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Can Alcoholics Recover? |
by Gretta Palmer
Alcoholism has been called out No.4 public health problem by a medical director
of the U. S. Public Health Service-and the postwar years, in which drinking
always increases, have scarcely begun. In the U.S. there are 750,000 known
alcoholics, or one and one half times the number of victims of tuberculosis. In
addition to these, there are 3,000,000 "excessive drinkers/' many of them
approaching the stage of true alcoholism, in which they will require expert
help.
Yet alcoholism-which touches almost every family in the country-is not
recognized as a disease at all by millions of Americans! Even many wives of
alcoholics confuse the malady with "lack of will power" of "failure to face
facts" when they discuss their husbands' problem. The medical world itself is
remiss in dealing with the disease: only 110 institutions listed by the American
Medical Association accept alcoholic patients, and most of these are content to
restore the patient to sobriety and "dry him out," with no fundamental attack on
alcoholism itself. The public is indifferent; there are no widespread, publicly
supported drives to raise funds for an attack on this disease. In our large
cities there is almost never a clinic to which the alcoholic can go for such
impersonal, scientific help as would be extended if he were suffering from polio
or cancer.
Yet the inebriate is as little capable of recovery, without help, as the victim
of any other disease. With help, the alcoholic who wishes to get well can be
restore to normal living in about six cases out of ten.
Why are we so lax in dealing with the alcoholic?
There are several reasons, according to doctors, psychiatrists and recovered
alcoholics who are trying to bring about a change. One reason why the alcoholic
is neglected is that he was, until very recently, considered incurable; doctors
rejected such patients because they did not know how to help them. Of the four
methods of therapy now in wide use, three have been developed in the past
fifteen or twenty years. Before them, recoveries were rare and not thoroughly
understood even by the practitioners who brought them about.
The fact that the alcoholic can be saved in six cases out of ten is news, and
important news, to millions of Americans. But in order to understand the
hopeful, recent advances in the field they must first digest the fact, familiar
to several generations of physicians, that the alcoholic is a sick man or woman.
Knowing this, they can attack the problem realistically.
He is sick. But with a malady whose seat is even now unknown to science.
Alcoholism is a complex disease, which may have both physical and psychological
aspects. The methods of treatment which are successful are all timed at changing
the patient's way of looking at life and liquor; they are, primarily,
psychological forms of treatment. But no matter how successful the treatments
may be, the recovered alcoholic can never again, with safety, take a single
drink. (alcoholics have tried, after five years or fifteen years of strict
sobriety, and have found themselves as badly off as ever in a few month's time.)
Some students of alcoholism therefore believe that there is a bodily
idiosyncrasy present among all alcoholics; what it is they still do not know.
There are about 50,000,000 Americans who "take a drink." Of every 1000 of these,
45 are "excessive drinkers," whose health suffers from their habits; 30 of them
seem still able to stop drinking. The true alcoholic is not one of these; he is
one of the 15 drinkers out of every 1000 to whom alcohol has indeed become a
drug, a psychological necessity so precious that he will cling to it in spite of
every appeal to reason and self-interest and his "better self." He has an
uncontrollable urge to drink, never experienced at any time by nine out of 10 of
our 50,000,000 drinkers.
Over twenty million of the Americans who drink are women: a recent Gallop pole
showed that 59 per cent of all our women take a drink at least occasionally,
although the percentage is much lower among women older than fifty years.
Women's increased drinking may explain why our national consumption of liquor,
which was going down before the war, has now increased, so that the 1943
consumption of alcohol in this country was 30 per cent higher than it was in
1940. Americans now drink 1.17 gallons of alcohol a year, on the average,
compared with the 4.6 of France, the .93 of Great Britain, Norway's .55 and
Holland's .4. Within our own country, the state that consumes the smallest
amount is North Carolina (.32 gallon a year per capita); the hardest drinking
areas are the District of Columbia (4.09), followed by Nevada and Connecticut.
Three of our states-Kansas, Oklahoma and Mississippi are dry by state law, and
one third of the whole country is dry by local option.
The confirmed alcoholic lives in a private world. Alcoholism, doctors say, is a
deadly disease, not a moral issue. Can we find happy endings for the 750,000
alcoholics of both sexes we have in America?
Much of the dry propaganda has centered around the problems raised by the
alcoholic; prohibitionists would attempt to prevent alcoholism by making liquor
impossible to obtain except by breaking a law. The political wets, on the other
hand, say that such a law is unfair to the 90 per cent of all drinkers who are
in no danger of becoming alcoholics and that it is, in any case, an experiment
that has already failed. Sixty-six million American voters are neither wet nor
dry; they are the "on-the-fence" spectators, who have an open mind on the
problem and who wish to help the alcoholic by whatever method the experts find
to be the best.
