My dear Dr. Jung:
This letter of great appreciation has been very long
overdue. May I first introduce myself as Bill W., a co-founder
of the Society of Alcoholics Anonymous. Though you have surely
heard of us, I doubt if you are aware that a certain
conversation you once had with one of your patients, a Mr.
Rowland H., back in the early 1930's, did play a critical role
in the founding of our Fellowship.
Though Rowland H. has long since passed
away, the recollections of his remarkable experience while under
treatment by you has definitely become part of AA history. Our
remembrance of Rowland H.'s statements about his experience with
you is as follows:
Having exhausted other means of recovery
from his alcoholism, it was about 1931 that he became your
patient. I believe he remained under your care for perhaps a
year. His admiration for you was boundless, and he left you with
a feeling of much confidence.
To his great consternation, he soon
relapsed into intoxication. Certain that you were his "court of
last resort," he again returned to your care. Then followed the
conversation between you that was to become the first link in
the chain of events that led to the founding of Alcoholics
Anonymous.
My recollection of his account of that
conversation is this: First of all, you frankly told him of his
hopelessness, so far as any further medical or psychiatric
treatment might be concerned. This candid and humble statement
of yours was beyond doubt the first foundation stone upon which
our Society has since been built.
Coming from you, one he so trusted and
admired, the impact upon him was immense. When he then asked you
if there was any other hope, you told him that there might be,
provided he could become the subject of a spiritual or religious
experience - in short, a genuine conversion. You pointed out how
such an experience, if brought about, might remotivate him when
nothing else could. But you did caution, though, that while such
experiences had sometimes brought recovery to alcoholics, they
were, nevertheless, comparatively rare. You recommended that he
place himself in a religious atmosphere and hope for the best.
This I believe was the substance of your advice.
Shortly thereafter, Mr. Rowland H.
joined the Oxford Groups, an evangelical movement then at the
height of its success in Europe, and one with which you are
doubtless familiar. You will remember their large emphasis upon
the principles of self-survey, confession, restitution, and the
giving of oneself in service to others. They strongly stressed
meditation and prayer. In these surroundings, Rowland H. did
find a conversion experience that released him for the time
being from his compulsion to drink.
Returning to New York, he became very
active with the "O.G." here, then led by an Episcopal clergyman,
Dr. Samuel Shoemaker. Dr. Shoemaker had been one of the founders
of that movement, and his was a powerful personality that
carried immense sincerity and conviction.
At this time (1932-34) the Oxford Groups
had already sobered a number of alcoholics, and Rowland, feeling
that he could especially identify with these sufferers,
addressed himself to the help of still others. One of these
chanced to be an old schoolmate of mine, Edwin T. ("Ebby"). He
had been threatened with commitment to an institution, but Mr.
H. and another ex-alcoholic "O.G." member procured his parole
and helped to bring about his sobriety.
Meanwhile, I had run the course of
alcoholism and was threatened with commitment myself.
Fortunately I had fallen under the care of a physician - a Dr.
William D. Silkworth - who was wonderfully capable of
understanding alcoholics. But just as you had given up on
Rowland, so had he given me up. It was his theory that
alcoholism had two components - an obsession that compelled the
sufferer to drink against his will and interest, and some sort
of metabolism difficulty which he then called an allergy. The
alcoholic's compulsion guaranteed that the alcoholic's drinking
would go on, and the allergy made sure that the sufferer would
finally deteriorate, go insane, or die. Though I had been one of
the few he had thought it possible to help, he was finally
obliged to tell me of my hopelessness; I, too, would have to be
locked up. To me, this was a shattering blow. Just as Rowland
had been made ready for his conversion experience by you, so had
my wonderful friend, Dr. Silkworth, prepared me.
Hearing of my plight, my friend Edwin T.
came to see me at my home where I was drinking. By then, it was
November 1934. I had long marked my friend Edwin for a hopeless
case. Yet there he was in a very evident state of "release"
which could by no means accounted for by his mere association
for a very short time with the Oxford Groups. Yet this obvious
state of release, as distinguished from the usual depression,
was tremendously convincing. Because he was a kindred sufferer,
he could unquestionably communicate with me at great depth. I
knew at once I must find an experience like his, or die.
Again I returned to Dr. Silkworth's care
where I could be once more sobered and so gain a clearer view of
my friend's experience of release, and of Rowland H.'s approach
to him.
Clear once more of alcohol, I found
myself terribly depressed. This seemed to be caused by my
inability to gain the slightest faith. Edwin T. again visited me
and repeated the simple Oxford Groups' formulas. Soon after he
left me I became even more depressed. In utter despair I cried
out, "If there be a God, will He show Himself." There
immediately came to me an illumination of enormous impact and
dimension, something which I have since tried to describe in the
book "Alcoholics Anonymous" and in "AA Comes of Age", basic
texts which I am sending you.
My release from the alcohol obsession
was immediate. At once I knew I was a free man. Shortly
following my experience, my friend Edwin came to the hospital,
bringing me a copy of William James' "Varieties of Religious
Experience". This book gave me the realization that most
conversion experiences, whatever their variety, do have a common
denominator of ego collapse at depth. The individual faces an
impossible dilemma. In my case the dilemma had been created by
my compulsive drinking and the deep feeling of hopelessness had
been vastly deepened by my doctor. It was deepened still more by
my alcoholic friend when he acquainted me with your verdict of
hopelessness respecting Rowland H.
In the wake of my spiritual experience
there came a vision of a society of alcoholics, each identifying
with and transmitting his experience to the next - chain style.
If each sufferer were to carry the news of the scientific
hopelessness of alcoholism to each new prospect, he might be
able to lay every newcomer wide open to a transforming spiritual
experience. This concept proved to be the foundation of such
success as Alcoholics Anonymous has since achieved. This has
made conversion experiences - nearly every variety reported by
James - available on an almost wholesale basis. Our sustained
recoveries over the last quarter century number about 300,000.
In America and through the world there are today 8,000 AA
groups.
So to you, to Dr. Shoemaker of the
Oxford Groups, to William James, and to my own physician, Dr.
Silkworth, we of AA owe this tremendous benefaction. As you will
now clearly see, This astonishing chain of events actually
started long ago in your consulting room, and it was directly
founded upon your own humility and deep perception.
Very many thoughtful AAs are students of
your writings. Because of your conviction that man is something
more than intellect, emotion, and two dollars worth of
chemicals, you have especially endeared yourself to us.
How our Society grew, developed its
Traditions for unity, and structured its functioning will be
seen in the texts and pamphlet material that I am sending you.
You will also be interested to learn
that in addition to the "spiritual experience, "many AAs report
a great variety of psychic phenomena, the cumulative weight of
which is very considerable. Other members have - following their
recovery in AA - been much helped by your practitioners. A few
have been intrigued by the "I Ching" and your remarkable
introduction to that work.
Please be certain that your place in the
affection, and in the history of the Fellowship, is like no
other.
Gratefully yours,
William G. W.
Co-founder Alcoholics Anonymous
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