Page 235 - The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous
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220 ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
Jackie to call on me. Had he come two or three days
later, I think I would have thrown him out, but he hit
when I was open for anything.
Jackie arrived about seven in the evening and
talked until three a.m. I don’t remember much of
what he said, but I did realize that here was another
guy exactly like me; he had been in the same laugh
ing academies and the same jails, known the same
loss of jobs, same frustrations, same boredom, and the
same loneliness. If anything, he had known all of
them even better and more often than I. Yet he was
happy, relaxed, confident, and laughing. That night,
for the first time in my life, I really let down my hair
and admitted my general loneliness. Jackie told me
about a group of fellows in New York, of whom my old
friend Fitz was one, who had the same problem I had,
and who, by working together to help each other, were
now not drinking and were happy like himself. He
said something about God or a Higher Power, but I
brushed that off—that was for the birds, not for me.
Little more of our talk stayed in my memory, but I
do know I slept the rest of that night, while before
I had never known what a real night’s sleep was.
This was my introduction to this “understanding
Fellowship,” although it was to be more than a year
later before our Society was to bear the name Alco
holics Anonymous. All of us in A.A. know the tremen
dous happiness that is in our sobriety, but there are
also tragedies. My sponsor, Jackie, was one of these.
He brought in many of our original members, yet he
himself could not make it and died of alcoholism.
The lesson of his death still remains with me, yet I
often wonder what would have happened if somebody