Women are playing a large part in organizing the new attack on alcoholism as a
health problem-as women volunteers have been the spearhead of drives on cancer,
tuberculosis and infantile paralysis. The new National Committee for education
on Alcoholism has a woman organizer, Marty Mann. She believes women have a
special interest in alcoholism; wives and mothers of alcoholics suffer from the
social stigma which now attaches to the disease and which would be avoided if it
were as matter-of-factly viewed as deafness or rheumatism in the family. And
besides that, a large and growing proportion of alcoholics today are women.
Before the war the Vale School of Alcohol Studies estimated that one of every
six alcoholics was a woman; many students of the subject now believe the figure
has changed to one out of four. In Chicago's Municipal Court arrests for
drunkenness used to be six men to one woman; the ratio is now one woman out of
three. FBI reports on arrests for drunken driving show that women are offenders
five times as often today as in 1932. So woman's interest in alcoholism is no
longer limited to the puzzled and unhappy curiosity of the alcoholic's family;
women nowadays may share the life-and-death interest in alcoholism of the victim
himself.
That victim of alcoholism; who is he? How did he get that way? Why is he
incapable of drinking like a gentleman? Why do his good resolutions, his
promises of moderation inevitably fail? Why is he-reasonable enough in other
matters-incapable of seeing the clear fact that his drinking brings him much
more misery than happiness, and of sensibly stopping it?
The answer to some of these questions is still a mystery, locked in the dark
recesses of the alcoholic's hidden personality. But some facts are known.
The alcoholic does not have a basic personality which varies significantly from
that of the average man. Detailed studies of normal drinkers, alcoholics and
recovered alcoholics were recently carried out by the Research Council on
Problems of Alcohol, of New York. No important differences in fundamental
attitudes were found.
But after some years of drinking the alcoholic is set apart from other men; he
is especially apt to avoid the responsibilities of married life.
A study made by Dr. Selden Bacon, of Yale, on arrested inebriates showed that
less than half of them had ever married-although four fifths of the men of their
age and geographical groups were married. Only 23 per cent of the alcoholics
were living with wives, compared with 73 per cent of the population as a whole.
Of those who had married, 25 per cent were separated and 16 per cent were
divorced. Other differences appeared which must make living with the inebriate a
trial for any wife: alcoholics hold their jobs for shorter periods and are more
poorly paid than other men of similar background; they amuse themselves either
alone or with casual acquaintances, instead of belonging to any group; they do
their drinking alone or with members of the same sex, instead of indulging in
normal, social drinking.
Such reports give valuable clues to those who would help the alcoholic. But our
best guidance comes from the life stories of the alcoholics themselves.
Take the case of Bill, representative of the very large group on "introverted"
drunks. Bill was a shy and studious boy, sheltered by a devoted mother. At
high-school dances he was often too bashful to ask the prettiest girls to dance;
in "bull sessions" he rarely had the confidence to speak out and express his
views. Between him and the others in his group their loomed an invisible wall of
self-consciousness.
Then Bill discovered beer; he found that if he took three or four glasses of it,
he was able to join in the fun. His shyness disappeared. His sense of well-being
increased. He began to see himself as a very witty, admirable fellow. The
process has been described by Prof. William McDougall:
"Of all the intellectual functions, that of self-criticism is the highest and
latest developed, for in it are combined the functions of critical judgment and
of self-consciousness. It is the blunting of this critical side of
self-awareness by alcohol and the consequent setting free of the emotions and
their instinctive impulses from its habitual control, that give to the convivial
drinker the aspect and the reality of a general excitement.
Many shy men have discovered, in alcohol, the same welcome release that Bill
found, and have still been able to keep its attraction under control. Bill,
however, could not do this. Perhaps his longing to be accepted as one of the
group was deeper than that of other boys; his sense of his own gawkishness may
have been abnormally acute. Perhaps for most of his years on earth Bill had been
ill-at-ease, so that his only memories of complete well-being were associated
with pre-kindergarten days. Such a boy - if his physical constitution allows him
to drink a great deal without becoming sick at his stomach-may use alcohol to
put to sleep all his mature, self-critical faculties. He may return, through the
various stages of drunkenness, to the state of the young child-the last state in
which he found happiness."
