| Philadelphia's 1st AA Newspaper
                Article, 1940
                   The Philadelphia Record. April 1,
                1940 EX-DRUNKARDS UNITE HERE TO HELP
                OTHERSAlcoholics Anonymous Tell How They
                Won a Hard Fight.
 By M. W. Mountjoy
  Every Thursday evening in a
                lecture room of St. Luke's and Children's Hospital, a growing
                group of former drunkards gets together to buck each other up,
                swap experiences and greet recruits.  They are the Philadelphia
                chapter of Alcoholics Anonymous (the "Double A's",
                which may also stand for absolute abstention) a national
                non-profit organization that has grown up around a former New
                York city toper who recovered.  Started eight weeks ago by
                a member of the New York chapter who came to Philadelphia to
                live, the group already numbers 50 and is growing at the rate of
                10 a week.   CANDOR PREVAILS.
 The meeting of these confirmed
                and confessed alcoholics are curiously convivial and forthright. 
                The one we attended included seven "hopeless" cases
                that had been lifted out of Philadelphia General Hospital by the
                chapter, and 14 wives, mothers and sisters, most of whom wore
                wondering smiles.
  The chairman of the evening
                was an insurance agent.  He was anonymous, of course. 
                The chairmanship revolves at each meeting because, a member
                explained, "if you give a recently dry rummy too much
                importance he's liable to fall off again."  The
                founder of the chapter, a representative of a New York
                engineering firm, who has been "dry" two and a half
                years, took no special part in the proceedings.  "I suppose," the
                chairman began, "we've all had more or less the same
                experience.  We've paid high-priced doctors, made the
                rounds of sanitariums, know what the inside of an alcoholic ward
                looks like and the morning after taste of water from a tin cup
                in a police station."   He called on a young
                attorney who walked to the front of the room."Was
                he a lush!" proudly whispered the member next to us.
 
 TOO SORDID TO TELL.
 
 "With your permission I'd
                rather not tell my story," the attorney said. 
                "It's a sordid one.  Up to now my life has been
                completely self-centered.  I think this is true of all
                alcoholics.  In recent years I was a periodic drunk. 
                I stayed sober for months, chiefly as a reaction to my last
                drinking bout.
  "But I won a case in
                court today, and coming away I had that old feeling of elation,
                that urge to celebrate.  Then I realized I ought to be
                thankful rather than proud.  "Stopping drinking is
                not enough.  You've still got the bottle heat in you. 
                You've got to be honestly thankful."Each speaker was roundly applauded. 
                The second was a draftsman who last month panhandled an A.A. for
                a nickel in a railroad station.
 This man read what he had to say.
 "I've been sober for 25
                days," he testified, "which is my longest period of
                dryness since 1932."  He thanked "the fellows
                here who broke bread with a social outcast" and commended
                himself to "the Power that has helped me after all else
                failed."
  The next speaker was a
                strapping young man with an Irish name.
 THEY CAME AND GOT HIM.
 
 "On my last bat,"
                he said, "which I regret to say was not very long ago, they
                had to come and get me.  Now I've already started visiting
                others."
  After that, members stood
                up and introduced starters, several of whom were living
                temporarily at the Salvation Army.   That was the formal part
                of the meeting, which continued conversationally for another
                hour after which the womenfolk served doughnuts and coffee. NONE HAS FALLEN.
 "Not one of this gang
                has fallen off yet," an older member confided. 
                "Although, of course, we expect some to.  More than
                half of the national membership (now between 500 and 600) has
                had no relapse at all.  Another quarter had trouble, but is
                headed for recovery.  The other quarter we don't know
                about.
    "We consider
                that record remarkable, since all of us had been given up as
                hopeless and had given up hope."
 The founder of the Double A's
                is a tall, tanned broker with a pair of searching eyes and an
                unassuming manner of speech.  Double A's, he reminded us,
                are not prohibitionists nor, necessarily churchgoers.
   A TRUE ALCOHOLIC
 "A man may drink steadily
                all his life with an occasional roaring bender and not be a true
                alcoholic," says an introductory pamphlet given to
                recruits.  "If anyone who is showing inability to
                control his drinking can do the right-about-face, our hats are
                off to him.  Heavens knows, we have tried long enough and
                hard enough to drink like other people.
    "We have no
                desire to make the country dry or anybody else dry unless he
                happens to be, like us, allergic to alcohol. HOW THEY DO IT.
 "Here
                are the steps we took toward recovery: (The following is a
                summary):
 "We
                admitted we were powerless over alcohol - that our lives had
                become unmanageable,
 "Came
                to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us
                to sanity.
 "Admitted to God, as we understood Him, to ourselves, and
                to another human being the nature of our wrongs.
 "Made
                a list of all people we had harmed and made direct amends
                wherever possible.
 "Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our
                conscious contact with God as we understood Him.
 "Having had a spiritual experience as the result of these
                steps, we tried to carry this message to alcoholics and to
                practice these principles in all our affairs."
    A Houston (Tex.)
                newspaperman, who started a chapter there, wrote:"In
                non-religious terms the experience is like the realization that
                sometimes comes to a person who has never appreciated good music
                or good books and who all of a sudden gets the idea of the value
                and pleasure to be found in them."
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