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More About Alcoholism
(Alcoholics
Anonymous – page 30)
Most of us have been unwilling to admit we
were real alcoholics. No person likes to think he is bodily and mentally
different from his fellows. Therefore, it is not surprising that our drinking
careers have been characterized by countless vain attempts to prove we could
drink like other people. The idea that somehow, someday he will control and
enjoy his drinking is the great obsession of every abnormal drinker. The
persistence of this illusion is astonishing. Many pursue it into the gates of
insanity or death.
We learned that we had to fully concede to
our innermost selves that we were alcoholics. This is the first step in
recovery. The delusion that we are like other people, or presently may be, has
to be smashed.
We alcoholics are men and women who have lost
the ability to control our drinking. We know that no real alcoholic ever
recovers control. All of us felt at times that we were regaining control, but
such intervals - usually brief - were inevitably followed by still less control,
which led in time to pitiful and incomprehensible demoralization. We are
convinced to a man that alcoholics of our type are in the grip of a progressive
illness. Over any considerable period we get worse, never better.
We are like men who have lost their legs;
they never grow new ones. Neither does there appear to be any kind of treatment
which will make alcoholics of our kind like other men. We have tried every
imaginable remedy. In some instances there has been brief recovery, followed
always by a still worse relapse. Physicians who are familiar with alcoholism
agree there is no such thing as making a normal drinker out of an alcoholic.
Science may one day accomplish this, but it hasn't done so yet.
Reprinted with permission
of A.A.® World Services Inc.
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