So it was with Bill: he drank enough, every time, to make him as helpless as a
child. Alcohol, even to a normal drinker, offers a release from grown-up
responsibilities. The authors of Alcohol: One Man's Meat-Dr. Edward A. Strecker
and Francis T. Chambers, Jr.-say "To view the panorama of the various states of
intoxication is to witness a progressive psychological descent or repression
.... Most individuals seen satisfied to regress to some phase of the teen age!
which was probably an enjoyable and carefree time! deeply imprinted on the
unconscious. Others seem satisfied with a very slight descent, and still others
are never satisfied until they have reached an infantile level in intoxication,"
Of these is Bill.
Bill's case was typical enough of the average alcoholic; looking back to his
college years, long afterward, he decided that there had never been a time when
he drank "normally." Like many alcoholics-perhaps most-he used his very first
drinking bout as an escape! rather than a means of sharpening experience. When
Bill had once discovered that drink was a drug, which would make him forget his
shyness, it was not long before he used it to help him escape other worries too.
Within a few years he had worked his way into the typically alcoholic pattern of
behavior: whenever life became painful, he took enough drinks to be carried back
to the state of mind and body appropriate to a carefree four-year-old child. He
was now a serious "problem drinker."
Bill passed through the usual steps: expulsion from college with the promise
that he could return if he would "brace up"; a job, precariously held for a few
years; marriage to a charming girl who believed that he would stop drinking as
soon as he had "responsibilities to straighten him up." There were periods when
her beliefs seemed justified; Bill obtained jobs and did well! for a time. But
sooner or later there came a day when some discouragement made him long for the
carefree days when he was a little boy. A few steps to the nearest saloon, a
dozen "quick snorts" and Bill was off on another bender.
Now, the vicious and difficult thing about Bill's drinking was this: he did not
know that he had a disease. Neither did his wife or his employers or his
friends. They thought that will power was what he needed; they imagined that "a
good talking to" would help. When Bill promised, in all sincerity, that he would
never get drunk again, they believed it. Why not? He believed it himself. Bill
was as puzzled as anyone else over why he got drunk; he thought! every hang-over
morning, that from now on he would be content to take one or two drinks, as
other men did. Even a visit to a sanitarium failed to prove to Bill that he was
incapable of moderate drinking, that he was a sick man.
(Eventually Bill found out and admitted to himself that liquor had him bested;
this was the beginning of his recovery, but that's another story.)
Bill had started drinking to get rid of his self-consciousness. But Mary, who
never had a self-conscious minute in her beau-filled days, also arrived in an
alcoholic ward in a big city hospital. Mary belonged to the flapper age. She was
a "prom-trotter," in the company of young men who carried hip flasks inside
their coonskin coasts and who believe that a speak-easy card was a proof of
great sophistication. Mary had a lovely time her debutante year: she was the
girl with the "hollow leg,'1 the good scout who was always able to drive a car
home from a party when the owner was tight. Mary may have been a normal drinker
at this period; no one can be quite sure of whether alcoholism, in its very
early stages, has subtle symptoms which some future scientists will be able to
detect. But it isn't essential for us to know for after eight years of
apparently normal hard drinking Mary showed symptoms of alcoholism which nobody
could doubt.
She became the girl who always managed to have lunch with someone who liked a
cocktail first. She was the woman who would say, "why don't we have a second?
That one was so small?" She was the girl who found that straight whisky "cured"
insomnia and headaches and "braced her up" for any disagreeable chore-from
arguing with the butcher over his bill to making a boring visit to her in-laws.
For quite a while, Mary/s daytime drinking went undetected by her family (she
was a great girl for cloves and mouthwash). But every month she increased the
size of the nips a little more, until evening found her half intoxicated on
several days a week.
Like many alcoholics, Mary scorned the term. "I can stop any time I want,'1 she
insisted. And, "Drinking is a part of normal gracious living to my generation.
We may overdo it once in a while, but what of it? An occasional bender lets off
steam.
This stage of bravura didn't last long; after Mary had been arrested twice for
driving while intoxicated, and had waked up with her third black eye, she began
to wonder whether she should nit "cut down/I But it was only after several more
years of painful experimentation that she became convinced, in all humility,
that liquor was something she could never handle again. Her recovery dated from
that admission to herself.
Jake was a self-made man, who had come up the hard way from a childhood in the
slums. Self-educated, he had attained success as a trial lawyer with no backing,
no encouragement but his own determination to get to the top. His will power was
his strongest quality; his ability to win out over every discouragement had been
proved through the years. Jake, after several of his greatest triumphs, went on
long, expensive benders that ended up in a bleak hotel room filled with empty
bottles, in a town he couldn't name. Jake never drank when there were hard
problems to be faced: it was only success that sent him off on these strange,
frantic bouts.
