so patient, kind and helpful—and to
countless others.
In my second year in A.A. we were transferred to Dallas. However, I threw myself into Twelve
Step work, and what I feared would be a calamity turned out to be the most blessed of
blessings. My work with other alcoholics has led me, day by day, into ever wider and richer
experiences.
I wish I could tell you all that A.A. has done for me, all that I think and feel about A.A.,
but it's something that I have experienced and have never been able to put into words. I
know that I must work at it as long as I live; I know that it is only by working at it that
I can stay sober and have a happy life. It is an endless career.
It has changed not simply one department of my life—it has changed my whole life. It has
been a fellowship with God and man that has held good wherever I've turned and whatever I've
done. It is a way of life that pays as it goes, every step of the way, in compensations that
have been wonderfully rich and rewarding. It has made life a thousand times easier and
simpler than did the endless compromises and conflicts by which I lived before. It pays
daily in more harmonious relations with my fellow men, in ever clearer insight into the true
meaning of life, and in the answering love and gratitude wherever and whenever I have been
the instrument of God's will in the lives of
others. In all these ways I've experienced, in ever growing measure and
beyond all expectations and rewards, a joy which I had never before imagined.
The words of Dr. Bob and Bill are with me all the time. Dr. Bob said, "Love and service keep
us dry," and Bill says, "Always we must remember that our first duty is face-to-face help
for the alcoholic who still suffers." Dr. Bob tells about keeping it simple and not to louse
it up. It's the last thing I ever heard him say, and I think there are some of us who, at
times, try to read extra messages and complexities into the Steps. To me, A.A. is within the
reach of every alcoholic, because it can be achieved in any walk of life and because the
achievement is not ours but God's. I feel that there is no situation too difficult, none too
desperate, no unhappiness too great to be overcome in this great fellowship—Alcoholics
Anonymous.