Page 183 - The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous
P. 183

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                                     162            ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
                                     these there is a well-known hospital for the treatment
                                     of alcoholic and drug addiction. Six years ago one of
                                     our number was a patient there. Many of us have felt,
                                     for the first time, the Presence and Power of God
                                     within its walls. We are greatly indebted to the
                                     doctor in attendance there, for he, although it might
                                     prejudice his own work, has told us of his belief in ours.
                                       Every few days this doctor suggests our approach
                                     to one of his patients. Understanding our work, he
                                     can do this with an eye to selecting those who are
                                     willing and able to recover on a spiritual basis. Many
                                     of us, former patients, go there to help. Then, in this
                                     eastern city, there are informal meetings such as we
                                     have described to you, where you may now see scores
                                     of members. There are the same fast friendships,
                                     there is the same helpfulness to one another as you
                                     find among our western friends. There is a good bit
                                     of travel between East and West and we foresee a
                                     great increase in this helpful interchange.
                                       Some day we hope that every alcoholic who
                                     journeys will find a Fellowship of Alcoholics Anony­
                                     mous at his destination. To some extent this is already
                                     true. Some of us are salesmen and go about. Little
                                     clusters of twos and threes and fives of us have sprung
                                     up in other communities, through contact with our
                                     two larger centers. Those of us who travel drop in as
                                     often as we can. This practice enables us to lend a
                                     hand, at the same time avoiding certain alluring dis­
                                     tractions of the road, about which any traveling man
                                     can inform you.*
                                       Thus we grow. And so can you, though you be but
                                     * Written in 1939. In 2003, there are over 103,000 groups. There is A.A. activity in
                                     approximately 150 countries, with an estimated membership of over two million.
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