So Jake stopped drinking; just like that. He did not say to himself. "I am
incapable of handling liquor." He said, 'I'll stop drinking until I make a
million dollars/I After ten years, the million dollars was safe in a brokerage
account, and Jake reached for the bottle. Inside of a month he was drunk; inside
of a year he had lost all his money and was a patient in a hospital alcoholic
ward.
Jake-like Bill, like Mary, like the public at large-did not know that alcoholism
is a disease and that he had it during all his "dry" years. The man who grits
his teeth and fights the desire for drink, as Jake did, has not recovered from
the craving (which is the malady). He still looks on liquor, and the escape it
offers as a reward which he can someday win. To Jake, success brought with it
the fear of losing it of sliding back into the poverty and misery of
his-childhood; liquor helped him to run away from this fear-to run all the way
back to the state of helpless infancy, before his baby mind had discovered that
such things as failure and success existed. Jake drank to escape from ambition.
Until he had learned to view alcohol as a drug (so far as he was concerned) and
until he had learned to live without the prospect of ever drugging himself,
there was no hope of recovery for him.
Now, doctors and psychiatrists knew many things about the life stories of such
alcoholics twenty years ago. But their knowledge did not help them to effect
many cures. Psychiatrists helped some alcoholic patients to recover then, as
they do today; but psychiatry nowadays has the benefit of the past fifteen years
of intensive study of alcoholism on the part of scientists. It has also learned
much from Alcoholics Anonymous, the group of men and women who, disgusted with
the failure of the known medical and religious approaches, made a daring
experiment of pulling themselves up by their own boot-straps- and were
successful. It is because of the collaboration of realistic, laboratory-minded
scientists with the patients themselves that alcoholism is today a disease from
which almost any alcoholic who wants recovery can attain it.
It was in the early '30's that Dr. Howard Haggard, head of the Laboratory of
Applied Physiology, began an intensified program of research on alcoholism at
Yale University. His experiments verified the fact that this disease has no
apparent physical cause, and that almost no lasting effect of alcoholism can be
blamed on drinking alone. Vitamin deficiency occurs among 50 per cent of chronic
alcoholics, but only because liquor has crowded out of their diet other food
essential to health; 8 per cent of all alcoholics have cirrhosis of the liver,
compared with less than 1 per cent of the population at large-but cirrhosis of
the liver does appear in teetotalers. Delirium tremens afflicts about 4 per cent
of heavy drinkers, but it is only a temporary effect.
Alcohol, of course, has its temporary effects on the nervous system, as its
percent: age mounts in the blood stream. Even such small amounts of alcohol as
are contained in two cocktails affect the drinker's ability to distinguish pitch
and color, to memorize poetry to react to light signals. But these effects are
shared by the alcoholic and the normal drinker as well. Physiology alone can
give no answer to the question: Why do 15 drinkers out of 1000 become the
victims of alcoholism?
Doctor Haggard began casting around among the sister sciences, to see what
enlightenment their studies might give. He and his colleagues founded a
scholarly publication- the Quarterly Journal of Studies on Alcohol-and assembled
on the Yale campus a number of scientists to work in various fields. Here, in
the Yale Section on Alcohol Studies, neurologists, psychiatrists, statisticians,
sociologists, anthropologists, lawyers under Dr. E. M. Jellinek tried to crack
the age-old questions: What makes an alcoholic? How can he be helped?
By the summer of 1943 the scientists thought they knew enough about the second
problem to share their findings with the public. They had studied many
alcoholics who had learned how not to drink; they believed that knowledge of
this sort should be shared with leaders of the community, who might use the
information to attack the social evil that alcoholism has always been. For from
25 to 28 per cent of all crime is associated with alcohol; the costs to society
of merely confining and punishing the alcoholic run to a billion dollars a year
(and none of that money is used to treat the alcoholic). Our prisons and
hospitals and mental asylums would be relieved of a heavy load if alcoholism
could be wiped out, as smallpox has been.
To help bring this about, the Summer School of Alcohol Studies was held at Vale
in 1943 and every summer since. Men and women representing twenty-five
professions have attended in a single season; there were a college dean and a
"reformed drunk," a judge and several ministers, a distiller and an officer of
the Women/s Christian Temperance Union. The course of lectures covers the
significant findings of the scientists at the laboratory; they also bring in
data from the two Vale Plan Clinics set up to help alcoholics who are sent in by
the courts or who come, voluntarily, to seek treatment there.
What are the facts spread before the students at a summer session by this group
which has learned more about alcoholism than any other in the history of the
world?
