Page 239 - The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous
P. 239
Alco_1893007162_6p_01_r5.qxd 4/4/03 11:17 AM Page 224
224 ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
fired me from this company was one of the first men
I met when I later joined the New York A.A. Group.
He had also gone all the way through the wringer
and had been dry two years when I saw him again.
After the oil job blew up, I went back to Baltimore
and Mother, my first wife having said a permanent
goodbye. Then came a sales job with a national
tire company. I reorganized their city sales policy
and eighteen months later, when I was thirty, they
offered me the branch managership. As part of this
promotion, they sent me to their national convention
in Atlantic City to tell the big wheels how I’d done it.
At this time I was holding what drinking I did down
to weekends, but I hadn’t had a drink at all in a month.
I checked into my hotel room and then noticed a
placard tucked under the glass on the bureau stating
“There will be positively NO drinking at this conven
tion,” signed by the president of the company. That
did it! Who, me? The Big Shot? The only salesman
invited to talk at the convention? The man who was
going to take over one of their biggest branches come
Monday? I’d show ’em who was boss! No one in that
company saw me again—ten days later I wired my
resignation.
As long as things were tough and the job a chal
lenge, I could always manage to hold on pretty well,
but as soon as I learned the combination, got the puz
zle under control, and the boss to pat me on the back,
I was gone again. Routine jobs bored me, but I would
take on the toughest one I could find and work day
and night until I had it under control; then it would
become tedious, and I’d lose all interest in it. I could
never be bothered with the follow-through and would