1. Why one man becomes an alcoholic and another doesn't is still a mystery. We
know that alcoholism is not hereditary: only 35 per cent of alcoholics come from
alcoholic homes, and the children of excessive drinkers, brought up in another
environment, have no significant drinking difficulties. Nor can environment be
blamed: the men who started to drink with the alcoholic are usually moderate
drinkers twenty years later. A longing to escape from reality, and a desire to
return to the security of an earlier period of life, is common to alcoholics;
but the same desire is shared by thousands of other men and women. Some of these
misfits become psycho-neurotics or invalids, but never feel at-traded to drink;
others, for an unknown reason, turn to alcohol.
2. Against these negative results of fifteen years of study, the Vale group can
say that there are now four recognized methods of treatment available to the
alcoholic who wishes to get well and that, if he is sincere, he has a slightly
better than 60 per cent chance of recovery. His alcoholism will not, however, be
cured-it can only be arrested. Nothing now known will make it possible for the
alcoholic to drink moderately, on any terms, in any foreseeable future. He must
be willing to abandon all forms of liquor, as long as he lives.
3. But the alcoholic can be taught to live happily without drinking; recovered
alcoholics rarely feel deprived or resentful of their inability to take a drink.
They look upon their disability much as a diabetic resigns himself to doing
without sugar.
4. The greatest problem facing those interested in alcoholism now is to reach
the alcoholic and his family with the news that help is available - provided
that they will look upon alcoholism as a disease. If the public at large once
recognized this fact, alcoholism could be almost wiped out in a few years, and
at very small expense. The Vale Plan Clinics, for instance, have reclaimed a
high percentage of their patients, at a cost of only $100 per recovery. All the
known alcoholics in the country could be given such help for $75,000,000, or one
thirteenth of what we now pay merely to lock up such patients, and punish them,
every year.
Now, how did all this progress come about? Was it through the research
scientists, the diligent doctors that the problem of helping the alcoholic was
primarily solved? No, it was not. The scientists have done much toward
re-educating the alcoholic into the ways of happiness and health; but of the
four forms of treatment, which have proved successful only one-psychiatry-can
help a patient without the help of other alcoholics.
1. Psychiatrists pointed the way- their painstaking, heartbreaking efforts to
reclaim alcoholics broke the trail. They discovered the compulsive element in
alcoholism and taught us to expect that the man who says, "I only want three
drinks/' at noon may be reaching for his twentieth at cocktail time.
Psychiatrists uncovered the reluctance to grow up which lurks in the breast of
every alcoholic. But psychiatry, working alone, had only a very limited
success-2 per cent, according to some estimates.
(Psychoanalysis, one form of psychiatric cure, has been carried out on very few
alcoholics. The Institute of Psychoanalysis in Chicago, of 1593 patients
interviewed, had only 36 classified as alcoholics or drug addicts; only 4 of
these were analyzed).
Psychiatrists who have the highest percentage of success with alcoholics today
draw heavily on the experience of the three other forms of treatment. By
combining their own valuable, specialized approach with one of the other
therapies, they have had great success in recent years. In co-operating with the
three other forms of treatment, they are accepting the help of recovered
alcoholics themselves, who have given tremendous help to the scientists studying
the disease in recent years. It was only when the desperate inebriates started
pulling themselves up by their bootstraps that things began to hum.
Take a look at the alcoholic, this medical pioneer: he is no "man in white," no
winner of Nobel prizes. He is just the village drunk; the stumblebum on the
Bowery; the man who broke his mother's heart; the figure of comedy; the
improvident father; the helpless recipient of more useless good advice than any
other man in history. Take a look at him. It was he who helped the "Drys" to
clinch their argument and legislate 50,000,000 indignant normal drinkers into
national Prohibition. It was he whom many sanitariums and private hospitals will
still not receive for treatment. This s the alcoholic, half crazed with the
shakes, eaten with remorse, up to his ears in debts and disgraceful episodes,
the prey of quacks who give him "cures" for just the amount of his family's bank
account, and leave him worse than ever-the man weeping wives and ministers and
judges brand as "worthless./f This was the man who decided something had to be
done about himself-and did it.
2. The most popular of the four therapies for alcoholism did not exist when
Doctor Haggard began his experiments. It was in 1935 that the founding fathers
of Alcoholics Anonymous got together and began to cure themselves. They were
extreme cases; even today 80% of A.A.'s have been locked up for drunkenness.
These men were desperate in their weariness of being told the wrong things by
outsiders who didn't understand. In despair, and fumblingly, they worked out
their own form of self-help-a kind of composite of what religion and science
could give the drunk that would keep him from wanting to drink. This treatment-
the patient's own personal creation-is Alcoholics Anonymous. And it works.
A.A. has spread, with the speed of a chain letter, among the "hopeless"
alcoholics of the country. In 1935 there were three members; in 1959, when the
book, Alcoholics Anonymous, was published, there were 100, most of them in Akron
and New York. Today there are 752 A.A. branches, 24,000 members. Some of the
chapters have c1ubrooms, open most days and evenings, where the members can play
games, drink soft drinks and exchange experiences-they provide the sociability
of the barroom to men still a little unsteady about trusting themselves in the
old surroundings. Best of all, they have meetings where recovered alcoholics
tell their stories to encourage new members.
Each man or woman begins the talk with the humbling words, "I'm an alcoholic."
He tells the funny things he did when he was drunk, as well as the dangerous and
cruel things-for he knows that he was the victim of a sickness, and he feels no
shame over its manifestations. He tells of the difficulties in making the first,
painful surrender of self to some "greater force," and the whole reorientation
of values that that entailed for there is a strong reliance on God in the A.A.
program. If the speaker had an early relapse-as some A.A. do-he admits that this
came from careless or self-centered thinking. A.A.'s tell the audience that the
place to lick the temptation to drink is in the mind, as soon as the
self-excusing mechanism begins to work. It is at this moment that the A.A.
pleads "Give me the name of an alcoholic who needs help." For it is by showing
the way out to other men, in more desperate need than himself, that an A.A.
keeps himself "dry."
There is always an alcoholic, somewhere, to be helped; with 750,000 in the
country, the supply is never low. A.A.'s in strange cities, when they feel
themselves slipping, call hospitals and ask, "Have you a drunk I can come up and
talk to?" Others appeal to ministers whose names they pluck from the telephone
directory. The first chapter, that of Akron, Ohio! sprang from just such a need
on the part of the original A.A., who had to find another alcoholic whom he
could help, to save himself from drinking.
The A.A. way is brought to the alcoholic by a former sufferer, and at the right
moment-when he is still filled with self-reproach and misery and has a hangover
to humble him. In this period of self-abasement! the drunk is willing enough to
take the first step: to admit-as a mere possibility! mind you-that there may be
some force in the universe bigger than himself. That admission-combined with a
sincere desire to stop drinking-is enough for the A.A. to build on.
"Atheists and agnostics, who stumble over using the word 'God', are still able
to admit that the universe contains laws and forces broader than themselves,"
say the A.A. IS. One half of their members, indeed, used to scoff at all
religion.
Doctors now take the A.A. technique seriously. Philadelphia General Hospital,
among others, allows A.A.'s the privileges of staff members, so that they may
work with fellow alcoholics outside of visiting hours. Some psychiatrists urge
their patients to combine A.A. membership with psychiatric treatment; Dr. H. M.
Tiebout, of Blythewood Sanitarium in Connecticut! was one of the first of these.
Of the alcoholics who are contacted by Alcoholics Anonymous, about one half
immediately catch on and remain dry. Another 25 per cent are flat failures-they
either do not want to stop drinking or are so confused and psychopathic that
they cannot be reached. The last 25 per cent go off, after a meeting or two! and
try drinking; but they usually return. One of the early founders had no apparent
converts at all among the first 75 men with whom he worked; ten years later he
found that three had died but that 67 of the rest were members of different A.A.
groups throughout the country. When he first talked to them! they were not yet
ready to stop. They only "wanted to want to quit/' in A.A. parlance.
But there are some men and women who entirely reject the religious approach. To
them, two other routes are open.
3. There is the very successful record of the "lay therapists"; these are men
who used to be alcoholics themselves, but who have reconditioned their minds, by
psychological methods, so that the desire for the first drink can be dealt with
before it becomes a real temptation. There are only a few lay therapists in the
country. Most of them are graduates of Richard R. Peabody! of Boston! who wrote
The Common Sense of Drinking and who taught other men the technique by which he
had cured himself of alcoholism. The lay therapists work closely with hospitals
and doctors, who help them screen their patients and choose only those for whom
this method seems a promising one. Office consultations, once or twice a week
for a year, are supplemented by daily psychological exercises. Francis T.
Chambers, Jr., of Philadelphia, Raymond McCarthy, of the Yale Plan Clinic at New
Haven; and Donaldson Clark, of New York City, are well-known therapists.
The lay therapist accepts only the alcoholic who is honestly willing to recover.
One of them tests the sincerity of the patient by asking him, "Do you recognize
your drinking as the central problem of you life and the one that must be solved
first. A surprising number of alcoholics who have been fired, divorced and
jailed for excessive drinking refuse to admit that they are alcoholics: they
drank, they will tell the doctor, only because the conditions of their lives
were insupportable. If they were given "the breaks" they could still drink
moderately. Alcoholics in this frame of mind are not ready to be helped by the
lay therapist. Such patients, when they hint that they can now drink moderately,
are usually advised to, by all means, try. A few months or years later the
majority of them return, finally convinced that "moderation" is only a mirage.
The patient who once admits that alcoholism is his largest problem, and that he
will work toward recovery, has already made a big step forward: for the first
time in his life, he has accepted the responsibility for his misfortunes and can
set about correcting them. This is a first step out of the old, alcoholic way of
retreating from painful experiences. But it is only the first step.
No alcoholic, even after he has begun a course of treatment, is really convinced
that he will ever reach a stage of not wanting to drink: only months of mental
discipline and suggestion can bring about such a radical change. "perhaps you
can make me grit my teeth and determine never to take a drink," the patient will
say, "But I'll always want one." He is wrong: when he has recovered, his
antipathy to alcohol is so great that, in the words of one recovered alcoholic,
"If doctors tomorrow discovered a pill that would enable me to drink moderately,
I'd say, 'That's fine-give it to someone else. I don't want to drink.''' Another
states the case this way: "NO alcoholic is safe until he can honestly say that
if he had only twelve hours to live, with nobody watching him and the certainty
that nobody could learn about it later, he still would pass his last day on
earth without a drink."
How do lay therapists bring this transformation about? Under their guidance the
patient orders every hour of the day, according to a schedule he himself has
worked out in advance-and he never departs from this, except in a case of real
necessity. In this way he learns to direct his own destiny. He spends a part of
every day tracking down his hidden mental reservations about future drinking, or
trying to figure out the reason for his benders in the past. This teaches him to
look at alcoholism realistically, without shame or fear.
Most important of all: he trains his mind to associate the first thought of a
drink with the painful episodes to which it would inevitably lead him. He
learns, like the A.A., to deal with the temptation to take a drink when it is
first forming in the mind, and to destroy it there. During a period of at least
a year the patient has several sessions a week with the therapist, who helps him
over the rough spots and compares experiences from his own past.
Dr. Foster Kennedy, head neurologist of Bellevue Hospital, New York, has said,
"I have no doubt that a man who has cured himself of the lust for alcohol has a
far greater power of curing alcoholism than a doctor who has never been
afflicted with the same curse." Dwight Anderson, director of public relations of
the Medical Society of New York, says, "The recovered alcoholic will never give
up hope. He cannot forget the numberless times that his friends and relatives
gave up all hope for him, to say nothing of the occasions when he had no hope
for himself. But when the time was right and he himself was ready, he became
accessible."
4. Alcoholics themselves are very skeptical of they remember how often they said
so themselves, with no real intention of taking the step. That is one reason why
recovered alcoholics are used as interviewers who greet all patients arriving at
the hospitals which give the "aversion treatment"-the fourth method which claims
recoveries today.
Arriving patients are warned, by recovered alcoholics on the staff, that this
treatment is painful, disagreeable and no good to them unless they are desperate
enough to welcome a future in which the mere sight or smell of any drink will
sicken them. If they face this prospect without flinching, they are considered
for one of the hospitals specializing in this technique; only about one man out
of eight who applies is admitted.
This patient is taken, several times a day into the hospital barroom, where
various kinds of drinks are mixed in a setting that has the familiar
associations of his pet saloon. A spotlight plays upon the bar; ice clinks
pleasantly as the attendant, in a white coat, mixes his favorite "poison." It is
poison, too; for the patient has been given injections of drugs which make him
deathly ill at the exact moment when he swallows the drink. Combined with
psychotherapy, and repeated several times in the first year, this method has had
success with 65 per cent of cases accepted. It is used at the two Shadel
Sanitariums in Seattle and Portland, and at the University of Wisconsin Medical
School.
Three of these approaches are new-three of them lean heavily on the sympathetic
skill of the recovered alcoholic for their success. All of them claim a record
which is twenty to thirty times as high as that claimed by any method twenty
years ago. For in that brief period, alcoholism has become recognized as a
disease from which even the most despaired-of cases can usually recover.
But the alcoholics and the doctors cannot do the whole job of helping our
750,000 cases alone; they need the force of public opinion behind them. They
need, in every city, a demand for the kinds of clinics which, at Yale, have
blazed the trail. They need public recognition of the fact that alcoholism is
not a reflection on the patient's character, but is a misfortune for which
society is partially to blame. When these facts are widely known, many
alcoholics-who have no idea they can be helped-will be restored to lives of
health and usefulness. Many families, whose present fumbling efforts are
actually driving their sons to drink, will change their ways.
Ignorance among members of the alcoholic's family is very widespread, indeed.
Alcoholics anonymous found that they were spending most of their time educating
the relatives of prospects, instead of concentrating on the problems of the
alcoholic himself. Two years ago a group of them devised a plan for public
education on the subject. Marty Mann, an A.A. secured the backing of the Yale
University group and launched the National Committee for Education on Alcoholism
to teach the known facts to the public. The essential teaching of the committee
is three simple facts, as all their literature states: "Alcoholism is a disease
and the alcoholic is a sick person. The alcoholic can be helped and is worth
helping. Alcoholism is a public-health problem and therefore a public
responsibility."
Since the committee was formed, information centers have been established in
four cities and permanent committees formed in nine. Clinics will eventually be
set up, it is hoped, in every large town in the country; when that is done, the
alcoholic will at last have a place where he can go to find his problem
discussed without moral indignation, sentimentality or reproach.
Of the need for such a viewpoint, Dr. Selden Bacon recently wrote, "Apathy,
secret shame or attacks on scapegoats can be the response of the public to a
problem. During the past 200 years the public in this country has reacted in
these unrealistic ways when faced with the problems of mental ills, political
corruption, venereal diseases. People have reacted the same ways to alcoholism.
Stimulation of the public is essential to bring about a new adjustment."
What good can education do? Well, if the public understands that alcoholism is a
disease, it will no longer urge the alcoholic to "Drink like a gentleman"; or
"Take two cocktails and stop, as I do"; or "Learn your capacity": it will be
common knowledge that alcoholics cannot do these things and that moderation is
impossible for them. When the public has learned more of this disease, hostesses
will not urge "Just a little one" on guests who have refused a drink-they will
understand that some people cannot drink at all.
Families would give the alcoholic a better chance to recover early if they
realized that alcohol, to the patient, is the only thing which makes his
muddled, miserable life at all supportable. The threat that it may be withdrawn
appalls him and he will face the horrors of a "dry" future only if he has
convinced himself that this present life is even more unendurable. Families who
protect the alcoholic from painful experiences may be doing him a great
disservice; sometimes it is only the loss of a job or the horror of a serious
accident which jolts the alcoholic into a state of mind in which he admits that
the barren, frightening prospect of a life without liquor may be better than
going on as he is. At that moment he has, as the alcoholics say, "hit bottom";
he is ready to begin.
When the public is better informed, employers, employers and parents will not
scold the alcoholic for behavior he cannot yet control; as one of the committee
pamphlets says, "The alcoholic knows well enough that he is not fair to his
family, that he is losing his friends and endangering his future. He reproaches
himself more bitterly than anyone else does." With greater understanding of the
subject, no friend will suggest, "Just stick to wine and beer," or "Try drinking
only over week ends." The committee says, "If the alcoholic could, he would do
all this. He has tried over and over again and has failed. But with expert
guidance he can learn to deal with his problems in a normal way and without any
alcohol at all."
No man or woman becomes an alcoholic through choice; all authorities agree on
that. No alcoholic deliberately and perversely chooses a life that will bring
misery on his family. No alcoholic sets out, on purpose, to become a problem to
society. His sufferings are real and grim and he is very eager to escape from
them, if society will give him the chance.
And if society doubts whether the alcoholic deserves much help or sympathy, it
is well to remember this: this is the first malady in history which has been
licked by its own victims, when science, without their help, had failed. If
Bill, the stumblebum, and Mary and Jake were able to perform some thousands of
miraculous changes in their own lives and those of other sufferers, then they
have perhaps earned the right to ask society to adopt the only attitude which
can ever help the alcoholic back to sanity: to look on him as a very sick man
who-now or later-will reach the stage where guidance can help him to recover.
For the Drinker Who Needs Help
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS. Confidential information for the
alcoholic in need of help. Will provide address of members in his community or,
if necessary, advise him by personal letters. P.O. Box 459, Grand Central Annex,
New York 17, N.Y.
NATIONAL COMMITTEE FOR EDUCATION ON ALCOHOLISM. Information for civic minded men
and women who wish to arrange for lectures, radio programs and newspaper
publicity campaigns in their communities. Advice on the organization of local
committees and literature on alcoholism. Room 447, New York Academy of Medicine
Bldg., 2 East 103rd St., New York 29, N.Y.
YALE SCHOOL OF ALCOHOL STUDIES. Information of a technical nature for
physicians, psychiatrists, sociologists, penologists, and others interested,
professionally, in alcoholic problems. 4 Hill House Ave., New Haven, Conn.
RESEARCH COUNCIL ON PROBLEMS OF ALCOHOL. Information on different types of
treatment and lists of recommended literature. 60 East 42nd St., New York 17,
N.Y.
©Ladies' Home Journal, August 1946
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